Edited Text
âFor Mopping
or Scrubbing
Old Dutch gives
better results with
less work.
Leaves no-greasy
film; makes wood,
linoleum, tile -or
Stone looklike new.
Keep a can handy;
good for generai
household use. â
ore or
â
s their spring dress for the °
opening on Victoriaâ. Day when a
sweepstake competition handicap,
medal play for men and women
âWag called, the winners being Mr.
FP. T. Watkis and Mnps. W. K.
ri -
» . Week»
VICTORIA DAY.
Victoria! . What golden memories
SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1922 â
BISTINGYISHED THEMSELVES
We note by the Patriot cof Thurs;
day that the Prince Edward Is
land members have distinguished
jthemselves at Ottawa. âThe
l House.â âthe Patriot informs us âis
attended by them in the after.
noons even so iate a8 midnight
and between one and two oâcicok
âoceasions.â In these
Strenwous attendances and sleep.
on some
lessâ watchings over the interests
province, the
Patriot says they have secured a
number of grants for Prince Ed
|ward Island. The only item worthy
of âthe Patriot's fulsome adulation
is that for $14,000 âfor haroors
âaf their. native
and rivers generally,â a revote of
an item passeq year after wear
and of which not more than $3,000
has been spent in any one year
since it was first placed in the esti
mates. Mr. J. J.. Hughes in elo-
quently pleading for this
is reported in Hanzard as saying:
revote
âIt is not a'new vote and if the
money igs not wanted it will not
'be expended and no. harm will be
done. The item passed ag it has
passed year after year for many
jyears and of which the province
|never. received more thanâ an âin-
jfinitessmal fraction, â
In. the list, however, we find not
ls dollar for the standardization of
|the remainder of the Prince Ed:
| ward Island Railway nor an elo
quent protest by any of the Island
members. against its omission al.
though the Patriotâs interpreta
| geniously
ation through reduced duties and
adding $35,000,000 in. sales tax)
âang promising | mores (which
same kind). âHe has resisted tne
temptation to yield to the Pro-
gressive pressure for more Tadical
changes. âHe has disappointed
some Liberals who were disposed
to expect sweeping changes.â
âThe farmers in particular and
the consumers in general have
gained fewer concessions than they
wished,â adds The âTelegraph.
Throughout its âwhole editorial
comment, The. Telegraph is in-
evasive and frankly
apologetic.
The Toronto Globe swallows it
with attempts at explanation. It
comments thusly:
â âThe increase in the sales tux
by fifty per cent in the Fielding
budget has one feature of special
significance. At present the
is four per cent, and like the old
rate it will make no discrimination
between the countries from: which
the goods are imported; but the
increase of two per cent will be
more than offset on imports from
Great Britain of enamelled ware,
cotton fabrics, flannels, lustrea,
woollen fabrics, woollen clothing,
rubber clothing, knitted goods, and
boots and shoes, by an increase
tax
of 2 1-2 per cent in the preferen-
tial tariff on these products.â
Comments from other Upper
Canadian papers are equally in
formative, equally apologetic, and
equally evasive, many of them un-
consciously humorous.
heaven forbid if it is tobe of the} *
-| McLaren
âwhich is always
Rogers. Luncheon was served by
Mrs. McCready president, Mrs. W.
8. âStewart, Mrs, Blanchard anâ
Mrs Noel DeBlois. Today's tea
hostessesâ will be Mrs. F. iL,
Haszard, Mrs. W. Erdiey Hyndman
Mrs. J. O. | Hyndman and Mise
Haviland,
â hallow
âThe very mention of that qneen-
name;
In myriad hearts it is as deeply
graven, -
As the marble of a hall of fame.
Soldiers and statesmen pass and
âare fotgotten, |
Swept to oblivicn ag by resistle&,
âflood, ; ,
But ever brighter shines the decp
affection : toi
âFor her the people call âVictorla
âthe Good.â
ese
One of jhe victims â of measles,
which is prevalent in the South-
west London. district was the
Duchess of Devonshire, «wife of the
former Governor-General âotâ Can-
ada who suffered froma severe at-
tack, Fan epee
ses 4
/ The Duke of Connaught; who
Was 72 last Week, was among tlose
who visited Lord and Lady Shaugh.
nessey âbeforeâ theirâ depariure. for
Canada On the Empress âcf France,
His grandson, the âMaster of Ram-
Say, son of Commander andâ Lady
Patricia RamBay, is now the idol
of the Dukeâs eye atid spends much
time wth his royal grandpatent,
3 eee x
The young. people: âare eagerly
anticipating the opening of the
tennis season at âthe »: Park this
aft@rnoon whenâ tea will be served
by, the Missos Rourke, âMiss Freda
âHaszard and Miss: Miller.
âSurrounded âby carnations, roses
and daffodils the bevy of pretty
young nurses Misses Lanra Amelia
Dodd, Catherine Nichoison, Ruin biilod Sis
Evelyn Sheidow, Wiinifred Mary| There is quite a 1ot of activity
and Mabel Amanda| âmong the summer cottages just
Wright who earlier in the evening | Ow, cleaning up the grounds,
hdd received tneir diplomas and|Planting gardens â and generally
class pins in the Heartz Memorial | Tenovating for the summer season
Hall, âwere the guests of honor/S80 quickly approaching. âKeppock
Monday evening at a receptior | is to have several âneiw-residents thig
given them by the junior nurses of | Ya" and Holland Hall âhas jits
the P. 'Âź, Island Hosptial in tre usual quota of visitors listed. while
Nufses Home. The visitors wito the hotels are also all bvoked
weretthe relatives and friends, ahead for a full season. A new
were very kindty weicomed py tne | *mmer colony is opening this sea-
matron, Miss Beer, who hasâ al-| 808 -** Southport, facing the East
Teady endeared herself tc her staff River, where eight or more Pretty
and her assistant Miss Profitt; be |2°„ howses have already made
fore being ushered into the music an ae ne aes pie es
a 5 i 2 ank «taffs of the 1 a
rote was eee ey and Canadian Bank of Commerce
choruses especially composed for have each taken a ; house, while
the benefit of the 1922 gratuating | thers are to be occupied byâ part-
class, After a jolly hour retresn-|1es of young people and families
meuts were daintily and abundans.| from this city.
