I"- . uire a big capital and which al- . SATLRDAY, sarrasman 24 19:2 q j _ l L . ‘ ' ways find a ready market. At worst. 1 Cup!tal._ f I b . x , _ it would provide sustenance for l IA Usli E PEIVSIOIVS INQUIRY hen fish’ omt m!‘ m‘! sail can Iman and his family. with an oc- i I MY ‘ _: , , _ , _ ,md samjwn’ 0 hexfflnned m ' Bkicasional day's work on road-makhiB. l mam 1 I Difflcihtics in the ndniinlsnation Ibestosl zmc and leach - and how many 0mm, Mme home m. it took bf the Pensions Ac: have 0CC£iS10ll~ Modification o! Mmcuom against dusmes could be developed in the of the hd the sppouiimciit by the Federal Cumtm “we came on agreed 11mg wTnter months in connection with I m? vcrnnicnt of a commission, the q-m,’ m L; estimated‘ Wm mean ‘Lit! It would not be the riches 0f Cd by Iconstitutlon of W11 ch should meet to m iPeru. but it would be an assured, psi-u. ' 1°“ $3 "m" p" “m1 ° livelihood. “my t] ‘ith gcncrnl approval and confl- Canadian shippen , oi- agg hence. Omclais of the pensions de- Bacon and ham quot. up 0° r sum” mam! "a me my‘ d I 30:: arzment lconszitute one-half the maximum o; 0,500,000 cw; W, an. nationals regarding the ma“, on .616] xuembersziip, and representatives of mum 1K1“ o‘ persom o‘ questionable IIp-Be m“ “mus e‘ senicelnen3 “gm” Preference on Canadian tobaccoicharacter. With the murder of Mai’- lmd" .. ffilfitills 1i.» otlxii‘ h:iif, with a jud- to wmmue for 10 War-i shal Chang 1n China, it is recalled . . . ' id _ ‘t. . u :\.~ clcririixun. Dr. i t _. 11-3 1.43"’? 331131151‘ wrmsponden“ 5a ‘ILlw-rl‘ i M; o; Pa“ “Whl e ‘po atoes a e notspec ca; lisume of changs MW (mmubmes P}? m l, ~ - i} mentioned. Great Brltan vi-l ilooked like Amexqcans, while Amen Iiidcel f” I A 11min‘ m m‘ cmmder hung m? embarg‘) againsblcans said some of the women re- as I I “ ' *““5>“°“ (‘Yew ‘g the Canadian product. semblcd Emglishivomen. The French 1i slot. 05 ‘wlfil Since Mr. A. E. MacLean has call- COFWSIWW-‘IQYIW agreed 5°m°h°I the smack Ivi-‘sirzll-i PYY-"l!" 0d sueiiziou to this matter as he-|“'°m°“ ‘WWI h“ mgusniwmg‘: Pigs .915 _ v _ and Americans and they 0118 Hty i ‘ ‘mg pertinent to the issues oi thetmore were some German women W0 k .- a byplcction campaign in the FiftIllImc1udE¢ In Pa“ the my,“ French The 1”" “f ‘District of Prince, it would be vvel1' folk tell everyone the ladies of the Wm they-or the eject,“ w give it sfigous boulevards are not French. but u; , 4 | cons,dernt,_on_ Spaulshor German. In Madrid. they the h P v. o. t.“ we gransI are not Spanish, but W611i‘?! °Y or th ' i 1 e. . I‘ Wi- German. And in Berlin. they are i s iii ‘.11.- . r- "Li; . - feed! “‘ - _ ‘ “F ‘° “‘ scorrs ACHIEVEMENT not German. but French and Span- To ~ “P Pmm“ A" ‘s ———— ish. at least that is the way the fng w 0W1‘ 77-000 8Y6; summing up the real achieve- natives tcll the story 1n the dfier- Binge? m“ 57-000 a-“Imcnt of Sir Walter Scott in liter- ‘mt cities” not“ -~ "AI WNW‘ zrurc a ufter ln the Winni Ii‘- . A *- ~ ‘ . . , A peg Free _ 1°¢°°° “I? ‘lhr-d‘ 'Prcss finds that it is not his style, The Treaty u! Vcmillcs compel! ‘iorial wéhsfon is . . .. - .. ed a conquered Germany i0 disarm. up m l nhch was artificial and stated, 4 a y h. n.3,‘ e t ‘ v u but it also imposed an obligation on m‘ 01ml, m: neither “as it his refined young her conquerors to reduce their ar- ‘ ‘ "Ac a o‘ r ' ladies and 891153931911 - - - with maments. It is not, even at this stage ‘I I“ “mm °“‘~‘" Ne“? their perry wars and copybook a. question of reducing those anna- up to i ‘ 3‘ France’ “m among DIIYASQOIOBF." These detflils. he says, ments 1n order to give Germany “"~’"- - , - i , i» *1" <1 d ii‘ i'i— r mlLiary status. 