' 14th, 1921, to Mr and firs. Ivlaurice , Ian.) i‘ Letter of Sympathy “.".“"""‘» , f’ r‘ *“§...<»'.-.'r-I*Pm-._-..- o? i?‘ I 9-» 1.0%» ~ Ana"... --.\~..w-;-;-4ru%'III,fl1-~ BIRTHS WALSH-At Summerviile on Feb. Walsh a. daughter. (Margaret Idli- ---—-=o-o@——-—--- m Mimoumm in loving memory of our dear blather, ‘Mrs. Bsxnuel M. MacWil- liam, who departed this lite Feb- 25th, 1991. ln memory ever nenrp sue i5 gene ‘but not forever There's to be a glorious dawn when we shall meet cur . mother 0n that great Millennial znorn INSIZIKTEZD BY FAD-ELY. The following latter or sympathy has been received by Mr. Samuel Drake and family cf Cornwall:- Dear Mrs. Drake and familyw- The Trustee Board of the Cornwall Ghuron at its recent annual ect- (ilola nvk Been Saved ' also five weeks suflsring and less o! wages if Mr. C. Oakley cl‘ Sukatoon, Sask, had at lam-Bub when he first happened 4: cut leg. However, e:- perienee of Zam-Buks amazing healing power has “ccened ‘ms eyes.” You cut m, n6 - ,. - . _ galley. -~ , wed up the -.. an and altenclt-c m we wgekl. All the while I was of: A! ihe lid Of i! l was advised (a. go to hospital. "After I paid over $49 1O lb= ’ I determined no fr; lLJkE-L. lug unanimously sgrseg that a et- ‘ T tad of condolence should be sen’- zn you. The Board felt that in the pass- lng of Brother Drake you had sus- rsinod n great loss. He was n devvt Pd husband and a loving father, vaxunwptitying in his character the Uhrildan virtues of svdllneefi- kind linens and bones; integrity. Moreover, we feel inst > zlmroh has rr-tisinioc-I.‘ r. serrera l. 1 Drnltc iovwl ‘nor courts p, and All the‘ Instr-roo- lg. lie ' elp in our ‘W!’ ’ nollll-r . r. or his mfinfi‘, Fulflbnrmr-rr» zmnmuniiz ‘r ranernu llcnrw v.0 lflni lFis void" r-ni Inserl for l I vl-JDOUQI" a forty-d ar ire; .- lshall never b». ailzsepvmc. . » FBI-ll w nos! reliable remedy; 5e: e" ' - * assoc-as vucnds, scalp at.‘ " ‘ .\' s_ ace-Ids and a s. cmiggists. lF. arl-Buk Co. T016220, 1c. slim? MURAL "" Rwerfie l-TAJ. I5EHVI§J "O PASIFIF. (Ii-Mill .ed the thick do ‘modest house we had planned. w‘ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Spegker Duffy g 0n Canadian Nationality s NEW ACQUAINTANCE lflQaeckfrggzunnm 81.1"‘? s" the Speech on this Subject which Illa! Paper lilvencly Griiicizml. nu Wflli-AN u: muuu i! JAN]! PHIL?! Chapter 0a we h“ gradually formed a few, acquaintances, Among them was, a woman who" had u. bungalow 11981‘ "'“"' ' 11,-; Qascin/ating, temperamental The Examiner YBBl-efilfly Dub‘ sort. of creature, who attracted llslled lite full text oi’ the speech and rgpeiled me a; me “ma, “mo, delivered by Hon. C. Gavin puffy at She N,” gggemyak; plonde, tall Ottawn recently, and which has and willow a daintv creature at been the Fllhievt 0f 65500551011 l! with someway“: qlrnoét Crud, ;, its- columns ‘I'm: spwcli is as foi- ‘l in ' "na- axe. " - g m r' ' Q r. Cbairmnn, ladies and gentle- ,;,-,| Wm, hmi- 5!) golden, incur-The flint that wo are as- lsne was an eccwlm dFP-E-“YF- snmbleri here m-nlgnt to do- yst her gowns seemed snnlewn; to ' and t muev ter we m9! her oi‘ my drapery shun. ° 5 W“ ° ~ l’ " and she persuaded me tn do her land. 13BX18! IIOITIB l0 l-lfi Val‘? l0!‘- rninzalo“ Y” h". 1 was fl‘-i‘?ill3Z-"cibly' the m: that there exists in fiydnfjeygyfgaggj~wlggfgg“y;3;; m» old land a condition that la = l: ' - . - had nut been m“, to build the claiming the attention of the whole civilized world and which makes us doubt whether evau the great ‘"1"! thin-l‘ m“ "Pn-“n 7937*" conflict through which we have ' - I : I ~ ,. I _ ‘£53 .»".:::-:.'1'*% or. p-i-qg n; l» inn- ~- ; .p. hops I1 pIFPEPIIGE-KI zntcr- “l” ‘m9 °~ 6111mm“- ' ltnow that the discussion of She vrrwtc queer fantastic tfllefi. '5 ies ‘ l Ififi“? 