v- y’ any“; it u e tu. 1w MW M ~ ‘ x ‘. I "gin: GIIARLOTTETOWII sunning THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN deli-W. Cheater l. IeLue, I P. Yiao-Preelleul, 3'50 hunk, r J | llccntery-Llent -0eI l) A. In‘ Dlrnotor-J I Inrlelt. l‘ J l. '* Idltcr and Inn Alum-Into Idllo fl—l'fllll Willa! Ill I) l Inrllnnnn. D Currie. lowing Dally (Iouulod I881) ll O0 p" your (In duller] delivered. 50 per year (in advance) culled In Canada nil United ltetee. rrrunsnsr. JANlJABY 1o._19_rs. MR. BENNETTS APPEAL The fact that there are objectors -some of them within the Prlnlc Minister's own party—to Mr. Ben- nett's policy of economic reform, is not surprising. It means that his appeal is to the rank and file of , the people of Canada. not to the old party shibboleths. The consen- sus of opinion published in various Liberal and other newspapers goes to show that his statements are meeting with strong public support. There are of course, die-bards in every party who cannot or will not admit the need of economic reform. These are the laissez faire men l0 whom Mr. Bennett refers, and whose influence in shaping public policies ls definitely over. In this connection thc Ottawa Journal sug- gests that the objectors-if they are thinking of party-might remem- ber that it has been the left flank of Conservatism which has preserv- ed the party as a. living organism and force. That is as true of Eng- land as it is true of Canada. It was ;Pitt who reformed the new Tory Party out of the wreckage left by North and who led it back to the land of promise and left it there for more than forty years; canning, the devout disciple who, when the beacon fire lit by his dead master was dying down, strove with the vain hands of his genius to feed tho flame. Later on there was Peal. who taught his party new ideas of trade; Chamberlain and Randolph Churchill, and lastly, and master Of them all, Benjamin Disraeli, prophet and evangelist of Tory Democracy. And so in Canada. It was sir John Macdonald who fought successfully to weld progrrssive ele- ments into the Liberal-Conservative Party. It was Sir James Whitney who made it in Ontario a patent force for reform; Borden and Meighen who continued and 1m- proved upon the Macdonald tradi- tion. With all their variety of gift and temperament and circumstance, the influence these men exercised on the party, by conversion from within or by pressure from without. had a great common feature. All alike were dedicated to the task of seeing that the organism did not perish by a. failure to adapt itself to a now environment. They were unwilling to have the party remain inert in the face of some entirely fresh and dangerous condition, trusting to old proved weapons tellectual and Sweet-heart, ml they bark at me." ‘Hamlet,’ ‘Romeo and, Juliet’ tragedies contain expressions of pro- of the agonizing words which Mar- lowe put-s into the mouth of Doctor ruustus; surely the most pitiful character in our literature: “See, see where Christ's blood streams 1n the firmamentl One drop would save my soul." One ls conscious, however, of ex- pressing only a personal taste in such matters. The "most moving passage" remains a matter of 1n- divldual preference, in which read- ers must be content to “agree to disagree." A BOOTH BIOGRAPHY A biography of Geneal William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army. by St. John Ervine has been published and is of special interest in view of the recent election of a new chief. The Army is now a popular institution, but in its early days it went through an ordeal of persecution. One reviewer says: “Fierce opposition was stirred up against them and they were de- nounced by the rich from pulpits and in the press, while the poor mobbed them in the streets. Lime was thrown in their eyes; bricks were hurled against young girls; often a procession would arrive at the meeting place with torn clothes and bleeding bodies, but they arriv- ed, and Booth would say: "Now's the time to get photographed!” In 1882, when Catherine Booth went to Switzerland the'whole country rose against her, "and she was cast into prison. Cardinal Manning was one of the early friends of’ the movement. Gradually opinion changed. The pol- ice found it better to protect the Balvationists than to arrest them. Phyvical violence grew les, ‘but in- opposition often in advance of other men, put him in touch with the new spirit that was spreading over lltngland. It is that zeal for social service that has won so many friends for the Army. EDITORIAL NOTES The New Year church Not always did they succeed, or 9d- succeed immediately. But each