.-...:,_._a,\. “was-a ... _... -.~,--_ -_. ...._ an mi’. Alrlsf, views. fit fil-l UFFFJ will k orrav§ adlah Pr? offers a flour and reciprocal adian mi.‘ lties the would be Dominiol Represen" will, it is of the F. 1 Imperial At the e considi Ihjee Sta, clared h close to They cit months year imp- had inol for the year. W: Free Sid ofbacofZ Ireland l l ‘ cheaper \ x _ v a A ‘ " ‘ " Lin nail-Ii F! -.~ m 0.1%. lam-v ?._ i vioo-rreelauo-I. I. Ilsraetl Ilollllln, D. I- 0- C2 ‘dgqggl plaster-ultimo"- " a-fififiloa-rifia wailmulv-l-"IPII 3.5m pony (founded um ‘as n: was (II Illvll") 4'11""- “Jflpegycfll (in advueonalledlnfilalaaail Ualtolltotaa. President-W. Cheater l. Llllzzifkr-D-Pk mounds’. JULY s5. I988- 03s,000 last year. In the first six months of this year there has been It will be recalled iflat when the a fufthey falling off as ovmpllfld Australian Goodwill Ship came with lust, year, exports for the hall Canada last October Charlottetown y,“ “m; down to $842,000,000 as was visited by Mr. P. n. dentin. agablst eiszkoocooo and import-l Editor of the Herald, Melbourne, down go 3150000900 gs against $1,- Australia, and Mrs. Jenklri. He sub- _o4|0o9,00q_ lequently gave the Island a splendid peggimigm is not good at any time writeup in his HHVSIJB-Per- In a rw- and it is very wrons’. almost ohm- FROM DOWN SOUTH ant letter to Mr. F. R. Sayer, Pub-i licity Representative of the canad-i irial, in fact, to encourage it by ll’!- accurate statements and conclilfilllm ian National Rafiways, Moncton, Mr, 1n regard to {Jule and other con- ‘ Jenkin writes: "We often think Oliditions in the colmtfy. 111°" 6599c’ our brief but enjoyable slfly ill MOM‘ {ally at a time like the pR-‘ll-Illli when ton and find that people 118W 81¢ :50 many people are disposed to look most interested in the Morlllml? oh the dark side of everything- Provinces about which they hearj very little, A11 Australian tourist party is coming across next year and‘ 0n my recommendation they intend Germany l-B V3958 Wm‘ mum“ to spend several days in your de- for the front pages of the news- liglliful Eastern Provinces." Pill"!- dlle W 15119 "u" 15°")! 5'9“? We are sure that the tourist party ‘and the anticipated cOB-il-‘qllfllce-‘l- In from down South will receive alan interesting and infoflmllive most cordial welcome here, especial-‘article, the Toronto Globe states i MORE PRUSSIA ly if their visit coincides with our that the promulluilon of 8 41ml? summ weather, when they can be orshlp ten dill’! N10" 911° Bfllelll shown the Island at its best. On the elections which deoido ti" "l6 9f previous visit o1 lvLr. and Mrs. Jenk- the German Republic, means the de- in it was Winter but notwlthstazld- structioh of the last vestiiie of dom- ing both thoroughly enjoyed their -ocracy in the Teuton land. If Hitler tour and went away enthusiastic about the apparent comfort and solid obtains a clear-cut victory at the polls, Pl-esdent Von Hinderiburg will prosperity oi our Province. It was ineither have the power nor the in- Mr. Jenkln, it will be recalled, who clinatlon to b10133 the BTOW-lhslll" iold the story about the Islander leader's road w absolute power. If who, when translated to Heaven, ‘Hitler fails to obtain such a victory- asked to be permitted to return to s. continuation of the present von me Island, Papen regime is certain. In either event Germanylwill be ‘ruled by arch-nationalists of the extreme Right-nationalists who frankly be- It seems part of the propaganda lieve in the right of the mailed fist, of the Liberal Party at the present and who scorn the principles of time to preach blue ruin simply bc- constitutional democracy. cause Mr. Mackenzie King is not at The y“; 1g “m; were g no p05. the hoim- In disflll-iilllg this qllee- sible alternative to dictatorship of tion the Moncmn Times notes that a some sort. Germany made the fatal number of Liberal journals are al- mistake of permitting the various leging that the decline in the dol- ‘revolutionary forces to become so ial" value of Canada's cxport trade strong as to make dissolution im- is due to the Bennett Governments _ possible. The l-fitlerites have at least tariff policy. This is pretty cheap'0,000,000 supporters, a large propor- politics. Canada's fiscal year ends on tiori of whom are ready to fight for the 31st of March and for the twelve their program, not only with ballots, months ending on that date in but with bullets. The communists 1922 with a Liberal Government irflpollcd well OVOI’ 4,000,000 votes in power, exports amounted to $753.