2Z5‘ on the proper food. For sure guccess try male/n? BRAND Condensed Milk tbn preparations being made in Boston to commemolntc their landing. We are cordially invlLecl to gn lo Boston and help iu the celebration and incidentall? W spend some of our good Canadian money there at the rate of eighty cents on the dollar. Now I bnvo no qvnrrni with vbose people in nud around Boston vrlio wont in go info this eolnbrntiou. They are iziouxlitr that we ‘oc- I . 31w noon col the Irish question is OIIF that must‘ 03'2"‘ “mfiw f""‘:r_“[§d be approached with n great deal. m ‘Wm ‘c! 5pm?" ‘o oi‘ cm-e in these trnubloun times. l’. in a long tlnm nmv since Ire»! land's immortal bard (Thomas nlocre) wrote of her that "it was ‘ aroasou to lnvc her and death to , rleicnll." Conditions after the - louse of‘ morn than o. hundred yvurw are qery iltiilo bcttor to- Z‘ rlny in spite of our boasted civili- welcorne to do no nod they are nc- customcd to make "much 2.110 about nothing." but when they in- virr- u: to IIIIU‘ part fn this F-"I" bmtion I feel justlflcd in asking tho reason why. I can see no good mo... wby tho landing of the Pil- grim.- nbnulzi b0 tho cubic-ct of any ccuigraruloilonn. Euglonrl stuns the celebration and with good reason, for they loft her tahorlw; never to return. Holland follow-n wuu-y that a not gunned b! the Iris ." ‘ Johnathan P. Doiiivar once P!" a noble tribute to the soul of Inland who had shown abfliI7| that marked _th'em as- leading ii!- urec in their adopted country by merely doing that which in - ‘Ire land was rank treason. He all-Yar- "The struggle of that popular as» pirntion against tho imilllwflble barriers of English preiudlw 115B made Ireland the arena of a cou- troversey that has enlistod U16 gnnd will oi’ mankind. Timt cnu~ traversey has produced statesmen equipped with all the weapons 0! intellectual strife; orator; whose IpPffPCI art of speech has command- ‘ci ztlikr tho applause of Imu oi’ scuutezi multitudes : oi‘ music ruin for Kreml- pmrs whom syllables liltvc iulien like the gentle ’ from Hoavbu upon all hearts; P11- trloci» upon the robes oi’ Whose ‘ ;c virtue not avou bhn dunner!!! and tho. gguflfi"! have loft a utrilu. She has given advocates to tho American bur who have fllleii 0W‘ highest‘ Courts with the treasures of prolesaiOnnl looming. SM hi8 contributed the scattered children oi her national aenlua to enrich our national literature. Sim ban Rout among us the ministers of hat mm peoph were ready to seem . it (hill llld I0!“ IIIYO IIGQII Ill-D l“ 110d. Ireland was not dislwal l! J l," Iii w the out-break o! one war and n: n i Ill pupal-in to do her pm faithful]! HWIIEI“ and loyaily. An! "film" m“ arose during the war was provok- ed by ihn stupidity of than» in charge of the war oilico. Then Wilson littered his famous self-da- gm-mimiilou dmwme tor nmnll na- tions. Ireland felt that she was ugsiu being tricked and betrayed In regard to home rule, and PM! '0 the other extreme of demanding nolfdetermination and absolute .in- dr-poudence. Any roncesuior: made to Ireland in rbe past hits always. been, fol- lnwnd by thn utmost 80°11 W!“ 011 ml, Dam ny .110 people oi‘ lmlaud 4 , tounrds l-tulxlnud. Any hostility‘ chat has ovoi- striated ha". been caused by the stupidity oi‘ EngIl-nh Statesman in dealing with Ireland. It in the name stupidity that loot to England her North Aruorlcnn Colonies and almost lost ha!‘ Oll- uoda. on well. Had it not been for this stupidity the Union Jack would be Ilyini; W411!’ 