, , . 1 ago-u EAGE FOUR- TIIE GIIARLUTTETUWN GlIARBlMl ouo on you (In udvlnu) mullrll In Canaan no rniud noun, Inning Dolly (founded lillli) You w: you 1m gdunnrcl flvllvorod. .A_ PrllhlroWlV. Chester B. Nl-Lurs. Vlre-lfielldnnt-J. N. Ilurroll». Secretary-Lint. Col. l). A lllllslnnou, l) B. 0. P’ ldltor and Manger-J. B. Burnett. Anson-lino Editor-Ii. K. fun-no. SATURDAY, APRIL 20, 1929 ‘to be second in command. There were of course "idle apprentices" in those days. but the number was sur- prisingly few. considering the light- and the country represcntoiivcs are uesefioi the over-seeing, for each returning to their homes today. Thcir f9" that hi5 P151‘ dillenlifd 0Y1 him" month's residence in ondrioeetownistlf; on his own skill and Personal- THEACLOSE OF THE SESSION The legislative session ciccd yes- terday with the usual ceremonies Notes B__y_T7ie Way ‘A The Canadian Press has been car- rying from time to time-items about the re-discovery of Ur of the Chal- dees in Babylon. To our modern Bflhflvl Elrls and boys, who are not educated in church schools, this means less than nothing. as the Bible is no longer taught in the com- mon schools. and nothing but, snip- pets is given in Protestant Sunday Sent-oh. But to boys and git]; 9g an OIdEr fzrowth. and Bible Students tzenerally Ur oi the Chaldees ‘calls up visions of the foundations of both the Jewish and the Chris- tlcn faiths. It will be recalled by these/Cid: Ur of the Chaldces was K1 Bill’ cf no mean importance 5000 3'6"" 83¢: it was ancient when Ab- raham went forth from it at the ‘Eliot loo? of , 1 _'§lllll‘5 lhluuifW BlrlonJdD DEX CATAltfill ‘Catarrh is a raiser-doze ailment and it seems to be very difficult to affect a curef ‘ ' . There are different types or rather degrees of cutaarh, with just the or- dinary everyday irritation oi nose and throat, with a little thickened "spit" or sputum. then-the further advanced case where there is considerable dis- charge of a thick mucous from nose "rue frunasorrsroivrg GUARDIAW- son Events CRATE 10' The American Mission crossed the Channel on November 22, and during the week that followed, even before the first formal sezsion oi the Inter- allied Ccii en:e, they went for to- ward settling with their French colleagues the bases of ecomomic co- ordination. For Colonel House. the most important immediate problem fer T38 Intimate Papers Of. Colonel House The Friend And Adviser o: President Wil- Recounis. In His Diary The Great Of The War In Which Country Was Concerned. ' (Copyright) , His APRIL 2Q am . THE JIM KING "~ CLUB \' \ A home for Jx-mlillonalreg h, Chicago with 80 lnmatep. h b a n k e rs, nnnufaciurere, \ lawyers, illflses, brokers, teachers. professors, phy- iclans, dentists. editors, politicians, salesmen, etc. Once wealthy- dcpendent in old thing, and a talent for explicit stats- mcnt rare among tongue-tied sol- diers’. m.- not difficult to understand the factors that led Mr. Lloyd George to subordinate the military aspect of Supreme War Council and to refuse to appoint to it the British Chief_ of Staff. But the French insisted that tho Council as organized by the Rapalio agreement did not Provide old age. Protect YOUR old age through: 4 i .