II 091.. .-.-5'-;-...1.::=g ll Good Tweed Working$4. Pants These are well made, sturdy pants, o1 brown or grey tweeds-shown in good range of sizes from 32 to 44, Sturdy Overalls ior the Men This llne of overalls includes styles made with bib and braces pant style. blue, grey and stripe. window Men’sl Cotton Tweed Pants Now here garment, sizes, a very useful wear. Made of good heavy denim in r” a 1""; WESTERN GUARDIAN. —I'I‘ RAVI to My this PIM- IIOO. m —AN BNTtERTAlINMENT and lunch will be held st Clinton Tues- day, March 2nd. 7323. —WANTBD ASSISTANT SALES- lsdy and trimmer for our nllilinery department. Estate James Kennedy TZIB-Z-ZBMEGI Kensington. —8lCK flECOVERlNG. —.Al- though there is still conside oble sickness around town, the most serious cases are recovering while the milder ones are rapidly im- proving. H. -—WELL KNOWN JRESIDENT DEAD.-—The death occurred after . a lengthy illness on Saturday oi Mr. John T. Mullill, of Kensiugtou, at well known and highly respected citizen. —WANTED--To buy a farm of 50 to 60 acres-buildings and elitis- factoy supply of water and would buy stock and implements coni- plete. ‘ferms on applicatios. Wil- fred Arsenault, Kenslngton. 7289-_2-28ME3lpd. and they are fine value ........... .. $4.50 1.99 ..—-A HEAVY GALE of wind, ac- companied by several squalls of thick snow, struck up in the early hours of Thursday morning and con- tinued durlng the forenoon. No train as well as the plain arrived from the west during the is a heavy, strong, durable shown In dark fancy stripes, all line of pants for hard They are real good value at ......... "$2.75 See samples in our $1.99 2.75 Odd wear, ribbed, clean are a bargain at sax, grey only. pair. day, heavy drifts being reported in many places, the morning train from the east was about one hour and a half late on arriving. Oper ations at mud digging which had been suspended in the forenoon, as was also much outside work. II. St Dunstan’s Drive Tho following are Killkorn cor l-ectlons. I >30 (tll-Janles M, Duffy. 20.00—~Ja:ues hlcCardle. $lil.00—~'i'hos.S'mith and l-Tugonc $7 00 euch—'l‘ilos. l.. Silrt-enun, Mr. and Mrs. John M. Murphy, Jellies M. (lreenlln, John ll. Shre- enan, Michael (flllrke, P. A. -Mc- hiallon, Francis Carr, Richard ‘Mt.- —IOHOOL INISPECTIOIL- Mr. R. H. Campbell, Superintendent of ‘Educatlcn and Mr. Fred Bell are ‘in Summerslde Inspecting the School. —WANT BETTER SYSTEM;- The firemen of Summerside intend asking the Town Council to lnstsl an up-to-date Fire System in Sum merside. ..—-His friends are very sorry to report the very severe illness of Mr. John Strong at his home in Summerside. The doctors have slight hopes for hi; recovery. —FOX NOTE.—-Mr. David Lecky of ‘Miscouche is very unfortunate in having lost two very valuable foxes. Up to time of writing they have not yet been recovered. —NOTICE TO FARMEHSa-We are prepared to buy any quantity of live and dressed hogs, paying the highest market prices, on the following days of each week at the following stations. Albany on Thursdays and Emerald on Fri- days. Joseph Hughes is our repre- sentative at Emerald. Green Bros. Borden. 7227-2-25ME6ipd. Minard's Llnlment Cures Colds, Etc “IESVPERX PERSONALS ~—-.\iiss Rose Ryan, (‘harlotlo- town, is visiting in town, guest 0i Miss Ruth Noonan, Granville St. II. BRITAIN sAvss DAYLIGHT. (l-‘ron: the Boston Herald.) Tile British appear to have fin- ished their discussion of tile ques- tion of daylight saving during the summer mtlnllls and arrived lit _zl definite conclusion. At least the Government has decided whut Par- liament shall be asked to do. Home Secretary Shortt has given notice in tile llowse of Commons o1’ the Government's intention to intro lluco legislation for the purpose of making permanent what is usually cullctl4lltl Summer 'i‘inlc Act, un der which the clocks are set for- wurd one hour. Ill previous years the arrangement was nlalle only dorreslfbecsate oommoi 041' quarter. Americans have absorb- ed very few Mexican lworde. While the language is tilled with German and French words few Bpaulsh words are found. The Americans never learned to say "dos realee." but they may have Americanized that amount -by saying "two bits." Hence