t] to these centres of industry so ab- , that . deu- to permit those who were in- . enable those interested in certain ‘raining information, and it is to “JO pa! your (In advance) rroaaaaao-lw. cheater s. llelmro. Scsntarr—laicus. Cal IMOOI all lasagna-J. B. Barnett. Aaacaiato Editor-D. is .u‘ n‘ RIGHT AND WRONG. N’ the multifarious activities and 011111181118 “P1119113 °1 the“ rapid be on the defensive continuously modem days. the question 1B MW" What is consclentlousl, asked: Right? In many respects the 1481111 of twenty or fifty years ago m8? b9 the wrong of today and vice verso. To further complicate the question. what is right in one country may be wrong in another; and so the con- scientious enquirer is kept in a state of uncertainty and perplexity. Generally speaking, the rights and wrongs which have changed with the years are matters of personal or sectional opinions. The fundamen- tal right and wrong are unalterable. Honesty, truth, love, kindness, char- ity, and their kindred accompani- ments have never changed and shall never change, neither shall their op- posites. The former were right all the way back to primeval savagery; the latter were wrong throughout the ages and shall be while human nature endures. The caveman stole from his neigh- bor not because he believed it right to do so, but because he had'the opportunity. Possibly he may have had fewer conscientious scruples than his modern brother who pays similar attention to his neighbor's property, but for each the theft was. perhaps in varying degree, consci- ously wrong. The savage had his code of morals, less drastic no doubt than ours, but he had well defined ideas about right and wrong rela-i tiona with his neigbor. When he transgressed the moral code 'he did it consciously like his civilized bro- ther of today. _ Opinions change with the passing: yearn and most of our opinions are speculations or have been formed from‘, what others have told us. Right is eternally ‘Jright; wrong. elcmally wrong. The sense of right and wrong is inherent -in the human race.’ As to the wisdom or unwis- dom of following a certain course it is merely a matter of judgment or the want of it, and even when a wise or unwise decision has been made it cannot be placed in the category of right or wrong. It is quite conceivable that undcr the self-control and other restrains placed upon us by our civilization and our duty to civiiize society, some of our inherent propensities may eventually become atrophied or even eliminated. Fear, greed. jeal- ousy, love, even parental affection. have been held in check although not permanently eliminated. Social , environment imposes limitations and makes demands but cannot make right wrong, or wrong right. {Om- TOO MANY FUNCTIONS. NADIAN hospitality has been showered upon the members of the Parliamentary Association now visiting this country. They have found time, however. to visit many of the industries in Northern On- tario and other places, and express themselves as greatly interested in the progress made ‘ along many lines, such as pulp wood, mining. etc. Indeed, they found their visits sorbing that they expressed a desire their hosts should cur- tail the hospitable functions infor- ierbstcd in certain activities f0 Vllit them. They prapqql "l" "19 Dirty be so split up as to industries to visit them whils "the Rmllninl members of the party 9911M attend such functions as suit- ‘sd their tastes. ._.'.f'ilo Parliamentary Association is in Canada for the purpose or op. ‘thcir credit that they are more in- retested in obtaining this informa- tion than in attending banquets and grooms entertained. mailed in Canada and United discuss» _}I|ll|'l)nily (build 1881) O$M~flr you (in advance) delivered- SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER '8, 1928 Vleo-Pnaldcnt-l" B. Barnett. D. A. Iacllnnon. D. S. 0. K. Corrie the defensive." ‘It is doubtful if it is enough to be on the defensive. It is necessary also to be aggressive. To presupposes final defeat. To carry the war into the ene- my's territory may mean the delay- ing of‘ the final catastrophe. We are waging war on diseases, on in- sect pests, on numerous plant dis- eases. To stop this warfare would mean defeat and premature death. Man has cleaned up the disease and plague spots of the world and made them habitable. He has pro- longed plant and animal life by overcoming many of the diseases to which they are subject, and in these worlds still remain tobeconquered. He is fighting crime and evil and poverty, fighting oppression and tyranny, often in the form of flesh and blood, often of principalities and powers; and there is no truce in this war. Man is by