‘YET-Q? a-LY-‘Li X vaceconacenuvo-eesae-cwao-ooeunnezzeofl!!!YP"'"‘~"'*'*'"' ““’“"““»""'"“ """"'5""'““' _ _._- -.._-»<¢"~¢»-_-..--~¢-¢-¢¢¢wsuccee-e-n-oevwouev-e-e" ‘poovcov »¢-a-¢»~4>-- -- DOQ-J-Q—<-r- PAGE FOUR THE ciiliiitonfiowii GUARDIAN 10"“ "fijliiliil ,.,,,_!,_]_,,,,__\\-_ mummi- s‘. Mcliute, ll. P. Vlce-Preeldent-J. R. Burnett} sr-cri-tnry—l.lcut.-t'oi. l). A. lillcKlitnoiii D- 3- o .\ \I‘li1lf' l-Iilitnrs-l-‘riin n1“ iii.- in. \ Editor and ilriniiigiiig Director-J. it. llurnett I lr Walker and D. K. Currie ifnlllltl0Ll issn $5.00 Mr Y"? ii" l'i""°°> ‘“~‘"‘"°‘i- 5,5,, l," 31.3,“- ii“ fiflfllllce) mailed in (‘anada lud United Staten. Anvnrtrtstso lucrnlslturarlvns " rim srnvrbs-Tiie Beekwllh lug Hull-lint. 1'.‘til:iili=lpli'n Atlanta ltuss Bitilrling, Morning Maxim Hell is a place where everyone Bptclfll Agency lnc. New York Centri . . ' Build g_ ,\v\v \iirk i‘ll_v_ Cflllfifill lfotorl Building. Brim" '"""-‘"'" < ~ ' n uni Chi o: i-irio Pity; (‘lean ‘W91! my‘ “lnmlghhy rnwrglhuFfllllféiltfllcalglllfi xi». cotii siren, does as he likel- . 3)‘ . . .,_,,,,.,. ,.,.A.,,_. .,__..-..-_., .1. __< ... ....,.,.- -. ~,-n-eee-v-c-e-eqseiua-nneeurefiflllfl t . MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1932 ling but $200,000,000 in value. There is no evidence that they would have bolght more had we continued 0.1‘? usual volume." FOR BETTER BUSINESS A trenchant message to mer- chants, manufacturers and bankers ls conveyed by the Canadian Daily ivcwnspapers Assoczntion in an ad- vcrtlscment in todays Guardian. Evcryone today is looking for bet- The Globe concludes by expres- sing the hope that at “a not dis- tant day," the tarlf‘! regulations adopted to avoid an unfavorable trade balance will not be needed. "This," it says, "wiil come when the example of the Ottawa Confer- ence ls followed by the timid coun- tries which as yet are doing noth- ing to help themselves and others. In the meantime there is our trade balance through the grace of the ‘United Kingdom. And coming into effect are the trade agreements. The Ottawa Conference is a reality. What the», other countries propose doing to assist in putting things in order is still a. theory." lcr business. Ft w realize the full im- portance of daily newspaper adver- l establishing direct and economic contact with the consum- er. Yct without such advertising the bcst iriziile products would languish on ihc market. Ncivspapcr adver- tisements are in practically cvt-rv hotnc. No other channel of publicity yields such rcturns for the c/iiiirv cxpciitlccl. i\['lll‘l'()\'(‘l', exten- stii- nowspirpor advertising lS today ii hallmark of quality. Now, on ihc threshold of the business up- rising in reatl p» , the public is eagerly scan- rmig the advertising columns, and RAILWA Y ECONOMIES those mcrthnnts and manufacturers llconom’sts and statcsmen on both sides 0f the Atlantic afe Hindu-Till’ coming to a mutual understanding and agreement as to the steps I101‘- essary to restore world trade. But it will be useless to hopc for any r6- sults unless the United Slates and ,the Bitlsh Empire can be induced ‘to keep in stop. With these two iin agreement and collaboration, a real lead can be given to the whole, world in the d’rcctiou of ccoriomici‘ of trade.—N'nctecnth Century- lreconstr-uction nlmcd n! Phi‘ rPVivfli‘ There are lntlmaiions in New York that Tammany secs the hand- i ‘pg-fling on the wall, and that it pro- -claims the coming 0i R FiFiY "Wimnf the ancient oganization ivill no‘ longer have the lcaderslfp in the ipolitics of tho cif)‘. Timcs have! changed since Manhattan was all New York. Not only‘ has the city been enlarged to incltidc the five‘ boroughs. but the growtth in pop ulation has bccn in the four out- side the Isiliizcl of Mnnhattcn. There population has rccently declined. Tammany licld its tindispufcd sway in the old liincs and ihc old ctv. In the gri-ulcr city of to-driy, how- ever, Tammany is not all stiprcmc. It is n pcriinrnt question whcihe~ we have not. bccu nitnrkiir. tho depression, and ihc fuirircitil tWiRiS it. has larciiizlit in it; trail, from one angle only and that not the, bcttcr one of thc two methods 0! approach. Th" course (ha! h-is Mon acloptcd tliiriiig the past tvrclvci months lsn thorny one, but never- ; v lame: W-Borfon. MD. lrzcztzrm IN names CURED BY SOY BEAN with which babies suffer is eczema. After trying all manner of oint- mcnts, pastes, and