l \ Standard ‘Li’ / Q 0f QQYI‘ . Quality r for l over 50 ‘Years Irooeoooooevgevo-OO-O-vm t . 3 (‘Imrsu-icr Iteathng i O -.~¢~~¢¢-¢o.-.. >Q0-OOO©OO The Mouth and Lips Thi- mu lh is one‘ 0i‘ the must mobili- oi features, and registers more quickly and effectively the various emotions of the heart and mind than iIlllIUE-il any olther part of the face. .\ largi- mouth. generally speaking, indicates greater force of character than n small one. hilt the quality as well as the size must he inks-n inlo zit-count. likewise its re- lations to other features. »‘ Again its character is determined chit-fly by the lins and more or less also by the teeth. "SAVE THE ro hlzsT" ibefore you throw it aWflY- Matches have heads but they can't think. Dc it for them. i Carters Seeds Grow About two hundred Mer- chants on Prince Edward ls- land sell Carters Seeds. it you cannot get what seeds you want tnom them send to us. .- Our Seeds i Seed GPii" are tested at O wa for pur- ity and germination. No. 1 No. 1 Ask for "Nickel" X "Queen” Mammoth Clover. No. 1 "Rose" Alslke Clover, No, l Early Red Clover. No.1 Seed Wheat, Seed Oats. Barley, Field Peas, Vet- ches. Fodder Corn. Blwk‘ wheat and a full line of Vegetable and Flower Seeds, and Field Seeds, Carter! Timothy Shallots, Onion Sets. 90"" Onions Early Seed Potatoes, Dahlia and Gladloll Bulbs, etc. Don't neglect the Lawn and Grass Plots, use our "Evergreen" Lawn Grass and Lawn Fertilizer. Carter&Co. I I Limited Seedsme" ‘o the people of _ P, E. Island i- Professional Cards jgltrDtmnlil & McPhce,B.A. I. l‘. MePllEI.‘ I. A. MnDONALD ,_ w II. A. l. llanlafnra, Attorney. Ito. ‘Money .0 “Hay flullcllng pm 0.1!; Xuonmann “or-nuns- or it's. but Grulaato § Indleal mum see lloeliltal POII Offloe Bayer Building i ' xleli , 1‘ olophnno RIO-J. a, Mcflyggan, o. A. . inaalnlir eoaltnaoa. no. ' Ionq to been (Maureen lloel l.‘ UXLE-Y ti JOHNSON Ilallhx l’. ltlllblflll) OXLII ‘I’. HAROLD JDIIIBOII, 0. A. mam: a. smug. o. A. Plhl Aha! "BIC Auditors u‘ hltv In I Arm at r. 1.1mm leotle. "f; “lit i; u Bllllllllll ., i‘! ill“ In: Iloeeetary, Linn. (Vol. Illlol all Iaaellr. I l- . lands.- _ Not Iuek |$apreaeuu~cIvo-—1ner~~un rum-rs. lac‘, Chic-age mlfilfllllbl\w*=- a. Power. T]v.._...,,_...... J. ll. .\. mum nmu. n d. u. Aaeeelata ldllc. h. It. Oarrla llflrlwlll TUESDAY, MAY; 1925 PUBLIC OPINION The MontreaLBoard of Trade u doing a good work in arousing -pub- sic opinion to the necessity of more rigid economy in the matter of ‘pub- lic expenditure, federally, provinci- ally and muullcipally. It has issued its ‘third circul-ar tho subject under the caption "Zliind Your Own Business." Wu have in a. former issue referred to the first ‘two The “Mind your own business" caption ‘is lntcndmi to show that the public ‘busltieas of the country. the ‘expenditure of public moneys. ‘the ‘lntpos/l-tlon of taxes ‘and the manner in which those taxes are expended, is not the business of mem-bers of parl-lutnents or of mun- icipalities alone but. is ‘the legitlni‘ atle business of every elector, every ‘and ii. is the ditty of cvcry elector to have a voice alfl n iii xpayc l‘, ‘my ‘in the ‘matter of expenditurt. The hollowuess and the falsity of ‘hat shilm political optimism which ‘s now being volcedaabroad regard- nu,- the ‘financial position of'Can- ‘ula, although not referred to dir- |'('iiy in mi; iwmvltlt-t. is zuppurent. to ‘evt-ry thinking ‘nan and woman. We are being constanltly told that our ilztlcral “inunccs are satisfactory. that our lmlliovlng industrial situabfon is ‘i vuomiio lives and "11- feronce to federal. Charlottetown: llnltetl a lye, II, Non and t l‘ tollmnnltelph. Uiltflltlfll. P.I.I. OI Clflfllfel vnd that conditions‘ generally are. punch better than ever before under‘ ‘any other ‘government. This is no‘.