E0111 I \T\ s DELL/U .6‘. lil l list, For Every Thirty Years llilSlllllli ‘m: crnnuncoaleauv. Iunnvoita ervv.‘ Decorate to Match Ellie Fabric Beautiful walls that not only harmonize with the colors, but actually resemble the texture of our furnishings, can be had by decorating with Opsline Eifects. They are easily and quickly put on. All you need is ‘ CHURCITS r‘ v _ A Wall Brush Jantl Sponge For those who prefer plain tints, Ala- bastine is the ideal wall covering. tscnu 2' r booklet- "Alabnrfic Opaline liflc n‘ For solo at all Hardware and liiiii. Shops. The Alahastine Co, Paris, Ltd. 4i Paris‘, Ont. k liVEnnipep, Matt. r 75c . UC 5 -Lb. Package QM-Ll). PilCkufl E. R. snow . Z46 Richmond Street Charlottetown Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Cood Stong Stock Companies. MR. READER:- _If you promised to help a candidate win one of the big prizes, “make good” on your promise now. Clip out the coupon below, fill it in and send it direct to the Guardian or to your candidate. The most votes are given now. Get your subscription in by next Saturday night. ‘HELP YOUR FAVORITE WIN THE STUDEBAKER Date l..._...._...... Campaign Dept. The Guadlan Find eneloeed 8 .............. .. in payment e1 my nub- eeriptlon to The Guardian for one year. Credit ......_._.. votes in the great eonteai to l (Name of your favorite candidate) Vie eubeeriptlon new or renewal? m... ....-.........--...-_.._. (Mime of Subscriber - A renewal er old euneeription ler one year eerne till! yetee. ‘Pl ‘new ‘ext-Mien earns 23000 votee ll paid ___ the vessel is proceeding. iiéli (magnetite; Page ti ‘and aiiai in iy toe In tale ntei declare that this invention math ‘revelation la m iit-innetting try. nun In capital coat and is cheaper than its rivals. a Minoan waALri-i IN coat. ort- in l Greater attention is beinglgivfllitm "is hll- $15.00 a pair. are V: h l iitll§igiluiial taakwm l; and l. . scientist has pointed out that thel "lend" n” m“ world is wasteiulty consuming itsl this nndl ‘cum. grounds enaenmu" In", lnhklh or time you have worn glans [been made to deal with coal more, {efficiently than by burning it. under; a boiler or converting it at a high-l" "T “Y” l" >"’“l' "w" ll°"l° ‘l’ teiuperaiurc into gas with a hard‘: coke and various tarry materials _\- PQY _ t h f $4.49. ntherwi as by producls urea‘ hopes have iiiTEiQ-e. and you are out noth- imparfgcL notably lli the lack Oil Judsy than ever bet .iory oi engineering to the sublet: tut iuel economy. Scientist aite l ‘coal resources; and on l l ‘been entertained of .known as “low temperature carbon iisation," which differs from the or smokeless fuel which will ‘as iuel oils and ether products fThe whole question. westigated by lernment. a This Board. which has .cztrried out experiments on a large! report covering the work o: the years 1920 scale, recently issued its and 192i. The problem is not yet the Board has produced represents endeavour to titid a- sound commer< i‘old wealth hidden diamonds. in our black l THE DEPTHS OF THE SEA in iihe early days oi‘ navigation lvessels by giving them warning oi the approach o!‘ shallow waters. The need for something with tit-y was felt when the survey oi‘ (leap ivaiers was‘ uutlertuken. The famous ship “Challenger", which w; ' " iretl by the British ‘Gov- ernment im" (mean exploration, titli- fise». ... \..,..d.-ri‘ul sounder invent- lrti l- lrepkiccti lllk’ old-fashioned line .wi.i i. pinzio wire. The weight nt- ltaU-v’. (therefore serving u double purpose. IWith the development of bilgh ispeeds in navigation. something- istill more rapid has been calledwelope-d in Great Britain for a widelul lllell‘. consul“ obllgallons 'for: and the call has been iifl:i\V9l‘-|Vlll'l€l_\’ of purposes. ,“.