powders the anxious mother takes the young- ster to the family doctor in an ef- fort to aflect. a cure. very often the doctor is able to correct the condition by cutting |down on the butter fat in the milk, using an alkaline mixture inter- rnally, and a simple ointment ex- i ‘icrnally. Sometimes however the eczema refuses to heal and even the child specialist after spending consider- able time and thought on the case, igcts the condition healed, only to : have it break out again in a short ‘time. Drs. J. Lcvy and A. S. Finkel- stcin, Newark, N. J., placed forty cczctna patients on a diet free from milk entirely. The milk was re- [placcd by the soy bean ivhich ‘i5 ‘now protiuccd in such large quanti- tics in Alunchuria. The experiment lasted from four to nine months. What was the result? Thcy report thirty-eight infants iniprovcd and two as unimproved. The skin affected by the eczema THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN One of the distressing ailments The Machine As Liberator (P. W. THOMPSON in the Winni- peg Free Press) ‘ HERE 1B TEE PLACE ‘Ibis, we are being constantly 7°" minded, is the machine age. More and more every dill’. the W°fld5i keeps house, Tremendous changes, visible and! otherwise, are involved, and man is going through the painful P7915955- hills, time spills Here is the place where Loveiinesa work is being done by mflchiliefi" I Between the river and the wooded , Within a may wriei-e the Spring- of readjustlng himself to thesed-Ier nrstlixig wind-flowers under OCTOBER a,_ 19a; who tztki- ndvriirugc of this medium arc invi-sdng in ihc suundcst pos- sitiic scctlriLv. GLOBE OPTIMISTIC In the opinion of ihe Toronto Globe, leading Liberal newspaper, Canada's return to the United States money market for the $60,- 000,000 loan to be used in meeting maturing obligations is an event "of major financial importance.” This. tho Globe points out, its the first substantial borrowing abroad by Canada in two years. The last lnrgc loan, of $l00,000000, was se- Clll‘!‘(l by the Canadian Govern- mcnt in October, 1030, and cost 4.28 [l"i‘ cont. compared with 4 per cent. lasr. wcck. Panic conditions in the United States in the meantime virtually closcd that money market, not only to ihc outside world, but to domes- tic borrowers, evcn States and municipalities. And now Canada. which was the last foreign country to lose access to the New York market, is the first to regain it. Moreover, there is the significant fact that the Canadian loan was ovcrsubscribed within half an hour. "Viewing the transaction in the large," says the Globe, "it is a. sat- isfoctory renewal of a debt without the silrcharge of heavy exchange, it is a. mark of returning confidence abroad in Canadian conditions, and it is evidence of the fading of a. pttnic which has disturbed Ameri- article entitled “Isle of Prosperity" seriously for two which appeared in the August issue can conditions ycnrs." Another cause for sccn by the Globe in the excess of Catindinn exports over imports, amounting to $38,684.39O during the twelve months ending with August. "Thc fact that this favorable bal- ance cmcrccd as compared with an tlnfnimrnblc mi»- [i-ir m» (‘Qryp5pqnd_ ‘til: ptWlrius yr-nr iifrqrr-rzriting 545'. 1320b‘, nil/l irir ihc vriar before that, pf $l03.506,23l," it says, "comm. tutcs a direct iznin ‘in dollar-g and ‘SOP-is for the Cnnarliztn pocketbook." Th? Giobc also fl/‘ZllS with the lfilfli‘ situation bctwcen Canada and thc Unltcd StillPS. As the local Liberal press has frt-qilcntly charged ihc Bennctt Government with ob- itructing our trade with Unltgd Stntcs it is intcresting to obtain the titthorltativc Libcrzil opinion, {mm ihc loading organ of the party, on lhis subject. The Globe says: "As things stand in the past tvcclvo months, Canada is obliged in New York, Sir Henry Thornton, former president of the Canadian National Railways, again expressed his agreement with the report of the Duff Commission on Transpor- tation, and predicted that both the nationally owned lines and the Canadian Pacific Railway would provide satisfactory revenue if the recommendations of the Commis- sion are carried out. Referring to the emphasis placed in the report on the need of drastic economy, Sir Henry said : " The depression threw light on one of the difficulties of operat- ing a Government-owned system. When it became obvious that