9P0!!! “BY-I'm to tho North Polo, and hero would be :1 nation within the Empire o! which England might well be proud. I have perfectly good authority, i iii ID mm; to spread tho truth of the|il<w using this strong language. An gonpel and exemplify the lofty Dre- cnpts of her holy roliyrlon. She has kept. watch through her tours. while from tho plundcmd liovcln of her unuatuml poverty tbo l MWIY znfllions of bor people bcvo not out to iinri in a land of srtrnngr-rs the fair and equal chance that izl dc- nlori tholu in tbc land in which the)‘ wore Loin." ‘in’; rvcli known examples will Illngliah 10rd (Houghtou) nddrelscq 0d an American audience in very nirnilnr words when anointing mt the cc-iobration of the Anniversary of American Indeponiloncc. Ila said:—- v 7 “Celebrating your independent-o you call it. A very noble act at a vory uoblo time. '70“? "PM may seek to justify it has in iaer [IIOD was fully instilled by tho fol- 1 hm; [ho affect of rallylnl; the Irish ly and the ozupidrity and the ignor- fig m8 world against this couutn coco oi" England." t Apparently we ' and daily fldfuflg to their animosi- ure not Lbo only pooplo who today ' t! we should i,“ false to b,“ orn tailing nu interest in tho uiina- I “us; M,‘ we no; proclaim our pm mi" 11‘ "flmd- The "londnnzffiillrl anxiety over a ' sltumm TimelW-that lzreztt organ of pub- whmy only wilful blindness gm zrninn, our free institutions and izgipnsr-d freedom oi‘ speech. We are fold (but Iriehmen and their _ ’ dr-qreluinuta rlro loo fond of refer- , rim? m liar past history and weap- ' inf-f over her dead aches. Yet for in CfllOhfiiYllJfl the frlct that they ctayvd. tum-n only twelve icon; and icirilltvltb nailed away. ‘Thus far logic and reason arc both on Ilx- nbiu m’ tho celebration. Illzt eon-o fzirvfier {-1 iJl-ictrnt-r- niiis: mint-Gavan lvuffi M14 31'1"“ 106cc. Duffy ngiiats-l Mr n. re- mmrrl cl‘ lrr-inods agrarian troublcu by illovdng the tenants to ball’ 011i (fliers Frnv 1. Hal-Ir: '-ri\'$!fl§3Q=‘-i ‘f. . all": ,<1l;:lh'.l1g 1 1m hm pen. ,At tin. they would new TnlkF. . [Pfllfiflq l worn ‘Jul orient-r wr-rll illmi! i)? --- .. lnzllcn potlua c I r iui-nta! 3f gjqgyyp F‘? ilje "‘i-uli1:21.\-‘- minding yet he =r-e Sim» "lees-r ~11 I FEE:- V I Nan and Dick. ‘i ' Iovelj‘. '. n". n2 p IiflSiit Slag CA$TQRIA ‘ ' Kc: Infants and Children IN 96E FOR [IVER 3U YEARS Always be t 1p , ' ".. no.2... fiélinw- aim‘; Hill! M-wusi 1l-'1"‘l!: .1 in III! u-i-‘zlvlil- u ,1 Spatial price»; ~l IFYIHM- mums vnrekouao DQBLOIE BROS“ LTD. ..___z... .»_.._ _ “_'>-.-_ T. I Steam Sawliiill im ial i Big Auction Sale .:"" mil- siocl: at '1‘. P. Cull> ‘our. (Jenrral Royalty on March 1st ; '1‘. 1.20 P. W Consisting "(HVIII/‘DPTILY pirryili-lr. Piorses under 8 ' . , ' driving horm- .1 years old. 2 ' l‘ I.\ "- him rind Gunme- ..I1Ii calhlillolritcdu n‘ IGrrt-ic) i l'urivbrnri , ii fl mouths, old; l i Pllff-IIFTII Iiolwiein hull 9 months; I IHIII J months l Guerns- i yeai- mid; 2 Grade .- cr-Ivfl 6 months‘ ‘i fnil , 3 h’ . m, 1' uual» 1y n! semi (I315, wn oi, wnrl timothy nee/i. 'I"crm;l Pt "clr 'I‘ s"tol'niy' culc next do)‘. PETE-R BRODIE iuctionem- ,.. ‘_' 1', i-iorb-aaw, n. w I M. n p. Imibrr uni ongini. runnlnc order t t.‘ . i=3 mpiyyirz" Imilr. inlet vummol‘ of ‘tzmrl, This pro --i' mile-a front church _ _ I‘ ~ q-Om predep; Bilflrlll/ifl; um». t M? l - orb‘ _ Wfififi r1317“. 1 . "iv-w \‘L’IlI.Fhl~-- .1 It. I’. It. I (‘his m1)! Is w; R Winn My, ;l/~'l"'1 _; lllfllf! BIG {ILEARANIE AIIIETION SALE ' AT IIARLINGTON (In Ihursdaye, March 3rd. it I O'clock Sharp l am insmzcvrd by f». i1. (I-z-{jlhell w» .~ I, . r linlton all his stock, rrnp and implclnmt . .111 young. Ono pure bred cow 3 ycwm L’-l'1ll."UI J ‘mil 2 years, Shelters 1% Tea." . Crop-IO tons of hay. 6 i lot of mixed feed. 400 hllah-ALN . turnips. 5 bushels or timothy seed. imr plate. (In-Us) .