ltruggle leavened the mass by a process of permeation until ideas deemed heretical became the com- mmplaces of orthodoxy. The lesson of it all is that a pol- Italv has rot what she wanted y in North Africa. Railway accidents. such as cc. little dogs and all, my, filanche, and indeed all of Shakespeare's found pathos. One ls reminded too said, “Everything possible in Dower of diploma should be done fmm nmW-"B P1964? in the Si!!!’ to avoid thIe appgrance of antag- onism between East That is true, but Smuts must admit that the Jap- anese are straining the powers of Notes By The Way In n. v/eL-ordercd 5b.: nine- badieu men and women ieady and willing to work ought not to be re- garded as a liability but as an asset. and until the question o. impeJai Development ls BpPYultC-IIBU with a frank recognition or the paramount claims of me individual, we snail not get very far. Surely the time has come WM]! we can say that economic dqzmfls and political shin- boleths no longer overrule me ‘humanities’ in tne Empire. At tne moment it seem.»- 1m. we have a great heritage wn I.‘ we are unable to mlprociate. some considerable development ls needed and methinks is not depenccnt in any degiee on international questlons.-"l‘ne ma‘.- Dlne Review. Ifeaohofush-uagoodlynum- ber of wants hovering about us there is great. hope for our eternal salvation: We must hunger and thirst for the things which, event- ually, give us iuurishment and life. George Uisslng used to have his own test of a good writer. Upon hearing of some new ligna in the literary world, he would ulquu-e: “Has he started?" A sense of need drives uS to the heights. It intro- duccs us to the stepping st0ll~2$~a11d to the fields beyond. From this idea was evolved that ianitus phrase, “necessity i5 liic iHOLflJl‘ or‘ inten- tion." WliBn if...‘ are driven t) think, something impotant. nearly always happens. Penile. will change its name to Iran. This is nu llL/IC .11‘. unprove- ment than the change from Mes- opotamia to Iraq, which recalls the story of the old lady who went to church just to hear the preacher pronounce "that blessed word Mes- Wmamifl." The British Tommies degraded it into Mess-poi, but they were thinking of the flies, the heat and the filth, not of the history of the region. Persia is a. name iden- tified with the romance of the O:- lent and of the ages, and Persia it will remain unofficially to western people. The educational clinic of the col- lege of the City of New York has lust made a strange discovery: a child of four, who, it is said, pos- rcsses the highest intelligence quo- tient ever recorded by the clinic. Charles Darwin's was 186; Einstein's ll 206; this child's is 196. Al; two years of age the baby knew the names, numbers oi’ a dozen rclativa; could talk fluently. using any number of multlsyllabic words; the alphabet backwards at eighteen months: four; has since read an of one book a day; and uses long vzlords wilth awareness o! exact shade o mean ng. such as encyclopaedla, lnmllwl- evolution, luminosity. ._ Montreal Booths plans for social service, Star. addresses and telephone could recite read unaided at average could A 24-year-old Japanese man who can dislocate every joint in his body withc-ut feeling pain is being stud- ied by physicians. When he was l4 years old he found that his jould dislocate his fingers. 5o he practis- ed on other joints in his body. Now he can turn himself into a hunch- back or so flex his backbone that it can be bent in any direction. He can, in fact, “tie himself in knots“ services —-and flap his ears as well as any . against some deadly new artillery. flmtlnue to be very largely atiend- animal. The able (‘general Smuts htely th: and West." even General $1681 P6113’. 1f i4- 15 to live and be curred Tuesday, are very infrequent diplomacy to the limit. We have no useful, must expand both in breadth and in depth to meet each fresh demand and necessity. There must be recognition that even liberty i: not an abstract and unconditional right, but. something only to be gained and retained at the cost of self-sacrifice and at the price oi service. a gift exercised under a - rigid and continuous self-control. . lThe issue raised by Mr. Bennett, here. As a rule the speed is moder- ate and our railway men are very careful. France has her own troubles just now. for notwithstand- world's supply of gold, she is facing even harder times than most of her less fortunately situated nations. It is claimed that the pres- niei-ercre-tne issue of reromi or no out crisis’ la due to the depression reform-is one to which all sane man, all progressive men, all real- lsts, must