:.:.=.-_*.-_..x...-_-_=._.~.-._ .. ..‘-. ._ ..__...,_ 1i ui i t t‘ ——_ -» Qqamms-a-q . . -._,..vq_,g.____ ' __, we shall very soon build up home induce immigrants to ‘come to us 0114i filly with us and so enlarge Canadian opportunities for Cana- dians. couplet cones from our own East- crni - frills is it: --.>t..-....J;g. ,_, . . _ . And event s». their 1100MB shell hive much pleasure in recommend- 113! It as s slogan for both East and West. Vigil‘ - OQHUQQI: "ll the WEI! “Tm-h 17111107" The pamphlet fr welt can't-softy wtdtten. 19,1110 lianytvaiuttble su which tnightweii be taken serioue- gm vlll the Blot 1nd in tn; V951- 1mm written by a we... ’_ f ‘Meet-it PAGE-Ffiilit- or“ ~-\-.* l. .. . ~ . i’sod__lenlv_ vnfcsesue s. labial ‘fttttwtttttttttttt-Not-B- ‘ti’ Vice-President. l. . m»; o-t. n. s. tut-mu». n. n. o , - herein; Idioms and Imogen J. ll. Inrnei t. Associate lldltelil). It. currie- leaned Representative-J. 0. Ion-lo 1 ' In! Vent llepneesteuvs-rrssk ll. Northrup QNCIQ Representative-E. I. Power ll- Burnett: A recent newspaper cartoon 011-‘- tures a bowed-down consumer whose hat has fallen ozl’, while a jubilant. lino of coal miners and other wage-engnere play leap frog 1H5 GIIAIIDIAI In be shielded fu- els following agents is maneuver , the IIIUOICII ill-slip It. nexus. Queue sensor-t . A. Ital) Tendon, ;_ no»: n-n' stem-n , . d-l Wm.‘ PRIMER AND HOME MARKFIJOI having the East carefully 0080111" interesting statbtics have re- cently been compiled by the huh- our, Bureau showing tthe relation between the farmer and the indua» tripl centres. According to theec staffs-tics there are 3,000,000 per- suns ln Canada who are depend- trti upon industrial employment for a Living, that is, who are working in Tactories. lt shows that among the article.- consumed by those thus engaged are the following: 260,000,000 pound-s of meat; 52.000,- 000 dozen e536: 39,000,000 gallons milk; 195,000 tons bread; 78,000,- 000 pounds butter; 13,000,000 bus. hels potatoes. These are only some oi thd trincipul farm products which find a market in ottr industrial centres, and the calculation is based on what is actually consumed by the families ot industtial employees, not. on the general tonsuntption of the city although the latter is directly due to the existence of the indttst-ry’ or which the city or centre, large or small. could not There arehundreds of totvneyillages and cities throughout Canada the birth and maintenance of which are due to the establishment of one or more industries. These centres have developed other forms oi bus- iness, stores, professions, schools, churches. all constituting a home ‘marketfor the farm products oi the neighborhood and of distant parts of the province and even for the products of other provincaa. Our industrial population is smaller than it ought to be. In- stead of three tnlliion of factory employees, we should have double the number and this vrould meta-n more than double‘ the consump- tllon. of farm products above tabul- ated for industries attract other lines of business as well. What is the-inference? Clearly industries without exist. (‘Oil NEG goods nude in Canada tn 9mg...- this constituency returned a Ltb- i" ‘he M" '°""11 "1 1105i 110W ence to those made elsewhere; eral, tDr. Vrooman, over Mr. Ham- petmnize our home stores rather than stores elgewherq and 5O [mild ate although the rid-ing had been of frost, they seems-ti to nil tumble up our cm“ and towns as they are conservative m, many yum 0m tqthe earth at once. So unlike are our teal market. products; our undeveloped lnntla are capable of producing mulch more than our occupied farms are producing today. ‘Build up our dustriai centres, encourage Cana- dian manufacture, guard it. from tmequal outside competition and Inarkeis for all our farm products. ———-—-{O}-i-~ EAOT KND WEST A . Vnew- - werslon of ‘EiEtT '1 e. ~_ ,_D&L~..., '11 1'! I ‘K001i sentiment snd we lelile A 00., (Ignites-line!