ly served. The guests, after sing: Midd
ing âFor they are Jolly Good Fel-| Mr. Karle Spicer of Halifax, who
lowsâ and extending hearttest con-| 18 80 kindly remembered in this
sratulations said their farewells, City, Bave - a successful recital at
The nurses.were presented with|the Aeolian Hall, | London, this
the usual exquisite bouquets by} Week. (Mr. Spicer, who is a hari-
Mr, James Taii, an annual gift| tone, made his first. appearance
PCO OH Fe CV SCOTT ETe Coreen
Here and there you can haul a
good load and make fair speed on
the Government road. That is what
some published letters say, a8 we
read in The 'Patriot the other day;
a part, when all of the facts are
laid to âheart. For it's up with a
âbounce and down with a thud,
âSpring+ime floods, .as: you .motor
along it rather:jars things; some:
times also breaking your car
springs, and always when reckâning
the distance to town, you should
think of how. ifar you must go up
and down.
ly dry, âwhether they runâ where
all about equally nough, and this
last fact is particularly tough. In
the Spring and the fall there is
âmud over all; âand in winter: ail
covered beneath the snowâfall. So
four months out. of twelve, we may
say to ourselvesâfor one-thind of
the year, as it now. must appearâ
is all and the very best- we can
get, whether the seaso..s are dry
or wet, from this Government
scheme with its cost and its debt.
That's the sum of it all, though
perhaps a letter may now and then
say the improved roads are better.
Here and there better, but some
of them vile, and the cost up to two
thousand dollars a mileâone mile
improved where there's ten miles
neglected, just as might have been
expected, if we take all the roads
into consideration along with the
blundering âBell combination! One
mile in ten made worse or better,
for one-third of the yearâthatâs
âwhat. âshould have been said in a
letter. Two thousand a mile makes
a âbig debt load, more than horses
could haul on a Government road.
Stop and think now for fally four
months of the year Jack Frost, the
peopleâs great Engineer, builds for
the people his excellent snow
roads! be the land low or ânigh, and
where there are no roads; over the
a delight. to the last âweek âat a Queenâs Hall orchest-
which is part of the truth and only |i
where the washouts came with the |B
Just now all the roads are equal- |}
itâs low or high, and also they're Âą
:
ye ae x i
© Another season has come. It.aeems but âyesterday
since we were all preparing for last Spring, âut low and
âbehold, here is another Spring at hand, and our Furnishingâ
âDepatment is overflowing with âbargai
âwear, ties, collats, gloves,âeverything mer
them comfortable.: â
With Spring, comes an. obligation service to yourself.
It; js. atime when the purse strings must be looséd andthe
small change put in circulation. We do not expect any
extravagance in buying. You do not need to be extravag. Ba
âantif: you: buy, your furnishings: from us. -What'WĂ©:do ex.
pect, and what every person should to buy what you
Needyâ ty other words, let 18 bq you â â$i buy? fromius.
âwhat you'need, but buy careful sth benc line Bah Oo) wllace ds
Suits made to order from $37.00 to $56.00. 5.
Ready-to-wear from $25.00" to "r
MacL:ELLAN ;
site
BROS. :
siti
PROT OE OFCOI Oe 10 CRC TT CC Ov wey
âDonât Neglect Your Building:
Have us look over the flashing and
conductors. Maybe the gutters ar
leaking and need repairing. :
We use the best Copper or Galvan- ft
ized Iron in our work. fie
Our expert roofer will attend to
your metal work. A
FRED H. TRAINOR«: ââ+
Phone 393-J 80 Grafton Street
Opp. Prince Edward. :
sinc
eas
y
|
000-06-40-0000400 0000 020b04
4
4
soeoee eee f
+
E. R. BROW
146 Richmond Street
Charlottetown
ral concert. :the hills and over the ridges; and
adel âover the rivers he builds us bridg-
âMrs, Greener. and two little los, and every one of his bridges of
daughters who spent the winter in jice so smooth and even and level
this city with Mr.â Edmund G. and nice; everywhere itâs this en-
Coombs, left He week on returf'|sineerâs plan to build: his bridges
to their home. Mr. Coombs ac-|o7 single span; he builds them
companying: them to Ottawa. }quick and he builds them strong;
Ne, âhe âbuilds them broad, and he builds
The Queen of the Belgtans has! hem long; over. the rivers. and
jugt-accepted the'gift of ah Bnglish: â : ' :
aeroplane for her own use, and in- ponds pebitlcetelivllies italdipiaallg la COSCO ORCC SCOOT E+O OE
tion of the âpromises of Mr. Mac To a canned article in its col-| graduating class.
Kenzie King gave our people the|ums The Patriot adds the follow-, . we
impression that this work would; ing bit of summer comedy on its! Mr. A. A. Pomeroy âhas had as
ibe. proceeded with as soon ag the| own, hook. At least we assume it ne Suests this week Mr. and Mrs,
! ite F. C. Edgecombe of Fredericton, N.
King administration got: on its'is its own as it is.the only paper! (Mp. Edgecombe, who has had a!
feet: Even the unexpended portion! in Canada, go far as we know, that| Pleasant holiday fishing, sightsee-;
of the revote of $14,000 would: could put it that way: Pd i is leaving âtoday for Hali-
have been a help in this much| âThe âclouds of depression, are} {% Mrs. Kdgecombe will remain
needed work but it was not sug.| already lifting, tha. âNfecling is|
Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and
Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest rate.
Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis
Good Stong Stock Companies.
|
lL Peeee
a ed
e
MADE IN CANADA
BATTERIES
SOCeoe ° sa i a ci Sa tn he ti ip Bin fin in ts ne
over"until next week when she will
be joined -by her two daughters
If the new car
you are thinki
of buying has an
Exide Battery,
that is an advan-
tage worth con:
sidering
Exide Batteries of
Canada, Limited
153 Dufferin Street
gsted, Our people however are
âlearning by painful
,that Liberal pre-election promises
âare not expected to be kept,
To
HUMOROUSLY APOLOGETIC
Liberal comment on the new
Fielding tariff ang proposed. tax-
ation might be summed up ig the
familiar Scottish saying âlt might
have been waur (worse)â. With oue
~ Toronto,
|hand pointing out the wisdom and
ithe sagacity with which Mr. Field
âing grappled with the difficult situ
ation- and with the other showing
the defects and the weaknesses of
the tariff, the faithful press under-
takes to swallow it all without a
grimace,
The St. John Telegraph, prob
ably the abiest Liberal newspaper
TORONTO .
In Centre of Shopping
and Business District
Z30 ROOMS
uu with Private Baths
EUROPEAN PLAN
WINNETT THOMPSON, MANâG. DIR.