‘. set of fsnners nearly no nadir, 1 dice hanow (Frost and ‘-I'rod‘ cultivator. 1 gang plow. 1 . ‘ rolllr. I potato digger nr-“r . = ..-z " lhlfll. 2 good carts and r.’ wee 1'. w n01‘. c.‘ t». . on; warn, (new) 1 box Qlaigih, 1 set of team liR-FLVIFI, (new ' l in‘; l: not; n: Fllliflr und bamn. 2 m: of cart harness. 4 was of 10:‘ he: tmrm. sea o1 driving humans. Lot or houndlmld effect together - Hivms, linen and lot] 9f uncle; {no munermie t0 mention a nos . o, no rmmve us turn: in sold. "if etanny u» lint fins .i-.\.;. we st-mas yosliroly on flint T-< - i112 ill-é bu“; with hm" l: . each miner's worn 1M him. YUHIIIIIS of 4] "‘-- nearly two duyu loot uuaek in T0- ' roulo we were regaicd with the :i.m‘y oi‘ the Pilgrim Fathers and ‘Not u lbouglu. of on”. intimacy entered .n; doubt of Dick's loin‘. known more people, one often I might have h i. But it seemed 1o m» on!“ iIlaI. they should inlv i_ [I'M ', "certain tempers. l was worried for fear ‘he was ovcrdolug, so l Um ed to urge them m utnp tltllziur. shop and get out in the open lDick never failed to ask me 1o accompany them, u-aa even more Lflflg m,- [W17 m.,,-,n,. m (lmnmwi scrupulously.‘ careful to defer to U16 iymgnimt- p, pm, gm, 1.11.1 me. But I would laugh and toll and Dick were cnnslarlllv low-i ,_ them I had‘ work in d0. taught Juniqr w, ' "You two scribblers run M01; ;unt__.-,_-,;,; 3p tier rs and ma/ke up stories, while you ' * Juanita, and beiore 13x1; the air," I often said, and t 331165] h" so,‘ and 53¢ . would go away together, pFflllljli to be gone for hours. ‘But vwhen they returned they 1n- varlalbly told Ina where they had been, talking of their time toge- ther so naturally, taking my inter- est so fm- granted. that I nevor had the slightest suspicion that I was , putting temlpation in Dick's ‘way that he was becoming too fond m‘ Juanita. for mg; happiness‘ Yet Dlel»; up: only htlmzln. Juanita. 1~ Pf, w-rr IHTPIjf, very clnatlng li-I on a personal basic, It look me nearly m‘. m; rzg-si» “sometimes when she wouiri c ever after dinner IYl some tr.‘ gown ‘that made he? e ‘ "Wu?" feel rather . place In _'i'fl8D the [bad once c‘. rue < A nd ob" tninzs S0 1 would dismiss fill ‘Mil-Elli? of the sort, and not um- No how admiringw Dick iool-rml 1t her. I must boy's been hliuzhbiinrl {if-LI stupid. Yet I never noted thing in ller acmlons, or in Dir. cause me to fem- sbe was been: _ lanything more than a wrllcr- lr-nu ‘ dNVrltller did l rnnllzc cause I id not know an . , - -. . nbmlt. it, lib-w pnnplc who do ilhll. " . t w, , H”éjlLiirebbdiTwgYififif people of tcnlpernmoni, csp0'~ia.._v ,1, .h‘,'h" ..‘ .' My m T l, nrtieta illlil wrlmra, are srwevfld Y~v “H” E m.“ “"00" % “ Hen’ m’- Lhair emmmm - - ion or utis-z-ri good», any now, rich, .l)iclt's illness nuri the long unlf- fadeloqs (‘mor- Buy m) other dya- ulde of the desert had iiovolupcri all the lntcnl. tclnpcrcnil-zlv. lu him. .\'r-\v vrith Plcr -by Ills side. with her queer far-fetched notinnsmor almost unmornl views of life, nf tile relations of men and women, be was at. times liurll to under slnud—monlly nue day, bright and lull of energy and enthusiasm". nho IYUXI. I 11ml no iziou that this cimllge iu him was due to Juzmitzum‘ that rile ,hurl anything to do w un- TomorrowwJuanita Plans to Give a. Irllouse-Vvarmlng. Woolen Do Wonders. With Ililmond Dyes of "Di-almond ...._...._<q¢--..._._. fv§aQOQ+wcov§o00O\§4¢~ <- f § Hints Ior the Mmorisi§ t m‘ UJWLIII 1. IIJIFIHI v9 00m»: +M+HOJQJEORIQH PISTON RING SUGGESTIONS ' . ' ‘ " ‘Expert Fitting Is The Principal i‘ ' Jfiwtor in buccevssrul Installation IF SERIOUS GAS OR OIL LEAK GE unquestionably OCUIIIE; 175,35 __ Ibo [JlfiIGIlBw-ilfld then only-new _~w- rings and possibly" pistpnn on» ro- I- quired Ilcre are u low