I uosnctornluei‘ THAT WILL N01‘ SNRINIL signifies: - ~~ the ONLY UNDER- CLOTHING MADE lN CANADA that is Knit-tc-fit, that is Re-inforced at wear- ing parts (during knitting) and that will not prickle. For COMFOR T, wear (Knifiecl) ndenlollriny a truly Canadian product of 60 you: reputation and a quality. unuccllcd by even the best imported. an: scent-m: "-—-‘ e e A Suggestion-— FOR LADIES FOR MEN ' B ‘CEETEEN . 22>- Buv ‘ff-WEE’ New l auybeautiiul, W: white 5"“ “m” d W‘ wool. finely knitted. or ‘CEETEE’ No. 432 wool COMbIIIIIIDII or Tumbull‘: N... 42o. 1.00?’ lffj. nothing nice: nude. Sold by (ha Worn by KM but druirrs, bu! people 1 .5.‘ 8H0! tron: Holmaifl Onto-log.- D. M. Lamont will preach a Churchill, Tuesday at 7 pm. not Wednesday. sbarp.-—1l. FUNERAL NOTICE-The funer al of the late Elsie Bowness, Ken slngton will _ Oct. 21st at 2 Cemetery, VICTORIA FOLKS-Here's treat for you Thurs Boy. Oh, Girls Pythlan Players and Mrs. John hTCN€iii.—‘i1l. RAILWAYCOMMIBSION LEAVES-—The Board on the island Saturday, when it left for Halifax by the 1.15 train. Mr. R. W. Simpson, Assistant General Baker. Supt. of Passenger Trans- portation and Mr. Milligan, C. N. R. Attorney, were passengers on the salue train. PERSONALS. Mr. L. W. Murdock. Murray Riv- er,- ls among the guests registered at the Victoria. lilr. Juluis Rost, Montreal, is among the Commercial men now in the city. _ Many friends in town and coun- try will regret to learn of the seri- ous illness of Mr G. H. McGulgan, city. Mr. Eddy Farquharson eldest 5011 of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Farguhar- son, ‘Mermaid, is confined to the l’. l-l, island Hospital where he has been operated on for appendicitis. liis many friends will be pleased to learn that be is doing as well as can be expected. Funeral 0f Late R WHILE YOIPRE SETTING UP THE STOVE Li€ilf3 i”. If’ 4g? II Ii; Stop a minute and see if it is worth ‘her wutirn‘. A good stove bought " ’ m more returns for 1:5. than one gotten " . 1: the “lilCLAR.YS" 1 v/ovcs and you know " aandsome kitch- - t‘ Misl meal. “HANDY ANDY SAYS:” i Itis fine to get up in the morning, strike a - match to the oil heater and have the room in a glow of warmth while dress- ‘ We have the handsomest and ' hlandiest of oil heaters at very reason- able prices too. :13’. IE<Q>QQT 1 f“ ~ l t ME ;\< -4‘ fir __- z ac- > _..,_7 ANNOUNCEMENT Having leased large portion of Farquharson Building. Queen Street. Charlottetown, I intend continuing my gen- eral Produce business there specializing in Eggs, Poultry and Dairy Products I have spent Fifteen Years building up business con- nections from Newfoundland to Saskatchewan and have gained ‘valuable experience with large organizations In Toronto and other centres, therefore I can obtain but markets . My aim will be to find market for farm products. I am prepared to handle Produce on moderate commission rates or will buy at best market prices. I solicit a liberal share of patronage, F. J. HOLMAN OHARLOTTETOWN 75 QUEEN STREET PHONE 1002 A'I'ING_ l.‘ llnvitl lh-thunc. q Mrs. Henry Waughan The funeral of the late Mrs. Hen ry Waugban was held yesterday af- ternoon from her late residence 19S (‘timberland Street. and despite the llilifzlvorable “mother was very large |ly attended. | 'l‘iu,» (leceased was a woman of [estimable character a devoted uuother to her family. She was a ustaunch member of the Methodist i(‘hurch, although being unable to [attend for the past six years on {account of ill health. ' | The pull bearers were: Messrs. ‘John Collins. P. ll. ‘ McMillan, lfloorgv hll-lunis. L. B. bliller, Thom- us McMillan and John Kennedy. The floral tributes which were p-ery beautiful showing the high esteem in which the deceased was held, were as fnllmvs: Pillow. -~l<‘amily, Laura Bella, . Winnipeg. :—~l\’vli and Dot. St. Out; Mrs. T. Castillo, : lllvssrs. Frank (‘ronin and (‘rt-scvnt:*.