\ Husieimcflfer v I _‘ . A mzAo IFICI ILAI-Il-‘Aiocau. '_ _ T’ '; = / 1, w. BENTLEY, Manager t... Prince Edward island 1" measured by money. I began at tho '--q|dprod the supervision was of the that 1 must question every step and desired, since the more skillful . ~11 became. the more he beneath-d . igpqledge, but a spirit of enquiry was in many respects a pleasant one; they made new friends, and renewed] former acquaintanceships. and Wei all feel s s:n:.e of loss in their dc-l plarture. The session was, in spots, a cclor-| ful one. The last few days, especially l when the ; through. merit exercises in a lllndcrjartcn. ‘The members. of the Czxbine: had not their lesson! prepared and as a, result they had a gruelling time .of' it. The Opposition wanted some in- formation regarding some of the items to be voted on and nether the Premier nor his officials had the in- formation to give. When plied with estima. es were going resembled the ceimnenes-f questions, the Prcmier would petu- lantly reply: “I don't know." When told that he ought to know, the ari- swor assumed the form of a finality "'1 don't know and that's all there is about it." To do him justice the Premier gvanted to know, but he had put off the finding-out process till it was too late. Ho called upon his of- flcials and these after consulting various books. did not out. And so, much of the informa- tlon asked for remains buried in the history of the session. _ The Saunders government added no leaves to its laurels during the DQ881011. The Premier is not wholly 0o blame for the calibre of his sup- porters, nor for the differences of opinion expressed by them on many of the subjects which came up for discussion. They differed on the Pro- hibition question and on the advis- ability of retaining Prohibition as a plank in their platform. If the poo- plg wanted Prohibition they would Iflct it. If they wanted Government Oontrol they could have that too, and It would be administered as faithful- iy by their Premier as the Prohibi- tion act had been. The jewel of con- ulster-icy lost its lustre on several not- lble occasions during the setsiofli and it is not surprising that the Lib- oral members were glad to get away 1mm an atmosphere which became ',very uncomfortable under the keen , blasts from the Opposition benches. ‘In; reports of many of the speech- qg are yet to be published. and the pggplg throughout the province Will have an opportunity of knowini what manner of service their elect- ed representaiives have refldfifed- always find . -————’i'i“' I THE CHANGING WORLD V‘ The old order changcth. This l8 B qghangoless lavz, that spells what we, perhaps in blindness. cell orosro-‘a- ity." Well the old order of apprentice- ship is gone. Today there is no ques- tion cf personality. In every thing it is speed that The machine takes the place of per- sonaiity, The shows the iyro, in a short half hour, how to counts. foreman work his machine at a job which may ' be his lifegemjllcy‘ . it. ‘There is no question of skill, .he:c is no prob- lem as to how the job may bcst be, done. All the study required is how fast can I do it? All the patience. all: the creative sensibility, all the per- sonality, are gone. And in their place to , I is a. monotonous, drab axis. e. the accompaniment oi whirring belts and grinding wheels, that day by day: sends its victims homo, witli- son's‘, little above the lcvei of those of the‘ brutes~ and with no other ambition than a craving for light amusement. In the March number of I-Iarpers, Mr. Fred Colvin admits that, he has wept over the soul-destroying effects of the machine, and has urged the moving of men from cu: routine‘ job to another.‘ ‘to save their tottering reason.“ But the poor robots did not wont to change and said so loudly and clearly. One men in the assembly line lay on his back under the line. screwing on nuts. It was a comfort- able position with an admirable rest for his head-in two senses. When asked to take another job, he threat- ened to quit. He thought he had the softest job in the works-nothing to do all day but lie on his back, screw nuts, and get paid for it. Mr. Colvin from his experience concludes that repetitive work ‘makes for pleasant day dreams.