instant Deitii i i ‘Gets (Qpoclll to Tho Guardian.) LONDON’, Nov 9-~A poignant story of an ex-head-niaiitefs desti- tuhhn and death byjpolsonlng, was told ut an inquest here. The man was found dead on Woodhouse Moor, Leeds. and the body wns identified es that of Harry Albert Rum-below. aged 57 formerly head-master of Newport G. r School. isle of Wight. l-le had rived in Leeds under the name of Henry Bellew Carr. Dr. B. 8 Lockwood said that when he sew the nnnis.con-nected with Newport Grammar School, he thought the man must be lulu brother-window's old schoolmaster, whom he had not seen for many years V lie went to see the body, and from a view niso of his hwndwrit- lug, wns fairly sure that it was Harry Runihelow. When he knew him, ltumbelow was a young mun ti.’ briiiiinnt. promise. ‘ . Mm. Ross- iDerwick, of Weetfleld Orescent, heede; said Rumbelow hndi lodged with her under the name of Dr Henry Bellow Carr. With Cyanide Dose ' Giilslilill~ - (‘ash Frnni Bandits (Sllooill to The Guardisnj EilRiOlT, Mich” Nov - 9~Four en held up the plant of the Kel- WY Wheel Compwny at Kirby Ave- nue and Twelfth Street today, and W" were eeinureii- by officers fol- lowilng a. general jiilarm sent out by police headiquaners. The bandits took between $300 and $400 in c-ashfiln the robbery. Th4}? We're prevented from getting $1lo00 more by thequlcl: wit and coolness of piyouug woman cush- ler. The "money " »-w.as recovered in ciiiii fliernee‘ ilnnoied by Carnegie iund fonimissinn (‘Bpccial t 1h - PiTTSflUlttg. Noev §i?':§9,:;"'2;uu_ “aisles; Wlcr-e lnoluileil in the iii-it oi Hero Fnndlwfu‘ I.”- ‘he ciifliegla meet“ l onnn-ssioii ut its Fall Gets of iilem tmhy- Tmrlft'.-'lbl'l‘l9 ‘ eroism were recognized b: the (°'““"3“‘1°". which awuril- - - l - < . . Csnudlinns a-re; u “b T,“ EJKIH" h. Price. oi‘ 1800 Jinn... from the bandits’ wrecked cur. _. [The bandiilts" drew up before the Kelsey nliiiit iii e largo iiiiiriii; car. One remained id the automo- bile. one was posted, as a lookout "lid of the two remaining unu went into thebashisrw offiice nnd the other into the front office. in the cashier's cage in theresr office were“ four girls. The bnndit demanded money. Mil-as Liniibloom the cashier, liinnded over n. tin boil’, containing bet-ween $300 and $400 in cash.’ sstrtu Street west, ("final QnL ' harry '5 “YOURS. of 35 Robin- ison Avenue Guelph on; ' P0918. a iou teen-your" 112d u; V‘ . ‘ ' ' '. 1&0 l- imit-» attempted to save the H161! '“i ag-‘Jg-‘Ytm- ‘ifllhllunion, Wesley . - 8 5- When- the letter rel. .7091 a Dlilrlilion into lathe Coucht. “mg ‘fn JiWB 7. i919. ‘Ehmyoung- l“: "f- “Jfihlclwil b!’ lllS riiii. B fHZBml in the waiter until he lcariicd lllilSlif ten feet, um“. if")!!! lilo iavlllion when the wnier ‘W33’ m‘ 1"“ 1111i! Mid. iic was iii‘ HAT An PEPS? READ iiow THEY Aer The hesgprotection for the throat, chest and lungs contain in a handy box of Peps. " As Pe s tablets are dissolved in the mouth, power- i m icinsl fumes are carried with the. breath .. ight through the air passages into the lungs, here liquid medicine cannot reach. The throat and lungs are always more sensitive in old weather. Peps will strengthen them. There- ore, keep Peps handywherever you are, and occasion- ly dissolve a tablet in your mouth. You never now what infection of colds, “la grippe ” and even iing trouble may be carried about by people with hom you come in contact. Because of their direct action, Peps give almost im- ll ediate relief to the chronic bronchitis sufferer, and rovide oung and old with a safe- defence against lie owed her about four pounds l0 shillings but had" left her a let- ter telling her how to muke use of some papers in hlls possession, hy which she should receive six pounds. in the letter, which