PA aroma r011. Gil Notes By 17m Way w» ' i!‘ . .. m’ ‘Q ... ," “- use rru animate: _ . -.' .. . .....-:....-.~.. .. -' v j Ill!!! and laugh‘ llivmlor-J I Irutt. I J l ;. Annalee: Idllol» not Iuibn III D l Parr-in umerablo passengers who have enjoyed ocean travel on the atial old Mauretania will be unused toiearn that has been sent to flowing Daily (founded ll") ll W ll l" It: your PiDENTAL CLINICS The mot of almost all evil in- the human frame is the root of tilt tooth. It has been recognized in medical science and practice that more poison is disseminated through the system from desayed and sup- puratingi tooth roots than from any other source. A recent hospital case demonstrated beyond peradventure that a well-known citizen who 1; passed away from heart-trouble in ‘ reality suffered the evil conseqrmr- I tee of suppurating teeth. Keep your teeth well and you will insure a measure oi’ good health. In pur- ruence of such a policy, the Board ~ a! Health is establishing dental f clinics for schools throughout the Province. In the city. the work is being undertaken, as usual, by th: City Council and citizens generally. The City Council is asked to pro- vide accommodation and equip- ment, and crrtain organizations are. seing asked for contributions to-l wards upkeep. It is recognized nsw- ldayg as part oi civic responsibil- lty to guard the health of the ris- ing generation, prevention being better than curejlt is therefore a legitimate expenditure, which may. or must, be borne until such time Isa Public Health Law and Health Insurance scheme be introduced which will transfer, as in the Old country and the continent, all such expenditures and service to the State. The Dental Clinic is now a public necessity, and as taxpayers we have to foot the bill whether w like it or not. PATRIOT RED HERRINGS Spleen orer the sorry showing of its party members in thg legislative debates, and of the fiasco at the Lenten banquet where Mr. Lea was to have pulled “the Liberal platform and policy" out of his hat but made a complete mess of the performance, is reflected in our coutemporarys editorial columns of the past few; days. Here is an example: “The Speech from the Throne‘. contained the following paragraphz‘ ‘You will be called upon during this ression to consider a number of bills including farm loan legislation: Yet the House prcrogued without even this legislation being introduced." What are the facts? Ari amend- ment to the Chattel Mortgage Act was passed during the session for the specific purpose of simplifying the legislation for the benefit of those participating in the Dominion Farm Loan Act. When this bill was hi committee, Hon. Mr. MaoPhee explained that. further enabling leg- _ lalation was unnecessary because or Q the amendments now introduced by the Bennett Government in Parlia- ment. ' Here is another misstatement: ‘The Provincial Government in the session just closed Pfvved ab" golutely dvfenceloss against the at- tacks of the Opposition with respect 0o the borrowing o! $1,000,000 and a fortnight later $250,000 without calling for tenders." Irr today's issue of The GuBrdlB-II fibula tho full text of Premier Isollllllur’: speech on the Budget, h which this question is fully and convincingly dealt. with. "Another glaring example," says our contemporary, “of bad business 1m the paying of more than 535.000 lo an outside architect for plans for Ialconwood hospital." The Premier, in his Budget speech, dealt with this subject also, and in- cidentally pointed out that the trus- tees of the Prince Edward Island Hospital had to pay in the vicinity . ». of IMDOD in architects‘ fees for con- ‘1 Li, I-ruction of the new hospital. The architect employed was "an outside architect." Wls that mother ex- flmph cl “bad business nrethodl." or h Inolr crrriolsrrr lust. another el- ohple of partisan misrepresentation? cs _ _. ... _.-....,,..V,.,....s.._s;.4....-.__......_ ,. ill advance) hailed the scrapheap. In her day the Mauretania was Quien of the Seas. but. as with everything elm, she has been overtaken by age and ec- , iipsed by still greater and grand- (ll Mull!) (div-d. ll Clllll 3C Ulllkll Ihlfl. '—‘ If!‘ IQI n, a. w. B0001. Mo. FRIDAY, APRIL, B, 1935 i ViBOTOIISIY they are all for economy. tare, and they passed unchallenged by the Oppofltlrm. Nor did Mr. Lea once attempt to show, as our contemporary says, that $250,000 of his overdraft was "a leg- acy” of the first Stewar. Govern- ment. Why? Because he tried to use this argument before, and it was shown that this amount repre- sented but a small part of the $007,- 000 overdraft which the first Stewart Government inherited from the Bell Government, under Mr. Lea's own regime as secretary-treasurer.