ll may be that “two bits" ls of southwestern and not eastern origin. Those Were the Good Old Days. March 30 to Sept; 20. . Three sea» sons’ experience has convinced I vast majority of the people that the daylight saving system l; sen- erslly beneficial. City dwellers and workers are. apparently, un- animom in the desire for its per- petulstion because of‘ the benefits they have derived from it. For one thing. it gave them a. health- ful hour out in the open before sunset for "war gardens," and these were so useful as the cost of living increased that there is a strong feeling against allowing the cultivated back yards and small allotments to become waste places. Labor is all for the con- tinuance of the healthy and thrifty halhits and the profitable results due to those little gardens. The agricultural opposition is not near- ly so strong in Britain as it is lu America- and it could not be, be- cause British agriculture produces ,so small a proporation of the Illi- tion‘s food. in Massachusetts and New York, where state laws for dllyligll: roving are under discus- sion therc- is a sharp division he'- lweeu the commercial. manufac- turing and labor representatives on one side and the farmers’ re- presentatlves on the other. Tile question will have to be settled ac- cording lo the principle of the greatest good of the greatest num- (New York Herald.) When the smoking of a two-for- s-ltlokel cigar didn't bring the lliealth Department and a court i order abatiag yourself as a public nuisance. When it took only an ice cream soda at the cornel-‘drug store and a neighborhood card party instead of a $5.000 automobile and three “‘l110Vl8" shows every evening to show your best girl a wonderful- time. When you could match coins to pay for the noon lunch and know you'd be stung-only. a half dollar _ instead of about $16.30 if you lost. When you could acllltve u repu- tation for being ll millionaire by purchasing $8 shoes instead of be- ing considered terribly penurlous when you kick about paying $25 for a pair, “Wait, Mother! . . Don ‘t Forget This” Johnny has decided opinions on what: he wants for dinner-especially for dessert. But motilcr is certain of one thlng—he just love: Pure Gold Quick Puddings. And she always makes sure that there is a plentiful supply in the pantry. There are a great many “]ohnnys"—snd grown folks, too-‘whoae favourite dessert is a Pure Gold Quick Pudding. They're so wholesome sncl tasty- and so easy to prepare. Order s selection from your grocer. custard and chocolate, 15c. s package. lame Gold Desgselrts QUICK PUDDING Tapioca, lig- ufqfltjig lfjvgifgiflénfgetflfllfvjif; when your We Conn m, W... PureGoldManuhcturlngCo"LtdnTorontq British trade. and that British pro- '0 llle ncisltltvffl “nil b°rr°w a w” \; . ___.| (incurs know what. they are about gfbfglgutr) ‘fvagpflgtlllté’Tgnsicuiguutg l m the Saving o‘ daylight‘ fndenmiliwbond you now must put up for ll. a When u man could spend a quiet ORIGIN OF "TWO BITS." '-' evening at home with his family moiers’ these ‘drive’ -people usually - southwest it is a common, if not To the Nortilcrnr and eastern I people the term “two biis" may I sound like u slang expression, but l to the people of the west and the bean. looked as big llS all provincial one. The expression “ll quarter" is seldom used there. lt. is invariably “two bits." it. is tlroreover, llluch easier to say "six bits" than "selventy-five cents." Explanation of the origin of the term “bit" comes front the refer- ence to the monetary system in 17311, when the Spanish iillllPil tlol- lzlr became the unit of motley. At that time there happened to bl- coined under Spanish authority a p'vce of silver for Mexico repre- senting the eight part of a dollar called a “re.al." after the name of pin llloney class. When a man could get away with it without internal revenue sleutlls which is exempt. "Should not the cull without being considered balmy in When a billion dollar Congress creation in- stead of being considered ill the say he had allude $10,000 the previous year and being ntlred‘ that it was all a joke and that his reul in- come totalled only $1,800 all.ofl forced to explain to ll hulf lltl -——-—-¢o>-_j- CONCERNING “DRIVES" of the indirect, of himself or his friends. which requires. ll large expenditure of money. l-le chooses his scheme accodrlng to the indications of ill- clinlltions of the time. 1-le docs not need to be particular about details of proposed expenditure so long as what he demands ‘is specious and spacious enough. lie invents u high sounding and popular name for his proposition; and then calls his proposed associates into coun- sol. They through the press, und- er his guidance, do the rest. The jpubilt: ls ‘prepared’ by judlcal pre- liminary propaganda; and u t last, suddenly deafened by an advertis- ing uproar, those who may not up prove are intimidated in a thou- sand well known and well tried are, whatever they may call them. selves. There is only one way to pu-t an sud to them and their Iiielh- ods and that is the good, old, indi. vlduai way of refusing to be stain. one is fully collvnced. And one ll not, or should not. be convinced by tllg assertions of promoters mm their agents. but by one‘s own mind, made up deliberately, in ad. wince. This ‘drive’ business has become a public- nuisance and l] pu-blc luenaco. It is epidemic. lg ll not time to pllt n stop to it?" A FAIR EXCHANGE. You have adohal. l have o. dollar. pcded, ztnd refusing to give unless, Size i Underwear ‘$1.50 Men's heavy unshrinkable Under- ments in a good range of sizes. These $1.50 PER GARMENT Odd lines of men's soiled Collars THREE for Boys’ Jersey Gloves, good and warm, small sizes only ....39e. per pair Men's heavy wool Worth to 60c. per Special ............................ .. 39c. well made gar- 25c. and cotton SAVE YOUR AND GET AN AUTOMO- BILE FREE. - ASK THE SALESMAN Moore & LIMITED 119-121 Queen Street Charlottetown SALES SLIPS McLeod HORSE RACE DOPE OFFICE HELPS IN THE HOME —_-_ A woman's home is her laborat- ory or office, and some of the many aids to efficiency of the business world might well be adopted there. if she is to run her ‘home -Ii10S'l. ef- fectively. No complicated or eiti-c- lent "system" Ils necessary- though they sometimes prove help- -flll——but merely u few of the minor ofilce accessories that simplify work. In the first pluctg, oillcc work suggests a deslv-and house- hold work ought to, for it is ro- marltsble how much easier it is to keep accounts and make plans for days in advance, when there is a time and a place specifically re- served for doing it. The time im- mediately after breakfast is often most convenient, but. there is a lighter task that miglht colne first. That is reading the morning news~ pa-per-and in the most efilolentt households the reading of tho morning paper is of value/hie assist- ance ln the day's routine. Many on olllce subscribes to a newspaper clipping service for il- ems useful in their work. and the housekeeper should be no less al- ert and progressive. It is not noc- esssry for her to subscribe to a clipping service, however-she can do it ‘herself, and much more satis- factorily than anyone else could. Scissors, paste. alld stiff cards should the kept handy as she reads the paper, so that when she finds short items tbesring on house-keep ing, such as instructions, recipes, or means that might prove help- ful to her, she can clip them out, mount HiEfll, and file than, accord- ing to sublet-t, in a desk drawer. These are both broad suggestions adapted from ofilce routine-but the little details of offlce manage- ment sre Just as valuable and ad- aptable to the home. The custom oi.‘ always keeping a copy of busi- nest. letters is an excellent on0— and carbon’ pfllpei‘ that records thc touch of a fountain pen can now be had at most stationery stores. Perhaps the ‘most useful of all hints to b1.» gained from an office are little tlllings. No housekeeper can realize until she has tried it how convenient a troy of pins, rub- ber bands, and paper clips will be found. Their uses seem innumer- able, and one wonders after adopt- lug them at home why kitchens have ‘been so long in accepting the conveniences that offices would not be without. ‘Some of these little ac- cessories even develop uses at home thnlt their otilce careers have never suggested-the two-story let- ter tray, for