was written on Thursday night, he sflidz- i l was out in the raiin a-ll inst night and all todisy, and shall be or sup oi’ anything. l have not n single penny. and I cannot get any money. l have nothing to buy a bite or drink with. _ . . Till hungry and cold. The nights i have been awful. l have to be in ~ the open-could: not find shelter. ; ‘Chlief inspector C. W. Poss said that the photograph of Runtbelow had been identified by the present School. Rumbelow left the school ‘_ 27 years ago. He was separated ,, were living in Ceylon. ' ~13. A. Burrow, piibllic anailst, said " ken cyanide of potassium, some o! which was found in his» possession. He had taken four times as much as iwas necessary to kill him, and would dile practically instantane- ously. ' , again tonight. I've not had a bite a . headmaster o’ Newport “iammnr smashing a wheel. The mun Jump- bridge, swam to the di‘u\\‘n.1ng . . h mm h“ “m” “d "mu" w ° to have l7 bullet 110165 uii-oiigri its distance of Zlbtllll lhlifl-_\' feel. m, ' he found that Rumbelow hiid ta- ‘Two macmmsm were wmkmgwance‘ "is tlrntalll there is?" the bnn- lmmlm-"t danger of drowning dit demanded, waving his revol- Ymlnlt Price diivi-d from the 9mm. yeq; lion niid swam to w9§jQy_ 1-1,. "That's nil," the girl replied, “d0 mm“! t"? '.\10Il\1lt‘efi‘ boy and you think this ils a iiiiiik. There milled fw- silore. Dill. wiiiiii-y ll. W93 $1,600 moi-e iii the safe. his ri-igiii held Price tightly inn-ii. The Muff worked. The mnn in "l" lit-ck iiud iiiiidc lt impossible the front office cut the telephone for hlin to swim. The boys nil-u; wires. nnd all jumped. into the 818d but ~i’ri<-t- \\‘1is unable to fro.- automobile and started to drive hlllfliwli’. Just as the puir rte-re slni: way. " ‘ ‘i118 a ill ill reached tiiein and (ll‘6'4\\ At thiis juncture Mr. Fox threwithem liiilli out oi the Wllitfl‘. up the window of his office on, ‘Bfflilks, iin eighteen your olil the second floor and opened Ilrmclerk. auvul Agnes ilngyiird and with a riot gun. Miss LlndbloonilAnn-e i! Lawson from drowning caught up a revolver from n driiw- at Guelph on June :5, 1921. 'l‘li.ia er in her cage and run dowiistsllrs 3111s. "while wiiiliiig iii the ~Spe<ad| after the mien. Undier a hall of River, suddenly stepped into deep shots, t-he automobile sped from water. Their struggles curried sight Turning from Fourth Streetlthem fifty fem from the shore into Hudson Avenue, the bandits’ and they Fiillk clasped in eucli ot- our crashed against the curbing, hens arms. BYOOKS dived from u gupremo quality and ~ PPOVGR excellence. The flavor is CJ.@]l8}\jff-\lng' ntiid. yet soundly fiaiiSfying. ed out and ran through an alleyz girls. nnd managed to keep them The wrecked machine was loun-l afloat and swim with thcm for a top. The cushions were covered wadiible wxiter. Spectators on the with blood. shore [lien tendered their US5181- on an automobile on the SW98! -—-—-——*—-——————~ when two men, one with a bad}? ed t" his Piilllflilifi to shoot. The wounded fiace. drelw revolvers and mechanics l'illl. The second bniiilit approached the two mechanics. shiot int: ltliem once but. inlsectl. ' One mechanic grappled with the The two illlfll then jumped inlii the utrinuu. roescco conrsuvucsusolhtiuirzn 'l‘lie coroner loun suicide. OTTAWA uo-r TO BLAME . FOR u.s. BQOTLEGGING oughs, olds,SoreThroat,LaryngitisandPneumonia. Send this advertisement and lc. stamp ‘for return postage) to Peps 00., Toronto, d hes trial package w IA be sent you. ' OTTAWA. Nov. 9.--'“"i‘h€ 117°’; vlnce is master of the situation. declared Hon. Jacques Biirenu. min- ister oi customs, today. denyinl: charges that whiskey was being bottled in Halifax for hcotleggins ‘in the United States, vlllilél‘ the protection of the dominion S11v8?"