‘ Our contemporary has another "red herring" in its yesterday issue about the "alarming" expenditures that the hiaclviillan Government is going to incur this election year. The contention of its own party leader in the Legislature was that election years should not be counted, In any event, it. can rest assured that the Lea Governments all-time record of over half a million dollars‘ debt increase in the last eight months of its administration is in no danger of being beaten. EDITORIAL NOTES The first forecast indicates a 30 to 40 per cent increase in the U.S.A. wheat crop compared with the bumper crop of last year; But it is too early to place any definite re- liance on such forecasta. It is enlightening to find the Liberal members in committee of Why-S and means arguing in favor of increased expenditure, while in their Sill-Smashes on the Address or Bud!" they protested loudly and Pccause of the adhesion of Prince Edward Island, Ontario and sas- katehewan, the fund available for loans on farm land has been in. creased from $70,000,000 to $90, 000,000, under the Canadian rim-m Loan Board Bill, now before Par- liament, ready for final approval. er passenger ships. Central United Stole: ls again being ravaged by huge dust storms that threaten to mm millions o! productive acres into a desert. The immediate cause of the storms is the drouth that has afflicted these regions for the past thrfl years. The primary cause was tho break- irig up of the buffalo sod after the world. war when wheat prloes rose to unprecedented heights. Scien- tists say that all of the top soil in that area. was deposited by the winds and it was a desert until nature developed buffalo grass to hold it in place. PEPPEEIHINT REALLY AIDS DIGESTION 9M 0f my early recollections is that of my grandfather and grand- mother eating peppermint lozenges after meals. Despite their strict re- ligious principles they m m; p”. pemilnt lvwiaar on Sundays also. much to my amazement. my mother explained that they thought the lozenges helped their digestion and so they had to eat them Bunda as well as week days. While it has been thought for a great many years that oil of peppermint help- ed the stomach to digest its food, it is only recently that some experi- ments have provent the extant to which this is true. At the meetings of the Jcntnl Society for Clinical Research held in Chicago a few months ago, Dre. II. I. Sapoznik, R. A. Arens, Hein- rich Necheles and Jacob Meyer, Chicago, reported the results of their studies of the effects‘ of oil of peppermint on stomach digestion. By using a barium meal and the X ray it was found that the normal emptying time of the stomach of six normal women was 240 minutes (4 hours). In one patient with a drop- ped or low stomach the cmptying time was 310 minutes. By adding a large dose of pepper- This is a time of year- when a spirit of restlessness takes hold of many of us. We feel a; desire and an urge to break away from our accustomed tasks and occupations. to go wandering in search of change and sights that are new or differ- ent. It is, perhaps, the modern symptoms of the wanderlust to which mankind in past ages was able to give rein in the mass. Wanderlust takes many forms.— Kingston Wing-Standard. You cannot pick in a responsible newspaper published anywhere _in the English speaking world without finding a“ “dim-ml” 5mm 5°“ dc‘ mint oil to the barium milk meal claiming against the German“ pol- me emptying time w” reamed to icy of ‘figardgng tmatmbuakdmm 145 minutes an average decrease of scraps o pa er." 'I'l'iis re own ' in solemn international obligations ghpeslefeggé‘ goggvgotfiinthaoimx; it is gravely feared. may ultimately first fifteen minutes anergthis dose lead to another dance of death in o, pgppemmt on was taken th 1m Europe and chm“ wmplete-“st- vestigators felt that the doseewas Camerines sumdam~ too large and decided to try out Germans make a great howl “gfif” i3:,t:.1a§d'pepper_ when Lithuania. sentences four mint lounges the emptying time Nu“ t" 51° 1°!‘ Pbmntl the Mum was reduced by nearly 40 per cent to Memel ‘w Germany: but it will Olive oil was then mixed with tné be rlmwmbmd “m? f" mm‘ the-n barium meal and the emptying time four were killed without the fcr- was redmed by 1g per cent, choc. ‘nluty °f ma‘ M"! Wnmmel“ ‘he , olate candy reduced the emptying bloodpurge in Germany last year. I1, , time by 13 p9,- ceng - ls quite right for Germany w do‘, These investigators state, “The re- certain things, but something quite suns Qbtamed may 031m- m o,“ differ?!