nature a fighter. As civilization progresses and science makes new discoveries, the methods warfare change. Civilization aims at all round betterment, the betterment of the world and of man- kind. It has discovered that Whl‘ against evil is man's business in the world; that international warfare is a relic of savagery and that evento the victor the result is a definiteloss besides being inhuman and unwor- thy of human effort. The League of Nations, now in its ninth session at Geneva, is an evidence of this awakening. Civilization will event- ually end international wars. Science, also, has by its discoveries, contri- lbuted to the elimination of interna- 'tional wars. Recent inventions and discoveries, not only in the perfect- ing of armaments by means of which “man may the more effectually slay his brethren," but by the discovery of deadly chemicals, make modern war so unspeakably horrible and universally destructive that human nature has risen in revolt against it ‘and the civilized nations. are now, by mutual agreement outlawing war as a means of international set- tlement of disputes. Man is a fighter, and his battle- field is a world full of enemies. full of evil which threatens his happi- ness and his character. 'I‘hese he will fight and he is fightinga steadi- ly winning battle. The world, be- cause of his fighting and becaus: of his peace-making with- the friend- ly powers around him, and which are as numerous as are his enemies, will go on from victory to victory until "righteousness shall cover the earth as the waters cover the great deep." Cf x s t QUEBEC AND THE EMPIRE. c ._i_ GOMMENTING on the speech de- livered by Premier Taschereau, of Quebec, in welcoming the Par- liamentary Association on their ar- rival in Canada, previously referred to in The Guardian, La Pressesays that the British Parliamentarians. on returning to their countries in the four quarters cf the Empire, can say with certainty that insofar as it iiepllrls on her, insofar as she is ahl», under the constitution, to se- cure the enjoyment of all she con- siders her right and to be the con- dition of her existence, the Province of Quebec is determined to live and progress under the protection of the British Crown, with the ambition to make of Canada the brightest jewel in thathcrown. The Prime Minister of Quebec and La Presse speak the sense had ‘feeling of the people of that Province. It was in no stilfed. qualified terms of separatism that Mr. Taschcreau addressed the visit- ing delegates. He is neizher a La- t l‘ it EDITORIAL NOTES. Beautiful, matronly, mature Sep- tember has already iuued the invi- paign alone. other day celebrated his eighty-first birthday at his home in Ottawal He is one of the best known figures in Canadian public life. More ' than fifty years ago he entered political ilfc and at once attained a position at the front. high official positions in the Gov- ernment, including the Ministries of Marine and Fisheries, Trade and Commerce, and Finance. He was one of the most prominent figures donald. Sir Robert Borden and Right Hon. Arthur Meighcn. As a speaker he is recognized as standing in the front rank. Sir George is now one of Canada's grand Elder Statesman of whom all Maritimers, and es- pecially those of Conservative faith, are proud. 500,000,000 bushels, is something to be proud of, and there are optimists who figure it at 600,000,000. About two million > people reside in the Prairie Provinces where this magni- ficent harvest is mainly produced. and ‘wheat is- by no means total product. field products with live stock, are also produced in abundence. And yet, whenwe come to think of it, thirty years ago Canada's wheat crop was less than sixty million bushels. What may it be thirty years hence? Stipendiary Cluney‘ in the Halifax police court one morning this week, and “received the usual $2 fine." Halifax is supposed to be under pro- hibitory law. At the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition, where the daily attendance is nearly 200,000, a drun- ken man is a rarer spectacle than any of the curiosities in the side- shows. in Toronto, and Toronto is under a enforced, in the former case a vio- lation of the law simply means the of little use to mankind. Ponderous tomes have been written on philos- ophy which were nevcr meant w be and which, as a matter of fact, are natural causes of things, and one who is deeply versed in these causes is a profound philosopher. how Edna St. Vincent Millay has succeeded in summing up her phil- osophy of life in the following dozen lines, which can be understood and memorized in five schoolboy:-- No wider thantheheartds wide; Above the world