give sober attention. PA TIIETIC PA SSAGES these colunuis to the controversy in the London press over the than elsewhere. and that, it will be ury hotels are almost empty, the "most tourist trade is dead and the people movluz passage" in English lltcrfl- look anxiously info the future. ture. The discussion was occasioned by Sir John Simon's tribute in the Hons: of Commons to the closing privilege words of Thackeray's chapter on Waterloo in "Vanity Fair." For and delight of seeing "Anne of Green Gabva" in the pic- tures at the Prince Edward 'I‘heatr~e. weeks afterwards the columns of All Islanders abroad who have seen the reviews were filled with letters tho production 5nd h", ‘yr-mm challenging Sir John's judgment. among the rival passages quoted be- ing Trackeruys description of the death of Colonel Newcome, the last entry in Pepy‘s Diary, the descrip- tion of the deaths of Tom and Maggie Tulliver in "The M111 and ab; moss“, and the closing words a Money's "Dutch Republic" _'l‘he question, of course. ll 0m which can never be decided finally- wim». my luv-ll l» w“ ""1- qlg u l, vary plthotlc DQIIOIQ 11157 pa. little or no tmmulm m wh- ‘g, Th; pumps cited above an undoubtedly smell! the "moat mm.- but mm are men! when oometomfnd. Alfluardim oneofmenywhoerekecn ‘dialer. ' Cities’: "ft q a hi‘. f" “m! .”l‘ “y; go, than I have ever p»!- "a than {have Ildflltbloutol’! us on the subject, praise it and wax enthusiastic over it. We have to bear in mind, however, that most of the scenery of the setting is that of California instead of Prince Ed- ward Island, rendered necessary by circumstances over which the producers had no control. Not- withstanding "the atmosphere" is Island, and the story just u the distinguished euthoress would wish Her; Hitler evidently wee not far wrong in leaving the church feoticna in Germany to fight it out among tbemlelvee. It is now reported that the Confusions! syn- od leldm have fallen out among themselves, one section no. cnslnl the other with be- ing "too compromising" with the the ltlfo fllllf 1 will be ng she has the fourth of the Advertiser. another two years before the nadir ~"'"-'“*"d is reached. Meantime French un- employment is growing, End’. "Hamlet." On the other hand it is 7511"?" a. gloomy sort of compliment, for haw: doubled since 1930, the rail- an examination of the regulation Recent reference was made in roads are losing $250,000 daily, lux- "m!" chose three dramatic works for its Opening days shows that it can only be translated as "no plays, films, or other performances be termed ‘joy-giving’ may be pro- This week-end we'll have m d“°°d-" sum church. The! demand tint intention of fighting for Standard Oil, or British Asiatic Petroleum either, for that matter, but it might have g somewhat sobering influence on Japan to know that. In the last internal analysis. if a final showdown ever comes, Uncle Sam and John Bull found togethen-London Those who despair for the future my," of serious British drama may per- haps take heart from the fact that when the Belgrade theatre reopen- ed, after the period of strictest °°'-\"m8 111 Win00 W0 Y6"! label’ mourning for King Alexander, on the first three days there were pre- consecutively "Journey's "David Copperfield," and which the management which can One feels, in a sense, that Insull might just as well have been per- mitted to stay in Greece. His broken old mind is incapable of appreciat- ing the fact that he was wrong. and they were all wrong in those years when the cry of the New America was for prosperity piled on prosperity, and when the lords of industry could create apparent wealth by scribbling on bits of paper. He thinks he is ; great man, wronged by the inzrattude of peo- ple who left him in the lurch when he could no longer make money for tlvrm by affixing his signature to some otherwise worthless document. And for whatever period of life that is left him, he mlght just as well g0 on thinking it. Ho prob- ably wills-Hamilton Herald. Theodore Boceevelt. while ud- dressing a lay; Prowmelve Ro- publlca gathering in the election cempeiwn of 1012. criticised the doctrines and methoa of the Dem- ocratic party. On concluding his address. I Democrat who happen- Od to he present in the audience andwhoobjectod toaomeoflvfr. Roosevelt's remerh begun to ques- tion the speaker. "Mr. Roosevelt,” 1H Milli. “why am you I Republi- can?" ‘Because my father un no flood this gal-he 1o the m..