\li'. James ll. McKen- un. (fross:~(lrand»children. Spray I-lr. and blrs. Harry Barr, Mr. and .\lrs_ l’. lI. hlcliiilluu» " airs. Flora Godkin and Mr. and Airs. Arthur Godkin, Mr and Mrs. Wm. Dalziel, bliss Hanna. Bouquets ~ Airs, Alfred Thorno. .\lr. and . is. Wm. Diamond, Miss lunufc 'l‘urner. -————<- TWO TO-NIGHT for loss of appetite. bud r-mlli-ll tongue, illllouunuuu. Without grlplnrr or imuum CHAMBERLAINS TABLETS flei your livrr right-only hrcul h. 27m. There is only one side to this story! KLENZO DENTAL ensue Frees the teeth from dia- coioratlon and tartar and bring: out the beauty of | the enamel. Price 35c and 60c per tube. SOLD on LY av . CHURCH OF SOOTLAND-JWV. WHIST IN AID of Kindergarten in L. of C. Hall tonight, Oct. 20, Play starts 8.15 take place Tuesday. p.n1. to tho_People's B. day night. Oh, that big show by with Dr. Robins of Railway (‘timmissioners concluded its stay Manager of the Atlantic Region. Mr lTlw use of Sage and Sulphur for u ml llilFilCi ivc. cd zippr-nrance, this slluple mixture and asking at any drug store for a bot- tin of Wyoths Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will grit this fam- ous old preparation. improved by the addition of other ingredients, which can be depended upon -l.o res- occurred in the cit ning of Mrs. Geo. '1‘. Ca winced age of ‘i9 yea Mrs. Carr leaves to number of relations ren, grandchildren a children. t mourn a larg - torment People's Cemetery. Converting Straw to tons of potential fertil stacks, which in the ordinary cours: lot’ events will be shortly burned served as an object lesson formally member of the British Association for- ithe Advancement. of sciengil, who recently passed through the prairie belt. . Great Britain has been operating for three years a successful pro- cess for making available the nutri- ment in wheat straw, and more RLTIUFJ each year are capturing the humus stolen from the soil by the worthless straw, and are util izlng it for the production of more kernels of wheat. Why should the process not be introduced in ivesl ern Canada? Those who are fam- iliar with it can see no possible objection. The English techuic was an off shoot of researcher 15 yeans dura tion on soil micro-organisms attire Rothamsted Experimental station at l-larpenden, England, and was carried out under the guidance o! Sir John Russell, the director, who has completed a tour of the “lest eru provinces with the British As- sociatlon. in discussing the straw problem, Sir John made the following obser vatlon: “The problem in the utiliz- ation of the straw is to decompose l-t. so that the huntus of the soil is freed again. The method which we were able to develop was a consequence of an investigation o. the ‘changes which take place il the (ieromposltion of straw in lh<> farmyard manure heap. As nearly as we can ‘tell by chemical analysis. the artificial process duplicates th- natural decay of the manure pile and the product cannot be dis tlnguished from the original humus of the soil." . Farmers have known for sonv time that raw straw is worse than useless as a fertilizer. Sir Join. pointed out: The Rothaitisted yvork. ers placed this observation on quantilwtlvc basis, however, they found that crops were actual ly diminished when untreated strau was ploughed into the ground “This is because the soil organ isms decompose the straw, but ir order to accomplish Ithe breakdown they zlbsorb plant food, tbcrcb) robbing the grain of some of it.