“ when the same thin! 1-5 planatlon of the relief of symptoms d0"? BISBWTIEN-—NIRERTB F0115 RRB- of indigestion following the use of WW" peppermint oil in various stomach and intestinal disorders, and the Th6 British “¢Xl>\0rnl0ry" vxpcdl- feeling of comfort obtained by the tion to Berlin found nothing cn- use of candy peppermints after a. couraging in their interview with heavy meal." Reichsfuehrer Hitler. The demands Thus this habit of our grand- he made were so astounding that parents of eating peppermint candy, the conference was broken off and the candy peppermint sticks and Sir John Simon hastened to Lon- “walking canes" at Christmas time don where an emergency cabinet when so much food is eaten, the meeting was held to consider the practice of hotels and restaurants of situation. Hitler flatly rejected all having a dish of "peppermints" the major Anglo-French plans and availableat the exits of their dining "A new Bank of Canada $25 note, first of that denomination in Cari- adian currency—will be ready for distribution early in the first week of May, bank officials announced t0d8y." (Canadian Press cfcspatoh.) May we be there to participate. Those dosisous of having first hmd KIWI/ledge of tlm working of the Farmers‘ Creditors‘ Arrangement Act will get it by attending the meeting called for Wednesday nlZht, when Mr. M. A. MacPkerson, K11- Superintendent, Ottawa, will be the speaker. Bfielly commenting on the Que- bec power contracts situation, Rev. Dr. James Little, in the course of n. sermon delivered at Wcstmingtgr Central United Church, Toronto, declared that. the question of con- tract repudiation was fundameng. ally an ethical one. The idea that the state was cmnipotent and could do 110 Wm": was the assumption The Governor-Generals last Dc- minion Day in Canada will be made o1 "Herod and Machiavelli," he said. made it plain that Germany- will roomsare all‘ founded 0n scientific not enter the pacts England wants fact. Peppermint aids digestion. and France insists upon. Hitler‘ is hailed as the saviour of the people. "l-Ie has broken the chains of Versailles" they cry ecsta- tatically. But lg, Hilly be that he, too - Strikes lIn Canada Although the death rah cancer is greater today than it was a few years agopthe probabil- ities of cure. ' the "disease ls treated early, are infinitely better ~ and are improving all the time. Twenty years ago ninety per cent.’ of cancers of the s were diagnosed so late that they were inoperable, but a4; the present time diagnosis is made at such an early stage that the number of cases of cancer of the 590111-0011 from eucoeufully __ hi" lnozeased materially ,and the sav- ing of life has been lou- atoly great. This brings up the question of periodic medical exam- which has been repeatedly during recent years. but ken advantage of extent. insurance inotion, advocate‘ has not been ta to a. sufficiently great Then is no health scheme that may be considered complete which does not llwlllde periodic medical examination, Cer- tain of the health insinanoe socie- ties in Germany make provision for periodic health examination Such an examination, if made the hands of a cam-hie Physician. will do much to detect abnormal conditions of the body at an earl? stage‘ and no doubt will help very materially in the prevention of cancer. Periodic health examination has been provided in Canada. by three life insuracne companies. Their object in doing this is to extend the lives of their policy-holders- They realize fully that the exten- sion of the lives of their polio?- holders lncneuses the income their conrpany. Th: executive of- ficers of these cemPlfllN "9 hard-headed business ‘men who are not actuated by altruistic mo- tives, but by good sound business principles. The avrrfl-Be individual should be as much interested in extending his expectation of life as ls the in which he l8 insured. The chief difficulty with most of us is first we take itfor granted that we are not golnl l0 suffer from illness or disability. It is always the other fellow who y; going 1,0 be the victim of disease or disaster. Possibly this istmreasonthatsofewof us think of undergoing medical exam- ination until there is somethifl! radically wrong with us. It 81101110 be obvious to a. man of 45 or l 50 years of age, who has always been healthyhghat any lmawimnmb!