-;the last Presidential election. The I I CHEAP POLITICS 927,000. At the peak in 1929, exports Reds, like the Brown shirts, have were $1,388,890,000. In the next two their own corps of storm troops, 11568-1 years, before the Bennett and have accumulated large stores Government had changed a singietof arms and ammunition. item in the tariff, the value of ex- In the past two weeks scores of ports had fallen to $817,028,000. In Germans have been killed outright [the year ended 31st March last it in the bloody ‘ “ between bands had fallen to $537,565,000. of Fascists and Communists. Hund- So much for the measurement of reds-including numbers of inno- Canada's exports on the dollar basis. cent civilians-have been wounded. But every preson knows that values The plain truth is that a state c! mensely since 1929, when all prices civil war already exists. I-Iirldenburg and his appointee, von Papen, have were the highest and and the world been able to limit the scope of the was money mad. A measurement of actual fighting by reason of their Canada's exports by quantities would control of the standing army and "make a vastly different showing. the police. But the task grows daily Wheat is one of Canada's largest ex-:more difficult. The total number of ports and the price of wheat has|killed and wounded in the past fallen to little more than a third month is greater than the entire of what it was in 1020. The same casualty list of the previous eight- ls more or less true of all cOmmod- eon months. A major crisis is ap- _ lties, produced or manufactured. Be- parently imminent. ' pause of the depression, which has It is to be remembered that Bit- been ‘more severe 1n every Dirt o! lens position in Germany is radical- I I of all commodities have fallen lm-i’ i I I i I I i l i . . the world than in Canada. all coun- ly different from Mussollnfs on the .1 JIM. with the result that two mil- and because of existing conditions In Italy the Syndicalist Socialists haying has been from hand to had created chaos in various in- mouth and stocks are greatly rc-Bdustries. But they were akin to an- dueed, a fact which will be of greatIarchists-without centralised organ- ' advantage when better times comeuization oi- means to fight s; u mass. Canada's trade really makes 1.171s German Communists are high- good showing in comparison with'ly organized. For years they have that of other countries. The Tlmeslbeen preparing for just guch s di-lsls had not at the moment the neurones is now approaching. ‘racy expect of Great Britain's brads but it has_to meet temporary defeat on Hitler's fallen enormously. Factories and advent to power. nut, u the mim- ninu are closed oi- working on short Pflh correspondent of The Globe, Mr. Pierre van Passsen, ha; pointed i I ma; are buying less of everything] i lion people have been in re- Ielpt of the dole. out. the German pad; g" moulds. Statistiu of the lng that Hitler's pollclg yill drive import and export trade of the Un-‘to the Communist camp adherents ited States brought down to tllelof the present DemQq-‘ug m4 go. ‘ aid of last month, have just been ‘clalist parties-ovq- who“ "m; yqn V issued by the Commerce Depart-‘Eindenburg and Von Papas in rid. inent at Wsahlntton. These show lug rougbs . that exports have declined from Developments ih col-many during 05.940.906.000 in 1920 to tfldflflfldlilliths near future mly "ii ‘im- give last year while imports have fallsmhlstery of lumps foi- giiq n“; my II%M.I#."°°°"“"°% "M.- mai "-4 l i»? l. ' J . 4 lions sl TIIE will What goods are displayed in a European store with the _iabel “Made in England" prominently in evidence, buyers are attracted. The fact has been proved recently in Spain. Different firms in Barcelona con- ceived the idea of sticking large “Made in England" labels on pack- ing cases and on goods of their own manufacture. ‘There is no law in Spain compelling merchants to have the correct marking to show where merchandise is actually made. Sales increased right away. The people were anxious to buy the “Engllsh" goods. Another company manufacturing a soft drink found its volume drop- ping. They took the Spanish name for the drink off, substituted the English name and labelled it “Bot- tled ln London.” Immediately