1t is, as hay In e I m. n5 ‘to “g fim ‘e a t: do not afiect the essential contents fgdlijiltheo beginning to remove the Cllllid In? h“ C"! ‘ML ‘O m‘ Cm I I01. Scott's books’ in fiery one which danger to the world implicit in a ~ - < - -~= — i. - .. . ‘ . sub-i fb-Jd J"- <“ v“ °~ C“ l" a“ the unporiani characters Mad up too heavily armed slate. So m the c go £33m“ ‘I * 8- 111118 hish out of the printed page. only power that has really reduced , v4 ~ ' » - . A Sim" m“ m‘ ‘h-"m "1 “he P“ ffmllllmeflts of life and its sdveht- amiamcnts is Great Brifein- Appar- “E: Eton Act, a zo:a1 of 1,757 cases has mes ‘ma, we lapse of a hundred ently nothing moves the others to = . . u ‘ disarm in fact, although all agree m“? duct“??? of b1: ti; App‘? years‘ that excessive armaments are both folio‘ ‘COW? d°c5~cns ha“? n m“ ' "Novels like Redgauntlet. or the dangerous and burdénsomel grcd by the pension tribunal in 4,- Legend of Montrose, or Old Mor- I __. ._ _ tality, despite the difference in Gr“ m” “m” M“ m‘? 39am of Pm modem literary treatment, are PAGE FOUR IIIE BIIARLIITTETOWII GUARDIAN ‘—'* _ ' - . . _ _\ -1, M, l‘. Vlce-Preuldent-J. It. Burnett Ire-Idem “‘Sthrfiitifii-lAsutfifipl. I). A. Rlac-Kliiunii; "- 5- 0- l ' i-xiiioi-Tiiiiii Alflnfliflflfi Dlrccwr-J- R- 331mm ' Associate lIlIIlflfflr-Ffllllk Walker and D. h. CHIN! i . Q 110mm; 110E15- tlfilllltlfll 1897,! $5.00 per year (In advance) delivered. _ G REPRE-QENTATIVIES I‘ UNITED STATlIS-Ili with Special Agency li\c._ New York Ccnfrlil iig 1i: ~i Pity, Wllliiiigliby 'l‘o\\'cr Building, Chicafto: 4-139 City; Glenn iiii‘iiiiiig_ 06th Strvcl. \:'.IIiliIi‘I])hIXl- - ,3 $150 poi- yuiv iiu fliI\‘I.\ll\‘0)'Ill!1iI9lA in Canada and United States. IIMIPYIII Alotors Bull-ling Dctroit_ interstate lhillil- sAtIllllllk lfusa Building, Sal! Francisco; 1135 No. e Morning Maxim We are not hcre to express our selves, but to help other people, -.< Isitm Commissioners have Elven de- ‘vim... in 151.311 cases, divided as ‘Hollow: In, o: disease, 15.301; ‘retroactive pcziszons, 1,036: alwess- Itnent, 763fzuid death 3206. ,- It ls hot-col the new commission ZilIil‘._\' of zhc diffi- ‘ of in the opcr-i s‘ any rate, the‘ e Government to ‘wit-h lTfUTll-il ‘ltd men is s 'n by .0 non-partis- I er. nature o! the m 12g i:..o the matter, ‘ssion which I 55 i cm novels appears like ‘ho fzfni. ‘ *5 ,1 V P in , uncertain behavior of phantoms." wonder that “c, arc e-Xpeficnc p: . xi. A . ., .. _ ' i- cmbarrassmcnt in balancing our vied to be of advantage 1:1‘. cazididnte in the by- Ftfth Prince, makes 7.11100 in {he role of kncckcr. “Not much! f-‘s wizh reference to still after a hundred years of lit- erary evolution, better stories than any now being written. Beside such stories as Dugald Dalgetty, or John Balfour of Burley, or Dandie Dinmont, or Nicol Jarvle, or Meg Aferrilees, the characters in con- I0lIl1)01‘3.l‘_V fiction are two-dimen- sional shadows. And compared with such scenes as the lists at Ashby. the‘ Knight and the Monk at Copmanhurst. the death of Sergeant Bothwell at Drumclog. Jamie's intcrvlev: with Queen Caroline, the rescue of Sir Arthur Wmrdour and Isabella, the murder of Morris by Helen AfacGregor. Dugalds aftack on the Dukeof Argvle in the cell in Invcrziray CRFIIQP-fiflfi so many other scones of breatliiiyss interest that we could spend an hour in making a ls‘. of them-the action in mod- BUYING AT HOME A writer in a. United Szatcs ex- IIIITES BY TIIE WAY