- W: u claim, w prevent the BIO-mun philosophy or Dr. Alfred menu m»; S. By fame; WIBorfon. “P. BOW LIFE SPAN MIGHT BE LENGTIIENED FOR- THOSE OF MIDDLE AGE Before the days of the educated physician Nature simply ceded out those who were not rugged, and infectious diseases —- diphtheria. scarlet fever, typhoid, small pox, and many others—took so many that even a's late as 1800 the expectation of life at birth was about 35 years. What have doctors done to pre- serve life since 1800? 1n 1929 the expectation of life was 61 for females and 53 for males. This has been accomplished by the saving of babies at birth and dur- ing their first year, and by 0V8!" coming to a great extent the infec- tious diseases that formerly curried off so many thousands yearly. However there is another side of the picture that should make us do some thinking. President R. C. Wallace, Univer- sity of Alberta, reminds us of the fact that while the expectation of life, reckoned from, birth, has in- creased by 25 years during the past 125 years, nevertheless the life ex- pectation of a man of 40 to-day is no greater than it was sixty years ago, and for a man of 55 it. is even less. ~ Now one explanation of why men of 40 are not likely to live any longer than those of that age of one hundred years ago is that a number of thesc men were never very rug- ged and others would have been among the number who would have died from infectious diseases had they not been saved by medical science. However most investigators be- lieve that the increased stress of life of the past 35 years tells more heavily after middle age in our present civilization. Personally, while I believe the above two facts are true, I believe that much of the tenseness that tires and kills is dlle to our unwill- ingness or perhaps our inability l0 relax even when we have time and opportunity to do so. That careless or thoughtless eating habits and wrong intestinal habits enter into the breaking down process of the body as we grow older has been well established. 4 A little more- calmness of spirit obtained through the study and practise of our religion, whatever it may be, or by any other means. would ‘have a profound effect 1111011 the gland system of the body and hence upon every other organ and tissue. We would not wear out near- ly so soon. grandfather were both Republicans." was the reply. “What would you be if your father and grandfather bath bad been horse thieves?‘ again asked the Democrat. “Yd be a Dem- ocrat," Mr. Roosevelt replied-Maz- azine Dizest. Isn't it ridiculous that our broad- casting stations seems to arrange among themselves all to give the same kind of thing at the same, hour. 1f you hear one station 8W1"! a. comedy, turn where you W111. H1! the others are giving comedy. i00- At certain other times they all give classical music, and at other times jazz is standard on all stations. Why? would it not be more ration- al while one station gives jazz for another station to give classical music, and another station some- thing light? Listeners could then choose what they want. POLICE OFFICIALS JAILED (By The Canadian Preset RANOHI, India, Jan. o-Jrhree constables. charged with wrongful arrests. were sentenced to six months’ rigorous impflsoflmem- TW° werg glwbn an additional six months for receiving "illegal gratification." According to the Canadian Cus- toms returns 183769.770 bushels of wheat valued at $14,704.96!) were exported from Canada during the month of November, 1934. Sedentary work. said the college lecturer. tends to lessen the endur- ance. In other words, said the smart student. the more one sits the less one can stand. Exactly, retorted the lecturer; and if one lies a great deal one's standing is lost completely. lllt. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. Noted Physician treated luc- ceslfully and obtained per- manent cures of Sto h con- dftlona, such u In lgestlon. Dyqpepela, sour Stomach, Heartburn. Gutrlc Dlntreu and many other ailments pec- uliar to the stomach, with a prescription, which we have procured and cell under the name of Evan: Stomach Mix- tare. We alone have the sole right: on this preecrlption and slnco selling It, have received nnnuroua teeflmoulnle from satisfied purchasers Don't fool with your atom- ach. ierioI additions are likely to arise if you allow younelf to lapee Into a ahrenle state of gastric trouble. Get I bottle to-llly, price ll eonb. The Two Macs 1U OM00 00011’! lfllfl llhll Order: Attended To. . Quebec, was Canada's most famous Bernier 0f The Arctic (Vancouver Province) Captain Joseph Bowler, who died last week at his home at Levis. aeedog. He was born of a. line of sailors and made his first voyage when two years old on the ship ln which his father was carrying sup- plies to the troops in the Crimea. He