sales picked up and lost ground was re- covered. These Spanish activities are a great compliment to the English goods. They indicate the splendid reputation built up by the English people: According to the London Times the Greater London area, included roughly in a circle of fifteen miles around Charing Cross is 8,205,942, an increase of 723,741 since the previous census in 1921. That the population of Greater London, equal to more than double that of all the cities in Canada, or to more than three-fourths the total of this Do- minion, should be able to live with any degree of comfort within such an area is one of the wonders of the world. That curious British genius which, half carelessly, threw up a Wolfe at Quebec or a Rhodes in South Af- rica, will surely inform a Bennett, a Baldwin and their confreres at Ottawa. And it is the glory of the new British Empire that the des- cendants of those who followed Montcalm now join with the des- cendants of Wolfe's followers in welcoming to a united Canada the successors of Paul Kruger as well as Rhodes, together with represent- atives of the whole Commonwealth, w take part in a. great conclave oi’ Imperial equals. A recovery in our export trade is vital to us, and, even if the Domin- ions and all the rest of the Empire purchased from us everything that they wanted from outside, we should still need markets in other coun- tries .We cannot afford to enter into agreements, however favour- able they misht otherwise be, at ot- tawa which will cut us off frofhour foreign trade, and we must not in our discussions there forget that we have a. great farming industry to take care of at home-JJ-l. Thomas. If the only result of the Confer. cnce were an agreement between the Empire countries to consult each other, without in any way ty- ing their hands, before they make flny major changes in their tariff policies, Ottawa would be more than worth while. Inside tile British Em- pire, the attack on economic na- tionalism can be made on a wide front, and one of the most fruit- ful results of the Imperial economic co-operation now being discussed, would be an inevitable and con- tinuous process of lowering of tar- lfl barriers-J. H. Cootman in The Fortnightly Review. The flowing tariff barriers in foreign countries have played havoc with British trade and it is one of the hopes underlying the British fiscal policy since the National Government came into power that Britain's tardy entry into the tarifl’ war, primarily in self-defence, may induce ageneral lowering of tarifl barriers in foreign countries-Sing- apore Free Press. ~ For our own part, says the Colom. bu Times or Ceylon, we think that, apart from restrictions of output. which is immediately necessary, the ‘salvation of the British tea industry eve of the Fascist march on Rome.- lllfly be found at Ottawa. If, as is hoped, arrangements can be made whereby British-grown teas will receive preferential treatme ‘ throughout the British Empire, thereby enabling Ceylon to recap- ture the Australian market, our worries should be at an end. The situation is frankly depressing, but it will not be improved by becoming downhcai-ted to the point of being panlcstrlcken. The Colonial Empire, In the page, says the Trinidad Guardian, has been overshadowed by the Domin. ions. The dawn is now bright before us and the day is ours to make of it what we will. We are an Empire and slices of an Empire, We have each our own history, our own peo- ples and many of us our ownjmg. uases. We are divided up into fifty- WO’ Boparate administrations. We ha" 54.000900 people and a trade worth together $400,000,000. Our 1m. portance almost takes the breath -v-is_'ievt\<xlnicivwfliela~rl -~- - IWY- We have only to flnd a means of welding ourselves spirit as well as on Life On Venus -.-.. (The NQIYOII Bill _ The discovery of almost conclusive ovklence of the elilience of carbon dioxide 1n the atmosphere of Venus l“ “other. triumph for the great igooker telescope on Mount Willofl in“; also apparently for infra-sod ‘photography. The "Mllllfllfll 1'31?“ B! I W. Burton ll D ‘ ' ‘gathering power of the l00-lnch mir- ror enabled Di’. ‘Willi?! 