- ‘m- Qpinifln of bankers,‘ financiers d1 interested business {mu men. QiThc very opposite opinion is being, i‘ fzrccly expressed and we are being ‘l |.‘-!il in all sincerity ishmvn that to the enormous debt ilcft us by the wa-r. a debt. which jtfwnatla willingly incurred and to Columbia reports the second best should be taken [nine n \. it ‘which she added the sacrifice ofihalibtit catch in h‘"r history ;‘in the yr‘! to be math by built the leading t ‘I. wimany of them for life, the present zovcntmcnt has added $262,000,000 And for what? >d railways? many unneeded public works to How much -for Manv millions of it for purposes out of which Canada has never i-"celved and never shall reccive ‘a dollar's: worth of’ real service! paying some $350,000,000 in _ m-lllion of prople and we are all paying it, paying it in our grocery hills, In our clothing, in our mnis in our plcaautrczs, ‘paying lg ‘ln income taxes, in our solo-i taxes In evcry- thing wo buy and In everything we sell lt would ‘be unfair in the Montreal Board of Trade to gtlve the lmproa- alon that in its circulars lt thus‘ dealt ‘with ‘the question from a ‘political standpoint. its warning h-as re- pmvlnoial and municipal governments alike and its advice to electors ls to elect men to cnch of ‘those governments who um pledged to and are knownoto be honor/t and capable in the maittnr of public economy. The present federal government is admittedly a mills-tone around the neck of Canada. As a direct result of its ‘administration hundreds of thousands of Canadians am to- day exiles In a foreign land. Cuna- dlwn industry is stagnant, Can- adian railways are operating at a loss and adding 1o ‘the yearly debt and esrneet men are looking fear‘ fully Into ‘the future‘, and all ‘the more fearful because of the gov- ernment's palpable eflforte to do celve and to mislead Another (our years of {he present regime would put. Canada beyond ‘the reach of sal- vation. While such e fate 1a ‘highly improbable ft is up to every Cana- dian elector -to so mind lila own huulnetll as ‘hm only to ‘make much 01min u nrb peering cautiously into the forested politicians is at hand but Lhiiy want evidence. llow many ‘unneed- & llow ‘many wbsolut‘ ly Miuscless Royal Commissions? lfow mollify illssntlsfietl constituencies? How much ostensibly. ‘for immigr- ants who never came. but in reality yo provide jobs for ‘poilrtical friends? junketlng poll~ tlcal heelers, ‘for political jobbcry? Is not the. expenditure of our taxes everynnfs business? We are inter- s-st every year for the debt ‘thus in- curred. an enormous charge on nine a thing inrpossL-blobut, to make ‘It impossible even-again to Dime in" competent. men at the head of Cana- dien aftafrrs. -—--a-o'>---— CA UTIOUS OPTIM lsM Finanolatl and. industrial authori- fnture and liriy are not all satis- f eil that the time for shouting and ,c‘...l Ling has arrived. They are anxious lo be persuaded that the "era of ‘pros-penity" ‘predicted by in‘ T-hc May monthly letter of the ‘toyal Bank of Canada is cautiously and vi-ry tnfldly optimistic, or ra- ther, makes a brave attempt at 0p~ t-lmlsm, ‘being careful not to be os- tcutatiously so. it says: THECHA i Notes By The way The budget debate added over 100 epeeohee to what bad otherwise b:sn a very talkative session. A pa-rt of tho time was taken up with talk about talk, which seems to be the most useless sort of verbiage. Each party blamed the others for prolonging tho debate and taking u‘p too much time. Several mem- bers took the pains to count the number of columns ‘ln Hansard for “which thc different parfes an in- dlvidual members ‘were responsible and the percentage -to which each party ‘was until-led. ‘In the wrangle that ensued .