‘ Most people do not want to express themselves. he says, nor accept responsibility. command of Jehovah 1o four-lei the people of Israel and is reckoned the oldest city on earth. But Ur had disappeared from ofl ihe face of the eartlrfor thousands 0f years. and even its location had been lcs; sight of, Immeditaely aft- er the war. in 1919, the Britxh Mus- eum, in conjunction with the Mus- eum of Pennsylvania UiilvcrsLy, sent an (‘fillidltlllil under the leadership oi Mr, C. Leonard Woblley, to the Valli‘? of ‘lite Tigris and Euphrates. which is the Ylginfty o; the Garden 05 Eden. to see what could be dis- covered of the ancient world. and pro-historic days. The expedition WES fortunately successful in discov- ering a mound which. on_ being ex- Eatfllfid. disclosed to view the re. mains of a city ldentlflcd as Ur. Not cnly so. but a layer of clay over ‘the city eight feet thick. indicated a phenomenal deluge such as the lood told in the Bock of Genesis and which corresponds with the Baby- lonian Deluge, Commenting cn this discovery a writer says the excavators had not (1118 10118 on the mound before they hadsiruck the "l‘emenos crsacmd dis- trio; of the cld City of Ur: since thou archacaiozical _ti‘easurcs cf im- meme historical value have kept coming to Pght, discoveries which have startled the world. An interest- ing find in the Temenos district was the museum of antiquities, probably the first of iis kind in the world. The annals of Ur show the museum was‘ stoned by Belshalti Namiar, high priestess at the Temple of the Moon C-od, and daughter of King Nabodinus, who ruled about 550 B.C. He‘ ivas the son of Nebuchadnezzar. and one of the most intelligent men of his time in Babylon. Nabodinus is looked upon as the first Archaeologist, for where-oer he repaired a temple or building he ol- ways dug down to the foundations But a more truthful though darker view would be that the machine- minding is like an opiate- induiifl; pleasant dreams maybe. but robbing‘ the victim of initiative, and person- ality. and all things that make liic woinh living, and (as opiates do) requiring only more the thing which brought him into that condi- tion. The old days are gone, but not all the changes the HEW ones bring are improvements, Ecoer it is . . To live. to work, to gather, year by _v:er, A little store of oil and corn and rvine, under our own island skies, than to pursue the delusive shadows of such pleasant opiate dreams lo foreign lands. of EDITORIAL NOTES New conditions of living arise. tie- manding new arts, ncw industries,- and new sacrifices. And the u-“fifllf-‘Fll of these sacrifices is. We imaiiinf- mat of persenalily. "when I ‘"5 my," an gcquaintance femflfkfid. "my guardian apprenticed me to a cer- tain vocation, for five Yeflfi Th” wages were small even for those; as". but the rcsubs were not i0 b9 2 l bottom of my trade. and so I w"- lightsst description. it aplfieafed '° if 1_ were ever to attain a higher po- llflon in my chosen work. This was what my mastcb-who by the Way we; g ‘canny’ Scot-both expected hum my labors: and hence I soon .. not only a sound technical “mush I carried into other walks of 1min], This peculiar training also forc- >1’ "id m; to judge the outcome of over! “cup. smelly, when ‘z was "out or my up employer who was on tho look out for mm one to relieve him at the supervision of his orapioysll. flgflkjflflulflng my molten-tum B I’. was good to see the Eonshaw fboat arrive in Chcrlmtetolvn yester- day. ’I‘his opens navigation for the i season. a little late but welcome. The lobster fishermen are all ready for the season's flshlng and now that the ice has disappeared from around the shores the trap lines will be placed very shortly. We shall miss the breezes which have been waited. more or less. gent- ly. across Queen square Gardens from the Provincial Building during the pact month, but the flowers will bloom again and the grass will come up again just as ii nmhin; had hap- pened. The Craterical Contest yesterday afternoon and last night was a splendid success in every way. 