5- Ad!!!" now noes YOUR- rouuos-raa m, Mount wiim director, and m. sraun on sr-rr “More Dunn“, m “can, m. iii-oi, astronomers to identify a gas m g planetary atmosphere. They found the dark absorption bands in- dicating the presence of carbon diox- ide in ah invisible part or the snoot- rlim of Venus and pholfiflflplled them with the same sort of plates that have been used recently to make excellent picture-l 111 T°°m= which to the eye were as dark as Erebus. In Great Britain the orthopedic surgeons and cillldrenb specialists believe that there ls some fault in the system-food, air, exercise, heridlty that causes children ~to have bone defects; or defects in the way they stand or sit, giving them a poor posture or shape of body. In America, the specialists be- lieve that it is the poor posture or position standing or sitting, that f. . -.__ whltoistbeforutubeartio them thlb fllld 19- White ‘not of lily nor v! “l”; m“ Their vision. W119" m‘ ‘Pr’ ‘up. down her brook-film‘ m" Yonder where ales?! °n l" than all bloom- Paths secret, involute. 311°" l” the moth down-floating Fmm pgydheu hand to cleave the ‘ forest shadows. Therein Liflllmml" ‘mad!’ ti” frights the enchanted vixen ! That was a Pflnwll- “m” ° - earth's ladies. I But we that have mu "m" m“ causes the illness, and lack of pro- per growth and shape of body. We must admit that nothing is more important to a nation than the proper growth and development of its children-the future men and women. In the White House Conference on Child Health it was felt that the relation of body mechanics or posture (the way the child stands The light which comes to the’ lost the vision earth from Venus is sunlight Fe‘ Hem-g o1 the forest unto Lightheart flected from the clouds which seemi wmllleteil’ l° 9mm“? m‘ Phnetfwherefore anti-eat we. "Chlld- 1”“ Above these clouds is a layer ofi huts whilst still dlsoemih! atmosphere apparently about 4,000 where beckons iltus show-white feet thick; what the depth of thci ‘twixt the leaves." atmosphere below the clouds may _Anne Young‘ be nobody knows. It is plain that‘ 118m “mooted from Venus has tra- l hiie and versed the upper atmosphere of the YIOWf-‘Tl- The “n,” 3" w gives. committee of which Dr. Bobt. 1a.’ made a most interesting and help-i ful report. The committee found positive evidence that two-thirds of the children of the United States have‘ faulty body mechanics, it was al- stand or sit properly. ’Can poor posture be corrected? The report shows that where ‘systematilfa ttempts have been! faulty body mechanics, it wls a1-, in health and efficiency. I am a great believer in group ways associated with improvementir I f the or sits) should be illve-Bllflfliied- A-planet twice before it reaches a ter- Waxy lmwm- An pa“ o 1 . contain in restrial observer. It is only in this ill-Elli “an when med‘ c 11in the Osgood’ Boston’ was chm-mm, h“ iupper 19m that the presence o; cm-Joil which soon after who I there is no reason to suppose that and produces an in era the gas does not exist below thei The W-son seems mo“ vmflm ' lant ls bloominfl. P841019 clouds as well. Repeated attempts 17o when the p 1 Wm‘ vb detect oxygen and water vapor infill" cimru“ W150“ Wm“ mm’ the atmosphere of Venus have met B11118 Creeper. the two vTh “m? with failure. “In” gmwmg metzert’, him l“; ohc of the greatest difficulties en- howevel- h" n" 1°“ ° skid t m" countered by astronomers in attack- llhe Pecunnldatk 3"“ . e ° - in; the problem of the composition polulllwlll 11""- made ili the schools to improve not the gaseous covering o, Venus is: P013011 ivy affects no sptoill limb‘. that its absorption lines are notltat. It is found in ravines. and 011 ' z .tall~ eadily distinguishable from those?“ b°’d°" °' “w” ‘t “m” - , due to the atmosphere of the earth. trees and nestles coyly in !°n°¢'°°*' games for cblldremthey strengthen ,Eeg° txzaoxl:“gislvrgergreazzatgiifi heart and lungs, teach a youngster, p“ to take m knocks. “m, mm mo this dllflcultbyithilghttibe illjglliiizlrliig to be unselfish as he must work for ibut the" m‘ p a m° ‘m; w: the the good of the team and not him- ‘Wmvide a" es~ape [mm ' m self; teach him to control his tem- fiam‘ “d Venus are apmwachmg °r Wflyfi. straight ahead, shoulders back, ab- :distihguishing the one from the domen drawn in, that inaddition to other. Whether the Mount Wilson improvement in condition of all his observers took advantage of this body organs-heart, lungs, stomach, shift," of the spectral l'nes does not l1ver,_ intestine-there is bound trflgppear, be an improvement in his morale or cougars. his seuerul outlook on terest in the discovery of carbon life. " " Send your youngster to a schoo. .1 b l t wk m ‘once raise the question of the pos- or cu gynasum, o e e regu- _ sibility of life on the globe which lar body building and ‘stralghten- is not only the earth-s “camp; m3 “if ch55 wmk‘ neighbor among the planets but ai- Fmther‘ see that w" youngsterimost its twin sister in size. Animal fr: ‘Zilllnbfig? 