thoughts in Iin this connection: Do not expect ‘very gratifying; results from new rings. instnllod in badly ovallzed or ocored cylinders, for pistons can {cpl-rate well only in true, smooth cylinders bored out_ Better “take the bull by the horns" and have wornout cyliners bored out. Do not iii. now rings to pistons that are undernize for their bores (or thcy are not likr-li; to bo tight and "plat on slap" is imsp sure to develop. Fit new pistons with the miniuul r-ufo clearance. Remember, above all things, that correct fitting of tlm rings is more vital than the kin-i of ring used Good ordinary rings cxpcrtiy fitted give better ra- Bulls than fancy riu-gs installed in v-!A Travel by sleigh in dear winter weather in an cnhiluaiirq piuure-but in fraught with the danyer oi colds, henna- new, end bronchial troublen. ‘Those who must d pend on this method oi Laval lhould always keep at hand I bottle oi HAWKEWS Tolu Ind fillers-y BALSAM which In a quick, sure, and reliable remedy for all sud! affections. Gerhard Huinizmln. the pin» Inna lasiurql‘, M T oronlo, says;- "l ‘k an e inurncy in the Mullins Prov on I ccninand a severe cold 1* a hnmuinl eouh. A and u ‘ed llll I0 secure l H0 an or’: Tola and Ch: Ballam ado loved the nnld evgllappod 60h sleaze." Bqra He. or 50c. bnllls of any (m; or cnval ilm, and 6c prnpard all "m! " iroullu. a slovenly manner. I70 not expcct rings or complicated construction to act as well, when gumzrmd with carboized oil, as they appear to do when demonstrated by the solos- rnan. Remember that tbs maker of of your engine probably cared en- ouzb for his reputation in use the meet kind of piston ring that he could mbialxr In selecting a make of ring. do not consider too rmucb tho lciurl o! joint, it ban Oil will seal any lrind of o joint if titling is ouch that jhn cm]; roino clone eunuch together. Put the stress rather on ‘ho dollowin: points Ave the nines vou are gain: to me m" proper width to fli. their grooves. rin Ihev take a. perfectly circular Q loathe ‘I all eurns oi 810.00 6 per cent per 25:13‘ an for rub. l. A. MQDONALD. Auctioneer .._. .-_.... .>._r. The Canadian DrugCm, Limited form when in their bores and- do ivby flouton should celebrate their arrhal and permanent settlement I our unable to understand, unless it is fin account of the increased commercial advantage arising _to 1hr». vendors of antiques from tho m!“ of thn over-increasing si-t-rl. m‘ inrulluro brought over by them 5.1 lilo little “.\layflower." Loav- ing Europe on account of religious intoivrance they themselves were ~11.» 11nd, (“Ir this ho we.’ till‘ Iuto prism. lie was acquitted on n. technical queetlou——none other might avail. lie wen-i out to Atlstraiia and found n. cnndiiinn very similar to vrbai bc. loft in Ireland. the que Ir»: I'll. unmo cnnlfod him m. once to enter into too struggle and. yroprw: .1. remcdy-Jbo name rim’ hc bad proposed for 17°11'13- , . intolerant of every n-wsons’ opinion but their They remind one of the "u; p Vi" whom Burns immortalized. II Q4, their shores that the Pilgrim Fa- ‘ there were unable to prevent that. Country from becoming the izrnt, prosperous and progressive oration that it. 15 £01116?