THERE'S FINANCIAL SAFETY IN|ââacceptadle
AND/ that the. downward
âAUTO INSURANCE
THERE'S CERTAINLY
DAN GER AHEAD
Not one of us can picture
and life and accident
becoming so necessary. Let us
plain its completeâ protection,
Hyndman & Co. Ltd
in the Maritime pifovinees, per.
forms thé swallowing feat with
humorous heroism.
At the outset The Telegraph re-
minds its readers: that âthe coun-
try was told sgme months ago by
the Prime Minister and Hon, Mr.
Fielding as well that there would
be no general tariff revision ac
this session.â The Telegraph con.
siders it best not to say anything
about âwhat the Prime Minister,
Mr. Fielding and all the Liberal
candidates had said before tiat
time when they were campsigning
for, the election. It proceeds how-
ever: therefore, not ex
ected that the Liberal tariff
pledges would be carried into ef-
; fect at this time and they are notâ,
âIt was,
It remarks that the changes, are
im the expectation
tendency in
Customs charges will be main
tained.â Seeing that the âdown-
âward jtendencyâ has been. main-
the tained for many years under dif
future. That's why we take out fir 2!
:jnéurance. |
and that is why.auto insurance {3 little consolation in_ this.
ex-
there fs
The
| Telegraph sums up its opinions
| thus far with the Conclusion thal
âHe,â (Mr. Fielding.) âhag disap-
pointed all the Conservatives by
ferent administrations
widespread _ that the worst has
experienceâ passed; and the restoration of con-!âąO0lor here from Fredericton.
| fidence will inspire the hope, nay
â | the faith, that as a quarter of a
"| Gentury âago tha Fielding Tariff
| Was. the beginning of -a period of
,unexampled progress and prosper:
rity, so the Budget framed by the
Pa master hand yesterday may
be âthe harbinger of better days
ywhen âCanada wil again march |
forward to greater achievementy
and an ampler prosperity.â
It has been said of The Patriot
that, if on a Liberal ship headed
for perdition and with the Liberal
flag flying, it. would, even when
making the last plunge over: the
precipice, declare âWe are all right
yet.ââ
a ee
THE ETERNAL ROUND
A southern farmer, asked, why
he was raising $0 much -corn,
replied âto raise more. hogsâ.
Why did he want to raise. more
hogs? âTo buy more land.â What
did he want more land for? âTo
raise. more corn.â To grow more
More land, to grow more corn to
feed more hogs, to, buy more
lthe eternal round upon which he
expended his energies and his in
genuity.
It recalls
which the
entered, as
the eternal roundâ upoa
âBell gĂ©vernment. has
explained by the Hon-
employ more. officials, to collect
more taxes, to inerease the pay of
officials to employ more officials
to collect more taxes to increase
the pay âof officials, and sq on
through the eternal round!
It is ingenious but unfortunate-
ly there is no logical end to the
system, Fortunately the ingenious
machine itself hay an end and the
end {is in âsight, otherwise we
might go on eternally employing
more officials to collect more. taxés
to. pay increased salaries to of-
THE OLDEST INSURANCE AGEN.|8iving the consumer some reliet" ficlaly to collect more taxes toâ
es
â cy
Cate
IN P. E.
WBS,
LAND
ele
ae
(relieving them of one million tax-
Maga
pity |
aiyet
'
but you know the rest,
&
corn to feed more hogs, to buy |-
land, and so on ad infinitum, was ;
ourable George HB. Hughes: âTo
who with â their husbandg wili| tends to pilot it herself,
see
Tho Right Rev..C. W. Gordon,
D. D., of Winnipeg, moderator of
the Presbyterian Church tn Can
ada, who is well known ilso as
âRalph âConnorâ was among the inter.
esting visitors to arrive in the city
last evening. â
ve * *
The Daughters of the Empire tea
in the Navy âLeague yesterday
afternoon was-one of the nicest af-
fairs held fcr some time and the
wide patronage it received »musi
have been gratifying to ithe ladies
who âworked so strenuously for its
success. The many fancy articles
attractively atranged sold quickiy
to appreciative buyers, while the
tea, âwhich was a dainty collection
of everything that is 800d to eat,
was thoroughly- enjoyd.,
a * *
eee
Letters from Mr. and Mrs. James
Paton this week indicate they are
having a glorious time on their
countries. At the Azores en route
they were charmed and delighted
wth the beauwiful . gardens of
Pontaâ Delgada where there are all
kinds of. flowersâ in. bloom besides
pine apples âand oranges ready to
be plucked.
Victoria Day, with its bright gun-
shine, found Charlottetown desert:
âŹd and the frist holiday. of spring
was royally celebrated by a round
of picnics, driveg and fishing
parties, eee
: The engagement of Miss Helen
MoLaren, only daughter of Mr.
Johri:A. âMcLaren, to Dr, E. Notting
of Halifax was. announced among
their . friends this week, the mar-
tage to take plaee early tn June.
* es
_ âA Pair of Sixesâ was very
Prettily staged and , exceptionally
well:acted at the Prince Edward
Theatre on âThursday evening iby
the (Dramatic Club of Mt, Allison
University. {t was a delightful
entertainment and the young per-
formers will always Tecelve a
cordial welcome in this city. Yos.
terday they were entertained to a
drive around the city and suburbs,
a ah
A dance at Beath Grove Inn was.
enjoyed by the visiting Oddfellows
and their friends, the âInn © bein,
opened cn Victoria Day âfor te
first time this âseason,
oe ee ee
orecee
Daily Selections io.
Guardia Readar
From the W. 8. Louson
Collection
tee «@
") * NEW.GOURAGE
By F. W. Hutt , â
**
Néver mind the failures,
find a better way,
Keep in mind the Purpose of tha
leaders of today; ;
Just begin all over, aiming higher
than beforeâ'
Never mind the failures, hop
something good in store
Uy (ONT A cable
from London to the
World says: (Lady Rachael Caven-
dish, the Duke of Devonshiroâs
beautiful daughter, has been filmed
for the âTopical Budgetâ which {fe
being shown at all the moving
âpicture shows, (Significantly, she
is described in the picture ae the
young lady âin) whom such particu-
âdar public interest js being taken.â
Lady wel, one of the charm-
ing âbridesmaids of Princess Mary,
smiled most agreeably before the
camera. âThe film excites a buzz
of admiration wherever it is shown,
The exhibiting of the Picture has
naturally revived the report that a
marriage is coutemplated for her
with âone Of the royal Princesâ-it is
believed to ibe the Prince of Wales,
It ts unprecedented for a girl in
high society to allow herself to. be
filmed: in thig distinctive way for
the âTopical Budget.â at will have
one resultâeverybody in the coun-
e for
Never mind the failures, trudge
' along another mile;
Notice how one little path
sunnier the while,
âMount each hill in triumph and
with faith both strong and
new
Hold the path of honor whatsoeâer
i it. passesâ through.
grows
Never mind the failures,
Strive to clear a better way
Courage for tomorrow be
motto for today, .