‘“..._ ed in more than one ivay. iiy sentl- made in larger sizes with tunnels 'ing a sound wave downwards from {the hull oi‘ the ship and by observ- {ing the time taken to receive an echo oi‘ the sound from the bed oi ll-lle sea, the depth of water can lbe calculated. Another methud,| {which has been carried to a suc-_ icesslitl issce by a British firm, ut~l |ilises light instead of sound. A ‘powerful beam oi light is project-l ed vertically through the bottom oi‘ 'ilie ship on to the sea bed. Further] along the -hull oi‘ the ship is an ad- justable iube through which an ob- server can pick up the beam of light. The angle iii-rough which gthls‘ tube has to be turned gives an vindication oi‘ tho depth to which the beam extends. The operation- oi‘ this depth-tinder is ot course quite independent o ithe speed at which E 4 THE DAZZLE DANGER A great deal oi‘ attention has been given lately to the danger caused by the use o! powerful headlights on motor cars. These lights have a blinding effect on pedestrians and on ‘the drivers of curs; and their use has been the I source of n. number oi‘ serious ac- cidents. The Royal Automobile Club of Grant Britain offered a sub- stantial prize i‘or n form oi‘ head- light which would be free from this . disastrous dazzling effect and mim- erqus attempts were ninde m flnd n way out of the difficulty oi‘ sec- uring a light which would be strong enough to lei the driver see ~ where he was going and yet would not. dazzle the eyes oi people com- lttg in the opposite direction. The problem was in fact abandoned by many people as insoluble. but rec- ently two Britlsh inventors worked out diflerent solutions. both of a most promising character. in one case the lamp is placed at the foc- us oi‘ an elliptical reflector, thus concentratng the light of the lamp on the second focus of the ellipse. At this point ii small diaphragm is placed to reflect the light in such a wiiy that no rays rise above the level oi‘ the lamp. The rays below this point pass through a lens which spreads them out so that the road surface so strongly illuminao edJor a good distance ahead, and the sides of the road receive sul- tlclent light. The sec ifiyeutbr q uses u special iorm or wit} a- eiiiy about one third et itiat acaci- ealehvea and to feel value ie ti; inacii naeerier. wtiea oat veil ia than and earns riebtiy. mum m“ melee Free on trial. to a inf working expenses the new eyeienHC-II. the process solved, but the information which cial method of utilising the mani- ‘ lanai Anthem. given and it was decided that the institute pay for new blinds. a moveable blackboard and racks tor gvrltin! exercises. The comrnitteea , Fruit! be used; A discussion regard lid making eat given semi: from ay to ted mt m. lthn a. etniii eoeeia let hia hen . u a ‘True Vision" ‘Ikirtniae if“ of tliia Greening r who writes h a C0 _ ti. no SIM. \\'ll\l\i Manitoba. These splendid twill enable anyone to mad ilitnulloll print. thread the ‘ needle. nee tar or neat‘. cvt- tr in or headaches. n nald retail X OI! ll address. and age. and state olutely free. if you are satisfied nu are then to the se lug it - he ‘will beautiful enclose the velveteen-lined. glasses lettered Spectacle Case. to be yours. free ot‘ all cost. assist this distribution of the light and to ensure that the sides of the roadway receive the requisite ain- ount of llumination. Both these do vices have been tested and have astonished experts familiar with early forms oi autidazzle lamps—- which. in tact. consisted chiefly of arrangements tor dimming the light and thus depriving the user of tho lnecessary illumination. l the highest point yet reached in the MAKING TEETH BY ELECTRIC- IT The making oi‘ artificial teeth is u fine art. and its success depends largely on the accurate baking ol’ the line