- F. ‘I. lovely. Prince Inns. J. l’. Duly. I line! W. 0. Wlhllv Kiel! Street Wilt -I- ‘Renee lull‘ Punk lloll. 'I‘HUR. DAY,- OCT. 25, 1913i II BIQ Avenue. over his head, laughingiy shouting their demand for more pay. in one corner is a farmer with tufted chin. watching the game with grin; in- terest. "i with l knew how-Whey do it," he says. And the consumer as well as the farmer ‘will wonder .t) ~pmlh run cmmm-rnrowrt cut-trom. its“ ‘Mb-i wt-teyoé is voun uvenz er the magnitude oi the West and of its problems. This is all very well. The West is vast auto arm. natural resources and wofttlcr-‘ill pam-tibllltiee. its unsettled smile lands, if tilled, could feed halt the world; it has ample room for mil- lions: millions have come trom Ettrope, left for the United Sta-toe! is something wrong. The Weat has been more and more as the cold weather pomes 0n and the cost oi fuel and freighte mount higher. and yet "We never died a winter Such is life Which reminds us that many oi our island farmer: are hard p t‘. to thing is wrong. it. to find men at any reasonable wage to harvest the late grain, un- earth and store, or ship the pota- toes ttnd turnips, do the ful; pio\v- lng, milk the cows and do nli the looked a-t the West and odds and ends oi full farm work The“ Form laborers are scarce. have gone to the lumber woods of ‘we?’ _ ‘ New Bntnewick, Maine and Quebec. advertised 111 111110091 Thcy gengootl wagon with plenty wards a number of inchflll. Europe became intoxicated with 0i’ 5001i food and comfortable ledg- me pmspecm and u came by hum ing thrown in, and work in the Dino right side you have the right lung. “any then 800111011- °1 “s West? look after them. tit is also the problem oi the Ea-s We have room in the East for in Prince Edward island ior lthem if we went after the-tn: we 1coult1 hold then if we looked a Iter them. We have peopled the er turned upon us the cold should- WQH with the Sonsianaulaughters er. if there was then some arrears. lEaet in ortier that we s-ltonld buil ‘up the West and now we Qvam 1m oring on forest and field. -I<‘or who {us in the blast take a leaf irotn th Western book and followite me bod oi advertising and let us add ‘leaf from the t lSoldiem ‘Settlement Act, and loo come. This method may be atiop fed profitably by the West as we Ins by the East. Then we can u icing in chorus. East . tbeat." 8| GNiFIGANT dreds of thousands ~to the West. This is the problem of the West: nuillon immigrants; we have room quarter of a “mm,” we mum Se; bright sunny days, most of of the Maritime Provinces.__ We -have left our farms vacant. in the htigrants to take their places. Let experience of the ,sfter the immigrants when they “'°1111'~‘1‘1"1- “oh. Ea“- ie w.“ and we" “to! the splendor of the western sky. And ever as one their hearts shall the earth. add to thepassing glory Years ago some one‘ ‘h At last hiondafs byeeiectlon ln ‘Lennox, Ontario, the Conservative “neg_ it is that, if ‘Canada is to maize the (‘alldilill-e. MI-Chalfleswesley 11101111- progmgg it, 1g cgpgblg of making, bl)’, dGlfiflrwd ‘his HD9111 opponent. we must in every Vway possible en-.C- W000i! 11y 0 mfltlorlty 01 590- ‘\f- homg mdugmeg, [my the general election in June 1351, scruon now so nettr its close. And when they come back to their fam- ilies in the spring. dollars are really sent or brought to the province by these transiently a expatriate "lumber-jacks" yearly. t. October has come and it brought with it nearly many them warm enough to enable us to for- get that the past summer had been less genial than usual and had rath- a gone. f. we can now feel that they have been repaid in iuil with golden days. gorgeous sunsets, starry or d moonlit nights anti a wealth of col- cau paint like Nature? iiow trivial anti how crude. ltow entail nnd feeble in comparison are the works t» 0i‘ the ntost renowned of httntttn l artists. B Some of our sunset: during the R passing month have been truly One might question t_ that any human creature endowed u with reason and a sense of color .could fail to pause in wonder and lhatimiration labrond at the sunset hour in view [A few light clouds, trnnsilgurod be- yond the power to cast a gloom on of the scene. [writing in an album penned the words: “May there he only enough clotttis in the your sky to make a 1y clad with loaves than during the tufckly they took on their brilliant and varied autumnal coloring. and spruce woode is healthful. As they spend but little money while lVhy 11111 111W 110i- 10111011! 