Up ye cheery hearted ohes, no time
for being sad
Never mind the -fajluresâmake
the .world around you glad.
â_â 0 or
your
A man may be down but never
out unless he is down in the mouth,
If the coal Strike keeps up there
try will Tearn of _her attractions
will be a. slate shortage, and admire them, vs
.
trip to Spain and the Mediteranean |
ane he takes!
| âWhen; he takes .@ contract he
| does not shirk; he gets right at it
.and does the work!
three nights and as many days he,
bridges the ponds and the rivers
and âbays, and often in a single
night, he ibuilds snow:roads all
clean and white over thousands of
miles: in: countryâ and town, just
gathers material and lays it right
downâwhen tha/roads get. dirty
he puts on more, of the same mat-
erlal which âhe keeps in store. (He
isn't to blame if it piles up Jin drifts
that's the fault of the wind as
it blows -and shifts!) In the spring
if we ask him thow much we owe
for his bridges of ice and his roads
one-third of a year? he just goes
off with a smile and a cheer.
âNo, good Jack Frost is well con-
tent to do all thatâ work without
charging a cent, but with certain
persons itâs different! Four months
of the year withou any cost our
road-work ds done by Bngineer
Frost. âSurely Jack himself must
be a hummerâbut we donât get the
work done so chéaply in summer.
No, every year {t costs more and
more, evâry yeay more than the
year âbefore; every .yearâit's the
âone thing thatâs sureâthe road-
work costs more while the people
are fewer.
Taxes are driving the people
away! Under doubled taxes they
will mot stay, but that is just. the
Bell Government way. Boasting
about their imiproved roads, but
caring not for the peopleâs loads.
What good are noads of mud or of
gravel with only a shandful of peo-
ple to travel? / Telling them, too,
roads won't cost them a cent, after
all of the people's money they've
spent! Aifterâall of the debt that
theyâve piled_on every man. and
woman and child!â After all of the
taxes theyâve laid on man and wife
and on youth -and matd!
We were told one day when the
House was* âsitting that our very
wise Government thought it was
fitting to have the new roads kept
always repaired, and for this a
measure âwas being prepared, so
âthat the roads they called "perman-
entâ would be patched ev'ry year,
âwithout costing a cent.â But no
such measure thas yet been produc-
edâprehape: âtwas prepared but not
introducĂ©d!âtike that one ifor hold-
ing the by-elections, or it might be |
because of caucusâ objections. Any.
â
{In two. or:
of snow, and for âkeeping them up
clothed, with a hair net over its
perfectly dressed hair. The shops
which originated the doll habit tre
quently vary the kind of doll used
and take care not to put too many
in the window. There is no doubt
these littleâ novelties have a cer-
tain value in attracting attention
to the âwindow display, and the
fact that quite serious slores have
now âfallenâ for them in their mil.
finery and) childrenâs windows
proves that théy have. selling
value.
a -âââ
STEAMER oUNK
IN COLLISION
WASHINGTON, May 26. The
steamed Andree, British, of 2,534
Othersâ View Points
Women as Economists,
Toronto Globe,
ââAn official who has, been doing
research work for miutital) savings
banks in the United States says
that wives whese husbands earn
less than $4,000 a year make wiser
and more economical use of money
than do the husbands, but when the
family incemes pise, above that.
point the feminine impulse towards
economy weakens and the wives
are apt to spend on dress more
than ithey can alford, (Mr, Arnold
Bennett, in his latest book, âMr.
Prohack,â developsâ this theme
amusingly. Mir. Prohack was a
civil Servant with an inelastic In-
come who wag pinched like his
class, by rising prices during ang
tons register, was im collision off
the Philadelphia navy yard today
and was sunk according advices
after the war. His wife practised
a rigorous and increasing self-den-
ial, but the husband balked at giv-
ing up one of his clubs. âUnexpect-
âŹdly he came into a fortune and
was astonished when his self.sacrt-
ficing wife suddenly embarked
on a career of soaring luxury and
Social ambition. The Amencan
Statistican and the English novelist
agree that woman is more economt-
Cal âthan man when she has not the
means of being othenwise. If they
âTe correct it is another phase of
feminine capacity for privation and
patient suffering which is admitted-
ly greater than in the other sex,
Whether the husband or the wife si
the thriftier is a fertile topic of do-
mestic conversation, no matter
what the family income may be;
but. there ig not always an agree-
menton the subject in ever.
household, :
to the naval communication office ~~
here, ; } Hie
iNo lives wefe lost,â if was sald.
The navat authorities at Philadel-
phia, it was added, did not know
what ship was in collision with the
Andree,
i Lives Lost,
PHILITDTLPHIA,. May 25, The
British steamer âAndree, of 2,534
otns, tonight collided with the
steamship Alexander, of 4,184 tons
register, of the Admiralty Stear-
ehip Line, opposite Fort Mufflin
'Pa.), seriously disabling the
former,
The Alexander struck the Andree
amidships. âThe blow «was so seri:
ous that, tite Andree started to sink.
necessitating. the running her into
shailow water on the New Jersey
city, where she anchored, âNo lives
were lost, the report says,
Dolls Succeed Teddy Bears,
: London Timog
DODD'S |
ZAKIDNEY
/ PIL LS
NA ss
L KIDNE
RHEUMAT!S
TEND
i 3]
Hi, RiGwepie DI!
Slageres ! {i
{ 1
| â
4) a
âInto every part. of London: the :
craze for dolls ag an aid. to shop.
Window dressing hag spread. In,
Bond-street the French rag doit,
with highly colored hair and cheeks
and beautifully. dressed, may be
seen sitting solitary among. fast.
diously arranged stovk. In others,
there are Hastern figures with
Hmbg that move in any direction
they are placed. But the common.
est type of dofl is the âbay vamp"
â a chubby mascot not e1aporately
} ( }
|
peal
Vay
thing Ă©lse but to tax or to borrowâ
or a Salary Grab, as we've learned
to our sorrow!âcah always be put|
off! till tomorrow!