- nourishmcilt," tho scientist explain ed. “The bacteria absorb nitrates in particular. Application of ihi: fact suggested a solution oi‘ lhl dlillcully. Th1- ‘microbes arc fed their nitrogen scparatclyx the) break up lilo straw, freeing the or lgiual humus, and this can tilon ‘in put back into the ground." The procedure adopted consists in building stacks by ‘mixing with each ton of straw a few pounds of sulphate of ammonia, relatively in expensive, and calcium carbonate cheaply secured as pnwdcredlime- stone, marble or chalk. The am moula ‘supplies the xiitrogeit factor, and the carbonate prevents the mixture from becoming so acid that the bacteria will not work. “in from two to three weeks, with the English climate, we find tlhai the straw has returned to humus," Sir John Russell stated. “No inocu- lation is necessary. Tbr-ro are enough germs in the dirt mixed with the straw to start llln process off. When the resultant mixture Wilsi tested by using it to fertilize a tit-id of potatoes. ll crop was 0b- tnlund practically the equivalent of the yield with barnyard manure as tho added food. urc obtained in using tho product to replenish the humus of the soil lu between successive crops of wheat. Numerymefl have D9119 us‘ inp; the decomposed straw l0!‘ some time with satisfactory T9‘ suits." Sir John said. Each year nu increasing proportion of Eng- lish farmers \n'ere taking advantage of the discovery. Thousands of ions of straw were being utilized every year. . .i——{O-}————— Sage Tea Darkens Hair To Any Shade restoring faded, gray hair to M8 natural color dates back to grand- mother's time. She used lt to keep lll‘l' hnir beautifully dark. glossy “lbenover her hair look nu that dull. faded or streak- wus applied with wondurflll effect. lint brewing at homo is mussy out-ofdate. Nowadays, by ore natural color and beauty to R i Phonl 9 Tun Rex/tut. v0.5a. I KODAK Swans 5:1 i dark and glossy. the huir. ‘and ovvtily that nobody can toll lti |bas been dampen a spongo with it and draw this through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By mornlngthe gray hair disap- pears, and after another applica- A well-known downtown drugglflt nys it darkens the hair s0 naturally applied. You simply‘ or soft brush DIES IN THIO OlTY-Irho death Y Yesterday mor- n- at the ad- ' ' rs. Thd. late including child- nd great-grand The funeral will take place tomorrow afternoon from hcr late residence 161 Grafton Sh, to St. Paul's Church at 2 o'clock. In- Valuable Fertilizer tracks for hundreds of imiies, are izer. Thebig as the easiest means 0t‘ disposal, u| nmll Similar results ~ furnished Bell Telephone __ . ___"--. .. Colds With-Winners t Salvo Immediately Roaches . inflamed Air Plunges necessary ° stantly to dos treatlnl: bronchitis. sor throat. or dee chost family .bocause it is inst rubbc nothing to take. which are inhaled directly into 1h inflamed air y icaliadii" Pfflifi-l the phlegm uud making the breath- ‘HNNIPEG- Oci- 1~' - In has" inppeasier. mounds of straw, dotting the stub- A. t)... same time via-k..- ls an ble on either Side of the railroad congestion. At all drug stores 50c a Jar. Fo (Jheullcal Co., 344 St.‘ Paul Sh, \\'. Montreal, P. Q. The Public Forum (Continued from Page 4) Canudlan per cord? manufacturers (These mercc.) Do the people know that a cord of exported wood loaves in Canada of $50.00 to $60.00? Do the people wood using industries are second only to Agriculture as revenut the pulp and paper industry alone would bring this country close to buukrilptcy? ‘ Do the people know that the only measure that can possibly stabilize this industry today is an embargo on the exportation of its raw material? Nature is proclaiming on every hand that this continunt has al- re-atly been over-denuded of forest cover. This is seen‘ in the zilter- natu floods, droughts, vast forest fires, tornadoes late and early frosts and consequent failure and loss and damage to crops. in other words, Nature's