111 11"‘ thus employed they have the more Because the West did not to send home. or to bring home Thousands of ‘ er the gall bltttltlcr. Also in women wearing 118111 1391' point to ‘rtenlrlyrthe bottom of the 1 - vc. "lifhfghtyf down to the n1DD1BB1: lung, and below that is liver- 11 » _ d. }:‘§n,'“,§',§:!i2tt} to the left side. n i the diaphragm "b11311 1n fiunrrirtirchltlas up under the riEht lung Thus as ntentloned once be- fore‘ whenever a breath la taken in ‘the lung thus squeezes down against the liver and helps the flow of bile from the liver. A nat- "11 teezer." “rTllte tlfgrsttlitl so larflfl 111111 "- ac‘ tunlly fills in all the spate 011 1110 right side from the ribs in front. to the ribs behind. it is really 1110 largest. organ 101110 11°11?’- As you know the K811 1111111¢91"1” attached to the liver on its loweté surface, and holds any 0110055 ° bile manfactttred by 1119 "Ver- A111‘ acute pain in the t'ei;100 01 111° B“ _ bladder may be due to a nurnhet of things, a growth, or even gall 310F108. . were a line drawn from the bony lump on the top- of the right shoulder to the navel OPOSSBB U10 edge of tho ribs is immediately ov- Gus causes most of the pain in this region, but where there l5 very severe pain going r1511! 0V0? to the shoulder, u pain that brinss‘ out the perspiration, with a yellow- ness of the skin, then thu gull b1811- when taking u wulk1 golden sunset." We pass the senti- ment on to anyone who reads these nmoppe “(muse receipts l1] sewom u w" w", m“, om‘ twenty-five thousand for the mental and forest trees more thick- der is in distress and you would be wise to consult your doctor. t know that pcopie so! along all right utter the gall bladder has been removed, but its use as a res- ervoir h, Hm] admitted by physio-lare illuminativb. When Gladstone iogists. Big Increase in Automobile Licenses __ g» (Canadian Press) FREDERIGTON, Oct. 2i.-—-Aut- New Brunswick ltave ttlreatiy t-xtwoetleti the estimate of ihrcc httntlrctl untl present fiscal year. it is lteii-svetl that the amount will go over fottr ltttntlred thousand. Serims Charge-s.‘ As it is rather unusual to "nave a pain in the liver. very 10W P001110 have the right idea of its location. number of Now the stomach assumes differ- bl h fr to ion Archivists a very large am- lucrattlgsifdgniitfigt? rude guRFBbRt-Tder nunt of tlicumentary evidence has fairly well by tho use at their hand-a ttggcnqwnauy in vary thin people etl ilttvroln into conncctctl C . Wm, vgry lax abdominal trtusclee £1110 n“, ttver "falls" someawbiltlnltlgfhf; write history involves much more . farts duly authenticated. it requir- sets the liver S015 Pushed down- The first thins 1° "j§‘s°“,‘)',’,°'u,'§ tho time of which he writes. to that 11111191119111“ ‘he r catch the local colour and so fit 1| bone to about i§Z“'%‘§i'l§i"§l".t°t‘Ii°§-tt.. From this ight across the On the r1511! 