Ww
or Scrubbing
Old Dutch gives
better results with
less work.
Leaves no-greasy
film; makes wood,
linoleum, tile -or
Stone looklike new.
Keep a can handy;
good for generai
household use. â
ore or
â
s their spring dress for the °
opening on Victoriaâ. Day when a
sweepstake competition handicap,
medal play for men and women
âWag called, the winners being Mr.
FP. T. Watkis and Mnps. W. K.
ri -
» . Week»
VICTORIA DAY.
Victoria! . What golden memories
SATURDAY, MAY 27, 1922 â
BISTINGYISHED THEMSELVES
We note by the Patriot cof Thurs;
day that the Prince Edward Is
land members have distinguished
jthemselves at Ottawa. âThe
l House.â âthe Patriot informs us âis
attended by them in the after.
noons even so iate a8 midnight
and between one and two oâcicok
âoceasions.â In these
Strenwous attendances and sleep.
on some
lessâ watchings over the interests
province, the
Patriot says they have secured a
number of grants for Prince Ed
|ward Island. The only item worthy
of âthe Patriot's fulsome adulation
is that for $14,000 âfor haroors
âaf their. native
and rivers generally,â a revote of
an item passeq year after wear
and of which not more than $3,000
has been spent in any one year
since it was first placed in the esti
mates. Mr. J. J.. Hughes in elo-
quently pleading for this
is reported in Hanzard as saying:
revote
âIt is not a'new vote and if the
money igs not wanted it will not
'be expended and no. harm will be
done. The item passed ag it has
passed year after year for many
jyears and of which the province
|never. received more thanâ an âin-
jfinitessmal fraction, â
In. the list, however, we find not
ls dollar for the standardization of
|the remainder of the Prince Ed:
| ward Island Railway nor an elo
quent protest by any of the Island
members. against its omission al.
though the Patriotâs interpreta
| geniously
ation through reduced duties and
adding $35,000,000 in. sales tax)
âang promising | mores (which
same kind). âHe has resisted tne
temptation to yield to the Pro-
gressive pressure for more Tadical
changes. âHe has disappointed
some Liberals who were disposed
to expect sweeping changes.â
âThe farmers in particular and
the consumers in general have
gained fewer concessions than they
wished,â adds The âTelegraph.
Throughout its âwhole editorial
comment, The. Telegraph is in-
evasive and frankly
apologetic.
The Toronto Globe swallows it
with attempts at explanation. It
comments thusly:
â âThe increase in the sales tux
by fifty per cent in the Fielding
budget has one feature of special
significance. At present the
is four per cent, and like the old
rate it will make no discrimination
between the countries from: which
the goods are imported; but the
increase of two per cent will be
more than offset on imports from
Great Britain of enamelled ware,
cotton fabrics, flannels, lustrea,
woollen fabrics, woollen clothing,
rubber clothing, knitted goods, and
boots and shoes, by an increase
tax
of 2 1-2 per cent in the preferen-
tial tariff on these products.â
Comments from other Upper
Canadian papers are equally in
formative, equally apologetic, and
equally evasive, many of them un-
consciously humorous.
heaven forbid if it is tobe of the} *
-| McLaren
âwhich is always
Rogers. Luncheon was served by
Mrs. McCready president, Mrs. W.
8. âStewart, Mrs, Blanchard anâ
Mrs Noel DeBlois. Today's tea
hostessesâ will be Mrs. F. iL,
Haszard, Mrs. W. Erdiey Hyndman
Mrs. J. O. | Hyndman and Mise
Haviland,
â hallow
âThe very mention of that qneen-
name;
In myriad hearts it is as deeply
graven, -
As the marble of a hall of fame.
Soldiers and statesmen pass and
âare fotgotten, |
Swept to oblivicn ag by resistle&,
âflood, ; ,
But ever brighter shines the decp
affection : toi
âFor her the people call âVictorla
âthe Good.â
ese
One of jhe victims â of measles,
which is prevalent in the South-
west London. district was the
Duchess of Devonshire, «wife of the
former Governor-General âotâ Can-
ada who suffered froma severe at-
tack, Fan epee
ses 4
/ The Duke of Connaught; who
Was 72 last Week, was among tlose
who visited Lord and Lady Shaugh.
nessey âbeforeâ theirâ depariure. for
Canada On the Empress âcf France,
His grandson, the âMaster of Ram-
Say, son of Commander andâ Lady
Patricia RamBay, is now the idol
of the Dukeâs eye atid spends much
time wth his royal grandpatent,
3 eee x
The young. people: âare eagerly
anticipating the opening of the
tennis season at âthe »: Park this
aft@rnoon whenâ tea will be served
by, the Missos Rourke, âMiss Freda
âHaszard and Miss: Miller.
âSurrounded âby carnations, roses
and daffodils the bevy of pretty
young nurses Misses Lanra Amelia
Dodd, Catherine Nichoison, Ruin biilod Sis
Evelyn Sheidow, Wiinifred Mary| There is quite a 1ot of activity
and Mabel Amanda| âmong the summer cottages just
Wright who earlier in the evening | Ow, cleaning up the grounds,
hdd received tneir diplomas and|Planting gardens â and generally
class pins in the Heartz Memorial | Tenovating for the summer season
Hall, âwere the guests of honor/S80 quickly approaching. âKeppock
Monday evening at a receptior | is to have several âneiw-residents thig
given them by the junior nurses of | Ya" and Holland Hall âhas jits
the P. 'Âź, Island Hosptial in tre usual quota of visitors listed. while
Nufses Home. The visitors wito the hotels are also all bvoked
weretthe relatives and friends, ahead for a full season. A new
were very kindty weicomed py tne | *mmer colony is opening this sea-
matron, Miss Beer, who hasâ al-| 808 -** Southport, facing the East
Teady endeared herself tc her staff River, where eight or more Pretty
and her assistant Miss Profitt; be |2°„ howses have already made
fore being ushered into the music an ae ne aes pie es
a 5 i 2 ank «taffs of the 1 a
rote was eee ey and Canadian Bank of Commerce
choruses especially composed for have each taken a ; house, while
the benefit of the 1922 gratuating | thers are to be occupied byâ part-
class, After a jolly hour retresn-|1es of young people and families
meuts were daintily and abundans.| from this city.