\Ir. ‘Boys. the chief Conservative whip, stated ‘that Pre- mior Kfng had himself added 79 columns to Hansard during the de- bate, which was equal to one-third ‘if the tofnl Conservative dordage. There waa_ something really amusing when the one man- who had exploited more of the valuable time of the House ‘than any other ntenfber threatened t-hc others with a dissolution if they did not stop talking ‘and get on with ‘the ‘busi- ness of Parliament. More than‘ half of the mcnrbcrs did not speak "So conflicting ls the evidence, which may be gleaned ‘from basic conditions in Canada that it ‘is lm- posslbln to forecast the lmmadiatei It is possible phat the r'cent decrease ‘in futun: of Canadian business. car ‘loadings and the slowing up of busncss which apparently place in Mitre-h and early April vWre merely -s‘easonal developments. The volume of spring building has not <le\‘clnp-"<l to a point ivarranting UliilPi‘ optimism or pesslmlism. Re- ports of slight. increases in the v0- "umo c-f manufacture do not coiiceal he fnot that most factories arc work- ing ‘on a part time basis which ls not profitable.‘ The eastern coal strike and the low price of coal are factors Lcomplicatlng the minim; situation. ,w1 re generally satisfactory (luring ‘Lumbering operations that we aw-‘itlie winter and there have been eni B: sure your match ‘ls out Jflfling towards a financial crisis. ‘ i . . gflntring th? budget debate it was bookrd and prices are unsatisfac- tory. On phe favoralble side British woodpulp productiion. rival of spring. ‘business come more active. place. that thc latter is the case." -i—<-o>——- before we adopted our present name. An militarily informs us lf we wcrc to refrain from catching un- ilcslzed lobsters for two years the supply thereafter ‘would be_|i‘ll-irn‘ii.- u-ble. He says no lobster under n-inc inches should be permlbted to be sold either to factory or retullvr, Now that the cor season is grt- :lng into full swing more attention nrust ‘be ‘paid to railway ‘level crnseungs. Whercover much traffic a watchman should ‘be posted to warn both engine drivers and chattflfouru. Evidently the English ‘people are ‘not no greatly perturbed over Hind- enburifs elections as was anticip- Duilly News Mr. Stuart Hotjgaon, went to Germany t9 study the ellec- tlon situation. In. his last, cable- grs-zn he asserted that, Hindlénhurg oction but cit-awe momma; votes of people who wished to do honor to "Germany's grand old man." 11m Hlndetitbitrgers are snxllmie only In pmve Germany/b spiritual unity. "Both aides." says Hodgson‘. “are thinking really of hams conditions only. 1t is cevrtalln that. I-Ilnden- burgh: victory IWII not ‘hetralld any sudden change 4n Germany 'l'h.Is the right and lrft." (‘CRIBS t-he men's of record breaking \’i"ith'the ar- will be- lt remains to be ‘seen, ltowovor. whether the lm-i speakin‘ °°“'°"V°'Y 3"‘, i" °°"“ provement this year will be on-iy mm the pa“ “he mph“ ‘the-re is‘ absurdity of ‘the angry ‘Premier's thrcay of which he himself ‘was ‘urbllmely unconscious Dr. J. B. M. Baxter, M. P., for Saiint John is one of the foremost Conservative representatives from ihe Marl-times in the House of Com- Fifi‘??? 