.--_.qr_-\w, .. .. ifisdi-Ifiedt ,$tseaaeIeeeseI-J-l~ ___L ' a THANKSGIVING DAY. lJantOsLlI.A.Iaelhaem,lI.l.0._ Innate. AeseelaseIdlteI-ILLO-nie ‘ n Vloeehdllalt-i- ls " TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1926 ' Pnorscr THE allies. We are l The stand taken by Premier For ‘Queen, Ontario, is for moral sup- port for his liquor policy.’ He ari gucs that a law which has not the sentiment of the people behind- is worse than useless. “What _l want and what I intend to have, will be the great mass of Doofi-le supporting me, and Bylllllflthdtlc toward the law," declares Premier v4 c3110»: 57.34pm. - I v ANADA. "rrisux cool -_.-_- l» it is said‘ That Plato used thank God {or threesthings; (l), . ' v.1 vmgasa * i. . Thanltsgi. By John James 8ldey,_M.A. i? Church, and now accepted by the Citizen of P, E. I. Once each year the season term- ed ‘Thanksgiving’ arrives. as rog- uiarly as the other annual festivals, instituted in the ilrstplace by the EFFECT OF DRUGS ON YOUNG i.'h st he was a man and ‘not an ani- people as part of our National in- Shredllod W heart l informed that certain Ferguson. "We must 911811 £118 AND OLD stitutional Life. lnal; (2) that he was an intellect- », ___.. Tod: throughout the Dominion Q Canada. the day will he observ- d, as per royal proclamation, ass day of Thanksgiving to almighty 60d for the bountiful harvest 0 the year. _’ Thanksgiving Day is an id in- originated i New stltutlon. lt for partridge. i forgotten, and anyone people owning guns have forgotten that this is still the close season This should not be guilty of shooting these birds out of season ghould be persecuted. As a result of the periodical close seasons oh- lhbgland in 1621, after the first har- vest in the Plymouth settlement. We. to whom harvests are a conl- increased. mon, annual occurrence, who take harvests for granted, and who look upon them as our lawful right, may well look back to that first Thanks- giving Day. The new-comers to America, who had come “for free- dom to worship God," had sown their scanty seed in a soil and cli- mate of which they knew little. serve. There which are beyond other birds. also. the law and 6P8 served in recent years the partridge population has very considerably if falthfuliyycontinued in future years we shall have enough partridges to go round. There are other birds also for the protectionfl-‘erguson ls right. The wgeakness of of which close seasons have beenlillfi liquor policy in tho other pro- prescrlbed and which every lovcr. of law and order will faithfully ob-l. They had sown their all and de- pended for a living on what the wlioso usefulness is very doubtful. There are two especially of these, forest and the wilds could provide nolncly, crows and blackbirds. The them with. There uns- naturally. latter have exceedingly anxiety and uncertainty as to what numerous in recent years and are they vcry destructive in the grain fields. were men and women of deep and Crows nre another pest, thcir main unshaken faith. The first harvest occupation in life, apparently, be- exceeded their expectations. Thcying to make themselves a noisy were now in the “new land of free- nuisance and to destroy other and dom" and they realized that they more innocent birds. in Victoria would ibe a-ble to make a living. Park. for instance, a colony of This discovered, tbeiruilrst impulse crows. numberlng many hundreds, was to observe a day oi public are increasing yxearll", has taken thanksgiving. That their ihanks- possession and all tho songbirds giving was real and heartfelt, we and even the chipmunks or squir- ibecomc the outcome would be. but may feel assured. They had tried rels have been killed or driven oil’. For fepgal 1111 Blflleriment with which many This is a matter that might very For 11111611011191"- -- _0 doubts had become interwoven, but properly be taken up by citizens or Neutral ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " ‘l it was a success and they were cor- respondingly grateful. Other set- tlements followed their example. that, by their unmusical chorus ill u. semlnumqr. and for many years every commun- ity observed its own annual Thanks- their foraging expeditions, they are F" ‘weal - - ~ ' ~- giving Day. (in 1-863 President Lincoln issued a proclamation recommending an annual national Thanksgiving Day: succeeding Presidents followed his example and the last Thursday in November has since been observed throughout the United States as a day of public thanksgiving. Canada also, early in its history, took up the custom and has observed itun- ibrokcnly from flle beginning. Since Thanksgiving for the mercies vouch- safed by divine Providence during the year has been merged with our thanksgiving for the cessation of hostilities on November 11. 