hi. Here on the Island of Montreal. says an exchange, there is any I-| mount of good cultivable land which‘ Is not under cultivation; we could establish thousands and thousands ' of unemployed on it to farm. H4"- on a big scale, of course; for ex- ample, not wheat, but good truck farming, and breeding little ani- mals-rabblts, poultry, goats, sheep. etc-all the things that do not re- Now that the winds consequent upon equinoctal disturbances have subsided the storm centre goes to the fifth ‘district of Prince. The wind is not likely to abate much in volume because of the change. At the rccent annual meeting u! the Canadian Chamber of Com- merce some astounding facts were brought forth relative to govern- ment and municipal expenditures. So-callcd "ordinary" governmental expenditures, dominion, provincial and municipal, have increased from $19.08 per capita in 1904 to $88.68 in 1931. In that time Canada's pop- ulation has increased '78 per oerit, but her expenditures have gone up no less than 666 per cent. Is it any various budgets? Those who previously condemned the Brtish for not allowing India. to change offers the following sugges- tions, which apply with equal force to every Canadan communiiyi govern itself are now seeing that India is not a mere country or a I Conference agreement‘. 1d out to the farm- Money spent at home helps to build the home city, while money _nation. It is a subcontinent, it is §an ethnological museum of nations |and races, it' is a "welt/ei- of fiercely spent away from hcmc hclps teiahisconistio religions. One-third of ‘I Th? a? “ 1° 511°?‘ crIti-clsm 15 build some other ‘city. Bu ld aha-its zirca and one-fourth of its pop- tlro can; m. ‘e b7: Canada under home cm. firs“ ulfition is not under direct British ..: .»\ng1o»c_ _ treaty signed! Citizens who make use of the-rule, but under that of princes who - I - ' _- their over- . _ of: _ A s . 31A,.‘ A“ t m, , a _ __ cwn the Kill" Emperor p. aria on i l c gus lpllbllC bcmfits of the city shoiidjord and have binding Heaths’ Sign ~.'I‘!~.c treaty gives Cariad-an produc-Q help to make it pO$iblc to increase 9d by the 3,455,, go\~cn,,nent_ gm“. iers the following IYJ-IfCTCIlCQS in the _ Emunlcipal improvements by improv-Iantccing their independence. Each Inarkets of the United Kingdomi m; bu5in955_ ‘nation, each relglon wants self- f’ Wm“ in 313111 two shmmg Perl The home merchants handle‘ gcvemmen? but each L; 8° Jealous ‘quarter, or about six cents a bushel ‘Ismndard goods of the highest quay‘ Zgtaggrtéheezg Llrllgugilacfi ‘fgléixtblceail; F: Pa" it? 8*- tho lowest prlccf- Why b"? a rcal majority and fair to minor- II‘ Bmter- 15 EhimIIFZS P" ‘wt- (‘12 elsewhere? itles. All this, once overlooked. is INT-Ind“ 0r "m1" 555 M W“- You can inspect the goods before 11W’ m“? V975’ Plain- -“-Ciiecs:, l5 pcr ccnt ad ynlorem. buying and m“ buy h, large Rm?‘ "PPR?" 7°“? 511m“? slxlwncc small quantifies. If not as roprc-l _ P" C“: O7 51-03 PM‘ sctifcd. local dealers will make “wt-c are few accomphshmenk m Raw w. arr’ foiir shill 112's siflllericc . v< - = i -- ~ - ‘be d°m1°d "boy? the an or B 5km- ‘ ’ ’ Nil-Ck n-Q sai-‘YBC-OYY IidJ-!-‘~Y11@nIe-,cd and interesting conversational st. w" Wi- OP 51-08 1W“- i When .111 the home people tradcviirlzeii by n multipliclii’ of examples y" Cannrtl mimics. IIllTf‘ shillings six- in ,3“, ham? C5,}, .1103. enable theIIIK‘ irrm is disconccrtlngly misun- pcnce yo: wit, Qr 85 cents. I; ' rrs‘oo<i. so many folks seem to ' ‘.51.’