porcelain used in the con- struction of teeth. All sorts of tli-e ordinary sounding line was suf- shudes have t0 b8 SW91! l0 199111 01 11°11 91 elllorcelllmll befillm? flcient to serve the purposes oi‘ differed-t sizes in order that accur- {angled Wm; 901mg; Th; 1pm ate matches may be tnade with ev~ ery kind of tooth from the pearly n white ones of the popula raciress 1° 191ml" lllll qllelltlon “Hogan” . _ I greater range and increased accur- to the deeply stained tusks of the or from political control ‘by rele- flnveterate smoker. In order to be lsure of tibtniiiing the desired re- sults the temperature at each stage in the baking process must be ac icondition a British manufacturer ‘ie lm- Lord Kelvin, which has devised a very ingenious elec-| tric furnace in which a quartz tube tlemeu to say that they earnestly is heated by a close coil oi‘ wire 2.1 ‘this sounder was so c0u~ wound round its exterior. The teethi ._ ;Sli'l.ll:l.8(l that ii brought up sam- under treatment travel along thisll‘ ' pies oi the deposit on ocean beds; tube. the temperature of each poi"; N111. lilld 0H0 Whlcll "IR"! ftlon of which can be exactly re-. gcorded and controlled. This is a‘ type oi furnace which hits been de-' it can be ot lire clay for the glazing of til-es iiud pottery of various kinds. Its main advantage lies in the perfec- tion oi‘ temperature cotitrul whiclil ensures that all the material pass‘ ing through will be properly $1M- sd. With ltber types of turuace there ls a large portion of "throw- outs" and the cost of the produc- tion i-s therefore greatly increased. Owing to the tact that very little oi‘ the heat electrically produced is wasted the electric furnace proves to be much more economical than would at first sight be supposed. Biliiioral the . Royal llesiiliiice (Clntinued from Page 9) the legend among the people is as iollows:—-=Three tailors from Rutih- iemurchius wagered they would dance at three daies~abernetihy. Ruthlemurchus and Mar — Within twenty-four hours. The season was winter. and deep snow covered iihe ground. rendering the feat all the more dlfilouli. They danced at the first. named two places, and than commenced the long tramp through the snow covered Lairlg—-by night maybe and with the mist and heavy snow falling, so that they could scarcely see their way. Still they struggled on. but having reached Clach ‘Nan Taillear their strength was completely gone and they per- lshed miserably in the snow, their self-imposed task iiicompleted. Su-ch, says "D.C.," ls an incomplete but quite historical account of Bail- morail associations, which may prove of interest to some renders. The King leads a quiet, unostenta» tious. happy life when he goes to Baimoratl, and is much beloved by the people of the ‘Highlands, with whom be freely mixes, leaving aside. for the time being. all the formalities and trappings of royad- W. The fine 0i Month's liistiites (Cintlnued ‘from Page 9) to the first Friday. The holding oi a bean ‘supper was discussed ‘but no decision was-made. The meeting closed with the singing of the Nat- Georgetown.-'i‘.he regular nieeb ing oi this institute was held in the Council Chamber on the even- ing oi‘ October 9th. There were about ohirty women present; The report of the school committee was Id mimired aill the blinds whidll 41h: Red (Iron campaign was a. A netnonsttatt ‘ hint r on candyi _ lie Supervis- or, M-iaa 0 m: lunch wae after “ which . e lessen; social time "1 Itverymie who wean at line ni aadiut (Ritttnmllept. amt act. mWI-neggte-cmtininiataeofliil- "n2"; ties all was alternately new?!