“ change in the normal function of his body must have a cause. As soon as the slighest indication of abnormality appears 9. Skilled Dbl’- sician should be consulted at the earliest moment. In this way a disease will be corrected at very onset. with modern methods of diag- nosis, cancer has been bmllkht lbw the orbit o1 preventive medicine. Everywhere public health officials are directing attention to the ad- visability oi early diagnosis of any abnormality of tire body- 1110s B excellent ldfvioe and is wovlns to be an important actor in the re- duction of cancer. In Canada the King George V Silver Jubilee Cancer Fund will help to provide funds for research In 1934 was close prcwed that the econo- mic salvation he promised Germany t te i l's'i . - . . . . fir; a§§..t.<$ar.§$ 11.3%.. cgrmiilgrtis rgafilrgtlll ooirgixtgsnslocfin b’ til m‘ abroacei grgn lgledfialyralvfilethatiillfrtgtlvffiss. outs and stattstlcs “finished 3h°w I-Iitlcr may have good reasons for so mm’ me m” 1°“ w“ m“ 57ml" dramaticanv revealing his humt est since 1925. Industries chiefly Whatever the reason. there can be wnoemed were mums’ mining no doubt of this: Europe can no m“ °1°“““3 mPmW-“flw- but 10mm, mete“ Peace cannot be there was also considerable losses made merely by shouting it. We m ‘urlmm manmmtwm and must begin again to build-this "°°"‘“°“““B' “"4 “Wm 1" '°°°l time with more certainty, for we and Sh“ manuhmunnl The" know pnetty plainly where we stand. were ‘our strikes of cwthmg wmk’ —London Sundav Referee. e" m Tmnm ‘Nee m Ilmntreal- ‘ and one in Winnipeg, which ac- counted for about one-ti. '. or the time loss. Many work days were lost because of a strike of loggers on Vancouver Island and of pulp- wood cutters in Northern Ontario. Al. Stellarton, N. 5., and Cumber- land, B. C. there were coal min- Offlclal reports show that Chl- cago police have killed 11 armed bandits so far this year. That is in line with the fighting tradition of Chicago's blue-coats. Even more interesting, however. is the fact, that in addition to the armed out- laws slain by the police, five have been killed by private citizens in self-defence. went out at Flin Flon. Man. Most of these disputes arose from de- mands for increased wages, in some Italian feelings have been aroused by reports that Germany had offcred army and air expert-s to Abwssinia. The offer is said to have been made on March l9 when lost until the factions were the The Labor Gazette has been rc-' crs‘ strikes, while metal workers and cases also for union recognition. In one instance rival unions were fighting each other and time was ivasted and wages Dr. Kirsch-SZm-ens. the new Ger- man minister. arrived in Addis Ababa. The offer cannot fail to be a serious affront to Italy, os- pecially since the German rniniste" in presenting his credentials, m:- presscd Germany's Abyssinia. “in her struggle against foreign domination." memorable by the fact that on that day he will be sued in Dublin for $75000. Justice Sullivan in the High Court of Dublin has given counsel for Loni Bessborough an extension of time in the matter of lodging a petition against rcviniie authorities who seek to collect £15,- 000 in respect of bonuses paid to the late Earl of Bessborough under the Land Act of 1903. Justice Sul- livan extended the time to July l and adjourned the question of judg- ing the duty, on giving security of its payment. to June 21. Arms are of themselves a oently proposed twenty Expenditure for schools, colleges 8nd universities in Canada dropped from the peak of $178,700,000 in 193i to $163,945,000 in 1032. The Bore is another effort in ire-called Hirer-cl criticism: ‘"1110 member: of the government QYIMEI“ my wlti out of offictln 1 p; fly the fltewirt Government." L111; "actual amour" 01mm, our ,0! thin . , I i aw Wlwuuritcuiy emit ‘p. all at m with Nlltd to the‘ fall corrtin ’ in i984. Though its loft by the 1400111: when exact extent, is not yet fll- Qllelevsiisble data indicate that y”; grsouooc. "another 01,110,000. gm go on. The actual amount was 01,011,000, of ivhich more rhea 0M.- Ooiisdtrua 1m. isthmus!“- ofitbo ‘ovum-n: m 01041110481001! "- qua interest ‘rndfuopeio bills c! piurtiri 1M “Mew-v cinkhlgfund 1mm»: I For icllvairwrmtinr t9 lbwt Oil-W- ‘ ‘he ‘locniervrnvu are riro to m- ‘de 010.000 tor-Mm fl, WW?