, ~ li 0X0 Gillies' save you " only 5 minutes per day- ‘ ,hir __ \ tl itm ¢h - _ 0 .s.§l'§li>4°i.'§§."l°i'.'.".i.`l’§S.ll'l§ °-,`° Wir! Reason enough for U 'IIE OXO Cubes if that was tl 2 only reason. 5 _l *hw do mera than un tim, they 7, . :$113 _tha expanse ot meat - malta othar '; -A! I0 farther - and build oo and ' ` F A m mtala tha health of tha whois family. e“@ _J _ Q A C n p I u I I ls _I minute -the mllile you welll I! f ' Tins: 10°-s 23¢., Il.l5, |235. `__’__, l__ *_* '__ ` J ` , ef, r|.oun _ t iill B°*‘;Vay_ Make up a batch of Breadaiidltollswith it. Then bake a Pie - and Cake. Notice the fine, even texture--the absence of holes-the delicate, nutlike flavor, ofthe Bread. Then consider the lightness and fiakiness ofthe Pastry. You'll never o back to the coarse, almost tasteless western wheat Eours, after once enjoying the flavor of tha good things made with Beaver Flour. _ Order a sack today. _ DEALERS-write us for prices on Feed, Coarse Grains and Cereals. aaa THE T. H. TAYLOR C0. LIMITED, - » CHATHAM, Ons. \-._> \\Il\\ll _ -If I 1 I ' | 1 1 r_ Q `._\ W "u'~" iff \ _ ff _ ' nm-_a _OLD SAYING _ ._ ' GONE ASTRAY The house wife who is so gay over ‘fsaving ber bacon" would be .horri- fied and justly provoked if her neigh- bors would reply. "WhatiYou cheating your creditors?" 1_iAnd thatils just what one means if she employs the term properly. The story of the origin of the coslloqualism is interesting and more especially as it is credited to Connecticut. This is the ator ln the da s when ' Y- Y - the Charter Oak was green and Sir Ermuild Androse was more green. New London boasted of two citizens of the name of Fitz John Winthrop. One of the two was something of a politician and later became a statesman and Governor of_Connecticut for ten years. (He should not be confronted with the first Connecticut Colonial Gover- nor Winthrop. whose name was also John, and who, two decades before the Governorshlp of Fitz John. was Gov- ernor for eighteen years.) Fitz John was on hand when Robert Trent was Governor, and at the some time when Sir Edmund was the-de facto Execu- tive, and the charter episode got into history, when in 1698 Governor Trent, after fifteen years of office declined io be re-elected, Fitz John succeeded him The other Fitz John Winthrop was a sailor. and moreover of literary tastes. These tastes were more distinctly commercial. That is, while he was quite a bibliophile on his own ac- count. and had a goodly store of books, he was something of it connissieur books for others. Probably because he was something of a commissleur the colonists who coveted foreign pub- lished books engaged him to obtain them when he was in port on the other side; or, knowing their fads, he would of .his own account, make the purchase and bring them over. dispos- ing of them at a fair profit. Among his customers was a lawyer who was also interested in shipping. politics, and several other things which in our later day might go by the name of speculations. At the time when be~was flush with money he would invest in books and depute Captain Fitz John- to obtain- them forty days and for the same period abroad. Among other works for which be had something of a penchant were those of Lord Bacon. it does not appear as to whether his prefer- ence was for those that were philoso- phical or for those that were literary; but he 'managed to have quite a -nz- ‘able importation at different times. On one occasion, when the Captain came into port and brought him n bale of books, he found him in financial difficulties of a shady character. On be “distralned". Under the Colonial law among other things exempt from the claws of the creditors was meat of various descriptions and quantities. Bewailing the fact that his books must go under the hammer, he was discon- solate when the Captain came with the additional volumes, Ho had a decent supply of wits and he and the lawyer, working industrlouidy by night, managed to stow away a good I 1 l 1/ deal of the library in meatbarrel is / J/ the cellar. On top of each_ was a / , - layer of bacon in coarse salt. Tire `* /’ . following day when the Slierifi"_s ‘ ‘ an clerk came with 'tis red chalk he scrawled his X on each of the bar- ""g,f' 'll - B i sie eANKEa's Nenvs ies//like the Flavor " The Big Value ' Package thatis Guaranteed. ` Perfectly packed in bright lead foil, and price marked I _ on every packalo. ,J ’ _ 1%' ' _ -J "-A small bank in the Midland WO4+%4 &%OQ+G*G% O -O-0444-0 O-00-O-O-@0644-G06-04 §T'T~i`€te'S“o'Nc Treeiir " t _ i CAN'T BE BEAT’ Heat's the blessing thal.'a L-A " AND THE~ NAMEOF . IT IS caressing men when wlntor’s winds blow' chill-so why not call upon ua today and investi- gate the proper heating equip- mont needed for your homo and HEAT' w l 6* 13'” __._. have us install it .without delay. . .