3011p of ‘ Quark like. ID, ‘J1 e THE VALUE OF HEAT It would appear _that other coun- tries seem to appreciate the value of hcul in various ailments, more than we do in North America. ;ln Japan the hot bathing and ap- plication of heal to various dis- orders ls I‘0lltiIIt~ procedure. The use of the huge hogsheads. tilled wflh hot water, m which the Jap immerses himself after the toil oi tho day, was a part of the army life during tho war with Russia. The circulation is hurried along_ and thus the futi uc wastes in the muscles are rem ved from the HYB- tem. , Our athletes try to secure a hot bath after a strenuous contest, s0 that they will noit go "stale? For years it has been customary to treat all sprains with cold u!) ‘luring the debate and could real-izeillliciltiflll-‘l l" "eve"! ‘he Swemggt‘ the hu-mor of the situation and thtfour ‘Mos’ “mks are mum‘: "B i a heat. hot ilDDiiCBiliOnS. are the first indication because as the damage la (lone, the next best thing to tln is to gut a good circulation there. to remove the debris of nll the tear- ing, and start early repair; of the tissues. ' - ln Holland u surgeon had been treating a severe ulcer on u pat- mons. Many Conservatives ln his ‘that. he shall return to the provin- ciail arena in which ‘he was a con- z-li-ction ‘to phe Ottawa ‘Parlizunentf Recently Dr, Baxter was in FredPr-I ic-ton and \v‘h<‘le there ‘was in confer- cnc: with othcr protulucnt COIISOI", vatives who recognised that he was being m-uch sought for in both the Legislature nntl in Parliament na a oantlidntt In the coming elections. Thny wanted to know what his du- cinlon is llkley Lo be and he pm- misctl to inform them within a few rlhys. g _..___ Men of first clas; ability and hon- est patriotism are none to plenti- mla in‘th ‘>20 times and they are pro DOPIiOMLe \ in demand. Great care omlnwtlona 200,000 malmediPraiitie Provinces the livestock ‘have imrties ‘ln the section that men‘ of mutated we". and "om me EM, calibre should be selected for repre- sentatives in both t.-h‘e Federal and lncal l-fotisrs. rights. pa riaon lt ls now a critical time In the struggle for Mar-itime lent was bcdritldeil and threatened took ‘ntlve PPOViIICE think "i (leslrable Wm‘ llillilierene. , ' lie aimlieil a hot air box to the z leg, beginning with three hours irlally, untl Increasing it grulluallY , 59mm“ film“ hem” h" “OW-Yb! tn six hottrs. rxposlng “he bare lei-I‘ directly to the heat. Between the. _ heat zipplicniions, the leg ivas sim- ‘ ply covered with tin-ordinary band- , uge Tlii- first ‘thing noticed was the prompt relief from pain. 'l‘hl.-= l.“ the great factor ln the‘ application - of heat-in sprains and other injnr les. lt is very soothing. ‘ This ulcer was completely ltculed ln ‘twelve weeks, and ‘in the major- ity of (xases he states, that the cure Q was complcf+n three weeks. ' When healing is slow in run down indivilrluals. the stimulation of liile part by heat ls just ‘what is, needed to get some activity. , ‘ This is the reason that it. is not quirics ‘for sitbstantlzi-l quantlicies of ful in the public life of either the pnuoua] fm- an 01d gm-e m- ulmi- tn il,,,,.,h,.,. h", fa“, Ordrrs have been several ‘Proving-g or of the Domlu-the irritated by some DTCDiIITIi-lfill ion in the Atlantic section of Can- i" “rd” ‘m sumulme the drunk blood bringing old tton anti gei the new material. and removing material from tho spot. ‘Heat is a great. boon to us all. {i}? The Public Forum This column Ia open In! the lllnnnnalnn by onrruaponalonta nf mill-m.»- i-r Interest. 'I‘I|r- (‘llnrlnttnlrswn flllllrfllnn Ilriel not necessarily amlnrln thn np- lnlnna n! correspondents. RAILWAY FREIGHT sentailon of the ‘Atlantic Provln-| _ seasonal or whether certain flIIIlliI-legs m the Ottawa Parliament is dish mental improvements in the ‘busl- tlnctly below par. ness slLuatlon have ‘real-ly tukenipieiding- Pllgfliey- we are manned m befievnison and others who once stood in the front rank of public llfc at Ot- imwa have either passnlvq-ut of life equal ‘ln ability ‘and ln-fltlenco with " the least of the nine we have nam- ed. By virtue of their talents, char- ,acter and ‘Influence u mnjorliy oi‘ tho ‘Maritime statesmen we. have