re- trenchments were in order, every “immunity approved the principle except where itself was involved. If any effort was made to reduce service to a. particular point, there was an- immediate political re- action. ‘ ; -__________ ran/Totem;- zvoras The Dominion Bureau of Statistics Bives it as its oillcial opinion that the world depression ls "now show- ihg sign-s of easing up," and it speaks of "the gradual restoration of economic confidence. As a point of special significance to Canada it mentons recent gains in high-grade bonds, and in particular the Gov- ernment 1940 issues, which has ad- vanced til-from $02 to ssa-snce the middle of June. Excellent publicity for Prince Edward Island is contained in an of “The Connecticut Motorist," optimism is organ of the Connecticut Motor Club. The article is by Mrs. Minnie K. McFadyen, secretary of the, Tourist Association here and a com- petent authority on the many tour- ist attractions of the Province. It gives much valuable information tol prospective visitors, draws an at- tractive picture of our scenic and} 15 “m” i" m" Ummi Sim“ climatic advantages. and stresses says “mt h!‘ ls m m“ Umtm S" In an interview given last week tireless, it l‘f‘]lZQSl‘l‘il$ ihc lini- of hogan to show marked improve- least resistance. To explain. wl :1» is int-tit aficr one or two weeks under changes. lie is not doing it without some complaint. Just as bands o! displaced textile workers in Eniiand a century‘ and more 8H0 smashed the machines which had done away with their jobs, so to-day,_the world non-violent revolt against the re- placeme u. of human workers with machinery. And just as the machine smashing tactics of the early indus- trial era accomplished nothing, so the current anti-machine movement is doomed to failure. The machine- trend is too vast, too universal, t0‘ be stopped before it has run its course. And that, indications are. will not be for a long time. Our modern civilization is a pro- duct of the machine, and dependsi, upon machinery for its very exist- cncc. Imagine, for instance, a city likc "Toronto ivitliout street-cars, blossoming boughs: COAL ‘SERVICE over, a certain element is rising ln_ Where Summer site braiding her i warm, white brows I l With bumble-roses; and where Au- p yin: the very best Here you may meet with Beauty. Here she sits Gazing upon the moon, or all the day Turning mwood-thrush flute, re- mote, unseen; ' Or when the storm is out, ‘tls she who flitl , From rock to rock, a form of flying spray, Shouting, beneath the leaves’ tu- l . - multuom green. ure the imagination Great adven turea. mighty experiences, colossal —Madison Carweln. changes await humanity in the not far distant future. Events follow l l lniotors, elevators; with no tele- 'phoncs, writer service, no light but candlcs with its hundreds of thou- sans of inhabitants depending on the old, laborious hand mcthods for all their wants. The rcsult would be :1 vast chaos, such as were the large cities of two centuries ago, i"! WOTK- P901119 B"! béginnifl! l0 each other with increasing rapidity. see that, with machinery doing SOIFaster and even faster grows the much of the world’! Work. the"? I tempo of our great machine-civili- simply isn't enough to keep every- zatlon. Life today is different from one busy all the time. Our present , life twenty years ago. Life twenty unemyployment situation has done 4 years hence will be different again. much to drive that idea home. A The world changes before our eyes. At your service every day of the year, sup- tumn fills wood‘ Her lap with asters; and old Winter HARD COAL frills With crimson haw and hip his SOET COAL snowy blouse. DOMINION COKE Sold in any quantity at the lowest price. When you want ‘100 pounds or 100 tons, see or telephone. i A. PICKARD a c0. I Phone, 240 Coal, Coke and Fire- tomorrow. The burdensome tag that have enslaved man since ti; dawn of civilization are being u- sumcd by the iriacbines, and soon lu will have iittlework to do. “an will never remain inactive. He’ 4. sentially a‘ creative being. He m] voluntarily assume new tasks whq the old are taken from him. Bu they will be different tasks, not tor few years from now the present meant, an flllilififly may bc tzikcn: from busiitcss. If ri merchant should‘ find his salcs and profits dcclinillgw‘ he will naturally cndcnvor to reduce‘ expenses, but he will not b0 sat-is-' fled then that