51:1‘: 53351:; "life as we know it cannot thrive on carbon dioxide, but vegetable llfe jiigzds and “u” m the erect p081’ ‘does. Carbon (ioxide, being a com- pound of carbon and oxygen, may be broken up into its constituent el- ements. Plants do that very thing. absorbing the carbon and liberating (MB-ii fllld Empire) ‘the oxygen to replenish the supply Amous the hind-lime "14 “m” of oxygen 1h the air. In spite of the Pllblmallllll-‘l 18W“ b!’ u" NW5- 5°°"failure of the spectroscope to re- tia Department of Information at @851 the presence o; y,“ ‘oxygen in HBlifBX. i! "msmflc NW“ s°°t'5"|the atmosphere of Venus it seems W911"! on the oovei- in colors tho hardly reasonable to suppose that ornate armorial achievement zraut- a planet so like the cam, m other 9d by King Charles I in 1625. The ‘respects should be different 1n this. ancient arms were officially sup- In other respects, however, Venus Planted after Confederation ior B is decidedly different from the earth. Nova Scotia’s Arms and thistle. until reocutlyin scnersllto man, but there are indications use, but the original arms are now that it may be as long as a. terrestr- i-estored to their place. ‘(a1 month. Being some 26,000,000 It is stated that Nova Scotia has miles nearer the sun. Vcnus receives the proud distinction of being the much more heat than we do. As- only province of the Dominion of tronomers have taken the temper- Canada and the first colony of ature of the illuminated side of the Great Britain to possess a flag of planet and found it to be around its own. The flag of Nova Sootia is 7120 degrees Fahrenheit, which was a white flag with a blue st. And- ‘exceeded lh Death Valley in its hot rew's Cross (Saltier) dividing the seasons 1911-1915. 'I'h's, it is to be "field" in four, while in the centreiremembered. ls the temperature of is the double treasured lion of Soot- ‘the upper surface of the cfoud lay- land, the ruddy llon rampant inier. On the solld surface of the gold. It traces its origin to the Char-Iplanet, where the eternal clouds There would be little Ellneral ln-_ ‘ ‘dioxide on Venus if it did not at time by the commonplace salmon ‘The length o; m; day i, no; known. hers. It is anywhere and Bvtfywhtlll- and the only sure way to avoid it is [to watch your footsteps-slid restrain ‘yourself from promiscuous pioklul- especially 1n the-Autumn when its i ‘gay coloring makes it a desirable I i it is recognized, it is not difficultjto avoid contact with it. f: unfortun- Tiitely one comes into contact-with it, 'the best treatment is a thorough ‘scrubbng ‘withlsoapaand water. At ‘the first sigh of_skln irritations doctor should be consulted. on Est Disputandum (By Gerald Gould in The Week ' End Review) Among the otherwise perplexin rules of an odd society mention in a contemporary, I find the foi- iowing piece of striking l , sense: "Avoid, therefore, into arguments’ with Liberalfand idealists, with diseased persons and persons of alien descent." I should myself prefer to amplify and sim- plify the sentiment into: “Avoid entering into argument with any- more comprehensive than it looks at the first reading. Father William, it will be re,- membered, "argued each case‘ with his wife"-—when young. The trouble about that is that it becomes a domestic habit, like morning tea. I have long ago abandoned the hope or intention of inducing any- body to see sense about anything: but I continue to argue each case tremely hard working people," a1- rnost the only regular opportunity for initiating debate is last thing at night or first thing in the morn- ing; on both occasions my brain, such as it is, is definitely out of llr. L. B. EVANS to Sir William Alexander (after-I wards the Earl of Stirling) by King ter of New Scotland granted in 1011|fcrm a protecting screen, milder temperatures may prevail. Imagin- ative writers have pictured Venus as of London, Eng. James VI of Scotland and I of Img-ia world like in the earth in all land. In this Charter the name Nova ,earl1er geological age, with