mentioned had a considerable per- sonal following at Ottawa among t Timber. ‘Wilt-y. ‘Blair and Davies were ln this class, With one possible exception there is not a single Maritime Minister at0tfawa, ‘with, or wiithoug portfolio. who has .a single ‘personal ‘follower. Such is tho present rather pltlable condi- ,tlou of our Maritime representation at Ottawa. t. It is accentuated_by the fact that ernment our own Province has been‘ the "Senate during the present sea- ‘ed In Panlla-men-t. "The ‘time was wthen ‘a. Conservative Government amended to save our representation in the Com-moms‘. A bibeml Gov- away ha-lf of our representation in the Senate ‘Barely one ‘Marltlmes have fallen upon evil days! luv-nether those deplorable conditions Ishall be permitted go convince. The remedy is not out of reach. hardly thinhrhle that the a-blltty and manhood of the Merrtlmee ‘has ‘dwallned or vanished to any such airy exirlibvlt. would seem to indicate. will come. if at all, slowly. The [y such h“ be” "m, m‘ c”, ‘u 050,000.00 ravolutionady era is over bot-h form”, Mo,“ we hmflmwn M “f” 852.50 per cur (lcllvercd at ‘Thornton for why the lng the closing months of the fiscal ‘ or puiblic ‘uct-ivlty witihin a comparu- YBHP- 0X16 0f U19 fififligllfid Cullflvfl control. The first reason why our railroads ‘are ‘going he wheels of a rallroutl. driving people oft‘ on ship it by rull they can flnd u market at Montague for all tb lumber they can send them n a-gue. But when it takes almos half of that for freight where is the Iunrberman goln-g to ‘get off ln tho s-mall end oi‘ the horn? instead of chnrghg $23.50 freight on a car “Y ‘"° """"""' "Wt "' u“ W 339025.‘. ‘.§..."‘;’-'...fi1.“l€§ii 3.19.339 they only get a car load untlor tho deprived of two of Its members ‘lnppreaent high rates In keeping with salaries ranging from $10,000.00 to Mo‘, The Edam. of “he Londonislon and no protest has ‘been utter- Ifiaihogigoomgzgayecfrr‘ geaggmufégg men at home but the funny part comes In here, if they could ‘bill the ‘had the British North America Act cars of saw logo out an fire woo‘! It would cost about $3.00 loss pe OBI‘. Where does the difference come won, not only on the votes reprc- "Tllme"! 110W P9087! this genemaityfn? The R. R. hands don't have to new“! mm palm“, “mimic, to reiby violating the some Act to taKvfut a band near e logs to Iosd or unload: high freight rates to help i out? lenfs leg for ‘three yours, The pat- " , made to reflect unfairly on u (luvf ~++o+o+oooo+oo0+0+oo+A l ‘ >0 >00 o4 0-4 040040 ¢$~¢4+N | Slr.——“Notca By The Way" ln "Bill". Davlcflfithc Uuardiati of May iut. senator ‘Fcrglplvery spicy reading, especially the ilame excusectfered by Slr Henry National iftallway receipts fell off badly dur- mutlc “r112 '1 _ . 34¢ ‘I . -._v».~_,»,-‘ “ .'_--.-- l-W | ‘i i iii,” I m?“ u n 1| i |i i i i in ll 7M ' Ja/ iii b ‘iii. P ‘ i iliiquil ||iiiAl$° iii" Ebapclgii ‘Fi-"hr, I l i l ‘viii. ‘t"jillllliiiiiiiiiiiiii ii it ’ ' i i, i ,,.___,.,_-.-.__ ' - ‘i' ~--“ Ii ‘i’ " " ‘iii " ' ii illllllllllllllll , |||||]|]|||]|| |llll illlllllil. dmmmpm lhllllligiilillllliilii 0F s? fir '7 i i i =wi:.-inf=vg—_.r=?n¢ii‘ .. Packag - t.‘ nliil llillillllilliu-i TINS , freight and passenger rutr-s on I‘. l'l, l. were cut int i.\VO"-j‘l)ll ivouli see things booming on l’. H. L‘, ".'.‘1‘y not try it Sir Ilenry, 1nd lot , iill people see “dint you czindu w- f wurflg oarnlng $50.000.0ll per your. I am. Slr, etc. RAILWAY P.\'l‘l{0.