he has done all prs- sible to improve tho siiiation. He trate upon selling canipziiipis as he never did before in an effort to] stimulate his diminishing llUKlCVPIZ‘ The country's p cblciu should b‘: met in the swmc ivay, It ha; been! necessary to cut thc casi of gov» and spcntiiig ‘powcr by cucriiirngiug , industrial development. | Prince Michael (if ttumiiiia. WHOL fwas boy king for a wlillc until his‘ ihc usc of the soy bcan diet and? uftci- observation for periods vary-i four l the ing from not less than months up to nine months, cczcina has not returned. The infants took the soy bean preparation readily, were free from . industrial plants and set the work- . " -- tipation, and had . may be depended upon to concen- liiililhm-‘a °r “n5 no digestive disturbances. The gain in weight according t0’ the usual figures was quite satis- factory. “lln the experience of the above physicians, the use of a milk-free ., . ‘dict, in which milk was replaced by much bettcr ngc is on the way. For emmém in botmx b‘; 1,, In soy bcan preparation, i185 Drill/ed all ihc tigly, unplcnsntit things that essential m p0 mt p m 1i u Livnlitablc as a substantial curative gpc machine ngl- hns brought with be made to increase cmp - _\lllf‘ll knot in mmms Mm severe eczemay Mothers will be interested in this ‘lTpOTl. from Drs. Levy arid Fiiikei" sic "vi. lfather repented, is lizwiiig a fineiThC Hurricane Area ,time in Lotidon, his chicf amuse- ‘ment being visis to citicinn theatn res to sec film comedies. Boys froml iExchange) The Caribbean Sea may be de- ,humblc:- homes should bc picflscd to ‘ scribed as the world's greatest hur- lnote that princc; at tiiucs can have ricnnc area, the most violent dis- 1, little or the rim that thiv enjoy, turbzuiccs usually occurring the lat- i regularly. i tcr part of September or early in October, with none of the islands Russia is the first nation to cx- I altogether escaping. The most vio- tend recognition to itn-hnuko. the lent of these storms occur flbflliii i independent stntc that Jnpnll has' once a year, the Red Cross noting carved out of Mnncliuria to aid her‘ 450 1n the last four centuries. Fre- own colonial expansion. What does the Russian attitude portend? Only a few months ago there was fear of war between the Soviet Government and Japan. Troops wrote rushed to the Siberian-Manchurian bordci‘ and a clash between the two great Eastern nations seemed im- minent. But latterly Japan has seen the advantages that lie in an al- liance with the Sovict and has been openly pandering to Russian opin- ion. The . recognition of Man- quently these gentle breezes, with the wind moving at one hundred miles an hour or more, cross over into the southern part of the United States, Florida. in particular being affected in this way. . This week there are reports of much loss of life in Puerto Rico. with two hundred or more killed, many injured and property destroy- cd to the extent of many millions l of dollars. It is related that the lost‘ cboukuo is the first rcsiilt. It points serious storm m Puerm Rico’ which . h to a secret, alliance bctivcczi ihc two ‘mnnst destroyed San Juan and t e __ . from the im Oflilllt‘ i "one. minlihtr- P011110"- i~ .- a: ;i;;i§;"f;;g kjgjgg j§;j§“,hf§"j°$,; of the people L’. .i...§.-.’Z...‘.’ZZ. 1Y5? sire eventually to dominate the person; and. causing properly da'm_ asters, clrcnclcci since the days of whim Oi’ Asid- I" i)" fa" ‘if Siicifhtlgc omciany estimated at $85,100: Columbus. The i899 storm which an ontentc. it iKlIOOVPS ‘ihc greaqooor It Continued on and m: the I ravaged the islnnd the your after 1t powers of the wrstfq.“ “ION, h wk“ Florida coast, rolling up an addi- changed s°"°“'ig“t5' fmi“ spam m knowledge is taki h i itionnl death toll of 1,000 or more, m? United smtcs “'83 the "Sim n! 0d or the h“. vnhfllbal J. Pam’ a form" proshiwflh property damage estimated at Ciriaco. The 1028 storm was the dent of the Indian Lcglslativc AS-imore than 5165-090900- sembly, who resigned to Gandhiscivildisobcdlcircccnmpnign ;Rico were left destitute without H0 v food or shelter, and were cared for at ‘by the Red Cross and other relief (PETE. - join in Nearly 500,000 persons in Puerto constantly ravdgctl by plague, fire and oihci" disasters. Yet there arc some people who see in machinery ‘only a force for evil. There was Ruskin, for instance. He hated ma- chines and everything associated