instance, which proves such an excellent holder for vege- tllbles, guaranteeing them a free circulation of air that is impos- sible in the storage pantry or ice- box. Carrillo, Jchn A. Cunningham. Wm. Duffy. James J. ISmiill. $0.00 edCil——J0hIl Johnston, Putk. P. Duliy, George Murray. Mlnsrd's Linlment Cures Colds, Etc by order in council as an emer- gency measure considered desir-l ltble under war conditions. llut under those conditions the orderl had legislative force, and so. in the united Kingdom, “summer tinlc" ls not merely a popular, but a leg- islative phrase for the advance- ment of the-time shown ‘by clocks, legal or clock time, by one llollr KEEP vous‘ PIPES FROM FREEZING wmlcvou Can Do It They 9° to six feet, according to locality. Frost penetrates deeper under roads and sidewalks and other bare spots than it does under untrodden parts like lawns and plowed fields. it is a wise percaution to dig up the spots were ilndergroilnd - pipes froze last winter and let the pipes down to a safer depth. The work will be inexpensive it‘ done now. < Underground piping which is known to be too close to the sur- ’l‘his is a certain remedy if gener- ously applied. Woter plpeg to lawn sprinklers, hydrants, hose faucets, and so forth, should have stop- and-wasto cocks convenient in the cellar, so the un- derground piping may be shut off and drained empty every outunln. t Then they will be safe.‘ If a plain , stop cock or valve l5 used instead of a stop-and-waste-cock, which is self-draining, the pipes will stay full of water, freeze and burst as readily as if the water had never been shut off._ . . The water can also be shut off from the laundry with such cocks, and the laundry pipes will be auto» matlcally drained empty through the small waste hole located at the side of each stop-and-wasie cock. Of course when the cocks are clos ed the faucets at the laundry tubs must be opened to let air into and allow the water to drain out of the piping. Another prolific source of trouble is in the cellars of poorly construct- ed buildings. Cold air blows through every crlvice and opening of cellar walls, windows, doors, and so forth. A broken cellar window , seems to be an innocent thing, but it may freeze the water pipes it‘ not fixed ill-fore winter arrives. On top o tthe stone or concrete cellar wzzll ls lold a wooden beanl or "sill! which forms base for the wooden superstructure of the house. Carpenters do not always bed this timber down in cement, Therefore there frequently are openings under the sill through which cold wind blows into the cellar undetected. All these open- ings should be plastered air-tight vvvvvO§‘44 9 la coin ..l Spain, and with the same ‘Drive' be pretty nearly ill sight by now? asks. a writer ill ll l-lulifllx pup- Wc swap. ways. A bout offensts and speech- Now You have lny-dollsr. es is organized. Anti. finally, the VillUG r‘. the early American shil- er and ilililS. lt was -¢o]]9(-|0,-q-__fl,e skilled bulldozer, And I have yours, lug. Yankees used the shilling as conceived before but mule and [emankw-e 19¢ loose: We are no betcel- oft’. (iiqffirlllilltlllbeXPSPSQlOILI and some brought to protection during woe m Mm 0,- 1,9,- wym does "m Y h - _ up | . n emem er w len runners in the the hysteria of the war. it has come up to the flFtlHPPlllPfl anal-k in o“ ‘we an ldea- All» I i’ have an idea. We swap. Now you have two ideas. And I have two ideas. That's the difference. central and eastern states" employ- ed their extra help at so many silli- ling a day. Six, eight ten and twelve shillings was heard ill all lines of trade. When _the "forty-niners" run to cred. lt is a method of ex- tra!‘ 1.1g money from the llilhlitr, based ou mob psycholom-u All axed.‘ ed crowd of people can wally be induced to do, when properly work- ed up, what none of them in cold contribution. Thousands who do not Willi‘. to give, other thousands who cannot afford to give are dra- gooned. almost blackmailed. into given. The prescribed millions are wen-t to d ' g 1 t; f 1 -. collected; and few ever know what ' Freeze ygffg I: lclfigaglgoguslfllne“ “In; (“morma and u“? Smlihwefilem H004 would d0 “10119- ll 0811B. 111 becomes of them afterwards. Most Nox A col-D TABLETS _ Was-m OperaH-on from Apfili 8 to partdof the United Ssates -tlley the first place, for a leader, as all ly-llley arc spent in sltlurleg or oth- $0°:g'§:“go'|%:°° 813'“ l!" bflafllwe. Water pipes underground Will Sept 17; h 19m, from March 24 01m that dos realcs of the Mexi- mob activities do. erwiso for the benefit of the ‘pl-n. .1.