‘ 1 _ ' Come in and we will tell you ,,. 5 ' *` what u. will cost you. ' »`__| ii," R l ._ _ ._ f '- tion, so that we mlg t _ - t n ,_ _ - /’ financial power.. l explained that m'_ :;8;57_$l-so there could be no m_on_sy ln a email ‘ \ ° FRED H. TRAINOR i ` Phone 383-J, 80 Grafton Street -wan » llillOliIIIUIICIOUOIIICOIICIIOQI , _ at grins usuiusci §i Niicossiu *9osooaee¢eo»eeooool s .._lClil90¥¥$%-7%# e Q' _ _O ;l - Q Then insure in good [strong stool: compan ies, which never contest an honest claim such ' as is represented by ' ‘ E. R. BROW . ._ Charlottetown oeeneeoeeoeeaeaeeaesaoaaaaear» O .J-.L»iiit.ri._i‘ii35£é`.{z..itet.i.;..‘.»t.~;-€»sfi;L`s:i'f.i. '» ~. _ - 1 _ / I V Q " 1 / My' , _ 'There's a bank in England unlike ` /'(, " anything we have on this side of thc _ /' \'o, ' :` , Atlantic and the man who, until his / f' recent death, was the head of fft, too, a t F i ,\ Q ' , '_ _ _ land has some 1.200 offices all over on u ' '» -- - . 'f9~\ 1 \` ` ... . O-O-'O was different. The London. Joint City. and Miti- England. But it has opened few of these on its own account; most of them were at one time independent banks, which either Joined directly with Sir Edward l-idlden or first eu- iered some other combination to be absorbed inter by the big merger. The resources of the Holden chain may be judged from the fact that it has deposits of more than $1.500.000.» 000--by all odds the largest private bank in tne world. ‘ \Slr Edward fought his way into his first job. Here is the story in his own words: l advertised for a manager; l was then an accountant and as poor as a church mouse. l wanted to go into banlrling, and l answered the advertisement, along -with 300 other young men and old men. who thought they, too. might like to manage the bank. l did not ask for the position in my_ letter, but l said that l would take the place if certain conditions which I would ex- pilaln orally were complied with. "lt was a piece of cheek on my part. and yet l really did not care io start unless i could make a success. And l knew -that I must havemy own way in order to make success. “The directors called me in to _see them. l explained that I would con- bank-thut volume - wall. necessary Tbeylengaged me. and that wa knowledge of the= other. "l made my terms and then had the eachother-for if bank No. 2 had know that bank No; 1 had sold, lt would not have gone on with’ the sale. They were a surprised lot of direct- ors when they found out what happen- ed." POINTED PARAGRAPH8 ‘ ;\..,tr_¢in of thought now runs re gard-less of time tables. . _“il ' Many a man. like the moon, shines with borrowed light. ` ‘ '_ " Young men, beware ot the girl . ».,._~_._ \ . B kill9!» - `.‘~'¢.'»'.i-. '» the following day his property was to. agreements signed within an hour of. ausmesa iu_Naw -Pnoi=|_'raaL_s» 'rsac1'|o_u__- Lines _ 0' _'Ember 4.".-There || |'y¢'ry$!_p&&'y'»lrlond ‘girl at- the hstrack in one of the big uptown -dining lS'he has 'a lure - oh. gh; has 9,1 v_.'lcked`lurel--fn' her eyes of ceruleani blue. She- smiles never so sweetly-r. _ The man who can re- gain his 'hat' from her without slip- pgd he,-'In _di-me is a hardheartetl. soulless, ‘epmtlonless -wreich. who never knew _'what it is to have his pulses.stll'r°`d_ lil' the 'vision of puré womauhood. Bome ofthe men who dine there. often press s quarter into her softfpn-lm. .