111110 i‘ “Bus “p “no bly the present successful candid- tario’: excursion some four years '0ur home markets now absorb ago into Progreseivism proved a about eighty per cent of our tstnm lamentable failure as was indicated the sun departs southward and the the Progressive movement is pin- ning its faith to Conservatism and ' evidently has as little use for Lib- eralism as it has for . Fat-tuners tnovement. K101111831 which four Liberals were returned to ‘mo; previously ttcttt by Liber- als, one of them WM‘ ""1 W901- 14 a government expected. by the sweeping return of the I-‘er- guson Conservative Government last June, although even then the was showrn in the election of a Liberal in Lennox. That. this was a revolt ttgainei. the then condi- tions, rather than a return to Lib- eralism, has now been demons- trated. Ontario in turning down the United The bye-elections in Quebec in re-elected after aliPoln tment, was entrants: NOTES Do your Christmas buying in It (some! to us in s v t your home stores and do it now. ‘Ohrivhtnas mu be here. before you know it. v . The borne made. hand painted and con- Christmas cards with a well re- election member-ed focal view, or a photo- is more 1,... elated than any lentllnmisi Thereafter, following a few nights the ways of animal and vegetable life. We poor humntt creatures put on more or less thicker clothing as ly disrobe blasts to meet which the wintry instinctively know are near at hand, and drop —--—<-0-§-i_ » . ungguled tgontjmou of 1.119 province their clothes about their feet. The M“T“%'°T"”*'°’“** Selections trunk and upper limbs must needs be frozen; they can endure ii; the feet alone. deep in the earth. must be covered and wrapped against the penetrating frost. Some fools in England are advo- cating a depreciated currency as a cure for unemployment. It would. Printing offices. The Russian worth but a fraction of a cent — °° "M011 1110! are printed, plus the printer's labor-have dazzled the these financial exports. \Vea|fh 1110110)’. but it may be rapidly do... "°Y°11 "1 that way. Gold and sil- "9" ¢°1"“- 01' i10l>er notes retlcmn- are valid money in all countries and So far all the wisdom o’, has found nothinx bettt-r, l1 so at that. .__._- There ll s vacancy on the Board ilh of one of our many beauty "mo. W110 W!!! also g inent in the Home Bank before p closed its doors, v verse that means Wlrd Island has never be l.‘ uu°"1mP11'41l.110'-lifl‘l. We have photographers “med ‘"1 ‘he 9011"" Board and . t "t _ ‘h H‘ asPt-emierifiog, "cm" R411"!!! caused by the re- signation of R. P. Cough of Tor- As Prince 1:41. en repre- Against Governor (Canadian Press) OKLAHAMA CITY, Oct Z-L-Tlto impeachment Trial for Governor J. C. Walton was assured today when the lower house of tate Legislat- ure approved of the secottu of twenty-two charges against the t. tntttct In 1331, iiyA. B. K. 0.- This book fills a long-felt want. A historical no com preheusivo excellent work done by the Domin- been made available nntl it is by gntherittg the knowledge contain- nan-n- ihnnt Judge Warburton ltae done hismoat valuable work But to than the ntcro setting forth of es that tho writer shall be ablc to project ltltnself in thought into the atmosphere of himself to portray the actors as they played their several parts anti rightly interpret the significance of their actions viewed in the light of subsequent. events. For this Jutlgc Warburton possessed mttuy qualifications. Living from childhood in close social inti- mncy with the leaders of thought. ant] action of‘ the past generation, he naturally caught their view point anti so was enabled to enter into sympathetic understanding of the social conditions uttder which the early settlers livetl. llis natural aptitude lay in the tiirec- tlon of historical research. He him- self cntcretl early into political life anti played a prominent part there- in, hoth as a member of thc Fed- eral House of Commons and us Premier of the Province. Necess- urily his attention was directed to a study of its early history.