isktletched the sky, No higher than the soul is high. The heart can push the sea and land Farther away on either hand; The soul can split the sky in two, And let the face of God Will cave in on him by and by." LICTION funds for the Presiden- tial campalgn across the border are on a scale that seem startling to outsiders. The Democratic Na- tional Chairman has made his om- 000 will be necessary for his party. It is reasonable to suppose that if so much is required on the Demo- cratic side as much or more will be expended by the party ‘new in power. And this is for the national cam- What it will cost in addition to provide “expense money" for the 48 States of the Union, and many of the lesser government dis- tricts within them which will elect their Governors, Congressmen. Sen- ators, Judges, Sherifis and what not, will be another vast total which can only be guessed at for the present. Money will fiow like water in this greatest of Presidential elections on the first Tuesday in November next. The money is raised by. subscription from rich corporations, contractors, and others in the sure and certain hope of being abundantly repaid if their party proves to be victorious. This means that the people of the nation are defrauded. Thoughtful electors what the end must be. may well pause to think Rt. lion. Sir George E. ‘Fosierfthc He has he'll many n the Government of Sir John Mac- Canada’: wheat crop estimated at their Other grains and Fifteen “drunks" appeared before Yet the Exhibition is held ystern of Government Control. in he latter instance the law isstrictly ollection of “the usual $2 fine." Philosophy, whilst it remains ln he cloudy region of metaphysics, is ead by the light of common sense, not read at all except by a peculiar they Buy. _ class who usually have nothing else D'°“mm‘;‘:: if?“ the days M 7mm’ w d°~ Bu‘ “l? “b-ie“ “Se” 15 °f The golden embers changing as we vast interest and importance. Phil- stare osophy is simply knowledge of the To svlden curse o! summers 1B1 away.‘ NOIE minutes by any . " y The world stands out on either side shine through, a t East and West will pinch the ' ' poinic nor a Bourassa. It is not as u ma" I "BM" "NW1" 01 311M111 "1115 '1'" That can not keep them pushed By Roberta Lea mentions Canada. apart; And he whose soul is flat-the sky pence-c The summer visitors, like the sum- r-f lifim h.-.;' £@R' .1 . awhile iato ‘flan-hm hi l. . a 1 tation "Put on‘ thy beautiful glf-tlllfl‘ birds. are us. Like the merits, O tired earth, and resti" And summer birdllillat enjoyed our cli- thegsrments are even in this sum- niata and our ‘hospitality. they will Yvwilai I samurai reply mar-like waatiierpnttin; on theiricomc again and we ahall welcome Notes by .the Way cial announcement that $4,900,000: . I rm GUARDIKN ' 0511a: £0112, of a s. u lame: W. Barlnn. ‘M-D made by physicians to a patient t an that of an individual ten years younger than you." Physicians do not make this statement any more because low blood pressure for your age is really not a favorable sign. Not that it is dangerous, but you are not a_t par. at your best, if. your blood pressure isbelow normal for your age. If your physician finds your blood pressure low, he immediately be- gins to look for some cause for same. In a youpg man or woman he will search carefully for any sign of tuberculosis, as low blood pres- sure is the usual condition." 'In ‘older persons, or in young folk who are not tuberculous, if the blood pressure is low he tries to find some form of long standing infec- tlon. Now while this may be from old teeth or/ tonsil conditions, in tho majority of cases it is due to infec- tion from the intestine. Most of these cases will give a history of constipation. . ' Dr. A. Graham-Stewart reminds us that the one symptom com- plained of by practically all low blood pressure patients is easy fatigue. Any exertion tires them; they soon “give out" if they attempt any work or play. So low_ blood pressure is really a symptom and generally a rapid heart and a lowered temperature accompanies it. And you know that a low temperature and a rapid heart meat» that the vitality, the vital force's. are below par. Now the way to create heat, and thus raise the temperature, slow down the heart. and raise the blood pressure to normal is to do two things. ' First, eat good nourishing food with meat or eggs once’ a day, andi plenty of vegetables and fruits. You. will remember tilat in tuberculmis the food is a bk factor in enrich-i ins the blood and raising the blood pressure. Second, make your muscles use up some cf this good food by exer- cise. Insurance examiners will tell You that by these simple means, they have been able to accept candii- dates who were refused insurance three to six months previously ow- ing to low blood pressure. Begin with a short period of light exercise _—walking daily and increase it gradually. Q -<Q->____._. 