. wind and words make ers a‘. the p .621’. time." O1‘ < W‘ C113’ to have a stcndy gi-owth. d I D-"if-‘il flllll-Y 19 ‘WU-WIS ‘sixpcmwllx: business grows so will a clfyllclr: o Th blather about . I 1'1. i.‘ per out. or 82o‘: pm‘. no“; y y incoz cquczitlal things. Their vic- ‘ Eggs i“ “"“°I“" from ‘me shumm,‘ circulating in the home this arc given no opportunity to (24 crnfs- to one shilling nincpcncctcm. mcans progpvri,_\.y as theIdrrip 0 gupqqsgjm, n0;- (0 exprggs an 43 cvnts» p4": gicat hundred (l0 opinion. Tiint is one reason why so dozcnt accoidng to grade. ltfo no j.- H ‘money Silflli fit homo stays in the comm?“ _. and caiitrlbutcs to the‘ i ' ‘f- Condcnsccl milk. whole swectcnwbettemwn, or the whme My find‘ hi. five ghiiiliig/ pcr cut, or $1.23 pays “crux, (kY-idends in Ms de Quit FY60 cniry for Canadian eggs. poultry; buitrr, chrcsc and oflicr hulk producis foi- ilii-cc years cer- ‘ ‘lain, with possible revision n-flcr many iiifoiiizcnt and highly educat- cd pcoyfc talk so little. to still fui-iher efforts, so that next y-cai- an even better showing Enjfggh”, NOTES will he mmlc. As it ls, the result _. ihris brcn highly satisfactory. Con- Thc silrrv“ of ihc Cflllffll School; grntiilritinns are duo, not only to vclopmcnt. run cuaanorrarowilgiagiaialst at 1m} mo“... MD. RAW OB COOKED FOODS Afew years ago it was not un- usual w hear and read the argu- ment; for and against raw foods. ‘Today it is recognized that while a little raw food in the form of fruit or vegetables might well be eaten every day because of their miner- als, vitamins, and I bage, never- theleu a diet consisting of raw foods only is not wise for man in the present state of his civilization. While it must be admitted that some methods of cooking meats and vegetables remove some of their valuable food qualities, never- theless the advantages In health and digestion from the proper cook- ing of foods far outnumbers those of raw foods. Dr. Julius Friedenwald points out that food is cooked to improve its flavor, to soften it so that it can be thoroughly chewed and more easily digested, and finally to destroy all parasites and germs that may be present in the raw state. Cooking develops certain flavors which increase the appetite and the taste for food. Cooking more- over destroys the tough flbrousenv- elopes that surround many foods, thus permitting the foods to be more easily acted on by the diges- tive juices. v The raw food enthusiasts point out that In eating food in the raw state you get the benefit of all the food value, but if the digestive Juices cannot break through all the fibrous coverings of the food cells through whose covering the Juices break through, will be dig- ested . ' It must be admitted however that a. sufficient amount of this fibrous tissue should be eaten in order to stimulate the walls of the intes- tine and so prevent constipation. However to the vast majority of people food in its raw state ls not attractive to the eye, to the smell, or to the taste, and if appetite is not created naturally by hard out- door work, it must be created by sight smell and taste. This is call- ed "brain appetite." Brain appetite causes the juices to flow before food is eaten. , Further, I... B. Boldyrefl’, the re- nowned research worker at Battle Creek Sanitarium has been ablewo prove that the stomach digestive juice which pours out at the sight. smell, or taste remembrance of ap- petlzlng food is richer in hydro- chloric acid and pepsin than is the digestive juice that is poured out 1n the stomach when food is eaten. This would seem like a most ex- cellent argument for cooked foods. Vehicles