- Of courge. .the girl4~doesn‘t keep the dime. She drops_ it into the slit in the lidf_of` the box provided for that purpose, ft not being practicable to provide pocketiess clothes for the hat-check girls. as in the old days of the Greek slaves. Or else ,she steps into the shadow' ‘of the' rack and pussesfit to a dark gentleman lurking tiiére; ‘ ” ' , System of Espionage. _ 'l`he`hous`e detective watches tho dark' man _to see to it .that no one “gpg long enough in his vicinity to make a,_ dimeitransfer possible._ Then the spotter"watches the house de- tective. Each is nu ltcm in New York hat-check organization, which produces conslticrtibly more profit each yearuthan do thc traction roads of New York; ' "That sounds high." l said to' the statistlcian who gave me these facts. c "lflat-checking in New York is paying 5 per cent. on a capitalzation of at lenst fifty million dollars." said hc. “The traction roads are not." There_are at least sixty dining rooms of the so-culled better class in New York Cityl They operate along about the same -lines. You may not carry a hat into the dining room. it will be taken from you if you commit this social error. if you stand on-»your rights as ti citizen and refuse to give up the hai you will not be shown to _a table. if you sit down at a 'table anyhow you will not be served, if you sit too long at a~tnbl‘e the headwaiten aug- gests that your room is to be pre- ferred to your company. "Check your hat or get out," is the order oi -the day. v One company operates a string comprising V seven hotels, and rcs- taurants_ ` » Hatrscks formerly ex- isted in those places for the cou- venience ofihe patron. No doubt » a - _ __ NO ~ EXPERIENCE _ light. sweet bread can be baked r ° use within four hours from the _ ' is set. Full detailed instructions are in Royal Yeast- Bake Book which ' free upon request. _ ' The idea that _bread making is and difficult operation is ‘at j i bread may now be included in - of quickly prepared foods., for ' E. W. Gillett Company Limited. Toronto. Cenedt uw . R i lb-W s the recipient of the tip had to divide that tip with some one, -but at least a part of it stuck to the orlgnal palm. ln iliese seven places there are now about thirty stands where hats must be checked. Fortuna In- Franchise The total net revenue from the hat-checking in this string alone is estimated at $200,000 annually. That is five percent. of the capitalizaton of four million dollars. Consider the total value of the Hat-Check Company of New York if the exclu- sive checking franchise could be ob- tained in each of the sixty better class places. l-‘lfty mllli-on dollars would be little enough. ' Some men :io not tip the hat- check girls. They are the birds of passage, thc roamers. the butter- flies who fllt from flower to flower, so to speak. Because there are ways to bring the regular patron to heel. ~ The New York restaura- teur figures that the man who will not pay for his hat-check it not a desirable cosiomcl anyhow. He be- longs to that undesirable under class which always howls when it feels the prong. The true ` New Yorker submits to the harpoon with languid grace. lic knows he’ll get »-‘it nn_v\vu_\'. ` `~ “We got orders-to lose the hats of them blrds." said Lucille, the hcav- en-eyed beauty of a few paragraphs above. “They gotta come across About the second time they get the razz they get wise.” ` Smllng la Her Business "What difference does ii make to you whethe~ they pay or not? You do not get the money?" » _ “Whatltla yuh think l`m smiling at these ti..i| for?" asked Lucille a-ngirly. - "Do _voh think l'd waste a tender glance on a party with a face like a parlor lamp if it wasn't for lille job? l'm here to get the dimes. if I don't the doors will open oni- ward for my fairy feet." . There is just one redeeming fes~ ture about the hat-check hold-up. lt proves the overwhelming super- lority of the Amercan brain. Ten years ago hat-checking was the ex- clusive province of leather-covered boys auth put them ln little pocket- less pants and then searched them foreigners. Padroncg hired little | carefully _at the end ofieachll toil lest the g_uf-leless youth ed to hide dimes behind their J _ How Times Have Changed in those days the American affect- ed a haughty superiority to .t-he“hat- icheck pirates.. file checked »o;~,j-ha did not check. just as he took_ _his whisky or let lt alone. '_ Once a small alien pursued af naiive"" horn intoa dining room, howlislg: '-"‘ *Z - “Vivva dfrliafli ‘I 'gotta havvl-‘-' da hat! Givva da dam hit queeck." ‘ whereupon' the native born.) QIIP' ipod him and was commended for it .by the Judge.