1918. and our double thanksgiving holi- thc Great War Canadian r by the City Council. We have no-i thing to say against crows except the mornings as they set out on an intolerable nuisance to those living in the vicinity. .thst they have practically exterminated birds which, if left undisturbed. would be an ornament to the park, and that. so for aswve have ‘been able recommend them except their pe- culiarly shrewd criminal instinctto escape detection. Thcy arc the wis- est birds we have, but this does not entitle them to immunity. ‘Victoria Park, with its beautiful groves, should he a sanctuary for our beautiful birds and the other "little brothers and sisters of the‘ wilds," and, the crows kept at n’ respectable distance these little ones would come into their own. policy of education for temperelnce to such a point that the old con- ventlon of lit is not done’ irould vbecome ilrmly re-establlshed In the public mind. "That conditim of affairs," he said. “will do motye than any attorney general and his en- forcement squad. it will accom- piish more than any Pains or P011- alties attached to a law. I am right," he declared, of his stand on the liquor question. “l know I am right. Education must iprevaill" ASlpanish physician recalls our attention the tremendous an aged person. iHe tells of a case of pneum‘ whatever. A disturbance sent the Everyone will agree that Premier to perhaps 50. and there .vlnces has been just this, that the iwill of the people was not behind lit. Prohibition in nearly every in‘- stance was enacted as a war-time necessity, and now that the war {and war necessities are over there its a tendency to revert to Dre- -war legislation. 'Bdt that does not those having the public lweul at heart froim continuing to ‘educate the public on the folly of encouraging the use of alcohol. some prostration. ‘much from the standpoint of drugs, lrelieve one simple purge of cantor oil. have clinical thermometers Of 170 editors of daily nCw§pap'.glightest provocalgom h‘ ‘ l l . proval of prohibition, according to‘ is m e ailments and lEducation Department of tho be very useful ii’ common sense Federal Council of Churches (Jhrist. follows: Attitude of newspapers, toward Volstead Act:- Favorable . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..1l6 q drug is given a cihilrl. that a small 8 fraction of the adult dose should be used, becaugde of the tremendous effect or reaction that -—- have toward drugs. 1T0 Drugs of any kind, come down again‘, in o very shor space of time. - ‘ .0r the blessings of God to the Favorable . . . . . . . . . U106 m append“ condmmut people of God‘ u has come w - - - - - ~ -~ 16 the conclusion that unless Thanks- For amendment . . . . . . . . . . .. 22 _" giving Dav 1B really =1 day of ‘Mixed ,, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 22 ighgngffcigmgqltgt éygjlllfiiscitgst PIASBiVB .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 I er u vow that they as a nation Will ~ —— DAILY LESSONS not be ashamed of honestly thank- 170 lllg God, the Giver 0i‘ all good, for IN ENGLISH llndividual attitude of the editor ly w. L- Qordilll toward the Volstead Act—- i ~ to ascertain’ they have nothing to Favorable . . . . . . . . . . . . .113 ,_ foot an illness or a drug cam‘ thave true or not, there is not s, man upon a child, and‘ how little this same illness orldLrug will have upon in. the right iulng of an old; lady privilege of living in this Canada which was not discovered until oi‘ (‘ll-Ila with its marvellous advant- aftcr ‘her death, because she yhad ages. not complained of any symptomsJCanad that the best treatment is to with- "WY béckbmle hol-d flood for a day or two, keepingfmmlry S pmgiess’ the "For this reason some physicians luau“ m“! God's - . , may we ‘think Gol for the uncount- lbellete it unwise ilor mothersuttged nlyflads o; Ggwteamlg “than Ctliristmss time to her daughter, hand,“ as may are apt to be taking and mothers whose sons, the lead- grgelfntgarlegv: gggvelljtir stfiiglop in the youngsters temperature on the em l" mil“ and city and cwmry’ - . Th“ 0mm in schools and courts and icglsla- stones replaced‘ lmughle h“ m" rsa published in Virgina, Kentuckyg-means too ‘much caster oil, and too Missouri. Mississippi, Kansas andmuch Cllddling- "la-kill! U16 (91110 Mlnnesot . 