‘ v The same narrow intolerant spir- it that characterized the Puritans is abroad to-day in our own land ‘and prevents a fair and impartial ‘discussion of the Irish question. Nor is. this confined to the din-cus- slrm oi’ lb:- Irish question alone. Our lenders ill political and cou- r-tltiztionol thought assert that Ca- uruin has attained the full status of a notion and {he nations 0i‘ the world have recognized hor ponitiou by admitting her into the League. Yet in discussing our new-found place and its natural sequence- nbsoluto oovereignity in our inter- nal and external affairs-we find certain loyal hypocrites who hold up their hands and cry "treason." This spirit prevents tho full lla- rclopmeut of‘ our notional spirit and national pride without which no real progress can be made to- wards national development. It bus been Fflld that Irishman weep too much ovcr the sorrows of the past. Sorrow for the dead, we are told, is the only sorrow from which wo refuse to be divorced. So Ireland refuses to Ionve the grave of all her burlod hopes and national aspirotiono and she stands weeping beside the graves of her slaughtered heroes and patriots. If it is true that “all things hap- pen together for good" it requires niroug imagination to see the bene- fit to arise from the present con- ditlou of murder and wanton doa- tructiot: of property that is uow inking plnco in lrclood. Yo: “the way of the Ilialacr It: dark, Li iu hirl by the vcll." in the post. bowovcr, we can sec that umnc good has come of provious war-c- cutions. Tho Irish in their struggle for national freedom have applied themselves studiously to the study of constitutional Government, and when they were driven out oi Ire- land they were able to bring with them to the land of their adoption s knowledge of constitutional prin- ciples which placed them in the foremost positions as and statesmen. And yet we are tolrl that Irishman are not able to govern themselves. fitted lo assist. in the government oi’ others. Horace Porter expres- lwe this in very terse words. I-Io sr-Ys: “I have travelled in your country and all around s good deal and I have come to the conclusion II‘. JOHN. N. I. 3.4 their and; have the minimum sate clearancei’ _ _ . - .» .:_ v . Ie-l splendidly, oithls great work he ‘Fran kni-jfiilfe-‘l "have created a very living Irish joy the same Iii; rem-“iy v1.12 n-loj/iezi and work- As a reward for government ‘that I were to suggest to the United iwould hang him for trans-on fn?';<>li¢l¢i;p_=' " ates a. form of celebration, ifdolng the same thing in Ireland. we gum-Bi; mflps (,5 the Irish would be that they celebrate with It was treason in Ireland, it dbqqflegflgg 1n Ifgland." continues the loud acclaim the fact that so many‘ broad free-minded people came to‘ served a ILQIHLG. in Australia. DZ-krcy T-IcGee wanted self-gov- ernment for Ireland and was be not escaped to America he would have been hanged as a ‘traitor. He helped to establish seIf-govrrnment Ln Canada-Jo moire Canada a zlntion. Ile la one of tho Father's of (his country and we have not hoard that he infused into our constitution any hinge b! disloyalty. Tho flood oi‘ pnnaccuiinn {IDIIOEFH at regular iotcrvaln pureutly they destroy everything subside opncw perennial veg-ata- tiou ispnlugs up enriched by the deposits loft by tho waters. the flood of persecution that regular intervals overwhelms: taco of Irclaud, only scrvoo bring forth a freak crop of fnitb and patriotism plcuilifullgr mir- turod with thc blood of her slaughtered heroes. Thom who would hold it treason to coudomu the misdeeds of tho soldiers and military in Ireland forget time the ronl traitors to the Empire thouo wiho keep alive tho srpirit tbnt makes possible the carnage that now prevails in Ireland ir- respective of who commits the murder or who perpotrotcs tho out- rage. The real paririots will b0 those who tallo up and accomplish at tiou and esiabiioh peace and hur- mony among all parts of the Em- pire. Canada 1a a notion, and I hope she is no lass loyal for being ulch. We ure told that England will cover consent to allow a hostile nation to he established at her doors. There docs not neom to be any reason why the notion hould be n hostile one. I have m hesitation in esyius that it the imperfect measure of heme rule for Ireland that was put on the Statute books in 1914 had been put into force, there would b; no trouble in Ireland today. Th; legislators ‘ We have oi- ,_ ten seen that may are admlrnbly ' A Kidney Remedy K5380! troubles on frequently film‘! B! bib dismal bod _ vllilehwchbnsthucergsmto Illllillh the Irritant aelils "'1'"!