“ t i»- it air u ffblilqu:ll.lliu ti» yearn ago enacted a lam prohhit- ‘SW37’? u. t» r- on your improved appearance. Don't _ send any money. Simply your Ilfllrf, “pd mug Ibecalne the plfll l’ and f Banner Province of the to. m unyflbHQKrJII, can?) “wiggle; Tam i. n - repa arcc OI t IeO-Pgiltl’lllgflfifhlfittxiahlillt‘ and inspect the 1010s 0i sobriety here NW9 h; ever Iinee been Dfwi very way and want to keep them. small PQNIPH You acccPt his otter at 112cc; adequate machmery ‘or i“ gamma leather»- ment and that it did not tirollml -,d|na|.y process In gas works b). ette. ailringback. pocket-book. gold- "TBKSDII of the beating oi‘ the coal ~10 a degree much below the usual ustandard. The object is to obtain not only a supply oi‘ gas but also a burn ‘brightly in the ordiuury grate, and which is series of prisms which bend the light in such a manner that none man as 053151,;- 0| (he vmiious escapes above the level ot‘ three . y p of feet from the road surface. The ~re- 0f Krwlel‘ Slflillelli-‘Y- "i1 gllverll‘ tvulue in one direction and another. flector is scientifically designed to ments o! ‘both P811199 allemnrelr which is ex- ;ceediugl,v complicated. has been in- Fuel Research Board appointed by the British Gov- curately controlled. To ensure this b" °l Clllllollc l“ lllllll‘ I M; “pert aiiag with til u‘ $3 saaiii eel»! e mi mm in inn eitr. the Pr? 1mm stature soineltvelt! ls of intoaioe _|_e this Provin‘ es. Prince nloil in ‘Mo. _ s position o which Th; “w as first enacted, wll who importation of liquors, the power to .control such import and ainportytrade being vested iexclu- slvely ti. the federal authority. From year to year the laiw was amended always in the directliilv assisted in the 809d Wilijli- 3° strong was public southwest in time of its first eitactnieut n0 member of the Legislature during twenty years past has yei ventur ed to, propose the repealwof thi- law. Permitted importation ‘hasKibeen from the first an ltisuperable ob stacle to makin; 1119 P!“ vi-nce really "dliv" 1711i- 93°11 successive government a h a s been blamed for laxity lnnonforc- ing the law. And where tha-“outs" thus charged the "ins" the Gilt‘!!- en- Couservative government sought; l gating it to a Commission oi’ sift clergyman. friends of the law. three Protestant and a like-enum- It is due to these reverendigen; sought to do their duty. although t iwas at once onerous a/tvi diffi- puer- sone thought they should not. have been asked to undertake in view ' l l to congregatiotiii the Commission their None the less respective imlggion iwas appointed iby the pre provinces have taken effectual no- tion to this end. Premier Bell at be {liken here on this question but l l t cal parties. They iwere never charged at any time with politi- cal partisanship, .in connection with their work as a Commission and the Province ‘has never bade better enforcement of the DIOlIlIJl‘ tory law than they gave“ necessar- ily lmperfectvas it iwes. Three years ago there came it change of government and. it-wzis followed later oy the resignation of tho clerical Commission. not be- cause ioflthepoliticai change, but tor other obvious reasons. A new com- sent Government and was c0111." posed of laymen. one or more of whose members had been active political partisans of the "Dtirtyl" power. This created an unfavoraible impression. And at best the new Commission rwos under the some limitation as the out because or the unrestricted importation oi‘ liquors. l liow could this great ohslnvlPifl restriction of the liquor tratflcibu met and overcome? The tuleral authorities had already Pfiwldétl a way‘. lt is now and has 118911 (or a good while open to "any ipro~ vince to declare by popular vote its desire that the importation v1‘ liquors Bhilll ‘be prohibited. Other the inst session of the Legislature promised that a plebiscite would work, of the‘ Cotmnisslon worn generally ‘approved by both politi- wm, m"; previous p- mines and pledges made in the same quart-W- Tliere can be no doubt of the result of such a 111811150139 11 l‘ were taken. is l: not ‘DQ081189 ‘there is no doubt that the plsbis~ cite is not ‘ ‘lpfullflll- 011 311d llle Banner Province .0! Prohibition trailsiits colors at the rear of the procrasslon? it looks that iway. In the meantime the’ SOVBTMIIQ"! 