colossal Sootia (which is the Latin form forireptiles swimming in tepid seas or New Scotland) first appeared iniwallowing amid luxuriant tropical Acadle of the French, The flflg jtgoirmade a bad guess. is derived from the Royal coat of Arms slanted to Nova Sootia in 1625 by Kill! Charles I of mgland, the son and successor of James I. This ancient and beautiful arm- orial bearlng is the oldest of all Poison Ivy (Mail and Empire) Pdson ivy iswidely distributed and each year causes a considerable contradlstinction to Acadia, oi- tiielvegetstion. Perhaps they have not‘ N01“! Phyllclaa treated sue- cessfully and obtained pas- glass: ourezh of Stomach on one n: as Iadlgq. "on. Dyspepsia. soar Item- Iflh. Heartburn, Gastric Dh- aud many other all- menla peculiar to the stoma ach with a perserbtlen which "all!" procured and sell an er (he name o! Stomach nurture. W al I ‘ "n; g-nemhhave the sole the arms borne by the British m»; mln'ons, audzby reason of the un. lque combination therein o; moi Royal and fictional Arms of Scot- amouut of suffering, disability and expanse. As the season is approach- ing when this plant will become a mmacdsu illustrated descrimion of "ll I'm ullhr It Illvl n? oelved numerous eestlmeiihld from sstisfld purchasers. 1°" l! WWW“ by heraldic writ-it is given ih "The Blue Bell" by m. Don't fool with your Item’. Jeriou conditions. an ers the grandmt of all. The Arms of Nova Sootia are recorded in m; Twister of the Lyon Court of me Lord Lyon lflng of Arms at Edin- burgh. the aoottish heraldic office of the British Government. The mount at the base is adorned with msyflower and thistle floral bed‘. 0!. the former being the national never of Nova ‘scour. ind the lai-‘iiaaors. together in tei- the badge chosen by James III. ‘complimentary intention, new» i i" Khr~ozsoou.-aiii..-m|rsi_iiiy. shim. lhl-owfllflrlllll A. R. Pennoyer, medical adviser of the Bell ‘Iblephone Company, Poison ivy is a climbing or trailing shrub. with broad leave! in clusters, or three, aerial roots and greenishi 1o l-rlla If» m“ YWM" 4v hue-mm a gllronlc stab of pail-lo lino e. l . y Get a Bottle today. . - change is not known 11y many ‘pub- A THE 2 who continue to use, with us Great George Sheet the dil- d, I h other the so- ornament, mm frequenting locals’ Irhls puts me at a gross disadvan- per, and train him in many other Zlllidlgopxjfllreffilecct comes mm may M“ when pomm ivy m“ be found tggg; but 1 have deygjqpgd g ugh- ‘ . . rli ue. ‘ How..." mm i, m, question in and the absorption lines of the at- either on Jen-fur; or email-hi: l gar" o’ an I “Wm my mind butthat if a youngster lsimosphere of Venus are displaced udvisabo to m! It; e‘ when‘ precaution of’ being “gm Th“ is taught to stand and sit correctly, with respect to those of the terrest— Mot 1'8 DTP-Sell” °l’ °_ e‘ "h. ' to walk with his head up, his eyes rial air. ‘rhen there is a chance of‘ I I body." But the preliminary list is . with my wife. As we are both ex- "- H Inexpensive Satisfying . .- 0 gfikfiv , keeps the, mouth cool. and moist? business, whereas hers on functioning untiringly like a thirty inf-inland. horse power juggernaut. take the so simple, that I. am surprised it has_never_ occurred to anybody else?! ‘ndly; I make a very long, rambling, sleepy sort of speech, telling her what she ls going to say and refuting it point by rpoint, clause’ and sub-clause. schedule and addendum. Either she ‘inter- rupts, or she doesn't. If she does, I retire from the discussion in dud- goon: if she doesn't, I go on‘. till she has forgotten where we began. When, however, she does at last say something, I reply: "You are perfectly right and I am utterly wrong. I apologise. I withdraw everything I have ever said on this 4 ' .....,...... i». f bed or,get.._up and shave, as the _ca.se may‘ be. ’ Ithis an excellentjechnique. I leaves one's wife stunned with in ‘tilgnationn poisons her mind an rulnsrhenlife. mAlso, it Jolly well teacbeaher to argue. I recommend it to the great Trade Union of husbands. oflarlylolhsr subject." I then govto d - 146 Richmond so, ' E. R. B R O W Fire} Life, Accident, ‘Sickness dnd Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest; Rate.’ Agent at Summerside. Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown ' 4 Ioolcubfstfihlsiky? . 4 scrifper; tbefsliie of " theggoodltwistsyou ' swaps few. cents for. fwngm goal vilski K0!» '3 ~J