'I‘hc young orators are a credit to the province, and will no doubt be heard aglin- some of them on larger plat- forms than those on" whicluthey stood on thl; occasion. The judges bod o difficult task‘ to decido which 1m but in a galaxy which was all good. The audience was of the opin- ion that in the contlltlnts were ir. search of ancient records and in- scrlptions. Ile transmitted thLs int~ eiest in igrchaealogyr to his daughter- and when he buiit the pahne of Cig- Par-Xu for her he set azide one bi; room as a museum, The wlrter continues: ~ "That first museum. an intcresi- 1111; symbol of man's eternal quest into the sicry cf tile past, was quLc as elnberatfly iriaiizied as some mus- eums today, as ir. proved Ly can- tsmpe._:y ref: _n" s to it and the relics found in the course of the present excavations. “it ccntaind odd objects of various, dates, such as a fragman. of an ole‘ statue of King Dungi, who ruled in Ur thirmen hundred years before Kin; llvlsbcnlduz; clay tablets of an, even earlier date; a. boundary stone of the Krszite period (i830 3.0.) and a granite mace head so old that nobody will tindcrzaize to date King Nabonidus. and his museum ern- ' pioyees labelled their antiquities quite X15 modems do today. and not |'.he less: interesting cf in; relics ruins of Gig-Par-Ku is n museum label with the following inscription: ‘Copies of bricks cf Ur. the work oi Bur-Sin, King oi Ur. Nabu-Shumid- dina, the priest of Ur. has singled them out and copied them for man's admiration." ' Under these circumstances auth- entic details of the Flood discover- ies. after confirmation by the au- thcrLies competent to give 1n 9pm. ion, will be cagerlyfawaitedf-F Writing about museums ‘is’ a. ro- minder that the Harris Library, Art' Cailcry and Musmm should soon be‘ under way in Charioltctown. ' The City Council obtained ‘thencbeslary authority to raise its share ofthe cost last year. and nowYtI-is Lsglslat- ure has passed thlllegislptibnffdr the Govcrnmenttp mike itfcolritfl- button. Before long’ thereof-it'd! con- struction will be begun and-then it. ’ Italzcn from the o‘d museum in the ' and throat, some of which drains from the sinuses, the little "sounding" chambers which adjoin the nose. Then there is the third or last type where there is considerable discharge at times but this dries up to a con- siderable extcnt and dry “crusts" are formed. . Tho removal of these crusts, which become quite offensive. is often a matter of prolonged treatment by the doctor and by the patient also. A few years ago the remedies sug- gested were boracic acid or baking sods, and later various oils, but for the past five years the specialists have been recommending a. solution of or- dinary tablelselt, used hot. Prof. J. Kollarits. Budapest, sug- gests the use of a solution of about, a half teaspoonful of salt to a cup of water, as hot as possible. This not only cleans the mucous membrane, but removes the odor also. The solution is repeatedly snuffed into the nose three times a day; then the back part of the nose, and the throat. is also cleaned by bending the head backward and pronouncing a prolong- crl A sound which prevents the fiuid from getting into the‘ lungs. ‘ To remove the crusts. one nostril and then the other is filled for ten] minutes thrce time: ‘a cluy with an, absorbent cotton