- The court held that the slap was the proper punishment for an act compounded of insoiehce and graft. But in those days you could carry your hat to your ' table with yon, if your wished. There ‘wie a silly theory that the pntrdn ""’was to be more or less catered to. -'All effort was even made to_pleese him. Now the lint check barons wear some of our oldest American names and hat chccklng has been `pllced on a. business basis. '-The slipéltod methods of Europe are no lo!lge"r"fol- leratcd. Business is business. ' ' i ___ _ ,_ _ _ i L "' E §il1tfl1g_fE§`l§;Il<;;=id;` ` Rosa Pcnselle, great dramatic soprano ol the Metropolitan Opera Company, in aduet with Barbara Mziiirel, sings this world-famous sacred song, which many millinns love, in a way to shake even. ‘ ` more millions love it. sent to manage the -bank if l had com- Thudiemn, impldr. plete control an was permitted to in! word; ring 1|-pg merie other banks with their institu- in theirtender, thrill- h have real 31' A6121-s1.so \ l Th Kildiaa Ciritnaa Fulk, Part I. Morning. /_ ` ‘DeacriptivaColumbia0rei\eatra. Thalllias ` It . Qhrlahaa lralie, Part ll, Evening. Descrip- Kéé, . 3. _g tive Columbia Orchestra. A100010-inch 001 i ' I D a . , ` 0h. Cala. All Ya Faithful (Adeate Fideloa.) r ‘__ , _ _ 5 _ Columbia Stellar Qu_art¢tt¢ llarkl Thellssall his ecstncy at thc beauty of -/_ »' -_ - - 1 . - Aasahsiss. Colnminastailar Quai-taeta. » . A1738. 10-anclt I0: B A \ , "¥.‘2-i"s.°‘¢.".`.‘£'3| CIM. Fel-Trot. YI Tang' One-Stop. Or astra. _ the 20th of Every Tomato |‘" (;¢ly"§nea‘n larilaa for lallaa. Al Jason '§°,mL'_ °' G" “M " “_&‘,'1|1'i:f;',f for this iruly smusungtenor `l'h|y'n Al Ieaaiaa. Van and Sehanek. least Klaus. Van and Schanck. A21". 16-inch we 'HL ltbda Ara lilac Caallaa htie AH. |'l lelld alfattaaa Tris. Clllamrgbell and Burr. lrahaa legen, arnaon. ‘I " ll~M\dl` lik las D al Want laik-Yau lla] la.leIl Da Yealgaat la lin. Irvine Kaufman. I‘al'a 'satl Willa Yaltlag Fav. Irving Kaufm_an. ' ANN. lo-sub 000 af kt! . ladle . I' -Trot. “'i'h?l‘ia:;;.Bix. louazdfa laa’r\. F°_aiir-'lint 'na Happy six. Arm. to-meh sos I , f "F llh f A lbi':"’,l='-¥r=.‘le'l|a dlgiupyraglhr. Anal :Iced |¢,¢o.‘||,iat ibn:-gn. (adm. Ona Soap. “lm fl. Y"k°° um. n-ma saw Uahwilil Roeotla are meds in ill l4fl¢\4l0" Ness: Columbia Raeerla an sale Ili Columbia Dealers. GRAPHOPHONE 00. _ _ - Tha Stas af, tha hat. Barbara Msurel and ‘ _ \ Columbia Stellar Quartette. The llftldayd \ ’ - ‘ ` aKlaa.Barl>aral|aanl. At1so.ra-»'n¢l|s1.ov \ if \~ 4. »,\\\\ \ \\ t ._ ,ills V Y T5 _ l Sllaat lllsit. lialawad light. Charles Harrison. ~ Uh. llaly llislt. Charles Harrison and Stellar ~ ‘ - Quartatte. A2001. 10-inch l0¢ ` . chan- 'nas at Pasta cnm. can stawan. _ ' ' ` Ada Jonas and Pearleaa Quartetts. Evaalaa $4 ` Thea! P_shiaCoalar.C\l Stewart, Adalenaa l and Peerless Quartetta. A17". lil-mchtoo _\ aa-a .1 Vol Lo Sapeta 0 Hama. . with Me” 'mm it-sash sinh Din lan laflalo kai "IM lilies! I'Arla(l'¢" Sascha Jacobsen. Sensei. Sascha Jacobsen. A2773. 10-inch 81.00 Everybody will care s lot duct by Irving and jack Kaufman. Llckof "lovin»'" is what they lament Coupled with nl \’VlHl\l Go Back to Dear-Old Mother's Knee." ` A-2 79,5-90C o` U* Month lt For Sale 'by . . 1 I , » ~ _ _ 1 \ _ who is _wo My to return your, , _ 167'-Queen-Si-reef, (‘.huriof.fefown "Nobody Knows. and Nobody Seems To Care v P i _"ramen if "‘ ° ii AHarm'¢$iciii Teeiilgiitsixct ._ \ Thissentimentalsongoichild- hood' s and manhood' a dreams ' and ambitions is a beautiful bit of harmony. Both this song '- and the coupling "Goldem _ Gate” are worthy succeasoni 1, to_"I'm Forever Blowing i ` Bubbles" by the same zillion.; __ _ , Charles Harrison and Lewis _ james-a new combination T '-Sing them wonderfully. A479]-*|06 W --ll L_-4-1 in-v~»s Ted Lewis Jazz'Band ° Makes its First Record The feature of New Yo|'~lt's " "‘__ Gnnnsitl Vilhp Falk): Indo ~n»\f' » headlines' at Kf_ish’r Palau Theater. the Ted Lewis lazl Band plays Blues ..(My . Naughtie Sweetie Gav\Me)- '.' ,This frenzied fos`t`-tviglvas you an incredibly swi auec sion of resounding sypoopid f shocks. Coupielwitli 'llid " another iin¢_f°_l-¢I1>i- , _ , - L h f amos-oss. Q . \ \. . “l _ ia., X.