116 expressed their ap-lum mncemed Emu" “M59” and However the -whole point of the report compiled by the Researchimallel- l5 that the ghemomete, can o; used at the same time as the ther- Tabulatlon of the replies mometer, remembering always that a child's temperature cam‘ go up and Remembering also that if any (llllldlfin abolish Thanksgiving Day?’ ., except per- Opinlon of editor us to commuzni- ha?“ “still ‘iu- are “mi 515° excel" ‘in the handle of the physician, and even casior cli may he dangerous ual and not an ignoramus; and l3) that he was a Greek and not a bar- barian. Whether the saying is to ef- alive in this Canada of ours who ‘ought not to thank God with all vhls heart that he is alive in this lagreat century. and that he has the pence, prosperity, progress. tian virtues that have been and soul me child on water only, and glvmgwbo built dEeI) and strong the this article and quite ignorant oi foundations of our national life on ' truth. tive ‘halls, have made Canada what is today. Our pride ‘s not merely in our climate, or our pro- gress, our enterprise or our val- our; it is that we live in a land whose bn’lder and maker is God. The history oi.‘ our land is a. start- ling history of Divine providences and of the benefits that ‘have-come to us through an open Bible and the House 0t God, for from ocean to ocean this land is dotted with ‘houses or prayer in which from Sunday to Sunday myriatis gather to worship their ‘heavenly Father. A leading American review raises the startling question ‘Sh-all we on the ground that it is simply an extra national holiday. with scarcely a truce of its original intention of banking God in the house of God t ills continued mercies to us. We cannot Day for our salvation, for that is a free gift, but we can rise Tllil Year 1 find myself a citizen o! Prince Edward Island. For several years i have: some. what of a traveller, and th seasons as they have come andfgonh have been periods of an vthankfulness, for the lProvidence- of‘ the‘ Great Greater. 1n His provision for daily 116859. and all of life's opportuni- Fonlains all p tltllltllls-frisltlsviy i .7 :‘AA‘.4Qw MA‘; AAA x xxxx v v vvvvvvvvvv v , n,“ vv; 777v" ties. This year, ltoweverrsottled on the ‘Island, with wife and‘chil-l oovsauusu-r MUNICIPAL b AND, Iitlemc" a. is indeed like the land de- [seribed in the Bible, ‘a good land, such as pnen- a land of water und wheat and bar- monia, in a. youngster, would have ley and bread ivithout sca-cenees, tgnypgraulfe up to 104 whose stones are iron, and out of degrees or 105 degrees, the pulse Whose hills may be dissed copper to 130 or 140, and the respirations ‘B1141 silver and gOld- W011 HWY would we all at this) time bless the Lord have been great prostratlon. lt is W!‘ 001i I'm‘ 110 300d 1111141 H0 i188 not unusual bar youngsters with a 811911 us. But ‘more than this. Can- iiwlshly beswwed “W” “s- llttlg jndjgegflon m Show a tenmlfl atllans should thank God at this <- w- » normal, . . ' . e seas ‘w e ear of d n » B a cowesmjnng W!“ “d their hearts and the Bible in their Washer-Woman. who for sixty years mus mhysidan suggests that it i! hands, the 30m. o; pawn", Wm, w wore at her throat in order to brin unwise w “doctor” these cases too verence and faith and those Chrils- t 0 dren around me, and a host of; - 5 rriendsyhoth sympathetic and loyal scattered al over the Province, it seems that God has been vefy kind and gracious, in a more abundant measure than before, as conditions here on our island are capable oi‘ making "life" very happy indeed. if only we use aright the gifts so . ~- ‘ ‘ 2453-11-3-tst-6l. lnvestm x44x x x xx vv%v iEdgar Guest, in the November OAIN‘ p5 t. J. M. ROBINSON AND soivs; LTD. I em Bankers l; "' 4 P.o..lsox 404 ouanytorrzrowu, P. s. |., PHONE‘291-|_ v ‘ ‘.$ - w, r Number of the “American Maga- the story of a poor. together the loose ends pf r blouse. a. thirty thousand dollar or o," pearl brooch. builders along the street she had picked up One day 138.851.113- FIRE lusulmllci ____i__._______ " i we" necessity. , and service. its value. had used it for common Some six years later, wishing to make a present at 9g you, Properly? Talk the matter over wi “m” us direct. prise on discovering that the stone she expected to pay a. few dollars. for. was worth $2,000.00. -Explana-,‘ tlons naturally followed, with the.