0 OQO-O-OOO-O40040-OOOO-O-O-OQ-O-O Daily Selections FOR Guardian’ Readers September s, 1m ' WORK WELL DONE—-Whatso- ever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no work. nor device, nor knowledge, nor wis- dom, in the grave, whither thou goest-Ecc. 9'10 PRAYER—-"Work for the night is coming when mnrrs vfiifk is done." September 9, ‘I928 A SURE PROMISE-Cast thy bread upon the waters: for thou shalt find it after many days-Eco. 11:1. i PRAYER-He that givetll to the poor, lendeth to the Lord. TIIE DOUBT When age has chained us toa lonely fire - And pitiful fears of blood that's chilled and thinned Have closed our easements to the lovely wind And shut our" hearts to restless Spring's desire. Then we'll ‘HD1011 our‘ memories,’ i But 0, these days are gossamer and dewl Can we believe that after all the years Through time's obscuring host of _ cares and fears ' Forgotten‘ beauty shines for us anew? Have we not seen the old, when, hunched and frail, They nurse their dreams through long grim silences? ._ _ Can joy survive in such sad eyes as these, l Or love long spent return to lips so pals? _ tine FIDO; o. When lntrouneiih men and women, whose names are generally spoken first? A. Tb names of the women. Q. t is the grammatical ionnwf dating a social note? A , of BOWMIINI: , the . m . the minimal’ ‘:9 n nevIcr Vi‘ ' What i , yours} LOW BLOOD Panssuaa Nor a . coon SIGN- One of the statements formerly during an examination was this " our blood pressure is no higher, . OctobeFI-lis Excellency Lord Wil- .H11Pi161iiii8$. L The Week Well, son, I'll tell you; {Life for me ain't been no crystal stair. h _ m had tacks init,‘ ‘ And splinters, And boards torn up, And places with no carpets on the floor- Bare. But all the time .I've been a-climbin‘ on, ‘And reachin‘ landin's. And turnin' comers, ‘And sometimes -goin' in the dark [Where there ain't been no light, v So boy, don't you tum back, ‘ Don't you set down on the steps. ‘Cause you find it's kinder hard. Don't you fall now—— ForTse still goin', honey, I'se still climbin’, And life for me ain't been no crystal stair. ' not The pophlarlty of Queen Mary was illustrated effectively enough the other day when her Majesty was shopping in Bond Street. How ex- actly it is conveyed to the passer-by that the Queen is in a certain shop is a psychological problem not easily understood. A car with two servants is no uncommon sight in Bond Street, and one would think that the Royal car might pass unnoticed by people intent on shop windows. But, omehow, the first of the loyal’ and curious gather, and then a police- man is seenpand somebody says, “Is it an accident?" in a hopeful voice. The crowd thickens, and it is not- iced that the policeman is keeping a llittle space clear in front of the shop. "What is it?" asks somebody excit- edly, and someone else says, “The Queen, I think." And so they wait, ierrand boys and suburban matrons, Va tall sunburnt man from overseas, a commissionaire (with the air of having benignly arranged things which is peculiar to commission- aires), a group of Americans, and men of every type, including the elderly gentleman who must have seen Queen Victoria. The crowd thickens, and some of the less man- nerly peer into the empty waiting car. But they are quite courteous to ‘her Majesty vandto each other as they wait “to see the Queen.” ‘c a His Honor the Lieutenant-Govern- or and Mrs. Hearts are to have as their. distinguishedlguest early in lingdon, Govemor-General of Can- ada, who is coming unofficially. Lady Willingdon will not... accompany the Governor-General, as she sails for England this month. O O O j Prof. and Mrs. Robinson, who have been visiting‘ Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Hillson at The Beeches during the summer months are leaving Mon- day for their‘ home in Vancouver. O O O Miss Edythe Brown. of New York, is the welcome guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. B. Longworth at Hill- crest. , O O O Mrs. Longworth was hostess at a delightful Bridge at her lovely home last evening in honor oi’ Mrs. Hollis of New York, and other visitors. O O O An interesting ceremony took place in the Keir Memorial Pres- byterian Church at Malpeque ‘last Sunday afternoon, when the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Auld, of Toronto, was baptised in the name of Mary Margaret Eliza- beth. The tea hostesses at Tennis this afternoon will be Miss .1. Grant, Miss M. Stewart, Miss