whole equili- brium is being upset by tho ruth- less hand of the exploltcr. An expert witness .10 this condi- lion is Gene Strzttton Porter, one of the gruatest Nature students on this continent, who says: “With the cutting of our timber has collie a change in our climate; wet-Its of tlrought in summer and winters altcrnzlting from a condi- tion so open as to freeze prc-zna- Lurely forced frui-t and grain, nad ivinters so stringently cold that the fruit trees are killU-l outright. The oven tcmperziturc and the rains every thruc or four ilnys which We ltnclv in childhood are things of the past. Summer in hose days moans to scorch for weeks at a strmch with unullcvizat- -d heal; and in tho snmu static in which l was born, it has bccumv necessary for the sons of tlw mun who wastcrl tho woods adu tho waiters to put in uvcrheatl sprink- ling syslclns in order to grow their ;£1l‘(lUfl vegetables while wind- mills and irrigation are becoming zommon. “in my childhood my father zllantetl grain with the same cer- rulnty of having a flul crop that he bad of havfrlg alternate day and light. To day the farmer on my and has no morn idea whether he will got a paying yield from the wheat, corn and potatoes that ill.‘ puts into ‘the ground than he has is lowhetlier the next rgvciom- will llflW his houst- into the lake or nss a few yards on the other side if it. “Wefas a llzltlrr‘, have already, 'n the most wanton and recital-r: waste the world has (‘VET known, savc comfortable living conditioi... for oursl-lvvs und the spots of nut- ural beauty that rcmaliu for our chlldrui." Small as lho supply in tho lTu't- ed States now is, it is vastly lu excess of tbc remaining stand in Ccnarlzl, ('('l‘.S(‘([lli" tly this warning npplil-s with <1 '. " -\k‘ to Do"~'~‘vu. I have no ambition to figurc as alone crusader. I have done “that i_could to call attention l0 conditions and to bring about an improvement. if the government is so indifferent to the country's necessities and so derelict in its own tiutltxs, there is no earthly reason why l should continue to exhaust my strength and glvv of my means to try to force upon them something they apparently do not want. This is why after much careful consideration and much searching of spirit 1 have de- cided to dispose of everything l nwu in (‘anadut and Join tho trek to another coilutry. I um, Sir, etc. FRANK J, D. BARNJUM. lilonlrczll. Oct. 17th, 1924. STOGK QUOTATIONS HALIFAX, (lot. ill-Quotations by Ward 8' Johnson. Members of the Montreal flock EXClmngOI ion or two, it becomes ireautlfullly n7 dnlirRlntr-l-sbrlulrlel In‘ lltllc on n lint. ‘ wet clot . fill H‘! y over the blur-k» Brorlipm" -------------- —— " Int-ads for n few seconds-wash nu- St. Lawrence Flour ______ ,_ - parts. and every bInckln-lul will lu- Onawn ‘power "___ __ gone. Pluchlug nud argue-using oul . blackheads Innkn in ircr port-s, Cuba can" Sugar -- -- l2 "ml you cannot got nil of the lllnl~lz~ Cuba Ctme Sugar Pld. .... ._ 59 heads out this way-while this pa“ Amermm petmhum ___ 52 simple application: of peroxlnn pnwilpr Aymeflcan can nrrnl urns-r‘ tllssoltvon “cry particle hi‘ “Signalman Fraction ‘n t rm an euros ho I n nml port-s lu 61% Dlrfiol Trntmcnrwtth Vlllarllliil it is no longer con- the children ill croup. colds. Many Canadian mothers now use the "outside" remedy. vicks V590 Rub. for the cold troubles of all "i6 over the throat and chest-there. la “lben so applied Vlcks gives off medicated vapors passages, loosening sorlled and stimulates the skin likc a linlment or plaster and illllg aid»; the vapors inhaled to break up the free test size package, write Vick 813.33 figures are both taken from the report of the Department of Tradc'aud Cum- a matter of $10.00 while a cord of wood manufactured into