“ and infill hi. ll "m" COHGIPOIldIDI figures for the school “mm” mm‘ ‘year ending in 1088 show a still igreeter drop, to $140,902,000. The Herald. known, \ the‘ total for i904 was probably not above $l30,000,000.' Up to i908 the percentage drop was much greater in Ontario and the Western Prov- inces than in quebecbnd the Marl- tioiel. capital expenditures have geaerllly been brought to l. very low level. Ind teacher!’ salaries. in tbp provinces for which, lim roe- crdr have been ‘received, show e three-year decrease of about one- third. Redrictlonsvbevechoen much more more ln rural schools than ‘towns and cltinaA rhcrlaga c! our hi; ltd some Utllllliiltlen so shorten tbq-reaeiringqlbriirttfllrtei but very few 1805 and in British some thirty years earlier, persists in of lest your use Arabia and Abrsslnia. already fauna ..A commikrc lttion to insure genuine ‘ proposes the ‘f BE tllllfi. countries-able, sympathy for provocation to war: springing from mistrust, fear jealously and hatred they are at the same time a result "3' of belligerent desires. Tire most rc- years of armed trim: would be no guarantee of peace. Such a. truce would be a poor, perhaps a fetal second best alternative to a collective eifeort at disarmament. 'I‘he hope. if hope remain, still lies in an active effort at multilateral reduction of armed forces. The passive method may Postpone war, but it will make its devastating when eventually it occurs.-—Hamiltion Although slavery Wu finally aimilshod in the United States in ill D90 that the Rude still i0 flourishing ill Inning the uosslbllilv ofarrothof h Iumpeen war. the United States l0 brought to see the folly of dispute. It is gratifying to note, says the acre caused by wage fore disputes arose, that onlv one strike worlse cnly on dny was lost. involved men engaged in boats, chiefly pulpwood and tim Last July 4.00) workers were out in Montreal f0 two weeks, and the the came number strikesinthecitiestherewu whole whatever the heat of battle with the settlement of and worxhic returned to normal. smoothing to he thlrkful Montreal Gazette, that only ten of the 191 di=putcs during the year reductions or attempts to make cuts. On the other hand, wages were appreci- ably increased in some trades be- ao a settle- ment was reached with little dif- ficulty. It is interesting to note occurred in iculture. the strikers being hop rs in British Columbia, and In con- striction there were very few dis- putes and none involving many workers for prolonged periods. In the field oi’ transportation and public utilities the only disputes loading ber, demands for increased wages being the cause. Clothing factories were involved in forty disputes, in which 18,000 workers were affect- ed with 000,000 darn‘ tune ion. men's clothing ........ month sow two d vo n: k 1x11“, women's clothing factories, about the world. At the close ofthonlrroleonth century i; was believed, by some cmtirnistc that slave-trading by the Arflrshadbeoiiwlvod oubyeta report made by the Anti-Silver! and Aborigines Protection Society ma: woflrore being affected. In some of the measure of disturbance at than. incidents In urrrsoiwu-tobelllgorlllt iyiagtbccmliotoull in this country. Portuguese Financing When General Antonio Carmona assumed his dictatorship over Portugal in 1928 public finances were in a state barely short catastrophic. Dr. Antonio De Olivel- ra Salaizar‘, professor of economics in the University of Ooimbrc. was summoned to the aid of General Cannons. and became. in ellwt Portugal's one-man brain tfllbli- He accepted the appointments on con- dition that the fullest 90W" be ven to him, both to supervise ex- penditures and to veto appropria- tions. . The professor oi’ economics im- mediately set about balancing the national budget by reduciM 6X" penditures and increasing revenue. He accomplished" the latter DY taking steps to assure collection of existing taxes rather than by levy- ing new taxes. As a result thew was a surplus in the 1028-29 budget and in each of the past six years the revenue has exceeded expenditures At, the same time Dr. Salazar has reduced the floating debt steadily. has encouraged thrift arnom the people or Portugal and has cen- tralived the industrial and ag-‘lclll- turai credit agencies of the nation- Thougli a write-r in the London Tim-rs describes Dr. Salazar. now both Prcmfcr and Minister of Pi- name, as the most remarkable fi- nance minister of the day, he ad- mits that the picture is al- together sunny. No more than am‘ o‘h~r mm lws P0411014 bee“ 6X- Man, whose young passion lots the 0N GROWING OLD Be with mo, Beauty, for the flro is 6311182 My dog and I are old, too old for roving. spindrift fLying, Is soon tco lame to march, too cold for loving. 