- linent and in defiance of the will lof the people of Nova Scotia," Mr. “Bureau added. “On the contrary. we never grant a license for a bonded warehouse without the ex- lpress and unqualified consent l i {the attorney general of the prov- l-lnce. in the case of i Halifax the consent ithe mttorney-geneml of‘ that pro- {vince was obtained before a license ifoii o. bonded. warehouse was grant- my storiai’ _ Shoes i ailor Made» for Particular Trade RADIUM SCARCITY Since the discovery of radium leiia than one-fourth of o pound oif the element has been produced in the United Statcsjmd 110i. m0"! Do Astoria Shoes Fit? The/y do. ' will they has? their shape? They will. Does Astoria end in style? Always. _ Are they mode of best imterisl? They are. ' ' Can l buyAutorin Shoes at lending stores everywhere? Yeti an. To An The... Qiieiiioiiii d a verdict 0g woundede man. The bandit sihout- cnr nnd drove away. ‘Ln Scott-McHale, Limited London - . cgnadn where. H.J.MABON O-Ofifi-OQXR Pipelessi Furnaces a b f When buying one biiy a “FAWCETT” ' ' with an experience of " over half a century be- hind it. Makes homes. wlarm, comfortable, healthy and happy. Call and see this fur- nace‘ or write if inter- y ested. i I Samuel Kennedy Charlottetown, P.'E...I. ., h ‘ . which 0],)?“ Ffliirefer Well water or Tenklwater? Our yum systems dellvsr water DIRECT from tho well to the up. The tank is used to store sir only. Ro- snm-h-ssh tum- at all times, 0M no trout troubled. No thing show ground to from. . , . ‘was have established s reputation on the - our m ~1 mun m dependable service. Don't iis commie iuin so out n substitute. Till! m sold otsur by ;~ up. "> muawleiinmsun ism will» iweliefio.» . Kollllflflbll. F. l-l- . - Oflillilflll Eyes Examined Glasses. Fitted ‘ Montague, P. E1 . 1-min- camp llslllllvl-Tlot Inn cui- <' $2.00 t0 $10.00 lflfl n8 ll m out; minim UATI. QPTIMALIQ” ~tseupi|v um courses.) In Montague can’ IIII 00o t» yourself m» ur-rooan omen. rsntouno, r. nuunmsr i. 4 v an. than mile-tenth oi‘ a pound else- ; ti. Buys What n. Rent. About Gflfilh II DINING], ,' ' ‘The clerk likes t0 sell advertised go0ds—they’re easier to sell. N0 Eye-Glasses From _ Every Reader is a Buyer He Doesn't Buy What He Hasn’t Read About i _ _When he sees in a. store what he has been reading about, it is fami- liar, friendly-he 1S half sold already. That is “consumer acceptance.” _- costly waste of time and sales effort telling the consumer about them. - » - The clerk knows thatiit is the advertised goods that move-and keep ' " moving. He is eager t0 buy and handle advertised goods. With its daily-average circulation of 10,000—ab0ut 50,000 daily reader-buyer power-The Charlottetown Guardian is the one outstand- - A . ing creator of “consumer acceptance” in Prince Edward Island. Ninety- ‘ ~ seven per cent 0f its circulation is concentrated in this rich and compact ‘ .31‘, '."I,.:°1II.~..'I.,,°}'1'. I’ I - i radius embracing a. population of 88,600 persons. - ‘ii t right corona this spoon a 1-’ - 7' m . . y ~ e Charlottetown Guardians Advertising Service is the mosii zggkggznhisglgggzeys b _ modern, practical efiicientin its area. Through its intimate, friend- _ of Eyemmes ; f,- ly contact with consumers, backed by the known influence and power 01 1 .1. . , the Qharloiztetownbfiiuaruian as a. news mediuin, it establishes tiiat-“com- "mviailirlva-Lzuzlii: I H, munity of interest ~,'t_hat;nowadaysis so essential to the initiationot sun- ...- IINEIT PIOGUHAILI. ‘ - cessful sales campaigns: Market, Merchandising, Medium-the “three “M’s” of mercantilg success-you. have them here, efficiently and economically under one roof. . ; FIRST in the Province‘ i ' r A aqaa-g“ - ' ~ vvvvvvvvvyvvvvvvvvvvvrvvw THECHARLOTTlITOWN nulnnnlt