illilllllillliilitllilli llllililllli ll llvesee. ,-.-.---.,..->-',-:..":.-:~.-.,.':'.':, ".~:..:.--..".-.:.:.. ...... s. leg, vtee-‘Psoalbas, J. it. Insects; ""'“"" w‘ chm'moee cos-K's. mafia-eve. n. e. o. u .. lldlter. D. If. Cassie. gegi present tho-J. O. New llomasllltlv-w-Iewe- I. IOIIIIII 9"?‘ “”""""""_B' "m" than the big Republic. In recent unusual easy be sauteed n-eee the Iallossll‘ egeaee ‘la years the new tonnage constructed III - ‘ ~ has been found to be in excess oi u..." ma“ Isms a cram auees. . ' a: rim-its... u‘ r. I‘. larfltiirnaee-sssest. Grocery the demands of trade and for the A. asevva. eta-p Vendor. .|. r. . 01ml l!!!" quarter ended with last September all the principal nations were found nd|w., g", W. 0- Wlljlt, jinn! Itlmet Welt. 'Q.’.g. ugly, lllellsnd street. to be diminishing their output and ll. Thomas Wilts, Ill Il- Avenue- wen. Deletes. sense Park need. building fewer ships than at any time since the war. Yet the Brit- THURSDAY, NOV. 1, 1923 ish yards turned out 240,000 tons of the proprieties. Agood manner- and have at prawn‘ under Mm v- -. _4_-, Notes By the Way . m. The United states was building more ships than any other nation four yesrs ago, and has nowfall- en to sixth place. according to Lloyd's Register. Great Britain, Germany, Italy, France and Hol- land are each building more ships To Owners oi Victory Bo Metering November 1st, “1923 Under authority of Minister of Finance Bank of Nova Scotia will redeem the maturing 1933 Victory Bonds at par at any of its branches throughout Canada. Owners may deposit their bonds with the bank any oi Literary Relics ‘lt is believed that there has been discoveredln the British Museum what may he the great literary relic in the world, namely, a holo- grsph manuscript of William Shakespeare's. A comparhon oi the handwriting with the authen- tic signature of the poet to his will . I . hos convinced some experts that THAT DEMON HM Shakespeare wrote the manuscript. which consists of 147 lines. Liter The winter is at hand and that ary critics say that the quality of gfiinfiidfiuufigf 3:358 122mg: m” he‘ "”" “mu” “new! tim whose life he spares, weak, 111111 3.11“k°¢111°'11'° ""19 "111111- 711° worn. and devoid of all desire for other circumstances point strongly work or play. to the probability oi him having ,aeeelllni JUVENRE CONDUCT The trouble is -that he comes 1n, - awn-sans. _ t______,_‘__f_‘_fi" ‘ . -. - Just off the Press “Emily-of New Moon" by L. M, Montgomery. Price 52.00 peetpeid. "Trail of the Golden Horn" X by H. A. Coady. Price 52-90 posepaid. "The Gsspards of Pine Omit" by Ralph Connor. Prigg $2.00 POIQPQICI. The three greet books of the season. "A History of Prince Ed- ward island" by Judge War- I burtcn. Price 05-00 Mi- A copy of this valuable History g should be in every Library. Mali orders receive prvml" attention. Carter & Co., Ltd. 599k. Stationery oo-oeiob-b LET A YOUR PHOTOGRAPH CARRY XMAS CHEER Your Friends can buy any. thing you can qivc them ex. ccpt your Portrait. It is the ideal Gift, Make your appointment now. BAYER srumo 2 '63 Gm" 9901's: Street 2 9 Fresh From Our Oven .You are captured by llro dgllq ion-sly Fragrant aroma from one nf our cakes. We make all kinds. We‘ make special cakes to fill orders for any occasion uml never: lull to rzivc satisfaction ' NOt the least pleasing feature about our products is their moder- ate price. Victory Bakery Ltd. _________________ Professional Cards Mark 'R. McGuigan A BARRISTER, QOLIEITOR, ETC Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown. P. E. island Dr. C. C. Archibald 3. duets of N. Y. Poet Graduate Medical School and Hospital Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Office Beyer Building. Orset George street Telephone I904. Office Hours-O to 12 a. m. 1 to b MacDonald & McPher- B A. A. McDonald u H. F. McPhes lerristere, ‘Attdrnsy, Etc. Money ts Loan Riley Building Charlottetown Palmer & Palmer H. J. PALMER, K. C. lsrrleter, Etc. Money to Loan lenlr of Nova Beotls Building Gharleftetown, P. E. l. “'5. s. Hessian Isrrhsar, bliolr: Notary Public ueasv fro was §§§§-§O-O- &Q&OO§OQOQ-OO-OO ls it true, as is so often charsed- rhar the youth of today ere 1011B amenable to discipline and more prone to harmful mischief £11811 those of the rest senefliilbn- T11” charge is an old one. 88 01d 11! 