M. White, Miss H. Edgett. Among the visitors spending the week end in the city, guests at the Victoria, are Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Costello, of Lewiston, Maine. Mr. Costello, who is general manager of the Lowiswn Sun and Journal, is very much interested in the Mari- times. They left home on Monday last, coming in their car by way of l-loulton, Ma, Fredericton, N3, and Monoton, found the roads excep- tionally good and marvelled ht the exquisite beauty of the scenery en route. , o a o Regretful farewells were said this week to Osptain and Mrs. M. C. Allenby, sons and daughter, her ino- ther and friend, Miss Stringer, who left for Quebec, from which city they will sail for their old homo in Plymouth, England. O O O Wifll the opening of school and collages, this week, there has been an exodus from summer homes to the city, althoush quite a pamper are atill linglring at the seaside while the lmaent lovely weather lasts- ‘ _ ‘ O O O ltcy.,qilarle_a_'ll. left 00 Wednesday musing-afar ‘linronto, after 1m anioyablli Iimthh holiday course's of ‘a, dinner? ‘ I A. Mi WrtlIIlJiQ-iplvi ‘initial 119d while home preached 111°“ WWW‘ ably to the congregations 0f B1- Paul's and St. Peter‘! Churches and now returns lo take up 1118 $111195" assistantto Canon Seaman in the parish of St. Mary the VirBin in Toronto. Prior to leaving for their home in the Barbadoes Thursday mornin! Mr. and Mrs. C. Lomer Miles en- tertained at a most enjoyable din- ner and dance at Beach Grove Inn on Tuesday evening upwards of thirty friends being present, includ- ing the Lieutenan‘ Governor and Mrs. Hearts. O O O Shoe-shining is the latest menial occupation to be lifted to the dignity of an art in Paris. This has been possible by the modern woman's craze for shoes which are in as in- finite variety as jewellery and some- times almcst as , naive. Million- aires‘ wives are now wearing walking shoes which have to be painted ev- ery day with fresh coats of gold and silver paint. Some of this ul- lira-expensive footwear is decorated with miniature flowers and delicate designs, which only an artist can carry out. Consequently, when madames shoes‘ become dusty or are tarnished 'with _the slightest spot ‘of rain she has to appeal to the real ‘artist to refurbish them. There are only a few specialists in Paris who ‘can carry out this work, and the deman’ upon their services are such that they are earning en- ormous incomes. One of them, who is in business near the Madeleine, has been the king of Parisian shoe- shiners for more than 30 years, and he proudly recalls that lie used t0 shine the shoes of the late King Ed- WEI‘ VII. a c o Miss Olive Ritchie entertained on Tuesday afternoon at an enjoyable afternoon tea and shower in honor of Miss Margaret Croaier, the pop- ular young nurse, whose ‘marriage to Mr. Walter Gregor takes place on the 20th. Those were Mrs. Addison Miller, Mrs. G. Elmer Ritchie, Mrs. E. S. Coffin, Miss Ella Cuming and Miss Louise Shaw. Mrs. Carol Livingstone and two children, who have been spending the summer with her‘ mother, Mrs. C. Lyons, leaves this morning for her home in Piattsburg, N.Y. O O l Miss Barbara MacNeiil, who with her parents, Mr._and Mrs. R..H. MacNeill, and her brother, William, spent the week-end in Sydney, sang very delightfully there several times last Sunday in the Presbyterian and Baptist churches, and was given a most cordial welcome, as she is a favorite with the music lover of her old home town. - O Strongly reminiscent of the days of 1880 is a frock of black taffeta covered with a fiowered design in rather subdued color. The waist is cut V necked both back and front, and the skirt has a great deal of extra fullness, which is arranged in the back and hangs from heavy cording. “Aerial golf" in which an aviator is partnered by a man on the ground who putts the ball after the former has dropped it from the air as near the green as possible, has been play- ed on a New York golf links. O I O Tea hostesses at the Golf Links this afternoon will be Mrs. P. W. Turner, Mrs. D. A. MacKinnon, Mrs. F. W. Tidmarsh, Miss Margaret Full. I O 'O The short visit of the French crui- ser Ville d'Ys yesterday made a pleasant break in a busy week, ofilc- ers and men being cordially wel- comed to Charlottetown. O O I The week-end visit of the Glace Bay Salvation ‘Army Band was much enjoyed by young and old, and it is hoped their visit will be repeated in the not too distant future. O O O Miss Laura Scott and Mrs. Stems are leaving Monday on a holiday visit to Montreal, Toronto and Iroquois Falls} Ont. O, O O Miss Zella Clark, who is the guest of brother at the Experi- mental St lon- “is being welcomed» home by her.