Of Death (Montreal Gazette) Yesterday's newspapers reported that an unlighted horse-drawn vehicle once more proved its death- deallng role on the highway when an automobile crashed into the ditch on the Taschereau boulevard. about one mile north of Pont vlau. killing its driver and causing $611610 injuries to three other occupants. It ls regrettable that these trage- dies of the public highway should recur to reflect the unwisdom of the lawmakers of the province in refusing to pass a measure which would compel every vehicle to carry lights when travelling along the highways at night. The most care- ful automobile drivers suffer acci- dents which go unrecorded except in the too frequent instances that result in diaster, when they collide with horse-drawn carts creeping, grimly and ghost-like, along the roadside. What appears to be to the oncoming motorist but a shadow is death-dealing substance. The lesson of these fatal events should be I00 obvious to need further stress, yet it has to be rc- afflrmed once more, and must con- tinue to be emphasized unless and ufitll a traffic law compelling lights to be carried on all vehicles is passed by the legislature, to be- come applicable throughout the province. Farmers and others who use horse-drawn vehicles after sun- down must by this time realize that such a law is imperative in the interests of their own safety as well as in the interest of the safety of automobilists. No plea on op- ponentb behalf should prevail over the common good. It is to be hoped therefore that all municipal auth- orities, uniting their efforts with those of safety leagues, automobile clubs and. other public bodies, will Saving" The Railway (Toronto Mall and Emlil") There has been an i1terchnnfle or amenities between Hon. Dr. R- J. Manlon. Minister of Railway! and canals, and the Winnipeg Flee Press. The newspaper. who“ Lolmcai friends were responsible g0;- the extravagantly wasteful ex- penditures on the Canadian Not- Iona! Railways. is quite anal’! "m! the Minister becausetlie latter is éhdeavwlllg. to the best of h" abllltyg-Io save the public-Own“ transportation system from ruin and to protect the family"! \' galnst further raids on the treasury. Between 1923 and 1930 the friends of the Free Pres, then in power at Ottawa, added nearly $500,000,000 in the commitments of the C. N. n, so that when the present; ad- ministration came into offlre it had to put up about $100,000,000 per an- nuaq {o keep U18 TBIIWEY BOIDI- The Minister and the country were thus confronted with a. terribl! grave situation. This problem, in- deed, was the most difficult one with which the new administrr tion had to deal. Here iii-as a railway which had involved the country in cash ex- penditures 5nd guarantees amount- Ing io about 52.500.000.000; thus more than doubling the national debt, or rather creating a second national debt of that size. This situation would not have been near- ly as bad as it was had not the Mackenzie King Government al- lowed and even encouraged the management to pour out hundreds of millions of dollars from coast t0 coast ivith a view to influencing scores of constituencies In succes- sive general elections. The mo Press ls quite right in pointing out that since the change of Government far-reaching econo- mics have been cavrled out on the public-owned railway. Even 811' Henry Thornton saw that these economies were essential and w“ prevailed upon to eliminate Vmany expenditures. When he retired a. few weeks ago and was succeeded by Mr. s. J. Hungerford as acting