1! gathering tens of thousands of dol- lars yearly from a Prohibitor)’ Law, administered by a. more or less partisan Commission for'pur~ poses oi’ revenue rt‘ restricting the bauefui liquor fie. ' a ‘As a result, intoxicating liquors are freely imported in bottlesanu cases and lbarrels and hogsbeads. Government ‘Warehouses in the heart of the city are iburglarlzed. caslts of ruirn stolen therefrom and tho thclves not catight, much less punished. Rum liens exist bait a dozen in a block. Boothleggers ply their trade almost openly and ap- parcntly unchecked. Bootieggers‘ steal from bootleggers. Broken runiliotiles decorate the side- walks and endanger the tires of motor cars on the roadways. Drun- ken men reel and stagger on the ‘streets. one in ten of iwhoni per- haps are run in and fined in the police (IOIIFE, but Iwlio ‘inquires where or how the stint! wng ob- tained. or lays complaint against the bootlegger‘! 1 down to the present date it re- forcomant of the proiribitory law excerpt so far as ltiserves theUpur- poscs of revenue, is at loose ends, and ipublio opinion behind the law has grown ‘supine and inert’, or discouraged. ‘A rallying of ‘the temperance societies .is greatly needed to hold the Commission and the government up‘ to '1‘ label duty, especially to bring on plebiscite campaign. Present con clltions are st oncedaplorwble and disgraceful. The non-enforcement of the law has always ‘been and i. now the most potent agency for its destruction. instant and ener- getic measures are requires ‘to ' save it. Do our tilt usands o! pro- hibitlonists realize the danger?‘ —-—<o »--'-- POTATO PRIQES. The general range of potato prices this season so far has ibeen from one-third to two-thirds that of the corresponding time last year. n _ “A Mass 0f ‘o... —No-Sleep- Unhappy Days” wriiee lilra. Ore ll f Dan ii Quabeqjt, B. d"?! c3385 with‘: tors unui me lint u! Hay. n l a (‘Sldrlrlhlifrlielii lie-ea“ nut 1...». Act‘ and have beenentirnly well. ever n»?! “$1,301,? if lialfa bottle will relieve m: r atieren ‘l’ "ri""....."'.'l'.: l" filzasr'llr." on . . with. . flnfiiltin _ l v . . _Central D n A. I‘ t. . plan wits thus constituted and the- mall" "flflllffllell- 111 like mil-nu" Th.“ ll°lll lllcl l5 lll“ llll’ ell rclliqrliiilttetowu. o. u “ 1i l v ,1 , i-. ’ | _ u‘ carved it. in stone. penned-it on papyrus. of history in its making. And not jthe least important phase of modern history lies in theFreaIm of industrial progress. t- ll ‘Greatest His- ‘torian of Them, All OhllER wove history into his songs. The Pharaohs Julius Caesar painstakingly Today, history is written and given to Y0“ 911111119111‘ eously its occurrence. Every day, the important ev- ents of theworld are summed up fully and comprehen- sively in your newspaper. You are able to keep iabreast You find chroniciedlin the advertisements. _ Advertising is a priceless boon to those ‘who use it pro- perly. It keeps their information up-iio-dateoii the great variety of things that make life what itlis today. It tells them of the thousand and one things they‘ iii o ‘to live profitable, happy itndlusefullvyllivfieis‘. i y .. The consistent ‘advertiser lie you; his Warw- Hi; lmovéiiiieyfiiiehipii-Lntiiiecits dim his money because he is confident that F01‘ 0111)‘ merqlhattdise that is consistent] l consistently niiyertiged, ‘ tannin t ‘Kecttup wan memo. rr rat's." ‘RS811 the advertisement; ,. rder ‘can be n l this the '