‘ result that the poor woman foundf out that she hsd been bending over‘ the wash-tub for six years, ignor-‘ ant of a fortune that she carried about with her. , in exactly the same way, men Lower Queen 5treet. Effected promptly at lowest rates consistent with security Have you enough insurance to cover the IIYNDMMI & 00., III). i The Oldest insurance Agency In P- E. l- preeent value th our representative, or write Charlottetown. and women are carrying about with ' them in their lives, countless bless- ings, pearls of great price, the gifts of a loving God, and‘ yet are often ignorant of the fact. How many of us look at our homes and friends. opportunities, health, citi- zenship in a free country, advan- tages for the education of our chil- dren, both secular and religious, as real causes of ‘Thankfulness’? These are the things that enrich life, and make a people happy ,in-- They are the product of generations of pioneers in every field of activity. and if the heart- aches, tears, discouragements. and in earlier days even blood, of those who initiated the movements that in modern days, play such s. large part in making our‘ civilization worth while, could be vividly brought before each citizen, count- less hearts would be really thank ful. - ‘ y _ above our selfishness sndself- I - I [For repeal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 12 wggnsw‘ OFTEN’ ‘MISUSED; centred thinking and acting, and h's°;l?d dayivlpalrhalifl‘ ‘a gelllluzm .. _ .. _ , - as a natio lift u our hearts to the e e or m’ o" c um m us‘ For amendment . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 24 lmmerge means to plunge into or LO d hi1 G D “on m" devise some nmthod Doubtful . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 5 lall-lllsgflfiéggEgfiftgc" menus grgaé aneuy, “ggstilzfinzlavgigtmzfi whereby a film of these things “Impossible m enforce» :5‘ 0§TE§J.MIS,PR0N;0UI‘}OED: fucuhumble and 1mg"), thank; ‘to ‘the will be thrown on the screen. and Nelliral ~ - - - ' ' - - - - ~- ‘l lie. Pronounce the a. as in "at." Father of all mercies, for all His citizens will see clearly what lthns cost God and man. to make the Our stock of Toilet Goods and Beauty Goods ls a most complete one. ln-fact it has no supcrlo; in the Marltimes. Besides a grggt array of Face Powders we have a full stock of all those intimate things ladies of taste require in their toilet. The White Drug Store J. c. lnmltson Supra me in Toilet g Goods are entwined about that word; lru- making conditions impossible for grant thoughts, that cven with the existence of the evils that mar their sweetness, bring the tears of our Province. sadness to cur eyes. During the’ summer at u certain spot on For resubmlssion '1 OFTEN MLISSPEIJUEU: 1 ; tiour ; not sion. 4mm. goodness and loving kindness. I um Sir, etc., DVSON HAGUE day is now observed on Monday oflCon anything be done about it? the week in which the 11th occurs. Merging of the two days savors somewhat of the attitude of the young man who on retiring felt too tired to say his nightly prayers. ' Pointing to a printed prayer on tho wall, he said, wearily, “Lord these are mysontlments." and dropped to sleep. 'The cause for thanksgiving fora bountiful harvest and for the end of the war are separate and dis- tinct. True, we have many separ- ate ‘blessings to return thanks for, but these two are sufficiently out- standing to ‘entitle them to a day each. The observance of the har- vest Thanksgiving. towards the close of the year might well be en- titled to a public holiday. Armis- tice Day, November llth, will for- i-v-éo-o-Q-i- EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘Fly your flags today and tell the world we are ‘British and Canadian. Wo are too chary with our flags on national holidays. ‘Every loyal home will display its flag today. This is our Thanksgiving Day. Let us observe it in a spirit of thankfulness. whether in going driving or dancing or celebrating. We have many things to be thank- ful for. The winter of 1926-27 promises to be a literary one. Throughout the country as well as in the urban centres, literary and dramatic so- cleties have been organized and ever be a historic anniversary