- mYNlflMDlf-hb rwwrb Illa-n u» food a, . lllllllllitowdmpnihmu d lddzaldkf SQQ‘ YflItHdnay diunhc Will-promptly an. lflilllshflfllflegcndno. 7 that nowadays Ireland is the only ‘ Sig‘ in: 1min efisituntion ‘which. it says has bcccmr. | ,1 “world problem." _ that the ITITLIZ oi’ the Brltich do‘ deemed a traitor and n. rebel; had , {lint to ’ overwhelm Ireland might well be ' compared to tho waters that rogu- 9* lnrly overflow the Nile Valloy. Ap- - ' boforo them but otter the xvatoru so t.- the ‘ Q0 t, (ITO . the BOUIIOXIIGIIIL of this vexed ques- “ Lia npininn, nr rather tllntpgrortt EL-ddgnj qfiggwflon bold; g0 13,3“. .nri tried for lrceif-llzorgan for the mauufacum» and distribution oi propaganda to, mould public opinion-is reporled| as saying editorially that a dead- lock has been reached in the Irish‘ szilnr." ~ It polntu our Continued on Page Three minions present an Irish problem‘ ' for the Dorulnious‘ GovernrnentsI and refers to eighteen million Irishman in the [Tufted States who Smoke question for every United State: “Quite apart from ‘Times, "we have therefore quee- tionezlutha wrisdcm of the Britlshl policy which ‘newer-er, its authors Advertising, a Real Reserve By Lord I.cvcrhul|ui~ ‘Fire best reserve" fund of any lausiness is to be found in the good Mil of "that busi- ness and the goodwill of a business is, for she most. part- dependent upon its advertis- ing. Goodwill connotes the appreciation wshc public have of the business, and the pub lic gauge a business almost entirely upon what they read about it in the daily press. IMany boards of directors, instead of ex- tending their advertising, devote their sur- fund”- which fund is generally invested in What again are called “gilt-edge” securit- for many years afterwards to write down out of further surplus profits the costpriu of these “gilt-edge” securities to faking market values. Should time business halve l0 meet and overcome difficulties, or have i0 face frenzied competition, and the direct-- ors decide that their policy ought to be f0 draw somewhat. upon these “reserves". ‘they find “they cannot realize them without serious injury and loss of the confidence of their shareholders in the reputation and standing of the business; or, in other words serious loss of “good will". Regular, syste- matic advertising creates a continuous and ever expanding goodwill. People look for who firms advertising as a. feature of their nmrning paper and if,_for any reason‘, "it 1s absent they miss lip-The goodwill receives a temporary set back. I A ' The trouble with seasonal advertising is what it tends to compact the industry's busi ness into too shorts s " cc of time,,and this revents a profitable andling of the sales. ’ear1y advertising, on the other hand, spreads out the sales and gives tile adver- user a better dhlance to care for his orders. Also by pressing constantly against tile market's outskirts it often succeeds 1n pressing them back, and thisenlarflfifl the advertiser's field. The reader Judges the markets for the most part unconsciously, by following some particular firm or firm 8 . advertising. - lllitzglbbon was right when m, said that tho-people oi minim knew less of Ireland than thqy bur-l“ ni any country oi liluropq. plus profits to “building up" a strong reserve ' ies. These same directors are then kept busy '