111° race, nevertheless it is worth ex- amining occasionally. An old phil- usopher who lived and wrote sev- eral hundred years before the Christian 'El‘l1,Wh08L ninety years of age, left it on record among his last writings that the bore o! ihflt day were lees respectful to their elders than the contemporaries of his boyhood. While the complaint has at least the sanction of history and may have been true through- out the agee, the youth, male and female, have grown to manhood and womanhood, done their part worthlly and unworthlly. and by their efforts have evolved the more or less commendable civilization we possess today. Looking back; over the files of newspapers pub- lished in this province during the past halt‘ century, we find that juv- enile offences were juet as com-J men, juvenile depredatious just as‘ regrettable and juvenile convic- tions just as many as they are to- day. We believe that, on the whole, the boys and girls of today are just as wholesome morally, ment- ally and physically. us the ontogen- ariane oi today were when they were boys and girls. We are too apt to ior-m our conclusions from iexceptlonal casm. We find a -bad jboy or two, an unattractive girl ior two and like the Psalmist of |sld, conclude "in our haste" that ‘they are all alike. ' I While these things are undoubt- sdly so, there are some outstanding‘ llfferences between many of the customs of today and those of thirty, forty or fifty years ago, which might profitably be consid- ered. In our schools less atten- tion is paid today to the proprietiee than was the case in years gone by. The school text books of-to- day have little or nothing to say ‘rbout decorum and general behav- ior, respect for law and for those 1o authority us did the old time and now obsolete text books. -lt'is quite common today ‘to hear a pupil refer to the teacher by his or her first name or even a nickname. mite common to see a boy enter an office on an errand. stand cap an head, while delivering his mes- sage to the proprietor refer to fa- ther or mother as "the governor" or “the old man" or _"the old lady" ed youngster is a delight to assoc- iate with while the ||l coclous, ill- msnuered, rude child is despised and his or her parents very prop erly get the blame. ‘ -€-—-QO¢—->—- Hououn T0 CANADA For the finst time in our history the Nobel Prize has been awarded to a Canadian, or rather jointly; to two Canedlans,_Dr. Banting and Dr. McLeod, of Toronto, the former of whom discovered Insulin, the first specific apart from dietary treatment, for diabetes ever known to the medical profession, and the latter who collaborated with [him in the preparation oi the remedy. Another fellow worker, Dr. Best. also shared in the honour. ‘This is an honour not only to the doctors immediately concerned hut to Canada, and to Canadian universities which can in this great. discovery claim credit with the world's greatest and, hitherto, the monopolists in great medical and scientific discoveries.’ The Nobel Prize was instituted by Alfred Nobel, a Swedish in- ven-tor born in Stockholm in 1833 and who died in 1896. His father was a manufacturer of ultra-glyce- rine by experimenting with which the son discovered the art of» mak- lng dynamite. iHe also invented smokeless powder and several kinds . Wll‘. struction 1,029,196 tons, as agslrrs 1.023.502 tons in all the world be- side. Yet British ship-building ls less in volume than lt_ was before the In 1914 there was under construction _in the United King- dom 1,722,000 tons, or 700.000 tons However, Britain's lead in ship-building over , certain passages of which he did a more than at present. any other country. which was ec lipsed for a time by the United 1111111991‘ States. has been fully mature‘; she in four of the leading writers of the i8 foremost with a long lead over day to cut them out and write takes you the" h which comes next but others ‘more appropriate. Italy third. France contains on the margin Germany, far behind, fourth, Holland fifth, the United States sixth, Japan seventh, and the British Overseas eighth. lt will be seen that Ger. many, notwithstanding her alleged poverty ls still building Ships gt a rate three times that of the United States at present. ltaly is 51s,, bllildillx more tonnage now than in the years before the war; _.____ The bumper grain crop in the Prairie Provinces this year is a source of brighter prospects there, and of general satisfaction through- out the Dominion. Large as was the crop it would have been con- siderably greater but for the loss from hall storms, of which we have so little fear in the east. The Pub- lic Service Monthly, an official pub- ilcatlon in Saskatchewan, tells that "the total amountpald out this Year l0 date by the Municipal Hall insurance Association amounts to 31380-000" It sees 0n to state that "the losses are to be met by a levy of i8 cents per acre on the seeded 8411191186 and the ilat rate of four Domlmom, Sounds Like Shakespeare. have just been working too hard. perhaps playing loo hard. not enough sleep, and that with the the time of the writing, and was likely to have been one of the half dozen men backache and a feeling as if your The censor was old Sir Ed- whoie rbody had been beaten -by a mund Tilney and the MS. in ques- club. U” w“ "slr Thmn“ Mmé". a You are hardly sick enough to go P111? 