- Witon he accepted the judgcship tnuclt of his leisure “'11s devoted tn a study of its curly records nnd he ltogztti to collect the ntaterittl= which fittds expression in thc pres- ent work. He found his sultjcct one of tiurticttiat" interest. Though Prince Edward island was one of the sntztliest colonies of Great Britain. the ntanner of its settle- ment, the character of its rulittt: class, enjoying as they tliti cx- ceptional cuiuctttiottttl atlvatttnges tutti close social connections with the ruling caste in England, the nature of tho problems they wcrc cuilotl upon to solve, give to their early struggles a vhlut: to the stu- dent of Colonial development to some taxtent unique ttnd altogether" out of proportion to the size of the Colony. in this connection the facts was drafting his Irish Land Pur- chase Act. he found that Prince Edward island in its Act cnforcing1 compulsory sale upon tho lurgc cetlent accepted in principle by the ,Privy Council. Anti thc fact that to be receding in districts the first conference to consider the Federation of the Several Provinc- es which inter cottatituteti the Dn- lottctown, sets forth quently than words the calibre of the public men of Prince Etlurnrti Island of that tiny. Judge ivarhurton in his treat- ment of his subject shows an ap- preciation of this. He does not nt- tempt to maintain an exact rte- sketchee. Evangeline. dealing with the early history of ent positions in the body, depend- Prince Edward Island, have been lng on the food and drink taken in, written. but it is a rnre thing for theliver then available to move out of place unless eome- history was possible. Owing to the but with the materials gllgh have never tront- those they conquer unfairly anti untiottlttetliy they tltleutv-d their landed proprietors in the interest The Rhinelatitl republican of their tenfllitu. hnd created n. prc- mcnt was believed to be tentcndcti miuion of Cunutla mp: itelti at Char acct-salon of the St-ttztruttests was more vio- Diilflbvri-i In Ruhr where, ttccortllttt: t tttstnttt at a tnvttttttsttttttt From Its Discovery In 1534 Until the De- parture of Lieutenant Governor Ready Warburton, bgfi. It,‘ we are. by Longfellow? _phase of the question. action in these cnscu as tilctatetl by utllitary necessity. This por- ing reading nt-t well as rt storehouse of reliable information. The lituitn of thin article it rltitls the writer attempting to trent of the ltitttory of tho British Settle- ment itt detail. llow it cnmoto ho formed into a separate government and the difficulties which arose in bringing it into operation are well told with n wealth of documentary evidence. Tho early development of the A Colony centres around n strugglewhlch grew between the absentee lantletl proprietors anti the actual settlers. This began to take shape early in the Patterson Atlmlnisrntion—0ne cannot help feeling that Patterson's efforts on behalf of the Colony were not prop- erly recognized anti that tite_puu- iehment meted out to him at the lnatigationpf the Proprietors was. in the main, undeserved. Then foi- iowed the struggle for representa- tive government and later the Land Question. These are well dealt with. but the chief value of the book - dc- pettdrt ttpon the number oi’ cott- temporary records - which Judge Warhurton has succeeded in col- lecting. These place the actors in their proper setting, awaken inter- est and enable us to realize the im- portance of the strong individual- ism, clear insight into the funda» tucntals oi’ good government uttti vigour in carrying out their princi- ples which characterized our pion- eer forefathers. , These virtues arc tessontiul to trite progress ttntl tlterc is suffic- icnt ticetl today of culling the nt- tcntion of the present generation to this fact to make Judge Wat-but‘ tom's llistory purticttlarly valuable. The ltistoricnl nnd ltiogrnttlticul sketches which follow the tnttln narrative will provc u valuable ad- thn main text. it is to be hoped that this lmolcl will Ito widely road. PERCY POPE Republicans and . Separatists Clash: connatvz, (t-Jnhuy. ot-t. 2t. - lllfivi" in some quarters today but sot-meal first. affected. Berlin ntaitttaitm that titt- mnvotttcnt has bet-n guru-rally .1... foutctl. The most important no licliiiult official ntossttgcs rt l‘t-- llubllc was procluimrti curly today and public buildings occupied. On