was his father's mate at sixteen and master of his own ship a year later. In this long career at sea. he mmanded more than a hun- dred ships, and had a record. all- told, of 366 voyages. These voyages took Captain Bernler to all the seas and round the globe a score of times before he settled down to a shore Job as governor of the jail at Quebec. But the shore job was not to be for long. It merely gave the captain an opportunity to delve ‘further into the literature of Arctic exploration, inwhlclihe had been interested from boyhood. Then, when the op- portunity offered. or rather when he had made his opportunity, he was off on his travels again. Th8 islands of the Arctic archipelago to the north of Canada were to quite an extent a nomankv. land and Ber- nler conceived the idea. of making sure that hey were formally claimed for Canada. It took the en- thiusiastic Bernie!‘ some years to convince the authorities at Ottawa that his project was worth while, but at last the necessary mcney was voted and he was able to purchase a German ship which had been specially built for polar work, and with her. renamed the Arctic. he took up his work in the frozen regions. The first northern voyage was made early in the century and in the next twenty years. Bernier made seventeen voyages to the Arctic and spent twelve winters there exploring. setting up monu- ments, tracing the line followed by various British exnlore~ . making mineral and fisheries surveys and establishing Mounted Police posts. In the end he knew more of the Canadian Arctic. its needs and its ssibilities, than nnv other man. The effect of Bemlers work-the work which he otnceived and car- ried out-was to establish and con- solidate Canada's claim to the num- erous islands between the northern shore of the continent and the North Pole. British explorers had claimed many ci’ them before and the British claim had been trans- ferred to Canada. But there were numerous loose ends to tie up and Bemier tied them. The islands. wholesale and in detail, are now Canadian, as they would not have been had not Bernicr gone after them. It may be thought that as the islands are barren an uninhabited, it was an empty prize the enthusi- astic explorer won. But there are valuable minerals up there, there are fish and there are furs, and some day the resnurces may be worth developing. In any case, it is worth something to Canada to be certain that she is not hemmed in by alien territory to the north, as she has been to the north-west by Alaska. One day, with the develop- ment of air transnrrt, it is possible one of the world's great trade routes may lie across these same barren northern islands. Tracking The Cosmic Ray (Manitoba Free Press) The congregation of persons who have been waking nights wondering what about the cosmic ray may take heart. Prosperity, o;- at least the cosmic ray, is Just around the corner. Dr. Robert Millikan, the Nobel Prize winner in that sort of thing, says so. He has definitely cmlsed the American Associa- tion for the Advancement of Science that within a twelve month it will be known whether the cosmic rays are made of particles of matter or bullets of light (photos, though not likely, to .The controversy in this matter has been going on for some time. Persons of a scientific turn of mind have been much ex- cited over it. Friends of years havc been sundered and families divided. But Prof. Millikan states the true light is dawning or about to dawn. Prof. Millikan saiys further that said light will dawn without bene- fit. of the daily newspapers. Daily newspapers, explains the learned gentleman, are more concerned with news than they are with truth. It would appear that he arrived at this conclusion through the dis- covery that the public prints were quite as ready to publish the views of the scientists who d) not see eye to eye with the Millikanists as they were those of the true faith. And it must be acknowledged that all has not been clear in cosmic ray circles. In fact Dr. Millikan con- fesses that there has been a "state of hopeless confusion." "This," he goes on "is because the individual workers . unrestrained in a new field by a body of established fact, tend to set up hypotheses that seem to fit their particular experiments or their particular theories and are themselves ignorant of, or at least incredulous about, the finding of others. 