11V 1111111011!’ “111111111- H6 “"1111 to bed, and yet not in shape to do day's work. You stay on your feet, and then the damage is done. ove, and apparently called And such damage. Why, when an ordinary cold some sneezing, The MS. headache, "restlessness, tempera- “19 can. turembut you always feel that you'll soon be right again. ' But with the Flu? Why it just seems to pick you up as a terrier does a rat and shake and shake you, until, when you are put down you are nothing - but a beaten piece of flesh and prentices of London against for- bones. so terrific? M Why are its effects eigners when Sh‘ Thomas are iBecause while it effects the en- w“ Sheri“ of Loudm‘ T!“ '6' tire system it would seem to make visers were instructed to begintlre a panrcurarry furrow attack upon play with "Sir Thomas More's tw: {very vital centyes-the heart sessions with a report afterward an 9 1191"“! 5Y5 9111- A d in t hi Fl °§l hi‘?! 5?”; frvice dam‘ physiologic keepgvahls ‘lire eléeryodld S 91' 0 11 911-11110" , ° m your heart. lt is his chlefthought against the Lumbards, only by a th-roilrgliout, nntd if ltlgoundsdaltilng .h t rt nd n t tlicrwise at. rcsu ar v. notwe ran 121111 Wt £03; gs)‘: paws]? gut good force behind it, he is free from worry. He guards the heart BWIFB- "1111 aPpiiremlY “Trecled irrespective of all other consider- this scene. did not leave it out,but stions. rewrote it, putting the mob in a And the nervous system Sets 1i bad “gm and gm" the G0ve,.n_ shock that perhaps nothing else ment all the better of it. Prof. C. ever-gives it. The prostration is complete. l1‘. Ticker iBrooke, of Yale, a noted And m, 495mm? Shakespearian authority, says that Rememllrier ‘that tfheeie two vital es centres " ave rece ve almost a "he words m whim; lrlorehrxffiuze knock oul. blow. Don't worry about the mm’ are precsey w it then if you seem to be slow in sor's instructions. He bade them leave out 1 done so. Certainly he was alive at ‘mwkmg mm" and yo“ mink yo“ coped 1n r9 do m.) cold you've contracted you have ‘ payment in charge or ded kind account. ‘ -.'I’H I Capital $10,000,000 Payment will be instructed by the either in currency, or by credit to the time before November next and on that date receive’ full Without; uction of any made as owner, . by check owner's Bonk or Nova scone ‘h Imiislrre Fund $19,500,000 I should expect Shakespeare the msnigemng bad, h; your OM sell and dramatist to have used. “ll/oi Don't give up your business or ~h ieref» he sum “the same M. exercise, but come back to lhcml tialil/seitowam the mobgha" gm“, gradually as your strength of body] rns. ot- blasting powder. His loved-Pen“ Del-acre m‘ a" laud“? [would tlons brought him great wealth &l1dl'them>22 cents per acre for by will he left a sum of over nine’ I million dollars the income of which sumnce 3111119? whaunatured laughter, half scorn and our farmer-e think if it costidiii-"si-“mnd the “m3 emquem a" gheichamplonshl? <11 land they had ln crop for'hail inQagainst Another heavyiwbich law and order anarchistlc tenden .05 appears so consistently , . Whgeredhiere is no addition but re- be] was to be divided into "N '~ rue p- chemlsty, physiology or medicine; for the most remarkable idealistic] literary work and for the greatest‘ service rendered to the cause oi peace during the year. Each prize amounts to about $40,000. While two or three oi the prizes came to America this is -the first that has come to Canada. ' FUTILE OR DISASTROUS Addressing the ‘CartlerJliacDou- aid Club in Montreal the other day. Rt. lion. Arthur Meighen de- clared that practically all the acts of the Mackenzie King Govern- ment were either futile or disas- ish wages nowthroughout his 8611111119 W°1'1i*~" The Prairie farmers are "Pldly lurnlng their attention to mixed farming with excellent m. Bum“ Smck 13181118. including poultry and egg production, dairy. ins. and other lines are found to yield a much better and surer- m. turn than grain growing at present prices and are being extensively adopted. Professor Baker at the head of the poultry hush "Bimwfll. estimates Wm 111111111)’ exceed that of any pro. vlnce