president, still further savings were inaugurated. For these eripendf- tures Afr. Hungerford, as a practi- cal railway man of long experience. takes the full responsibility. There ls no doubt that the Minister of Railways repeatedly pointed out t0 Sir Henry and Mr. Hungerford the absolute need of lessening the pre- sent dralxi of a million dollars a week on the national treasury. but it is upon the railway president himself that the task devolves of elaborating the economy program- me with regard to personnel and other matters. In the case of the recent dismissals of officials of whlcli the Free Press complains, lt is interesting to know that Sir Henry Thornton had been working on this list when he retired, and that Mr. I-mngerford has simply completed it and acted upon it. Drastic cuts in expenditures have not been eonfincd to the Canadian National Railways. They have taken place on the Canadian Paci- fic Railway and upon every rail- way on the North American 0on- tinent, and everywhere else. m view of these circumstances it is merely childish to accuse Dr. Man- Ion of painting too dark a picture‘ of the public-owned system and of deliberately trying to meg]; it, The simple fact is that he is trying to save it from the financial morass into which the extravagancu of the late Government had brought it. The lifinlsterl; course is the only course that could be sanely pur- sued. Despite the greatly lessened revenues available in these days. his policy and the policy‘ of» the mflflflzement will probably out this year's deficit on the system prac- tically in two.- It is hoped, moreover, that the rcpozt of the Royal Transporta- tion Commission, which he‘ was in- strumental in having appointed, will make for better conditions on both the publicly-owned system and the privately-owned system. The economies effected in the lest two or three years on both roads tend to put them in a better posi- tion to profit by an upum in earn. lugs when such upturn arrives with the return of prosperity, The course of the present Ministry has bee“ W156 beyond peradventure. The case put forward by the Win. flipcz Free Press has not a leg to stand upon. ...t.t; KIDNEY follow the example of the st. Lam- bert City Council and petition the provincial Government to pass a,‘ law making it obligatory that all| I Fnlr slicull czicnuracc tlic bzigsthc prize winners but, to a1] who \ ‘IIIITII ]Y"l§. d. ‘A 10 IICLCGDLJQEQIGXQMG, onluln- and. nydq of our rural communities took part, I vehicles uskig the highway; d‘, ma. - ~- ‘oviwtj a nous: no: sm wanna (Sir Walter Scott die Sept. 21, 1832.) call out your bones and call up] your men! i Speed, the Moss-troopers are rid- ing again! -I Over the hills they are riding in I Oruwdin: the roads and threading jthu waste. Dances the moon on the dark-flow- ing Tweed. - Splash go the horses-Sir Walter in lend! Bobs Tam Purdle on his old shell)’ nil. G119! with the bridle a fat saddle Good old Sir Walter! He rides in the van. Mount, and we gallop as hard as we can, Jlngling and cluttering through old, sleepy lhires; Now the dogs bark and lights flit in the byres. Auld Rleekie we speed for, bound for the North; Iibre morning we'll cross at Stirl- ing the Fbrth. Claverhouse, Montrose, Rob Roy from his lair, Prince Charlie, Iiochlel, are gather- ing there. Queen Bess and‘ Queen Mary ride in our troop, Jogs along King Jamie who slob- bered his soup; Ballle Nicol Jarvie rides on m right: ' Ho! keep the Ballie well in your sight: Twa bottles he carries whaur pis- ‘tols sud be, For the Ballie, ye