plug. soaked iii the above solution, and pushed as far into the nostril as possible. plugs are "gently" removed, the crusts go with them. Nov! this seems like a lot of time to give to tho treatment, but surely when a patient remembers the dis-i tress and embarrassment that incom- pany this ailment, it is not too much to pay for the relief obtained. Soiriatimss it may be necessary lo make a few visits to the speclallsfs‘ office and thus learn the proper mfilhfid Ol’ handling the condition. Although a complete may not be affected, tsined is as before mentioned vrcrth the effort. I l < odZLQm LOVBLZEGT 0F Lweliast of trees. the chco 110W Is hung with bloom alznj i..e tough. And rnnnfis about ti: "dland iuuc Wearing white for Eastertiae. 11/“- via/v. i Now, oi-my thrcceccr: y ‘Pocono-y will no: come ' Azid m3: from s:"."e;1.y scozc, a It only leaves me fifty more. And 5111:: to ice-l: c‘. things in bloom Fifty grinj; an 122.1: FCJIJ. About the woodlands i. v: go To see the cherry hung with snow. THE Lauovlstove BY rsnsii “truism A NEW C;\i‘i.ll)_lilfe' STIiZIIPS Q. lflhzit new ‘Canadian have been recently issued? A. Canada's new pictorial stamp issue vzas completed‘ when the four larger denominations went on sale recently. Each section is represented. The one dollar stamp carries a pic- ture, of tho Parliament Buildings. For the Maritimes the fill-cent denomina- tion shows the schooner Bluenose winning the international ‘fisher-men's race. ‘The prairies are typified in the ‘id-cent otairip bya picture of a west- ern wheatfleld. The 1 Quebec Bridge appears on the i2-cent stomp. The teh-oentjstamp béars a representa- tjon _of-_ s mountain in British 00l- umbia with totemfiioles on the bor- der. The ‘lowefldcnominiitio carry the King's hqadfflnder the‘ miscrea- cope thewindows oh the Parliament Buildings‘ may be counted. and figures o‘i home‘ in ure British Columbia stamp; though ‘much smaller than a stamp: Vihcn these , yntmanent cure‘ the relief ob-, - A. E. lrioizsnrn. l; rai- éffeotive military coordination, and functions of the Supreme War I since it léft the Chiefs of Staii out- Councii. I-ie discovered as soon as he Aide; and the position oi the military reached France that criticism of the ‘Vldvisers on the Council was anomal- Rapallo Agreement was acrid, andlous, since they were divorced from he feared lest the dLsagreement that I their own staffs, subordinated to the threatened to develop between the political members, anddeprlved of French and British Government-s any eisecutive ‘powers. The French should interfere materially with plans i would naturally have liked a single of cordination. House sympathized command tovbe exercised by a French with tire French demand for unifledj general. But the British would not military control. At the same time ’liston to such a suggestion. ‘in all the 118 appreciated keenly the political conferences}! that time.’ wrote Gen- difilcizlties of liir. Lloyd George. leral nose, ‘ and up to ‘the great dis- The British Prime Minister insiss- [asteriour months later, any sugges- ed that the Supreme War Counollhtion ss..to a Commlndcr-in-Chlef was the settlement of the composition quite impossible. (Ed. Note: Foreign it was impossible to sepcrate prob-l lAifah-s, December 15, i922 p. 9. The lems of general policy from those of separation, he contended, which leltlusually well-informed, states (Le the military forces under the control i Commandemcnt unique: Foch ct lo; cf commanders whrrvhad a natlonntcrinzte dbocident, 1B8)that Colohcl and not an Allied point of viiezv, and which accounted for the waste ‘dlilxl pointment cf Marshall Joffre ascen- acsording to the Rapello Agreement ldid“ not conceal his