or state in North Amer-ma At present Saskatchewan is second 2:13;" Tgeiixoin turkey populgflon 1111 . , 00 head of dfimestig "mm" ‘"1111 P181111 of grain to feed them. trous. As an instance of the gov- ernment's legislation he cited the Combines Act of last session to protect the masses against trusts, but now he claimed that the Minis- ter oi the Department was solemn- &c. The-so are matters largely for the home and should be sternly corrected. They are vulgar habits and while practised are a serious handicap to the boy's advance- meat. Another cause of complaint is the youthful disregard for property and of the rights of others. This is rather the overflowing of the "gang spirit" rather than of indiv- idual deviltry, but it requires to be guarded against ' and warned against all the same. Many an in- nocent boy has been caught in s gang doing things that individually ire would never think of doing, Even in thb, we venture to say, that there has been no appreci- rble downward trend since our pre- sent octogenarisns played their Pranks on Halloween. Our homes, rather than our schools, are largely to blsmg 1m- sny "shocking" conduct or ill» mannered behavior on the part of the young. Nevertheless the school should insist. both ‘by precept and example more ly can the! do Iimi obsmssoe month. ly announcing that there ‘were no combines. The govern-men} had passed a law to relieve the weat- ern farmer of excessive water freight rates with the result that the rates had been raised and the evil accentuated, and aggravated. To redress this he said, that emis- ssrles of the government had gone .____ Saint John has held n ngfigblg jubilation over the opening of its ""1 fir)’ dock on Monday last. Lord Byhg, the Governor General was ilresent and performed the open. 1118 ceremony in presence of a dis- tinguished company of prrbm ma“, 1111-1111D0rtatlon from all pgrtg o] lNor-th America and thousands of ocal citizens. The dock ma" g, ‘"18"!’ "16 lflfsest in America, if not in the world. and the Opening c°l¢bmu°il flllllears to have been M1111: to the occasion and worthy °i "19 Brest trade routes of the Empire world. begging to American veseelowners and had promised them they might holdthe law in contempt if they would only be good enough to vio- late it. These, be said, were acts of the past 21 months. EDITORIAL NOTES- Now for "chili November's surly blasts" which "make fields and for- ests bare"! Let us hope the trans- ition shall ‘not be too pronounced from beautiful October to the month which has outlived its cor- rect name." Formerly November, as its Latin name implies, was the ninth month of the year but. sc- cording to the Julian arrangement, by which the year begins on Jenn. flms- err 1st, it has ‘become the eleventh -_..._._ In view of the large sums ex- Dsnded within the past few year's 21111019111! facilities t. Joli f and inland trade, it srzlhgrnziei: be too much to expect that tho “derll Peliresentstlves from the provinces across the Strait would lend their cordial suppgn to we m°v°m°l1i t0 perfect an u” t"“"11°1'111ll0n between those provinces and Prince We are good c“ for Nova Scotia "°W have ' DEBTS I —' "M31116 ellxineere and masters of ' nt shipping port m. and the i'i‘0 qualify almhel? down strangers. - Kill them. cut their throats, pus-s sese their houses This is the scene SHPDOSE-l 1° And lead the majesty of law in! been written bl’ Shakfifi- line ‘ To slip him like n. hound. Say,now the king, As he is clement, if th‘ offender mourn , Should so much come too short uf your trespass As but to banish you would you go? When country, by the nature of your error Should give you harbor? to France or l-‘lsndens. To any German prince, Spain ur Portugal. Nhy anywhere that not adheres to England, Why you must needs be strangers. iwould you be pleased To find a nation of such barbarous temper That breaking out in hideous vio- lence ' Would not afford you an abode on earth? Whet their detested against your throats Spurn you like dogs and like as if that God Owed not nor made not you, nor that the elements Were not all appropriate to your comfort. But chartered unto them? would you think To ‘be thus used? stranger's case . And this your mountainlsli inhu-' manlty. Ail—Faith, lie sliys true. do as we may he done by. Lincoln-—-Vi'e'll be ruled by you, Muster More, if you'll stand our friend to procure our pardon. MOFB-“Sllblllil. you to these noble gentlemen, Entrsat thelrimedlotlon to the king, Give up yourself to form, obey the magistrate. And there's no doubt that mercy may be found, if so you seek. You'll put,’ s This shake-rears? illdore—d~iay,' certainly you are. ' For to the king God hath his cllicc lent . Of dread, 0f command He hath not solely lent the kins his figure. His throne and sword. b"! 