prepnnmon has “men made for a which Canadians can never cease Team, enjoyable seasmh to observe. We are pleased to note that the Many ladlce 65 Well 118 86mm Canadian Legion purposes to ceie- men are still taking their daily, brute the day by a performance in plunge in the brlny Ill Vilii-flfil’ the Prince Edward Theatre, en- Park and at Rocky Polnt- This. We titled "Buddies," of which particu- believe. is the only province in Can- lars are given elsewhere and to ads. where sea-bathing is b61118 which the public are cordially lu- kept up in the month of Novem- vlted. I ber- The observance oi the two mln- '“ ihtes‘ silence at 11 o'clock on the 11th in honor of our dead, is fixed antfimmovabie and, we trust. shall is rig-idly and reverently observed by every loyal lBritish subject throughout the Empire. livery ship on the ocean, “every wheel on the dead. on railway or highway is ex- pasted to ‘be still during the two Initiates Immediately doilowing the shiitorlc eleventh‘ day of eleventh month’. >____ Every now and again something is said about the growing prosper- ity of Canada, and it is greedily quoted by the Liberal press as evi- dence of benign Liberal rule. This prosperity has come in spite of and not by the help of Liberal rule. Magnificent harvests, the de-elopment of Canadian mineral wealth and huge investments in tlltlpensda by American economists, have created the prosperity. Mr. Charles lE. Carpenter. "but remember -him telling me, one da after 1 had gotten considerably the worst of a iistfc school aifray, ‘Charles, enough trouble will come to you in life, without going out and hunting for it. avoid trouble if you can, but when you are dirmly convinced that trouble is coming} assume the of- fenslve. defensive warfare?’ NOUNCIQ IEOIGNATION I*M P. flollins, Liberal M. ‘P. for ock, Renfrew, ‘ mal ybip, m! written lo 1.9m 0r- 16" ‘partition. The report continues: "To those, WORD -S'I‘UDYI “U59 a word‘- who have been impressed with theflillrfeaélmcs ‘milmlnil-i Y°l1Y5-"’l1°l‘l1- hostility of newspapers to prohibi- m; in: gayest,‘ m tion, this preponderance of favor- “mu; SUBmMLq-y; must be recalled. however, that therqils life 01’ Billllmlty was an ex- lnliuentlai press belongs to the Iarg-fmPlB to h“ commamous“ cr population centres, where hos-f tile sentiment is strongest. In 3611-, Du“, selection. 1 oral, 'dry' sentiment proved to be, ' [OR stronger in inland states. The most _ conclusive returns came from‘ - Missouri and Kansas. in each of: Guardian Readers which fourteen out of seventeen re-oee-es plies reported a prevailing south‘ ment favorable to prohibition." ‘Novcmber 8' 19296 1S1 K E RlD-"Sce l Here is one of several good stories, wrfind 121i: strlejggiih, seckk ill: told by the Rev. R. J. Campbsllflface continually." 1 Oltnon. 16:11. concerning s. minister who was one. day preaching at a iittlo chapel onl PRAYER-when Tho“ Baldm" the subject of “Giving? During thelfik giemioiadciéilllnil age???‘ Said’ sermon he rejoiced when he saw a‘ y ' ' member of the congregation go to the side of the chapel and places. coin in the box, and a" littlo latera second member do the some and then after an interval, a third. The minis- ter believed his sermon had been taken-to heart with a vengeance. He received s. rude awakening, how- over, when on leaving tho building he was accosted by one of the brethren with the remark: “l hope we didn't disturb you, sir, but ours is a penny-in-the-slot meter, am we should have been‘ in darknesl if we hadn't attended to it." THANKSGIVING HYMN Once more, 0 Heavenly Father, To Thee our hearts we raise ln prayers of adoration And hymns of grateful’ praise, With. ookens of Tlhy goodness The fruitful year is crowned. Our ‘ ‘stew. angel guarded; [ml paths of peace are found. .LHHB alone tbeglcry! - bear us while we sing! We Tlhne adore for evernwre, All‘ gracious Lord anni King! We sowed our seed in springtime; lhou gavest -rich increase. ill golden sheaves were garnered by mercies did not cease” un- eyes were blessed -with ‘beauty, lr hearts were cheered with sanlg, nd sleep and stillness followed nit day, however long. blne alone the glory! . hearr us while we sing! We ‘liheo axhre for evermore, Our gracious Lord. and King! ‘Photo, Iiord, (has been our Thine ever arm in tamipeet and in sunshine Has shielded an! from harm. We thank Thee for Tlhvy bountios That round our pathway fall, But 0h! for life eternal We bless Thee more than all. Tlhlno amuse the glory! O beer as while we s-lngf We Thee adore for ever-more, Our g-aoions "Lord and King! mm resigned the Liberal leader- "My old Dad was a ‘Baptist ml: lstsr and a man of peace," wrltt refuge; It it best to There is nothing in this usual, warrv weer muoon, No. iii-sn- Godfrey ISYNONNMS: reward, compensa- ,tiou, remuneration, recompense, rc~ ‘é e u. mo... Says Smoking Today's,‘ doiitincss of able opinions may be surprising. 