personal prefer- the Council was headed by the hlrne l ence for the single‘ command; but i‘. lbfiziisters and Foreign Ministers, and - is__equally certain that he realized the the mi ry represmtatives were ' futility of demanding it at thLs time, subordinated to the political. {and there is nothing in his papers to I Mr. Lloyd George, moreover insist- show that he ever suggested Jofire ih led ujicn separting the Supreme War this connection. I Council from iii.» Chiefs of Stall If a gencrailssimo was out cf iii: prwtly ,. .ita ‘nth: Council the BritlshChieiofStafilthe less anxious to achieve virtual rvhcm he regarded r15 largely respon- l unity of military control. Neither sine for the strategy which had cosijGcneral Pershing nor General Bliss. the Erieish army appalling losses lbacording to Houses report, balivei the two big ha of 1317. Hlithat this could b3 secured by the choice was Sir Henry Vllihaon, whossRapallo plan unlezs it were amend- ‘rcmorkable natural gifts were notied. c1" . led in the lZ-riiisli army; nu erz- i p knee us: wide, iris mind quicltl Colcncl House lo the Pres. cut and rezcurceiul, his courage conspic- | Paris. November 23, 1917 ucuc; especially he was an intimate Dear Governor: friend cf Foch and much trusicd by; I forest: trouble in the working", the French StaZI-—a happy nugury . oi the Supreme War Council. ‘There for the new cooperation. The Prime l is a tremendous opposition in Eng- ifnbter and Sir Wiiliam Robertson lend to Lloyd George's appointment were men cf incompatible tsmpera- 7 of General Wiison. Neither Sir Vlil- mezits, and their collaboration wasiiam Robertson, Chief of Stan, nor . peiuzllj; hiitdcz-cd by mutual sus- Sir Douglas l-Iaig have any confi- i .on. sir l-lcnry Wlisen on the other 1 dehce in him. and they and tire-Li" hand. was a man whom Mr. Lloyd! friends loolt upon it as a. move to d and lalued, for put Wilson in supreme command. “‘c:. -—C:ntinued on page l0—- y€ iii .- Publit- Forum I ntJy they would glvc the matter , i lion. and assist in supplying a lmd- ‘ ' -fit‘d. sud a hangar in v-hich to .cv.se planes. C‘..ari:.t:.ov.ii would be on tho ' route of. planes flying from the maln- ‘Iaa: to Newfoundland, and the "Pl-ml" "I m" fiimfllm- h iiaegdaien Islands. Aiiaticn is E’)- ‘iit; ahead ty leaps and bounds in lSanada. Prince Edward Island ha". jtvi-ned out 1;; L35] “g3, in. :.'".cr‘v.':.1l:s cf life, and is. without _ - - Vc, icn capable of turning out just U M13. cs good eir piIoLs as anywhere in the n c; gggiclze. Lab's get started. form a Light This column is open for the discussion by rurrespusztllilils . oi‘ qzzcs ans oi llltElT-l. This t "town (indrdinn uooy ._;-'y endorse the I i i i i i ' ATLZZTC N ;,__,;;, A .3 (,__, L, C'_\_3_;-;5_>__.lA'il'p1r.£‘.e Club, build a small airport '.;v.n. Lct 1.; bop: this Club wlliiifi sl=rt vilth. and slve our boys a ' [chance in one of the fastest grozvin; L n, A n. L; L, ,\_ mug“: 3:ind\:s'..Z:s oi the day. ;,.c:c.i. L1 t. e pa. w ::.'Sl;n of t i: I m“ 5-1‘- eic- ' ' l ' .3‘. 3, 111;; ntgsntimi A P. E. I. AIRPLANE CLUB . lac; that tins 59037533 ' "1 (:5 in the Do- ' TDCNACH CN T35 MAP" ELL-In a recent issue of the Guardian appears a letter from "Ob- . 1 o. To enco age azloilon in Canada, scnt of hiiilitia 6r De- must. be under political control, since ‘only developed the belief that it was j § military strategy; it was just thislauthor of Fragments dhisioire, whol suse asked definitely for the ap- ; _ failures cf the preceding years. Hence ‘ eralissimo.) It is certain that House 4’ " because of his unwillingness ‘clrclc cf practical possibilities for tire , to cppolnt as military reprcsentativmf moment, the Americans were non: i 1 - . their caroiul and favorable considezo- ‘ mcn second to none in. we shall have an institution who»; pin head, are replete with detail. of the Province. 