1 take the mu andlgathcr to the . Turning old yellow lelves; minute by minute The clock ticks to my heart; s, with. ered wire Moves a thin ghost of music in the spinet. I can not sail your seas. I can not wander Your corn land, nor your hill land, nor your valleys , Ever again, nor share the battle yonder, Where the young knight the broken squadron rallies, Only stay quiet while my mind re- Summer of man its sunlight and its ower, Springtime of man all April in a face. Only, as in the jostling in the Strap Where the mob thrusts or loiters or is loud The beggar with the saucer in his . Asks only a penny from the passing crowd. 8o, from this glittering world with dom and passion, Bread of the soul, rain where the summers porch: Give me but these, andrthough the darkness c Even the night will blossom u the rose. —J0h.n Masefleld. FISHING POOR IN HOLY LAND JERUSALEli/k-Palestine has sev- cral clubs who hunt to hounds. Imglish fflshlon, with jackals and foxes as the game, but there are no rivers for the Nd and reel en- ‘ENERGY-y F .~. A product o] The CANADA STARCH CO" Limited REBOUID DOG FROM SIWDR EABTBQIJRNE. lmlllhd-(Jmwl- 1118 40 feet through u branch sewer with light of an electric torch, a Dolicemen rescued a terrier llliptlg. oned in a. rainwater culvert. BUILDING MANY SHIPS GLASGOW — Eighty mercliim ships and 21 Admiralty vessels are on order in British shipyards, 52 per cent of the work wing done is shipyards on the Clyde. oasocruiurnriiir rorcaamrn panama bwfirno BOOM LONDON—O0ILStfll0tl0n of 2.330.- membera 000 dwellings in England and wales are being made in the product on The beauty of fire from the beauty since the war will be reported to of gasoline at a cnst of four emits " of embers. the 14th Inte lotions! Housing and a gallon from torbanitc, a mineral Beauty. have Pity, for the stronG numb!‘ OWBNI hem l! 691108“ 0f W! 10°51"?- have power, " The rich their wealth. the beauti- "-—"--—*—"rrr~ ful their grace, Mr. Tea Pot says: Use ‘Best Quality TEA BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE ll 8-11 it! fashion, Ebflrmg TEA m nummhplay °t mm’ i" ‘m- m Bold only in red airtight pkgl. let me have wisdom. “ ‘7, wis- JoHANNEsn-urco _ Expand‘ Tits ll. K. 3. llilltllllfi, B-A-_.C-P-A-C-G$ QITIIID YUDIJO ACCOUNTANT MIJIIII OI‘ CANADIAN SOCIETY 0F 008T AOCOUNTAII.‘ OOMHIISIONIB IOI TAKING AITDAVII! m III SUPIIII OOUWI.‘ OI I. I. L P. l l. IEPIISINTATIVI thusiast. MANY KIN S 0F SLIPPERS NORTHAMPTON, England-Two hundred varieties of slippers arc being made in a new factory her: largely for the American trade. i i pioyed at a low level, but tho Times writer says that the increase in t-hv long-term debt is the weakest poin. inthe reoorvsl of amanwhoha; done wonders with his country's troubled finances. Considering the State of finances when he took over his 30b. the Port/ugesa Finance Minister may well be compl it over his success in maintaining a balanced budget. PIMPLES |NAR '5 il-INIEIiT t. N. D. MacLean UNDBRTAKEB E MIBALMEB Charlottetown llfll North Wlltlhim Phone Ill cmpt frcm the effects of the world- v-irle cleprcssioir. ‘The floating debt has decreased to the vanishing point, but the loni-V-‘flfi mum“ debt has increased at almost the same rate. The increase in the lone- term debt is the result or the Public works devised W to the workless. m; the port of worker-s "r well as employers. . m the present industrial cl"- strikes cumatances forerindb ti’! den rmnt the bet ppuent that recognized. l‘ \_ minus“ fol‘, have pm; the number of unem- and ‘lockogilt: mm than usually undeerm . u‘ dispute may effect . The more employ- ter for all. and it ll this truth is widely Macs‘ BLOOD FOOD FOB PALE AND THIN PEOPLE u: CANADIAN carmrr rmrs new: ASSOCIATION. Inn-nu. lam: or nova acorn nurrsnio orimuornrowrr, r. I. r. x Acecmtlngqrtenreopenodlollilmbl Labor-lovlngofliosmotlrodllnlhllol. . ocrrmmmuruuuunrrooyalmchmnil llnrrtlrlyJur-tcrlyenrlannlolllllli- Bulnrrceulreohllldhoiltudlnll uoonhrvllllvl i liroorrreTaxretur-rrswrlttealplrrdlllol- ' ‘ Iururcrurnmrououunrrdn between dobtceanl- creditor-l. United Llabllll! Ocrrrilhlol mum“- c. o. nox as mammal rave. __._' E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness‘ and Plate ‘Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St, Charlottetown ongol the greatest remod- les is the trcetrrrerrtvof Biron- raotinn. . alpeolllfy. .7700 TwoMacal mcxrv i NICHOLSQN. CNARLOTTITOWN P-H‘ TOBACCO CO. LT D.