the other hand ilerlitt rcports describe tho expulsion of the ru- publicatis from Aix Lo. (‘happcilu where the present tnovctuttnt saw 11" 11100l1iiou Suttdny. (Zoblettz quenco of dates in his pages, but where the Rcpultiictttts plan to rather groups his facts in their make their capital was uilll in lite special relationship to the tnutters hands the oitl officials this in hand. ltis work is particularly 110011- (‘Onfllctltttz reports valuable to tho t-vttttient, because of "0111 1301111 Where the Republictuts the free use he has ntntie of orlgin- 8Y0 Peilvrtetl to hftvo seized n“, 3| document; whenever P0591519, Government Offices. Berlin advic- it. is most desirable that the actors 99 00y Hfiilllftltlats are should speak for themselves anti tlterc. Food disorders in the in. days grow short. The trees actual- 3:311!E;‘n‘ig‘égg€nf:;'t‘“g“ed 1" ""3 its committee of inves they impeachment. Guardian Readers w?‘ To ‘these are added an appendix emplflyetl no doubt‘ give more employmm" in Two shall =be born, the whole wide I110 D8061" mills and official note- And speak roubles anti the German marks, each 50Gb of the other's being; and to barely wonh the cost of the vapor A“ me"- °'" unknown seas to Shall cross, escaping Wreck; dgfy. eyes and intoxicated the brains of And all unconsciously, shape every cannot be created by printing h; Thab ‘m9 d3!’- And rend life's meaning in each able at their face in such t:oittt1g._._ And two shall _welk some narrow have been so for "may centuries So nearly side by side, that, should 1110 uses Ever so little space, to left or right, We ht They needs must stand acknow- And yet. with wistful of Direeiqn o; u“, and," Nb Calling in vain to ears that never hear, _ They scek each other nii their the new appointment, jtere is n world apart itt different and have no thought 1 have no heed; untknown lands I in: death; i act to this one end out of darkness. t lhey ‘shall meet other's eyes. way of life 0H6 lllf-ll lodged, face to face, never‘ meet. . weary days . fate. -—~Susan Marr Bpeuiding who former! Isi 1, claiming for Cabot the original tlis- covery. which he made his landfall exhaus- gime is characterized by the snnm careful research into the Archives and other sources of documentary G information available that renders his work particularly valuable to the student. The interest aroused by his story centres principally around the personality of the mt-u who effected the early settlement of the isle tie Si. Jean. purtitzttlnr- eye, m” ly of those devoted uorvnnts of the Church, who here as elsewhere tn Cansdn, were in the truest sonar, the constructive laatlers in pinn- oer work and to whom we are in- debied for most of our attthentit: ilioialiy prom- Anti tile unsatisfied-and that t» f,f§§{d“6, 1'1"” "mm" 11"" "R'- whlch was the dominant cherttcntr- istfc of these religious fidvenfuygm in the cause of their church m which imparts such sion, coupled with a command of graceful dictation, not. to he found 001F190 on anti the [ttrbukgncu not subsided at latest reports <O-§-_____ today. ‘ Tito book in divided into three sections. 1. The Historical Narrnt- GERMANS WARN-En ive. 2. Sketches of the several Churches. 3. Biographical Sketches tof the first seven Chief Justices. giving in full a number of valuable l‘ historical documents referred to in the most p311 the text and last but not least a good index. in treating of the he evidence advanced by those s dealt with at more length, and p nterestingly told and the conflic- tslovitt. ing views set forth by vnrlotts on- seem"; Work quirers conco hing ' the point at lvely dealt with. His account of the French Rc- m idealism and interest l0 it will be found that the public 19'1"’ 91 59mm"? 00111111110. the documents, the deepntches and pri- m”! 110N011! 