1t style. or sentiment; moral grandeur. Toronto, Oct, Z9, 1926. Makes Man More i Dependable ‘i? BALTIMORE, Md., Nov G.-——ThB ‘man who smokes is likely to bee. more dependable and steadier worker -— more dependable, per- hops, than the non-smoker — ex- periments conducted by Dr. Knight Dunlap, professor of experimental psychology at Johns llopkins Uni- versity. have tended to show. ' So far as womon is concerned, “no_ scientific investigations have been made to furnish material bearing on the question," Dr. Dun- lap says, “and persons who say that women cannot smoke as man does without evidence in support of what they say." Experiments on tho effect of smoking on man, not yet complet- ed and not finslly’conclusive, were undertaken to learn whether smok- ing interfered with fine co-ordina- tion. “There has been no evidence so far that it does interfere," Dr.Dun- iap says. l \ "On the contrary. such evidence as we have found inclines to sup- port the belief that the man who smokes will be s. more steady and dependable worker. Tobacco is s sedative. The man who smokes is more likely to go along in his work with even production in amount‘ and quality than is the man who does not." Relic 0f Penn’s Treaty ‘Elm Offered To ‘ ' Society world as happy as it is today. it is only as humanity realizes the ‘cost’ of life, that great store will be sot upon it. The account is n tremendous one. it is written throughout with tears of blood, but. if out of the blrtbpangs a new world has been born, then those who suffered are happy in their achievement. I On Prince Edward llslnnd we the island, they were unveiling d tab-i let in‘ memory of those who had Bali, Man’s Wives N umber fallen in the Great War. After the Provincial Representatives had Upwards Of 100 made their speeches, there had (railed to the platform a father and LONDON, Nov. 5. - One man mother, and another Father of men ln Bali, of the British Camercns. whose names were inscribed uponfweet Africa. has 98 wives. while on the monument. Watching them. it the other hand lhere are 460 men in seemed that the lesson of the nfter- the town who have no wives at all. noon was not in the outward core- should be thankful at this season mony. though that was very im- for several definite things. Flrstlireflflive. but in tllo 100k 0f Pride and forgmgst became m, ‘Am of-and thunkfulness that shone in God‘ has devastated our coasts. their i°al"dl"""°d “'95- The!’ ruined our cities, or destroyed yearned for their stalwart boy- i111?- our llamas, Qum- paftg of llleythere was no feeling oi resentment world. where the people are asgflfl they looked around. because vlgllleoug as we are, have been vls. theirs had been taken while others ited by the relentless scourges cffilflli M011 ED111801- lflslfilld. Q1910 Nature. and misery and death W68 8- iook. that showed the tri- abound. We should be thankfulatmmp!‘ °i graatifmlls‘ over “Hm” this season that we are still enjoy- "a" humimliy“ wont ‘memyj ing safety and prosperity, and ourlThelll ‘gem prom?‘ ialldb ihmlkmi’ pity and pockets in equal distribu-pfim‘ h ‘fcaliaedl ° r b W’, whlfm tion bo lavished upon thnso who l “y a T“ 5° ' had '8'“ 7 i“ m are the victims of these tragic oc-ilifi D511. With million! currences. Then ngnln we should be [hgnk-'“I26lll0(il‘8.(2y," thankful because they ful that throughout our Province had been Kivoll. ill Order that tllcy there is "Peace." of the world sections of country flOjglvgg 1°,- lhe ggfeguaffllng i o; larger than our own Island. hsvejthoee conditions, that ntsldé Prince‘ this year been over-run by Wanllgdward Inland ‘Home’ for them and its terrible ravages. Ilevoluticnllmd llmlr poglol-lly, ' ll!!! ffliBBil ilB l-fllfllllfl 119ml. 0111i Ono often wonders. if the selfish the spectre has barely been ssvelheltizen, the deliberate law-breaker, from entering into our own Mcth- the grafter in politics, the immoral erland. Thank God. it has been m“, who cgnnhrgg go.