\'. i i .. ____ i -i {-0}- l i l l i MISLEADING COMPARISONS Slr,——'l‘ht~ comparisons mud.» by, the Rev. Elwin Malone in Motitluyls, (ilIHNJ-I-ill shows how stiperticlzil fig ures, suing-toil at random, may b -‘ irnmcui and a people. l H0 first trompnres whose rnvtznurs and pro\'in:"\s' colony ivhcrc _ |numbercvl only by thnuszinils. " “ is lulloivvtl by thi- lnistziltv-n us- snmil-titrti that, btwuusi‘ Ilillll‘ ofour. . npprollrlutloiis are can‘ |lliII'|\'l'Ii lot‘ that purpose, wt- urc nnu-ciuiirilnr,‘ tors to tlu‘. cost oi‘ t-tinii-niLnj: trgaimt the Willi-r‘ plague. that-by vcry long m|‘ls~-l’rint‘.t: Edward Island cor-tributes u iitI‘_l»Z"I‘ proportion of her revcniit-s to pub; tic charities than any province, in, the Dominion. In tin- maiiet" of tub- A little ileepcr l‘l‘.f'll'lli‘i‘il will iliu-ii-‘l llll/illiilili)’ l>\‘l‘l‘-il1il|ll"i by lhil-‘lll “use m our Rpyfi] flipnfl u". [m-Lh-lznnourlng ilur (iuvcrnnuvnt lllflflfiiliillll. What Mr. Winston Churchill Has To Say About Insurance “If I had my way l would write the word “INSURE" over the door of every cottage and upon the blotting- book of every public man. because i am convinced that for sacrifices that are inconceivably small, families can. be scoured against oatastrophies which otherwise would smash them up forever. lt is our duty to arrest the ghastly waste. not merely of human happiness, but of national health and strength, whichfollows when through the death of the bread-winner. the frail boat in which the fortunes of the family are embarked founders, and the’ women and children are left to Struggle helplessly on the dark waters of a frlendless world." We have policies of Insurance to meet every requlre- _. merit and would be glad of an opportunity to be of service- - to you and yours. i HYNDMAN & (X1, LIMITED. THE OLDEST INSURANCE AGENCY IN P. E‘ i‘ ill)- “As You SOViI So Shall You I xnn. Fir. ‘to. FRIEND OF MORAL REFORM »---—-—-—( O> ~~— -- intn ‘bank- ruptcy ls high salaried officials for doing little or nothing; also small leaks not attended to. its the small leaks that it‘ not nttcntirtl to III time will stop ‘the wheels of the ‘mill. The same may be applied to Here is a sa-mpla that ls not only caning depression on the P. E. l. Railway but. also their ‘provincial col-leagues. Iiowefllsmnd- At Wood Islands and Hopeflelfi and sorronntllngcountry there is enough lumbar going to waste that would give employment to hund- reds of men. If they would only Mon- that an expensive satiitarittm wz. "*¢¢~¢*¢¢¢-¢*¢H+~60+0 0* “ w‘ g‘ 1123;“£32"$!.‘i“..§‘.f§"ii2'§?.'1Still" illifi." .,‘“L‘LT.'3‘."‘;;i'.‘.‘ § 1...... .-....-.-....... i ...__ t . . . ., c _ . . ‘, r ,_ '- . . rlhlciy-‘bac: we tofu“ the "am" 0' reason but d.tl Slr Henry tell us vim-n these institutions exist. ‘ ‘ The" word. l" h,” u n ,8 mteresung to m“, that ma, lI‘61‘.‘ "We. T lie)’ and Augilll. ll,-what cam-led the (ieprcssion? Its vVhlli- I would not wish to‘: FOR i u.“ “ow as i" ‘h, day; Uni“ o, Mmflc, awmes , to ariwoulti be dl-fflctllt ‘to flnd in either mdsir H?” m m" “Pat? t," ‘mmmiml ‘he i"umrtaimi i," ‘MTV when they were written and ‘a - - . ecrso" .‘.. . . ‘ ,., - p ,thc Com-mun-s nr the benalo toilayuzauroafi Bind n, gapsglsre n", “an,” Rlyirlilaailgnfinillil?‘(ginfizfigluihmf“ ‘ (ilhllfliilll Ktlatlttffl may be applied tln this case rive here on June 24. our Diacoverylmm-e ma“ one or two men [mm me would “I'm”, to a“ roads “nae, MS WM“? funmiés an, “nnhh, ,',, ,.,,,,.,,'I to your’ gram seed. To rear: “M, ‘we were known m, s,“ John Marm,“ s, who would rank as the ‘ .voe-oooo-o-Ho-vooooooowc- a bountiful harvest you m" fol them. lie hm.t.c.d: a less pert-cut- zige titan in some of the provinces referred to. Tilt-so zicetiy onus have been materially zisslslcil ‘by our (lnvcriltncnt. in various w . The sum 0f $3,220.22; was dis- tributed lust year on what is tlc- nomlnutcd ‘Patipcra Sizalcs. Quip-i a percentage of ‘lhfis- goes to 'l‘. ll. purposes. Agtrn $200, to the Ills- pensury, portly