1 ‘ ‘ ‘ ' ‘ King Cool-gob radio} _"y1olit brit- onnil will not be pounce-Botanica- ‘POEONTO. April ‘IQ-(QPJ-‘Tor- ohtoi has Bbdiety tvnifbovs its In- nuai meeting‘ in July at the Royal gill?“ l! mo: acme-inhuman... ion this year. ’ _' , _ lforbizpttl, when one or the inno- _] _ “ ‘" - »' iauoiii which diifoirtlcuiiny inter- rmy u the ‘om dhybgeba‘ ‘Pinho- m lnaby wooioh ii n new pills. n is llflllilonbml a mo: a-bovihi- _ -for a nun. some; for n: emanate-m" "1 ‘ ~ ' v I l. 1'1‘, Th“ I .3’ if v V IL w. I fcnsc. will loan to incorporated Clubs 2 plant's under Bond as a start and v:lil subsidize such Clubs to the ex- tent of $100. for cseh member who qualifies for a Civil Pilots License u?) to a maximum of 30 annually. A recent announcement appeared in the press that the Fchchild Avia- tion Ltd. would shortly inaugurate a passenger air service between this Province and the mainlbnd. To- night's papers announce. the locating of an airplane factory at Saint John by the Curtiso~Reld Aircraft teal St. John, has incidentally grlntod $15,000. for, the establishment o: all airport, and Major-General J1 H. MacBrien speaking at Haiifnt on aviation, suggests that. it would bo good business for tho winter port of Nova Scott: to expand $150,000. on an airport. While we could not/ex- pect a largo grant from our City to build an airport, yet is it not fair to any. that if ‘n live commlifa wm to wai) on our City Fwhoro, and lay bo- for thomjh- Soot: and requirements of 1n Akplano Club, and the not‘ dry-s deeming so a city. having Hi4 ‘mi-scammed by the Dopartmlnt of . H. A I‘!PI.*.¢Q¢.WF'5 “strum m ro- ‘scrver" which purports to answer ‘my letter of the 8th inst, and after occupying half a column of your paper relaiing his experience in searching Ballingalfs map, Cundalrs and other maps to find Donagh, ho then tells the readers of your paper that Donagh is not on the map, when every school boy in the Province knows it is on Bsllingalrs Map and has been on the mopas early as i852. (Sue map of P. E. Island by George wright Surveyor General). - This is the writer, who through the columns of/your paper attempts to reflect ‘on many districts, and whose Mummy would not convict a pick- pockst in a court of justice. Then ho I!!! 10ml! 1n a hurry- and waxes eloquent, amLflnds all wt buildings in the school room. Well, a little "W" 1111""! Iflllht _ his sour domachmnd help him vomit on the matter on his poisoned liver. Thoro- 10". I will prescribe the some dots. Y“. Donalli lobool is finished inside with Doogluhr. ‘bu l good unitary winds coal howl. Ind x am one from our man uverhis iiolliflsdoicmtioa. sin x will place SWEET FRESH BRAHMI NOW. TASTE THE FLAVOR or N TEA Sold only in Red, Hygienic, Airtight Pfltktlgcs, llcrc you villi ilml everything sible Including ilic following: {Tmoizy City Clem ‘ Scrubs. Chzizeiols any part of the cify. Give us E. A. Foster u Ciilil .1 u ilfer on schooi clafminj snni y l...n'. cl a house is not the l1 ‘have n e .1 house, but, m. . few 1i c3, other nrti c3 o: S Ycnally. New this is the school that‘ ,“Obscrvc:" say»: is un;i'g'.i.'1,'. Again 5“Cb:crv:r" < lie never" lztiew any ‘educated pen; fr" .1 Dctxrigh, This i; a \'c"y chili! ii rzniiit for a wrltar to maize, ,.o did not knew rush a 1' c . Doitcgh, was on the ‘map; ‘cl , in fivc or n. a 1y ‘ seholars. :0 are livfnr. in many diffcrszi: countries. I iclrl ‘him vrhcrc k to find‘ stzne cf t‘ thcy “:1, P. EPIC HST. . ' school can: teachers. _\ .5 rill 9L‘ Oli. .~ cmglcyect. and for mall (is , v.".'i.