ly served. The guests, after sing: Midd
ing âFor they are Jolly Good Fel-| Mr. Karle Spicer of Halifax, who
lowsâ and extending hearttest con-| 18 80 kindly remembered in this
sratulations said their farewells, City, Bave - a successful recital at
The nurses.were presented with|the Aeolian Hall, | London, this
the usual exquisite bouquets by} Week. (Mr. Spicer, who is a hari-
Mr, James Taii, an annual gift| tone, made his first. appearance
PCO OH Fe CV SCOTT ETe Coreen
Here and there you can haul a
good load and make fair speed on
the Government road. That is what
some published letters say, a8 we
read in The 'Patriot the other day;
a part, when all of the facts are
laid to âheart. For it's up with a
âbounce and down with a thud,
âSpring+ime floods, .as: you .motor
along it rather:jars things; some:
times also breaking your car
springs, and always when reckâning
the distance to town, you should
think of how. ifar you must go up
and down.
ly dry, âwhether they runâ where
all about equally nough, and this
last fact is particularly tough. In
the Spring and the fall there is
âmud over all; âand in winter: ail
covered beneath the snowâfall. So
four months out. of twelve, we may
say to ourselvesâfor one-thind of
the year, as it now. must appearâ
is all and the very best- we can
get, whether the seaso..s are dry
or wet, from this Government
scheme with its cost and its debt.
That's the sum of it all, though
perhaps a letter may now and then
say the improved roads are better.
Here and there better, but some
of them vile, and the cost up to two
thousand dollars a mileâone mile
improved where there's ten miles
neglected, just as might have been
expected, if we take all the roads
into consideration along with the
blundering âBell combination! One
mile in ten made worse or better,
for one-third of the yearâthatâs
âwhat. âshould have been said in a
letter. Two thousand a mile makes
a âbig debt load, more than horses
could haul on a Government road.
Stop and think now for fally four
months of the year Jack Frost, the
peopleâs great Engineer, builds for
the people his excellent snow
roads! be the land low or ânigh, and
where there are no roads; over the
a delight. to the last âweek âat a Queenâs Hall orchest-
which is part of the truth and only |i
where the washouts came with the |B
Just now all the roads are equal- |}
itâs low or high, and also they're Âą
:
ye ae x i
© Another season has come. It.aeems but âyesterday
since we were all preparing for last Spring, âut low and
âbehold, here is another Spring at hand, and our Furnishingâ
âDepatment is overflowing with âbargai
âwear, ties, collats, gloves,âeverything mer
them comfortable.: â
With Spring, comes an. obligation service to yourself.
It; js. atime when the purse strings must be looséd andthe
small change put in circulation. We do not expect any
extravagance in buying. You do not need to be extravag. Ba
âantif: you: buy, your furnishings: from us. -What'WĂ©:do ex.
pect, and what every person should to buy what you
Needyâ ty other words, let 18 bq you â â$i buy? fromius.
âwhat you'need, but buy careful sth benc line Bah Oo) wllace ds
Suits made to order from $37.00 to $56.00. 5.
Ready-to-wear from $25.00" to "r
MacL:ELLAN ;
site
BROS. :
siti
PROT OE OFCOI Oe 10 CRC TT CC Ov wey
âDonât Neglect Your Building:
Have us look over the flashing and
conductors. Maybe the gutters ar
leaking and need repairing. :
We use the best Copper or Galvan- ft
ized Iron in our work. fie
Our expert roofer will attend to
your metal work. A
FRED H. TRAINOR«: ââ+
Phone 393-J 80 Grafton Street
Opp. Prince Edward. :
sinc
eas
y
|
000-06-40-0000400 0000 020b04
4
4
soeoee eee f
+
E. R. BROW
146 Richmond Street
Charlottetown
ral concert. :the hills and over the ridges; and
adel âover the rivers he builds us bridg-
âMrs, Greener. and two little los, and every one of his bridges of
daughters who spent the winter in jice so smooth and even and level
this city with Mr.â Edmund G. and nice; everywhere itâs this en-
Coombs, left He week on returf'|sineerâs plan to build: his bridges
to their home. Mr. Coombs ac-|o7 single span; he builds them
companying: them to Ottawa. }quick and he builds them strong;
Ne, âhe âbuilds them broad, and he builds
The Queen of the Belgtans has! hem long; over. the rivers. and
jugt-accepted the'gift of ah Bnglish: â : ' :
aeroplane for her own use, and in- ponds pebitlcetelivllies italdipiaallg la COSCO ORCC SCOOT E+O OE
tion of the âpromises of Mr. Mac To a canned article in its col-| graduating class.
Kenzie King gave our people the|ums The Patriot adds the follow-, . we
impression that this work would; ing bit of summer comedy on its! Mr. A. A. Pomeroy âhas had as
ibe. proceeded with as soon ag the| own, hook. At least we assume it ne Suests this week Mr. and Mrs,
! ite F. C. Edgecombe of Fredericton, N.
King administration got: on its'is its own as it is.the only paper! (Mp. Edgecombe, who has had a!
feet: Even the unexpended portion! in Canada, go far as we know, that| Pleasant holiday fishing, sightsee-;
of the revote of $14,000 would: could put it that way: Pd i is leaving âtoday for Hali-
have been a help in this much| âThe âclouds of depression, are} {% Mrs. Kdgecombe will remain
needed work but it was not sug.| already lifting, tha. âNfecling is|
Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and
Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest rate.
Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis
Good Stong Stock Companies.
|
lL Peeee
a ed
e
MADE IN CANADA
BATTERIES
SOCeoe ° sa i a ci Sa tn he ti ip Bin fin in ts ne
over"until next week when she will
be joined -by her two daughters
If the new car
you are thinki
of buying has an
Exide Battery,
that is an advan-
tage worth con:
sidering
Exide Batteries of
Canada, Limited
153 Dufferin Street
gsted, Our people however are
âlearning by painful
,that Liberal pre-election promises
âare not expected to be kept,
To
HUMOROUSLY APOLOGETIC
Liberal comment on the new
Fielding tariff ang proposed. tax-
ation might be summed up ig the
familiar Scottish saying âlt might
have been waur (worse)â. With oue
~ Toronto,
|hand pointing out the wisdom and
ithe sagacity with which Mr. Field
âing grappled with the difficult situ
ation- and with the other showing
the defects and the weaknesses of
the tariff, the faithful press under-
takes to swallow it all without a
grimace,
The St. John Telegraph, prob
ably the abiest Liberal newspaper
TORONTO .
In Centre of Shopping
and Business District
Z30 ROOMS
uu with Private Baths
EUROPEAN PLAN
WINNETT THOMPSON, MANâG. DIR.