- u“, Bake "o; averted. for if the Motherland had mull ol- ‘pgllflcgl lnlluenco, at the entered upon a process p! dlsln- liquor situation. the gamblingevll. tegrstlon this er. through lndus- immorality in its most sensuall trial troubles. boll the 8118110" forms. and the thousand and one- would be ominously hovering over evils that have a definite place luI us, and Thanksgiving Dinner um; our civilization on this island, has? ‘year would be a repetition of those any gratitude in his soul. or is' dark days in 1914, and '15, when tltanlrrul for anything st all in life.l ‘men's’ hearts failed them for fear. I am glad that the majority of’ Another reasonof ‘Thankfulness’ people on Prince Edward Island is the dbundant harvest, which the "'9 M‘ "em"- “nlraleilll 900N0- lsland has enjoyed. and the conse- I “m minim“ "l" i)". PP°Vi110B quent prosperity that, wlll come to has numbers of clear-headed. God- 5" c1385“ u a mum 00mg fearing men and women in it. that throughoutthe countryside. it is a ‘"9 in“? 1° Kl" iheil‘ 111116 011d pleasure to meet farmer after far- "W" m "91""! "109 Bl/iloill 0111‘ ma,’ “ma, but happy and 5.11am“; mlflfll. ll 8m thankful for the task Wm, the summer-H work when, which is ours. namely that of stim- PH-LDNDELRHIA, Pa, Nov. 6.- A relic of the historic Treaty Elm under which William Penn made his purchase of Pennsylvania from’ use ‘hidians almost 250 years ago. has been offered by lllichard Buh-, lig, American pianist, to the His- tor I Society of Pennsylvania. e relic is a wooded pitcher, made of small stoves cut from the Treaty Elm and was a gift of the Journaymen Coopels of Philadel-l phla to ‘President Andrew Jackson to colonial times, owned by Mrs. Blanche "Wetherill Walton of New ship and stating that. he has no decided to resign the office of chief yhils of the Liberal party, elite! '- a for the United States mash to the regret of tier, many Mendel in 1.8M. Mr. lBuhlig discovered it Noveunber to in .a collection of antiques dating some way e York, and he obtained her consent grateful. our island Home, its Laws, its to oler it to the historical society. Perhaps more than any o: the“ fldeais, its Churches, its Schools, i *-—-<°“"—~mml “mum” “m” gash:- $11.2 "is one other um its prosperity. its tntesrlty. and by. heads with revel-en’ itention. “WM be t," d‘lzruntled people ulating a public consciousness along on the island this year. There are u" “m” °i Thlilklllivillli 511d always those, of course, who sl-Kifliiiull" 1° 901i for ill onr-blessi" “y, "em to be “l "wand o; the ings. I am thankful that thousands lino. as as good fortune is con- "i m" “MW! M". 3 01011-011! corned, but in the Province this Pmiiicai "ndalli-llldill! 0! the year these should be,a very small PM" "d 91°81?!" 0i "1086 who. numb" lmieml An abmdmt h". through selfishness. greed and lust east. fair prices, comfort-hie work- “i m’ nub’ "mild "m1 .9" 91°‘ ing conditio easy tr nsit routes, ‘min ‘l°i"'*'° it 0i ii! "lillfllili. m, buomml. o; “u, "on ‘on. make conditions such that self-re- erally in the escsadenoh every 9999""! 17°09" ti!" 110i lily in "l Islander who permits the 8th of I am thankful that these conditions pass by, without in can be avoided by the one gl-‘aat easing his Thsnk- weapon of democracy, namely, the fulasss to the Creator, is guilty of pie. Let us. start this Thanks-l sheer selfishness, and INndeed un- V1118 limo by being grateful for :90‘; gfll" raising high the standard of Pnbli ‘in dlllhristian Morality. lei. us she:- s Armistice Day. What memories our irggilude iin compelling the world to respect- ln other partslin turn might givo, part of themv Another man has 27 wives, while ‘there are seven warriors with ten mates each. and 350 with but two spouses. l ‘Some of the tribes. says a gov- fernment report, keep up a slavery. witch-craft and trial by ordeal. and ‘generally live in the moat primi- ltlvc conditions. The men in some ltribes wear l/itmle clothing, and the women none, and it is the women who do all the work llliliNUTS Toilet Articles Hudnute Cold Cream . 50o Hudnuta Vanishing Cream 50o Hudnuteekln and Tissue ¢rssm....'............60o of others, Hudnute Toilet Water "Three Flowers" $1.50 Hudnuts Talsume 88o VHurinute Liquid lrlllantlne ---..l-...-......---.... Hudnuts Boild Brlllentlns 50o A full line of all popular Toilet Articles, ills 1 macs DRUGSTORE 19s Great seem ltrset