-h must, be l akcii fez‘. $75 is a‘. l3‘ , ‘for il:u 3 $2.10 uzzizld bzr it 4 c: icr a mimoe- mow .h:it many get u; _ »"Ch::r'. . (l at that money. Again 2. they ue:c cf recent origin, and are just a‘. prcsxi: beeozziixig general and rcmcmbzr the b30310 of Donngh '\vill ‘not be the flit place to organize any ‘society. w‘. ‘h tends to promote their or" that his ilnprogrcssive loo not apply ‘.0 Dcnsgh, prove my contention, I I- wish hero to inform‘ him that ‘Donngh had thefirst post, office be- ‘tween Fort Augustus and Charlotte- itown. the Johnston's River Post Of- ;fice, which is still by her school, a epithets and will fcentral distributing office forvarious, ‘routes. While this may appear a trif- ling mattcr_today, it was seventy Years ago as much of a novelty as an Air Ship today when residents from other districts cums llvemilce io got their mail. When rural telephones were intro- duced Donagh in‘ conjunction". with other district; was among the first to build miles of line extending from Webster's Corner to Hillsborough Station, and if you turn up the Tele- phone Directory you will find- al- most all the residents of Dflflugh mo. telephone communication in ‘their homes. -Continue‘d on page 5- ' {iii EYES TESTED ANII omssss run-au- 15w. rnwa a. s. carton Optometrists N! Richmond Direct l. x4e» ti». F‘ ‘ Housecleaning Supplies We carry a full 11m- nf the necessary supplies for house- olcanlng and our stock in these goods are new and fresh. tic-up, "Borax, (‘rarpct Wash. Liquid Veneer, Silver Polish, r, lflolh Bails, Cedar and Laitmrlcr Flllllrfl, .5}, Sliilllgfi, ere, Ho order loo small in take care of and quick service to (t DELUGSTORE The Home of D1‘.Fl'2“£1ll?h': vcrznicidelCupsulcs _ but he says‘ Jsnally I ‘ . and l£‘.\\'},'.‘l‘3 cducaicsl - hen he goes itito a furor over ‘ 11:12’. v:ted. I ‘ in: v/oy doc: . , small car doesn't make his demon! inlo ctnilderaiiimi in this mlt- ‘ it of raiepruvers, j times. I um be- ‘ 4 .. I am skeptical about i i/cmrifs Irsleulcs. flat at all. I said 5 WLLIUO, and I litre rcmiiid "Observ- i s ilflpu’. 1.1- F u. :-. our Needs for to make your work easy as nos. —llousehold Ammonia, (‘Mme a cull at once and let us prove ENTRAL Sunnyside v11]? ‘ _ LlABlLl l; no? rue/sure a USS f/la: "Z cztly paid $503 f0: the our. Fool- ish to . :1 a fifth of its cost for lb surname!" "R would be foolish if ll protecid only the car. But ‘it protects even- thlng you own or hope in can ll ' to ccrnc. When you bmiclit thii you immediately became respol- "iblc for nil Carnage it might do. l light r1 about can lzTl a person! certainly as c. 1:1", touring rar. TI c! that a pcrsori was injured by! i for damages any smaller than ill vcvc lili by a five-f. n truck. llc migl osl: for and got $25,003." "But I havenfi got $25,000." "ll wcll, that won't ‘worry iiu- 11ft Theyil set the award; ihv (ilalmal , will seize as much of your prowl! j as he can lay hands on. aml morllll i your future earnings for the balm‘ “There's only one way in I!!! overyllfng safe. That ls lo bu! u , Automobile Liability Policy. with lilfl , limits." We specialize in Automobile lllill‘ i #1130. and invite your enquiries. FHyndman & C0~ I Limited The Oldcrit Insurance A561"! h P. E (fhznjlottetotvn “EYE-non rox OWNERS AND RANCHERS Now um mtei-‘e of you»: I" arriving dolly. what precaution are you taking for the trul- ment of Worms? A great many of the leadilll Veterinarians strongly rmiii‘ mend either- IIURBOUGIIS WELLCOM CO ‘ l I-ondonrlinld WORM CAPSULES. -0 3... NEMA WORM CAPSULW put up by i . mans. osvrs a C0- ~ amt. time remedies n‘ laarantaod w seem: BM‘ i, Worms‘. Tlook Worms ab‘ ““ ‘ Worms. ~ DON'T DILAY. ‘ Price 18o and 81.00 Per 5°1- ThezMw nuuosrons gm Croat mam so»: 80nd In Your Ill! 011M‘