~|,,_ a 'm"d lhluvef“ %re:1:':“d§“.- Some lndividuoly f , _ 1 ‘he are no, buried deep _ can was the equivalent of two sllil- devises ii ‘scheme,’ very often - w in a few hours. G t tn . erllcfllglll to he below the "frost to sen", m‘ and l" 1919' 5mm liugs ll tho United States. Later largely ior fillil benefit, direct or] ‘Imters’ and their frlends' Foxdpro- ‘M’;:|:1L‘d':.'5‘i§?,:°:i%5°f:P all: line." This depth varies from four ' ‘ " ___ n‘. 9"‘ wives Attention Don’t you always notice when verware? Sundays it; usually is, when guests pour in from out of town, or go home with, you from church. And all the time you're saying how glad you are to have them, you’re wondering how on earth y0u’ll manage to set the table with the small amount of silver you have. Everybody knows that every woman loves beautiful silver-that she rarely, if ever, has enough. . So we have purchased a supply of Oneida Community PAR PLATE, 26 pieces to the set-guaranteed for ten years of every- day-in-the-year wear. The kind of silver a woman likes to handle and own-beautifully patterwll. graceful in design. PAR PLATE, so there are bound to be some company comes to _dinner you haven't enouge sil- TTV...”H We bought only a limited number of of you disappointed, if you don’t hurry up. Come t0 the office today and let us tell you about our offer and show you a com- plete set of Oneida Silverware which you get FREE. You’ll be delighted with the simplicity of the plan. If you cannot conveniently come to the Guardian ofilce, fill in 1i the coupon and mail it to us today. D0 You Know About Oneida Community Par Plate ? i It is made by Oneida Community who make the finest silverware in the world. It is sold by the best dealers everywhere. You can always be proud of the Oneida Com- munity stamp on the back of your silverware-At means the best materials that can be plut into any silverware, the most perfect designs by the best artists in that line of wor - ‘ %r'z'cz’a/%fea A I “TTTTW v vllyith cement; then the cellar will > , " g N p0 51', e wa d l _ l t . - . - - . . , . “m i” ' u nee... lfflf“ “° p W‘ “w” “ Tliltet lll3rlcl1al Wreflatlfilll dleslgsi 1S tlllrjdfimlfllglyhSlmplfé, with llllS designs delicately traced “Uh-yes! Ab" remarked the _____,._____ aroun e s a e o e an es. e IIIIS ls so t; a ——0n - ' _ doctor in his best bedside manner . a base of the begt nickel silver gr y v g weanngv A 1 plate on \ o to hlla patient d! they stood in the TWO microbes‘ wt on a pantry . ' . . . ‘ ‘. consulting room. "I'll give you the silt-ll Do not delay, wrlte or come today and be first ln llne to secure one of these beau- " yonqwgmg pregm-lpggony And watched with expression tiful sets ‘ J And ne handed him three small Dliiteth ' ' “N.” > pgpk3geg_ The milkm-an 5 stunts; both said at "A powder for my headache.‘ H ""19- .J<l , _ he said aloud, "a pellet for my fev- our P9111110!” "6 10!"!!! > er,,‘- he continued, "and a capsule "Til-infill" ‘f for my gouty foot." -————-¢o>-——- t» Then be stopped, and pondered‘ CA deeply for a moment. YWDF Yul-ii" , “i any, doctor," he querlelL. _ - 4» "how‘ll the little beggars know the For [Mimi Ind children > Po Al-i-‘g I rlshl nlwe w so when they sot ln- In U88 for Over 3O Years °"““"'“” "‘ m‘ trgfifi-E -. - l > 5M5!" Always besrs the Ulgnsturclof Wei ' I -—---<o¢-—-—- - . .., > A woman does not count her - ‘ l» <- yesra until after she has counted ‘I; her grandchildren. wvooywvvoe-ewvvoeonoeooooowowflo 0oe+o4 M40004 H++Ho+0+§+e++oo+o+¢o no M4444 00009 1i oo-o-o ' ‘ +¢o+++o+o ++++o+o+¢++ ovwweeu re o0 M0440 orowooo-ovo-oot M+o4++++w+++o+o+++¢+++¢¢¢+¢¢¢4' - > - I ' face and cannoLbe let down deep- t - , v I . v erer miiy be protected by tempor- , ' ' arily filling manure, straw, leaves > . or snow. say one foot deep and - - about five feet wide, along the > ‘ ground directly over the pipe line.