1101115 at vote correspondence of these early Where P1019101 today seized several ‘ days are characterized by an ac- P011“ 3111110118 only t0 be tlrivcn curacy and conclseness of expres- 0111 11811111. must return to PM. nccordin to Discovery, by {he g a warming 18mm" tongues’ Judge Warhurton sets forth clearly a bttt. concludes that. the mam my“, | . claim has not. been substantiated. 010w“. 0.8m" Germs His account ofJaqttes Cartiera visit bunlnessogv tcsutlt of imcrc-zteiutg unempgoy. 11y. due to factories and other well as the conmtries to the north. tnvo more xvorkptrg. 41m“ jot“ find 1110 W0-11110F111g German finds titint- Hv-‘tr out or luck. ile return to 011 flifilwnl 1o remain at home un- 1915s work tie assured. befgrg tmv. pounced 0i"? 101' 111i‘ the returning Gor- CANADIAN PRODUCTIONS IN liindcprotutcor of many photo- 11 J1"! u. announced inst "°'"‘“"" week in New York that he has com Dletnd negotin ' pictures nnnu ycsra. Four of these piciurtut w forc- UOIIIU story of But in fttlfnese We must realize that there ts another ’Ilto En- heen prone to tion of Judge Wurbttrlotfs book will he found particularly interest.- FIRE Fir e . carries no terrors _ I f01?.'11.1é"2.11t10 W110 1 § is adequately ‘insured * A V0111‘ 0rd" for Fire," Lifpher. Mari will receive prempt-attentiorfwheh m3 Hyndman The Oldest and Largest insurance Agency in P. E’ __._-_.___.__. _ .__.._____\ r . tr lflturlnce ‘tivtin _ & Co. Ltd. f I Pltottt-s I ti-ttsurattetr-a? and 333 Bond Dcpt.-»1001 63 Queen Street Citarlottclown tliiion in enriching and elucidating err’ Double Dollar Days FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26th AND 27th Don’t fail to visit Goff’s on these days for you will find as good Dollar Day Bargains as ever ofiered and then some. . .Men’s heavy Boots, tnade by Valen- tine (sub standard) for _. . . . . . . $3.50 Also boys and youths at like tot-ices. A big lot 0f Women's sample Shoes size 4jttst received including‘ Iilaclt, Greys and Browns in Oxfords, Straps and high lacing‘ boots. i0 per cent is our smallest and 50 per cent our largest discount. oorr nnos LTD. (l-affldl otl Iiambttrg The pittntlering oi‘ shop-t w,“ had T0 STAY AT HOME BERLIN. Oct. Z-L-Gertnutt un- Wvautierint! into other ountnles seeking work M‘, for disappointed and Germany peunfl. Government atzatnt - ciioti. ‘ q Sub“ During recent weeks, as a ituttdtrctls of uuem» 10y"! Bull-grate to Attstnla, Jtjgt). 1111118111? and Rttmania However. theat- countries. us is fort-ed to Gerttunv. and t-‘te overnmteuve warn-lug Reilief organizations pa“, "n. BIIS. Ernest Shinmnn. Cnnstlian ny tions to make ei r l")! for the next if z ry. This is well brought fine chance for our Solid Four their ‘ r ‘Anna-m ti. ’ - t ‘itiLyr -¢. M- 1110 enorm- he d t duflznitatemn the southern: Stator winter months. and. ti. U; L2." L“ w l make at least one picture in Canada each summer so as to keep the world continuous motion ties of I I v ‘ t res pictures mstle in (lan- ifi when _ nsm ‘ I n nouns HOLDERS OF 1923 VICTORY BONDS Have the opportunity of selling and Reinvesting in New Dominion 5 Per Cent Loan 20 Years Yielding over 6% City of Charlottetown Bonds Yielding over 5% For further particulars writir, telephone or call 0'1 Hyndman & Co. Ltd. 61 Queen Street, Charlottetown A. R. McINNIS, Mgr. Bond Dept- Tclephones 67-488-1001 __..J h t mrwtitsttt... hottest»? '17"? i S ndicate Participattons. 1W0.‘ variably a. free s ow. cltlwfitrttyctcd to flllfliliiifi tMrt-l 311ml - t to ex-' “(dudes 12:‘:T1tf!;l111)'0e1l,;;11l¥grel?ieTirrttelillldroach 1-116 wit Rome tnedfoltfniheel‘ pictures. Because. under @1110 119W maintaining at the bottom . m.‘ arrangement, ample capital will but available at all time's. cMP-d $11111]- |_ ' ittres n onenttnty ~ they wtil-l be unable to Erik's nsegugsoJ|n be -more 91mm». ate and greater in scone 1111111 110w" toioreg ._ . Throushont the period of exist- ‘HWMAN "V! YEAR PLAN‘ i live year contract, MnShipman ;"\\1,, l t at large aware of the picture activi- ho Dominion. FIRE Rather than make an effort 1° 1 purpose of pulling Others down- titttttfsii,