ken, has a wat- ery ‘e0. Hulloa, Dandle Dlnmont! Call of! your dogs Or the Hallie‘: horse will be mired In the bogs. Ride on, Sir Walter! ride hard, ' Ride ham, Cavalier, Jacobite, true Soot and Bard; silk and homespun. love, laughter and tears, Lords and fair ladies, ride with your spears: Gude ploughman, Cuddle Head- rlgg, smells of the earth ' Douce Jeannie Deans keeps a clean house and hearth. Ride on, Sir Walter! You still lead . the van, Clean and sweet-breathed and a Iarue gentleman. Hamilton. -John Stephen. . The‘ Death Watch. Beetle (The London Telegraph) The Office of Works has with- drawn both workmen and experts from Chequers, and the celebrated Elizabethan mansion is once more ready for occupation by the Prime Minister at week-ends. It is not generally known that if it had not been for the timely intervention of officials versed in the work of restoring ancient buildings the death watch beetle would have won the battle against antiquity. The depredations‘ to the timbers were most serious, and drastic methods had to be employed. The fact that the death watch beetle was found at Chequers has been a cause of sorrow to Lord Lee of Fareham, who gave and endowed the famous mansion as .a country residence for ‘the Prime Minister of the day. Before he made the mansion over 1n trust in the nation Lord Lee had the it Sole Distributors O_f This Exquisite Line Toilet Preparations MAX FACTORS Powder; "If! Creams. products or HOLLYWOOD are the high- 9" llllllity products on the market. and‘ endorsed by screen star-u this line h" ""157 been received With dellxht In Charlotte- town Some of our lines Include Whllener Liquid Honeysuckle cram Face Bleach Face Powder Brush i ' H -E-A-T Judge Coal, not by what it costs, but, by what it provides! We sell only that which is known to give the utmost heat per dollar o! msg to you. - High Grade: “~35: ‘l. HARD coai. I sorcr COAL and Coke Sold in any quantity at lowest prices A. PICKARD & c0. Phone 240 whole fabric examined, and it was‘ given a clean bill. Unfortunately experts have not made up their minds in regard to the watch beetle. This was proved in the case of Westminster Hall, when certain experts were of the opinion that the roof tree was not greatly af- fected, but ivhen repairs death the waist. Outwardly all mm sound. It was. much the same were stronger than ever before. entered upon it was found that 1 certain beams there were cavitl capable of receiving a man up q Chequers. but happily science 1-, intervened in time to save u, building, and it is now, I am mid Fall Cleaning Aids >.-._7— BEIII! Vi; ALL YOU NEED TO D0 IT RIGHT A Veneer Floor Mop Reg. A 4 ounce Bottle of Liquid Veneer. Reg. A Liquid Veneer “Cre- pette” Dust Cloth, eg. ...'.........-... $1.00 --o---.o--q---- .30 .25 Regular Retail Value}? SPECIAL Thursday, Friday, and Saturday 98o Hardware 00., Ltd. “The Friendly Hardware Store” PHONE 757 Try Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea . Retail price 50c per lb. Sold Only in Bled Allflllhl I/Vhen Prosperous Times Return MAKE THEM LAST BY PRACTISING i THRIFT PRINCE EDWARD ISIJAND BRANCH’ The Great West Life Assurance Co. Hyndman & Co., Ltd. Managers Guardian of Homes and Champion 0f . Thrift Cleansing cream Skin and Tlslue Cream Visit our ltore and look over this new line which we are Introducing. You will not leave the store without pi". chaelng some. up 2 mos} m. E. R. and Plate BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summcrside,~LIoyd7 Lewis 146 Richmond Sh, i ~~-~——~-—~-—~t-.~- . Charlottetown