8o that the public soon loses itself in a. maze of incomplete- ly understood and apparently con tradlctory statements and opinions, and knows not whom or what to be- lieve." Well, this etete of ghastly aus- pense will soon be relieved. In the meanwhile warns Dr. Millikan "Be- lieve nothng of whatenyone tells you about the nature of the original cumin ray: that come to us from somewhere beyond the ‘Milky Way." One simply cannot trike for grant- ed all these tales that are going around. ‘Ihe Cosmic Ray has a right to a fair hearing. Clive him just a little more time and Dr. ‘Millikan will break down and con- fea all. He ought. to know. After 25 % Discount on all MEN'S WEAR JACK S. CAMERON TIP TOP STORE ' for his marvellohs national blessing. JANUARY 10, 1755 FROM.’ “THE COLD EARTH SEPT BEID w» The cold earth slept below, Above the cold sky shone; And all around, Wltha chilling sound. From caves of ice an fields of mow The bilegawth of night like death dld Beneath the sinking moon, The wintry hedge was black, The green grass was not seen, The birds did rest On the bare thom’; breast, Whose roots, beside the pathway track, Had bound their folds o'er many a crack Which the frost had made between. -P. B. Shelley. Poet Of Empire Birthday (Sydney Post-Record) Rudyard Kipling last week cele- brated his 69th birthday. He was born at Bombay. The Gods claimed him early, and he remains their darling! For half a century Kipling, the patriot, with heart aflame, has toiled at/ the poetic forge. Vulcan- llke he has helped to fashion the British Empire on a wider and nobler basis. In Kipling's system, to do one's duty is the final virtue. In "If" he bids you treat good luck, and bad luck, and cold reasoning with con- tempt. He agrees with William of Avon that “nothing is good or bad, but thinking makes it so." Everywhere you will find lovers oi’ Klpllngs genius. For instance, Sir Roger Keyes, hero of Zeebrugge, recites "If" as he shaves in the morning; Bishop Owen, Primate of all Canada. quaffs Kipling for re- freshment, wisdom and otyle. Emest Espley, hardy mariner, and hero of the yawing North Atlantic, cheers for our Pcet or Empire be- cause he unlocks the secrets and magic cf the seas, even tq him. Bo mi dark nights the sailor walks the decks with Sir Antony of the "Mary Gloster.” Last year, in Canada. a distin. rruished English statesman, with “Puck 0f Point's Hill tucked under his arm. observed: “You can't hall- mark Mr. Kipling. He's too varied, brain knows everything. He is very fond of child- i 10y Days Sale n of Men’s Wear o...» Wednesday, Jan. 9m. Glam Saturday, January 19th. e-r. All Goods not Listed 25 Per Cent OE N0 APPROBATION. NO CREDIT HENDERSON a GIIDMORE ren; is always sweeet-temoered. even in the morning: is tolerant Bracious t) other authors. and to hear him recite his own poetry, is absolute perfection." Kipling, constant lover of our Dilmifllon- agrees with Cecil Rhodes that Canada will soon be a very great ctuntry, espmiallv as the Empire crowds into closer com- munion. for what makes “No. 1 hard" famous. will make Canadians supcrrnen. To live N, or 49 lg g A Canadian who walked with him in his beautiful garden at; Bate. man's. in Sussex. believes that on Mr. Kiolingfs valient heart is etched: "ft is ‘He who has made us. and mt we. ourselves." Hence the poet's humility. r “ The Haberdoshery ” ' , , y. 25 % 0F~F Arrow Shirts Fancy. Mufflers Brock Hats Sweaters ' Pyjamas Underwear Work Shirts Stanfield’s Underwear Holeproof- Hosiery Work Gloves Men’s Caps Gloves Leather Jackets Men’s Fine Suits Men’s Odd Pants 33 1/3 % o" Men’s Overcoats Camel Llama Coats Beaverine Coats DURING THIS SALE. MEN'S WEAR L DARTNG THIEI‘ ESCAPES . n. umber of -, flwo and ewlllod with furs valued .Jan. 9--1n view of at $225. Ha outrun onlookers and ns a ‘thief hurled escaped. I Buy the Best TEA Brahmin Orange p Pekoe Ceylon Small Leaf Scouting Stands for Service all. the cosmic ray was his find- ings. SPRAINS leb fibula: pally. ll allure Qeeefill- . M DI .L_LN_LM_E-HI. Professional Gard: McLEOD £4’ BENTLEY W. l. BENTLEY, I. 0. Bh-rllkl and Mtcrney-nt-Iqw MONEY ‘I0 0A! Office: mo BIQhnInnd Street BELL 6! MATHIESON B. I. Bell l). L illethieeen, LL]; Ben-Intern b Solicitor; Money to been Cameron Blockfllurlnttetownjll, A- J. HASLAM. 8.5-. LLB. BAIBIBTBB. BOLICITOI, I10. New Brace llullflnl MacGuigan & Trainor lhri l. IQGUIIII‘. K. 0. I c. sf. Olelr ‘Inlnor. n. A. J. A. llaeilonald, llJl. IAIIIITII. UOIJOITOI IO. Charlottetown .l.llhll III»! no Ina and llvnlhevllbfleflilflw nl-a-a-imnntn. ‘ E‘. R. BROW“ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside,.Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown HICKEY & NICHOL NOTAII. be. ‘ IAIIIITIK~ IOIJCITOI l H. F. MecPHEE, B. A.. ll-Xiildfll -~ AAIQJv-wen-Arb-n-nnn-b-Q-nnq- . u...‘ -._ . i,‘ \/ . s‘ ON'S ‘ *r\ a brick through a window of e fur