THERE'S FINANCIAL SAFETY IN|ââacceptadle
AND/ that the. downward
âAUTO INSURANCE
THERE'S CERTAINLY
DAN GER AHEAD
Not one of us can picture
and life and accident
becoming so necessary. Let us
plain its completeâ protection,
Hyndman & Co. Ltd
in the Maritime pifovinees, per.
forms thé swallowing feat with
humorous heroism.
At the outset The Telegraph re-
minds its readers: that âthe coun-
try was told sgme months ago by
the Prime Minister and Hon, Mr.
Fielding as well that there would
be no general tariff revision ac
this session.â The Telegraph con.
siders it best not to say anything
about âwhat the Prime Minister,
Mr. Fielding and all the Liberal
candidates had said before tiat
time when they were campsigning
for, the election. It proceeds how-
ever: therefore, not ex
ected that the Liberal tariff
pledges would be carried into ef-
; fect at this time and they are notâ,
âIt was,
It remarks that the changes, are
im the expectation
tendency in
Customs charges will be main
tained.â Seeing that the âdown-
âward jtendencyâ has been. main-
the tained for many years under dif
future. That's why we take out fir 2!
:jnéurance. |
and that is why.auto insurance {3 little consolation in_ this.
ex-
there fs
The
| Telegraph sums up its opinions
| thus far with the Conclusion thal
âHe,â (Mr. Fielding.) âhag disap-
pointed all the Conservatives by
ferent administrations
widespread _ that the worst has
experienceâ passed; and the restoration of con-!âąO0lor here from Fredericton.
| fidence will inspire the hope, nay
â | the faith, that as a quarter of a
"| Gentury âago tha Fielding Tariff
| Was. the beginning of -a period of
,unexampled progress and prosper:
rity, so the Budget framed by the
Pa master hand yesterday may
be âthe harbinger of better days
ywhen âCanada wil again march |
forward to greater achievementy
and an ampler prosperity.â
It has been said of The Patriot
that, if on a Liberal ship headed
for perdition and with the Liberal
flag flying, it. would, even when
making the last plunge over: the
precipice, declare âWe are all right
yet.ââ
a ee
THE ETERNAL ROUND
A southern farmer, asked, why
he was raising $0 much -corn,
replied âto raise more. hogsâ.
Why did he want to raise. more
hogs? âTo buy more land.â What
did he want more land for? âTo
raise. more corn.â To grow more
More land, to grow more corn to
feed more hogs, to, buy more
lthe eternal round upon which he
expended his energies and his in
genuity.
It recalls
which the
entered, as
the eternal roundâ upoa
âBell gĂ©vernment. has
explained by the Hon-
employ more. officials, to collect
more taxes, to inerease the pay of
officials to employ more officials
to collect more taxes to increase
the pay âof officials, and sq on
through the eternal round!
It is ingenious but unfortunate-
ly there is no logical end to the
system, Fortunately the ingenious
machine itself hay an end and the
end {is in âsight, otherwise we
might go on eternally employing
more officials to collect more. taxés
to. pay increased salaries to of-
THE OLDEST INSURANCE AGEN.|8iving the consumer some reliet" ficlaly to collect more taxes toâ
es
â cy
Cate
IN P. E.
WBS,
LAND
ele
ae
(relieving them of one million tax-
Maga
pity |
aiyet
'
but you know the rest,
&
corn to feed more hogs, to buy |-
land, and so on ad infinitum, was ;
ourable George HB. Hughes: âTo
who with â their husbandg wili| tends to pilot it herself,
see
Tho Right Rev..C. W. Gordon,
D. D., of Winnipeg, moderator of
the Presbyterian Church tn Can
ada, who is well known ilso as
âRalph âConnorâ was among the inter.
esting visitors to arrive in the city
last evening. â
ve * *
The Daughters of the Empire tea
in the Navy âLeague yesterday
afternoon was-one of the nicest af-
fairs held fcr some time and the
wide patronage it received »musi
have been gratifying to ithe ladies
who âworked so strenuously for its
success. The many fancy articles
attractively atranged sold quickiy
to appreciative buyers, while the
tea, âwhich was a dainty collection
of everything that is 800d to eat,
was thoroughly- enjoyd.,
a * *
eee
Letters from Mr. and Mrs. James
Paton this week indicate they are
having a glorious time on their
countries. At the Azores en route
they were charmed and delighted
wth the beauwiful . gardens of
Pontaâ Delgada where there are all
kinds of. flowersâ in. bloom besides
pine apples âand oranges ready to
be plucked.
Victoria Day, with its bright gun-
shine, found Charlottetown desert:
âŹd and the frist holiday. of spring
was royally celebrated by a round
of picnics, driveg and fishing
parties, eee
: The engagement of Miss Helen
MoLaren, only daughter of Mr.
Johri:A. âMcLaren, to Dr, E. Notting
of Halifax was. announced among
their . friends this week, the mar-
tage to take plaee early tn June.
* es
_ âA Pair of Sixesâ was very
Prettily staged and , exceptionally
well:acted at the Prince Edward
Theatre on âThursday evening iby
the (Dramatic Club of Mt, Allison
University. {t was a delightful
entertainment and the young per-
formers will always Tecelve a
cordial welcome in this city. Yos.
terday they were entertained to a
drive around the city and suburbs,
a ah
A dance at Beath Grove Inn was.
enjoyed by the visiting Oddfellows
and their friends, the âInn © bein,
opened cn Victoria Day âfor te
first time this âseason,
oe ee ee
orecee
Daily Selections io.
Guardia Readar
From the W. 8. Louson
Collection
tee «@
") * NEW.GOURAGE
By F. W. Hutt , â
**
Néver mind the failures,
find a better way,
Keep in mind the Purpose of tha
leaders of today; ;
Just begin all over, aiming higher
than beforeâ'
Never mind the failures, hop
something good in store
Uy (ONT A cable
from London to the
World says: (Lady Rachael Caven-
dish, the Duke of Devonshiroâs
beautiful daughter, has been filmed
for the âTopical Budgetâ which {fe
being shown at all the moving
âpicture shows, (Significantly, she
is described in the picture ae the
young lady âin) whom such particu-
âdar public interest js being taken.â
Lady wel, one of the charm-
ing âbridesmaids of Princess Mary,
smiled most agreeably before the
camera. âThe film excites a buzz
of admiration wherever it is shown,
The exhibiting of the Picture has
naturally revived the report that a
marriage is coutemplated for her
with âone Of the royal Princesâ-it is
believed to ibe the Prince of Wales,
It ts unprecedented for a girl in
high society to allow herself to. be
filmed: in thig distinctive way for
the âTopical Budget.â at will have
one resultâeverybody in the coun-
e for
Never mind the failures, trudge
' along another mile;
Notice how one little path
sunnier the while,
âMount each hill in triumph and
with faith both strong and
new
Hold the path of honor whatsoeâer
i it. passesâ through.
grows
Never mind the failures,
Strive to clear a better way
Courage for tomorrow be
motto for today, .