‘ numerous relatives and friends on furlough from India. O O O Every one hopes that Prof. Fletcher will reconsider his decision to go to Sydney as announced earlier in the week. i . O O O Mrs. A. ‘I. ‘Btrubol. her daughter. Mill Alice Strubol. and Miss Dora Duchemin, who have been spending the summer-months at Fortune, have returned to their homes in Sydney. i 1 oar " General regret is expressed over the of Miss a. n. m- Oollliln fmliflthc Y.W.O.A.. WIIN she has bell! "t! Iflcioul OM 0b- ulrforthcpastaixycamandnu PEP-i“ ""1 3;‘; , M. war-ind. 1 soul‘ taksnaprominmtpiacsinthcso- iowm" _ Ln” _ ll Your Incoihe \ your most valuabl‘ POBQession. Insure. it V011 d0 less valuable. heigyngglriigs. licins Qlflllqly-Blfctary aridlIan-l lunch Ohio: EILHOLIIA ._ ‘ M NIP-amoral Agni, Charlottetown, P.E.I. .. a-hsairrs- m“ J. a. oxfouuell, araiiel» soemary P.E.I. OGO-OO-O you in this work. Vinegar. Every one of have your order. E. A. Foster, It is understood Miss McCollum is leaving early next month with her friend Mrs. John Richards on an extended trip to the Holy Land. Miss McCollums successor, Miss Johnson, of Toronto, will be cordi- ally welcomed to Charlottetown. O O O _ ' Miss Jean Henderson, after a pleasant visittoher parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Henderson, loft on Thursday for, New York to resume her nursing duties. ' . I O Mrs. F. A. Gates, after a short but pleasant holiday in Saint John wlthl her friend, Mrs. Nelson, has return- ed home. Earl and Arthur Reardon, sonsof Councillor and Mrs. M. W. Reardon, left this week for‘ St. Joseph's Uni- versity, Tlew Brunswick. Y O O O Dr. and Mrs. J. W. McIntosh and little son have returned from ‘a very pleasant motor trip through Nova Scotia. O Miss Winnifred Macdonald, and Miss Ada Macdonald, of Boston, who have been spending the sum- mer at their old home in Dundas. When you want a real cup of I . y 3» s" BRAlillillN, area Sold only in Red, Hygenie, Airtight Packages. The Pickling, gSlieason Now is the time to getiyour r-lanieenn Chow put down for the winter months and we can he of great assistance to You must have the purest ingredients J0 make your pickling a success and here's whsre we can help you. ' We carry a fresh stock of the finest Mixed Pickliing Spice, Tumerlc, Curry Powder, Celery Seed. Cloves, Cinnamon, Cardamon Seed and English Essence those is absolutely reliable. Lei. us CENTRAL mtuosrona ,, ~ iiyndmlin & ’Co., ,1, left on return Thursday morning, O O O l - The Prince of Wales is practising in an unconventional fashion for his forthcoming big game hunting trip to Africa. During week-end evenings, after the beach is desert- ed where he is staying at the " resort of Ferring-on-the-Sea, the Prince has appeared on the fore-. shore hugging a soap box on which he had painted a target; and hav- ing placed it in position, he has re- tired about 50 yards and begun tak- ing pot shots at it with a .22 calibre rifle. It is reported that he soon riddled the target. O~OO The Land We Love By Frank Yeigh Canada's Prclress ‘in 192i H Q. What are some of, the out- standing factors in Canada's pro- gress in 1027'! MA. flfiiilcfid)’. ‘Ibrohllfi financ- . a three rigs dig- tinguished Canada's progress in 1W1, namely, abundance of money at lower interest rates than have p vailed since 1013; a substantial uction in the national debt ‘out of surplus; and continued agricul- tural, industrial and mining qq- vciopment. Canadian governments. municipalities and corporntlnnn fated in any other country in tho world excepting the United States. Oholl! money has not resulted in axcive borrowing by government- si bodies. Dominion government fin. 11181118 in 1m’ was .A‘lnonorwil railway H wnmnnninifiil.“ rlslsifcllliicdiataapeed n; nilclln Grim-will behuilt ba- i! at cheaper rates than ex- ' 0 . Aligietles 000-000 callilllalpoiwer lllfili-is and of; visible "Flflrni '10!) lilo ‘I50 unifies. , need tllrc. \. .|\._. i tween Berlin and the Ruhr indur. '1'- ncmtr ' " O ‘Io-marrow Do you ‘carry the insurance ; you would _=wish you had the day-after a fire? The Oldest Insurance Agency -__'__.~._ n.___.__.Y__....}-§q- AiiiFIIhl-TQ iIOGiODHW have B6811 4117b». Bdifld; 410111‘ Sail llraracisoo and Mi‘ "l-‘Stomachs For .1,“ of appetite. WW1 or disordered stomach , Thy i ‘~ slflllllhzns entire strengthen: the stomach. 811d improves thejappeiitc. It h" M3“ 1'45 oreai can-v 511*‘ luau Orders may!!! " Attended. occ-uf Buy Leaves, Sunnyiside ‘l f not, see mited. i ‘ in r. la ~ l. ‘Charlottetown ilmt lure equipped willl l0. “ti? a preparation 1h!‘ anil tonaa up W’ digestive Evelfs Stomach Drugstore -\. “ " l iliilillfi i, KIDNEY a PILLS» \