paper en- riches the country to the utteut know that our producers and that the failure of zhungcd our t-lfluntl- conditions and misled, a good part of our splendid lu-riwuu. The question now rut-m, l: :4 \"l|<!lll"‘l‘ \\' - "llflll l0 all that lies ill uur ])’)W0l‘ In‘ B e P d t} Frrnnnrrawrnnlibmne ‘A rs. conoural. a 5rd; i IN A REPERTOIRIE OF OLASSY NEW YORK ‘ST-AGE SOENERY AND EQUIPMENT FOR EACH . —FOLLIES JAZZ— ORCHESTRA“ Big Novelty Vaudeville Acts at each Performance Headed by the Child WondQér=' 1, '3 l BABY HAZEL F OX» sea-rs NOW ON sALe-i-"on AIL PERFORMANCES TICKET OFFICE opens AT sac A. M. DAILY. ‘ , CO; Hsuccésess county-E Dypflucrlon v OPENING 13ft‘? rumour AT 8.30.. ' ‘Gmliii STRAlGllTl» A Eol/lisov DRAMA m THREE; .-.ACT$. g; PRlcl-zs-Jfzst-znvs-szc and an. osnzmu. ADMISSION 31., MATINEE AT 2.30 SHARP MNIGHTI’ AT aso sump I. Howard Smith Ilfd. __...-... Howard Smith Com. Spanish River Pfd. -_.._ sfQfl (Yompany of Canada ___ British Elnpire Steel 1st Pfd. Pcniuaus Abltibi ___- - 55V: Shnwlulgan _ - -* lluuruulltlo Pulp _________ _- $3 Cnuadlati (loncral Electric ._ —- (Iunadlun Steamship Com. .. -— (liilllilllllil Steamship Pld. ___ 4X91 Asbestos Com, ___. _ 2'6 Dominion Bridge - m" Montreal Power _ _. 185% iviunipeg Electric _______ .. —- Natimutl Breweries ...... _- 53 Atlantic Sugar ___ Atchison Am. Car & Foundry ___ Am. Locomotive Am. Smelling & Rofng. Anaconda Copper .-_._ Canadian Pacific. Ilailway _. New York Central _______ _- 105 Crucible Steel _-.__ _ 54% international ‘Paper ______ _. 45 Alex. Petroleum .......... .. ~~ international Mer. Marine _. -- , Press Steel Car ___ ___-w" ~- iloadlng ________ __ 60% Southern Pacific ___ !l-'l litudebztlter ___. l'uluu Pacific, MONTREAL EXCHANGE I934 Victory ____________ _. 10-l.ll 1933 Victory ___- 1922 Victory ____ _. i113? BANBS Bank Commerce __________ ._ 194% Hank Royal Bank Montreal ....... ._ . 2-18 Bunk Nova Scotla ....... __ 25814 WheaP-Dec. 150%; May, 153%; July, 163%. lCoru—Dec, 135! May, 109%; Ju- ly, 111%. 0ats-—Dec, 153%; May, 58%; Ju- ly, 55. -<-o->——-- NearOr the Truth. "So that pretty canvasscr sold you a book, eh?" "No; she sold me a couple of smiles and threw in the book." -——<-o>—--- SIMPLE APPLICATION TIIAT mssoilyns IILAPKIIEAIIS No more nqueeaing and plurhhur to get rid of thus:- unsiglltly hlulnlnln-rl. tilnckhnntls. There In one lillllllli". uufv. nud aurc wny to get tin-m nut. mul that lu to dissolve them. Got uhnul two (IIIIIPPI of pc-ruxlue powder from your ._..__..,_ —_ .i BATTLING F0 Honor These Two M Clawed Each 0th in Sight of a ~, rible Death! One was infuriated by . reyvellatlons he had unwittl ly made to save anol . The other sought only jug" be done so that a solution found in '- “The Leavenwo i Case” BY Anna Katharin Green The Greatest M 1 tery Story Ever Screened l Al. St. John iN A “NEVER AGAIN STRAND TODAY AT 3.15, 7 AND! MATINEE 16c. Children 1i EVENING Orchestra 26c. Balcony 2i Children 11c. Adults THE TIME—NOV. 10S THE PLACE-- PRl EDWARD THE EVENT-"OH l! “Oh Boy" til: sm: ',» cf Musical Conlediel be presented with a fiully selected Coal 0i ' local people. Hod" Auspiocs of the Knight! Columbus Council (Benefit K. of C. Ch Fund.) Try and get In Executive Headquarters-—75 Kent Si. SAVE l-Z THE, Uilili. Buy a Caloric Pipeless Furnace Hundreds of Satisfied Customers praise The caLoinc ALL CAST METAL PARTS, and the TRIPLE cASlNG ls a PATENTEO feature In the CALORIC. ___-___? Call and have u: demonotrato our furnace The PRICE of the GALORIC PIPELESS FURNACE is very REASONABLE for the value you receive. Fred H. Trainer PHONE 398-J. $0 GRAFTON STREET oPposite Prince Edward Theatre . sears N. D. MAc Have Your >= XMAS I80 nan-r s?» their natural condition. BAYER STUDlll l-EA- IwvPhOlJOS Taken i f M At The 4