Up ye cheery hearted ohes, no time
for being sad
Never mind the -fajluresâmake
the .world around you glad.
â_â 0 or
your
A man may be down but never
out unless he is down in the mouth,
If the coal Strike keeps up there
try will Tearn of _her attractions
will be a. slate shortage, and admire them, vs
.
trip to Spain and the Mediteranean |
ane he takes!
| âWhen; he takes .@ contract he
| does not shirk; he gets right at it
.and does the work!
three nights and as many days he,
bridges the ponds and the rivers
and âbays, and often in a single
night, he ibuilds snow:roads all
clean and white over thousands of
miles: in: countryâ and town, just
gathers material and lays it right
downâwhen tha/roads get. dirty
he puts on more, of the same mat-
erlal which âhe keeps in store. (He
isn't to blame if it piles up Jin drifts
that's the fault of the wind as
it blows -and shifts!) In the spring
if we ask him thow much we owe
for his bridges of ice and his roads
one-third of a year? he just goes
off with a smile and a cheer.
âNo, good Jack Frost is well con-
tent to do all thatâ work without
charging a cent, but with certain
persons itâs different! Four months
of the year withou any cost our
road-work ds done by Bngineer
Frost. âSurely Jack himself must
be a hummerâbut we donât get the
work done so chéaply in summer.
No, every year {t costs more and
more, evâry yeay more than the
year âbefore; every .yearâit's the
âone thing thatâs sureâthe road-
work costs more while the people
are fewer.
Taxes are driving the people
away! Under doubled taxes they
will mot stay, but that is just. the
Bell Government way. Boasting
about their imiproved roads, but
caring not for the peopleâs loads.
What good are noads of mud or of
gravel with only a shandful of peo-
ple to travel? / Telling them, too,
roads won't cost them a cent, after
all of the people's money they've
spent! Aifterâall of the debt that
theyâve piled_on every man. and
woman and child!â After all of the
taxes theyâve laid on man and wife
and on youth -and matd!
We were told one day when the
House was* âsitting that our very
wise Government thought it was
fitting to have the new roads kept
always repaired, and for this a
measure âwas being prepared, so
âthat the roads they called "perman-
entâ would be patched ev'ry year,
âwithout costing a cent.â But no
such measure thas yet been produc-
edâprehape: âtwas prepared but not
introducĂ©d!âtike that one ifor hold-
ing the by-elections, or it might be |
because of caucusâ objections. Any.
â
{In two. or:
of snow, and for âkeeping them up
clothed, with a hair net over its
perfectly dressed hair. The shops
which originated the doll habit tre
quently vary the kind of doll used
and take care not to put too many
in the window. There is no doubt
these littleâ novelties have a cer-
tain value in attracting attention
to the âwindow display, and the
fact that quite serious slores have
now âfallenâ for them in their mil.
finery and) childrenâs windows
proves that théy have. selling
value.
a -âââ
STEAMER oUNK
IN COLLISION
WASHINGTON, May 26. The
steamed Andree, British, of 2,534
Othersâ View Points
Women as Economists,
Toronto Globe,
ââAn official who has, been doing
research work for miutital) savings
banks in the United States says
that wives whese husbands earn
less than $4,000 a year make wiser
and more economical use of money
than do the husbands, but when the
family incemes pise, above that.
point the feminine impulse towards
economy weakens and the wives
are apt to spend on dress more
than ithey can alford, (Mr, Arnold
Bennett, in his latest book, âMr.
Prohack,â developsâ this theme
amusingly. Mir. Prohack was a
civil Servant with an inelastic In-
come who wag pinched like his
class, by rising prices during ang
tons register, was im collision off
the Philadelphia navy yard today
and was sunk according advices
after the war. His wife practised
a rigorous and increasing self-den-
ial, but the husband balked at giv-
ing up one of his clubs. âUnexpect-
âŹdly he came into a fortune and
was astonished when his self.sacrt-
ficing wife suddenly embarked
on a career of soaring luxury and
Social ambition. The Amencan
Statistican and the English novelist
agree that woman is more economt-
Cal âthan man when she has not the
means of being othenwise. If they
âTe correct it is another phase of
feminine capacity for privation and
patient suffering which is admitted-
ly greater than in the other sex,
Whether the husband or the wife si
the thriftier is a fertile topic of do-
mestic conversation, no matter
what the family income may be;
but. there ig not always an agree-
menton the subject in ever.
household, :
to the naval communication office ~~
here, ; } Hie
iNo lives wefe lost,â if was sald.
The navat authorities at Philadel-
phia, it was added, did not know
what ship was in collision with the
Andree,
i Lives Lost,
PHILITDTLPHIA,. May 25, The
British steamer âAndree, of 2,534
otns, tonight collided with the
steamship Alexander, of 4,184 tons
register, of the Admiralty Stear-
ehip Line, opposite Fort Mufflin
'Pa.), seriously disabling the
former,
The Alexander struck the Andree
amidships. âThe blow «was so seri:
ous that, tite Andree started to sink.
necessitating. the running her into
shailow water on the New Jersey
city, where she anchored, âNo lives
were lost, the report says,
Dolls Succeed Teddy Bears,
: London Timog
DODD'S |
ZAKIDNEY
/ PIL LS
NA ss
L KIDNE
RHEUMAT!S
TEND
i 3]
Hi, RiGwepie DI!
Slageres ! {i
{ 1
| â
4) a
âInto every part. of London: the :
craze for dolls ag an aid. to shop.
Window dressing hag spread. In,
Bond-street the French rag doit,
with highly colored hair and cheeks
and beautifully. dressed, may be
seen sitting solitary among. fast.
diously arranged stovk. In others,
there are Hastern figures with
Hmbg that move in any direction
they are placed. But the common.
est type of dofl is the âbay vamp"
â a chubby mascot not e1aporately
} ( }
|
peal
Vay
thing Ă©lse but to tax or to borrowâ
or a Salary Grab, as we've learned
to our sorrow!âcah always be put|
off! till tomorrow!
Ww