with them. He wanted to close the painful condition that la to a great extent the result of the rapidly ln- creasing mechanization of the world will likely be solved and its solution will be much easier than most peo- ple imagine. There will be little if any unemployment. Everybody will be kept busy, for perhaps six hours ers to raising their oivn food and b, day, flve days a. week, with the making their own clothes. Today probability of further l ’ " - in there are scntimcirfnlists who yearn working hours. for a return of the pastoral age This prospect will alarm many without stopping to consider its dis- good people. “Six hours a day, five advantages, or to rczilize that a days a week-debut on earth will they do the rest of the time?" they will exclalm in ‘yslismay. It is an in- triguing question. Just what will people do with_the vast leisure that will shortlybil‘ theirs? Some of them no doubt, will do little good with it. at first at any rate. Others, in con- siderable numbers,“ will do much. They will crowd the libraries, the art galleries, the lecture halls. They will avail themselves of the special courses which the schools and uni- versities, providing for this great change, will ofier. They will study music, art, science, in many of its branches. They will improve and beautify their homes. i. great new cultured" class will arise. Isthls picture too rosy, too hope- lessly utcplan? Not a bit of it! Con- it, and ivliitrh have aroused these people to mild rebellion. will pass away. They can bc eliminated. Some of them have been overcome al- ready. Man is loiiring how to con- trol thcsc machine-creatures of his making, which, like Frankenstein's monster, at times have seemed to threaten his existence. Already the owners of the ma- chines that produce the \vorld‘s goods are coming to realize that the greater speed and efficiency of these machines must result ultimately in shorter working hours rather than in the laying oil‘ of cmployes. Even now some concerns are on the rive- day week. The eight-hour day is almost universal, and a six-hour day is being discussed quite seriously. A generation ago it would have been considered most immoral. But the rapid mechanical changes that have taken place since then have brought already. Not so long ago an educa. tion of any kind was an expensive privilege for the well-to-do. Now education is not merely free to everyone, but compulsory, in this province atleast. Illlteracy is (m; slder what progress has been made ‘ An unknown inventor in an obscure work-shop or laboratory stumbles , on some trifling discovery. Others seize upon it, experiment, supple- ment, improve, and the lives of hun- dreds of millions of people are af- fected. Even now the scientists may be at work upon something which will change the face of the world - BATTER PECHAPCING PUMIQI .> will, W. l l ,,,i i ,,i Iii ‘ the body or the‘ mind. The time wt] ‘ come eventually when every indivld. , will be liberated for all time by tip ‘ Palmer Electric Lttl. heavy or tedious. not wearylng t4 ual will gladly work in his own cho. sen manner for the enrichment of civilization, requiring no reward bll the satisfaction of work well done From work as we know it today lu machine. ‘ ii < AUTO‘ imiitioii I Let us cheok your Ignition system for Fall driving condi- tions. Carburetor work a spec- ialty. Electrically at your service. Automobile Sdartlng, Light Iqltlon ‘ i)“ . i i'% a change in moral concepts regard- diSBPPBBPiKIB- 1t is only - , to see thflb Pflflllie are reading far more than ever before. The tremen- day ii occurred: perhaps arising rapidly Bplfliding- And sciences which a few years ago were the ex- clusive domain of the erudite few ' are being made more and more in. ieiiigible to a growing body o; m, l quiring laymen. A great lust for ' man T806. The vistas for speculation as to ' "h" 11¢! ahead are limitless. They ' ‘San Felipe." The most disastrous hurricanes ever to strike Pucrto Rico were the San Ciriaoo of 1399 mm the Sm Felipc of i928. The army wok consult public library statistics m CEDAR SHINGLES HAND Two Millions Cedar Shingles FOR SALE i Extras $3.75 and $4.00 es "to instruct ihc Amcrican pcoplc in the philosophy of Mahatma Gandhi," and for that piirposc will make a const-to-coast, tour of Am- erican cities to ommtcraci wlint hc terms "powerful British propaganda’ about India. The fact is that s» call- ed