31w" him His own uuue. , Calls him a sod on W01- ""1"" do ye then Rising against him tit-ii- Gi-il 11'1"‘ sell installs But rise 1111115’- 60d? to your souls in doing this, all desperate us You are. warm your foul minds with tcnrs. and those same hands _ That you like rebels llit 11311111"- the 0911119 Lift up ler peace. "m1 W" ‘""“' verent knee!- Make them‘ your is" 1° 111m‘ ‘° be forgiven. Tell me but this. whet rebel W“ tain. As unutlnies are name - Gan still the rout? Who will Obey a traitor’! Or how can well that proclamation sound mileage standardised as 01110111)’ "5 possible. justice. power and whether Go you What (‘o Y? knives incident, bl’ i115 What This is the Ne other province has suffer" gr; mush or so long from federal neglect as Prince Edward island- Fm. any year; p351 passengers here hgve paid the full mainland rates for railway travel in narrow crowd- ed cars drawn by lisht enables that were unable to force their w“ through the winter snows. Our present ferry steamer, after battling with the ice all winter must needs be laid of! two months for repairs and that during the touring season greatly to our do- triment. When thus laid up its place has never yet been adequate- ly supplied. Sir Henry Thornton tells us he and his directors would gladly help us. The sister provinc- es, strong in their support of the party in power, ought surely to ioln with us to move the Ottawa Gov- ernment to do us simple justice. A joint demand from the represen- Lot's Slotted Lines in the manuscript the lines lre~ gln with small letters, and capitals are scattered at random. There is practically no punctuation, and the same words are spelled two or three ways. There an several olighf. corrections on the flrstltwo pages and three lines on the third tatives of the three provinces era scratched out. The corrections n" ‘Ylliifiifovincial h cerrorrvmra "011 an n n . would no doubt bring about a rem- are in tho gem M“ u m, m; or The Provincial Bank of 0a Proceeds may be bearing interest. undertook to' improve on what Shakespeare had written. it was Don Johnson who said that Shakes- peare never ‘blotted a line, nud it was Dr. Johnson who OXCifilillCdl “Would i.o God ho had blotted u thousand!" Johnson, it‘ wool-l an pear was in error, but the wrltlul; suggests that the-author composed easily and swiftly and that his first drafts required little revision. __..__¢e->i— MEN OF WEALTH SELL THEIR ESTATES IN IRELAND s (Associated Press.) DUBLIN, Oct. lid-There is to- day an exodus from Ireland oi members of the wealthier classes. Lord Oranmore and Browne iii selling his property in Mayo. and other territorial magnates aretsk- ing the same course. Their estates in land come under the operation] of the Land Purchase Acts, which transfer them to the tenants at a fixed price, and they have nothing left but their mansion houses and demesnes. The destruction of the past year has wiped out many of the mansions. The fact that adiighrr income tax is payable in the l-‘ree State than in Great Britain and Northern Ireland also accounts for the desire to leave. V Yet the exodus is by no means general, and there are many men- of wealth who prefer to stay in Ireland. When the Earl of Mayo, who is a Free State senator, was! burned out of his family place in‘ County Klldare, he took up his re- sidence in the house of a garne- keeper on the estate, and resisted 1° of ell cos. the M5,, so we or; our“ m. “it “ ‘ 1'» f ' 5on5‘. l, '-.:~'-‘.h all attempts to drive him out. it‘ . is the desire of the Free State sov. Mirsment sewerage such ateato ' - "=' ‘ "» vv'JU.s is prepared to redeem Victory Bonds of the 1923 Maturity. Deposited in the Savings Department. Branches ‘at CHARLOTTETOWN, KIN KORA AND SUMMERSIDE mm is like a Marge! 111W Louise Drlscoll. I nada taken in Cash or Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers > LUCK Some there are tlrsl love and V111? And some that love and i019- Some girls take what they "11 l" And some girls choose. Some there are find Joy 111 m“ And some that only bear ii. ome throw their luck awsl. n. And some snatch and wear That may be dark or 111111111’- White roses may so bezel"! 11°",- And esblisses make mvlwl- Slnce I'm noteure of suit-W.‘ _=. Beyond the present minuti- think l'li put s. little in" i l' in ll. ' And some s nlhillfaudon d u, ~- ' m. ilivlnls ,- flf_niillly\l_l\“ivyl ‘,"i||' "~H' ill‘. I I " . 1| ,l u