llStll ln tlu- sum‘- r way. The three Hospitals receive $500. each 0r $l5ilil.4lt) in all, untl the Red Cross a sum of $24 0.01‘ from which them’ ls tho illiill‘('l‘i. contribution tp patients of that class. Then the orphutuigcs gut $500., each, whore tine children ol those lntllguntn uri- t-arctl for. Athl- ,. ed t0 these we have Fulcunwimtl 1 Husptnl and Inflrmarywilu-iorbing lioutcil, vanquished trilurly -- MoDONALD l BRADLEY almost a llfth oi‘ our whole re- Rgjnl ~91 11 ",4 l venuc-dn which, unlortutmtol-y. L Mm“ Proprhmr. patients suffering with this iiiflllll-‘JU Spring hut-i opvnvil wide thi‘ gnu-g gr"; ggnrge 8t. Phone 315 hovehurl to be treated. | ‘Larger prilvlncnu ihuve lthoir Health departments. hospitals and sanltarlums. While these institu- tions have n cost in management. they have also a revenue income. Comparisons are not fnir when‘ they are ‘given credit for thp‘ ex- ‘pense, without also charging against them the receipts. For in- erctilmils it is common ltntnvlcilgieilw ‘ tit-liver him, Psalm 91:15. nnd Lord, wt: iWlth quilt-k gusiiire, prldcfullv. Trophies spread or ‘the “.,,',.|,] h, i, Reap" sow aeed free from disease. the most common form 0' which Is SMQT. Our formalin ls guaranteed to prevent this’ and ao render your It“ ‘ capabicof giving the MOM" productiom, Now la the time to use this preparation. 0W‘ supply ia large and 0f l?" highest quality. m: {nuns May 5, 1925 lll-jhlVldlkANfilu‘ AT "AiNUIv Ii nlll hc with him in trouble; l will| l"li..\\’l‘.‘lt:—t) Blessed Ilcdcctntn‘ would conic unto‘ lln-c, for in Thee wc are aufn| hum (every fiury tlurl. oi‘ the Wicked! Unc. VICTORY Spring hut-l triumph-d glorinuply- ltcjultwc! ltcjoica? Wintofa minions wuil and live. 'l urn und run from ili-lil and 'i'rt‘i-, Whore tho trembling vuilet waits, (‘allcrl the In-lghi birds Illlll tin-it‘ mntes, Reich-c! Rejoice! Spring bus trltunphctl gloriously“. Rejoice I Rqjqp-pg lther wood or ‘what makes ‘the difference? Hero .It is In e. nut shell. The R. R. knows the saw logs are worth ‘more than the wood and they want ‘their dip out It la up to the electors to gay o! the difference. The same may apply to cattle or horses, n, can; about half the price of an animal ,to ‘pay ‘the ‘freight. Still people will ll- irwondsr why there are so many vacant farms In that part of the icountry, besides other parts of the Island. Depending on our Railroad to whip their ‘farm products P. E. extent as our weakened mrliament-q, cannot nor will not pay “ch WW l!!! lea-lee. If the Railroad we may. But oh! "what a hill- back bench position with ouch grace jfl-gnff is ‘there, my cmmtryznonf" stance Nov-a Scotiu received in , Bee‘ , 1923 3511041159 m revenue "om (ilveu them thou in yllll~~ilflfl me“ these Institutions. How much of ltejilicc‘! Rclfilccl ' ,- thlo should My. M81003 deduct -—Rebocca Holman, / ,. , from his $97.231.00 T. B. onllav which he credits to that. province? In New Brunswick they nud a rc- venue o 856.960.!!! from their sanitarlum alone. Our Island's con- tribution is all outlay, and no In- come. Nova South's ‘revenue was $5,511,872.57, while our income was about $700,000. There is never a dearth of ex- cellent suggestlone as to really (le- slrable expenditure of monies by the governments of the day— whether Liberal or Conservative- ‘but always a ‘most lamentable lack of advice as to the means of pro- curing these funds. Last year our revenues ran shout o! expenditure $23,000. From what fund would our mend pfopgga m dmq‘ on for this further outlay? Let me odd that I em ln‘the fullest dmpatrhy with the cause he advoc- ltfl. ‘but I am also sensible of the fiifllflllly 0i the situation, which ‘i-i- -€_ Many a sharp answer la mndg m blunt lnngugg‘. _