British Pfflpflgitlfiflllv has been sporadic and lnndcqtinlc, Both thc British Govcrnmr-nt and thc Gov- ernment of India have failed to tnkc stifhcicnt and prompt notice of mischlevoire attacks so frequently made on British rulc in India. Sllffht tintuthful stalcmcnts oitcn pass ,for the truth when no riltcmpt is ‘made to refute them. the fact that the Island is only twenty-four hours by train from Boston, and less than a thousand miles from New York. Mr. W. F. Allan Stewart, one of the defeated Liberal candidates for First Queens in the last provincial election, is striving hard to bring his name before the public. In a signed letter in Saturday's local Liberal organ he poses as a ci-itp; of The Guardian and of the Stewart Government's road and agcnclcs. Eighty peucent. of the houses in San Juan were unroofed The wind roared up through the Wcst Indies at a speed of more than 100 miles an hour. A deluge of rain flooded everything and sheets of galvanized . iron were whipped through the streets of San Juan with the sound of batteries of ma- chine guns. All communication fa- cilitles were demolished. The gale also struck heavily at Santo Do- mingo and the Virgin Islands. It was followed by an epidemi of in- fluenza. On September 3, 1910, the an- l-iflflmiliflyment policy. All that need lbe said of Mr. Stewart‘: eplstolaiory i effusion is that it is on a par with jthe pettifogging arguments he em-g , ployed as a candidate on the stump, iwhere of all the speakers who par- t0 pay thc United States for $110,- 622,709 worth of commodities im- porlcd iti cxccss of exports to that "JUMPER F0!‘ ihe year ending with August. i930, Canadian pur- vhtlscs from lllCISlQtCS amounted l" 8737192834. “ It] M15 corpgg. pllllfllllR vcrir of i032 they were T3NIO47~QG4~ n 13% Dcrtincnt to ii : ivhr-rn we would have been i‘ ii-ilt this reduction, and it ls H ss to siiy our neighbors would "Ought more from us if wc -" l lrcntcrl illct'i'1"b'éttvc'r. ‘Woman- no‘ tivcrlook the fact that they tthrnud firs: to irlm trade across it"? i100, cutting purchases from the Drosiest and the least effective. Mudslinging at ihc legal pfofcg- i-aion was his sole original contribu- tlon to the campaign debates. It h forgotten-that the mantle of tho Speakcrship fcll aftcrthe illness of MrfDavid MacDonald during the More than 2°00 were killed and ilast legislative scssion of the Lca Government. With the advantage ilicibated he was conceded to be this prestige ‘in the following August. the fcwcst ‘votes of any candidate in his con-F stitucncy Since thcn "Mr. Stewart was Isolated °n the ‘Md “d” by was upon Mr. Stewart-tux the but the district and Province have, Canada to necessary “ems ma“ [likely event of our readers having managed to survive. cicnt city of Santo Domingo was de- vastatcd by what was described as the worst of all the hurricanes that ever have swept the Caribbean. ,6,000 injured. The property 105g ,was estimated at $20,000,000. The estimated at 180 miles an hour, lev- eling everything before it. The city fl , - - elven‘.5335.“SiZZI‘°Z.ZS.ZS."ZP'Z1fJZTi. w current in the channel. Puerto Rfcan hurricanes go down charge of relief in i890, the island Sliii bfling under military govern. merit. Red Cross exports passed 51x months thcrc in reconstruction work following the 1028 storm. Cliristc. pher Columbus was said to have 10st heavily in ships and men on one o‘ hi5 ‘ml/REES as the result of one of the tropical storms, and Ponce do Leon's first colonizing g1. forts nearly came to ruin from this CHRIS. Sole Distributors _ his Exquisite Line 0f Toilet Pfsllarations MAX FACTOIUS Powders and Creaml. products of HOLLYWOOD are the high- Qll quality products on the market. Used and endorsed by notable lcreen Ital-l this line has already been received with delight In G lotte- town some of our llnee Include Whltener Liquid lloneyscile Cream Flee Bleach Face Powder Brush Cleansing Cream Skin and Tluuo Cream Visit our lforo and look over lhls new line which we are introducing. You wlll not leave the ltore without III’: ehasin, name. ON Clears............ 2nd Clears . . .. . .. . $2.75 and $3.00 Clear Walls Extra N0. 1st . . . $2419 and $250 L. M. Poole l & Co. E. R. BROW Fire, - Life, Accident, Sickness - and‘ Plate’ "Glass Insurance ..at Lewes Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., r0 . $3.25 and $3.75 . $2.50 and $3.00 t _ Rate. Charlottetown