ram". ruua __ TilE CHARLOTTE TOWN GUARDIAN Incident-I. Clint" l. IcLnro. Al. P. Vleli-Pralldnib-J. B. Borne“ leereInqv-Llent. Col. l). A. llulilnnnn, l). l. 0. Edltnr and Manning Associate Edifon—l:'runli Director-J. It. Burnett Wallin- and l). K. Currlo Iornlng lliiilv (founded lllll) ll-M ye: you (in affront-o) Ill-Up p" ymr (In ailvnrirry delivered. niuilcd In Cumulus and United Stltel. TUESDAY-fNOVEMBER 1s, 19:10 No! Surprising It is nearly three years and a half since the present Government came into power on plctlgcs of lOO 1101' ccnt. enforcement of thc Prohbition Act. And eleven drunks were arrested by the city police over tiie ivcek-entl! Perhaps they acre cclcbrating the =i1cccss of the G0\'f‘l‘llll!(‘lll'S ciiforct- mrnt activitics. At any rate. there are quite for thcir appearance iii Court. Herc arc some of them: Oct. 4, i929. gllliilV-‘ZIW, fciualc. I old offender. sciitr-iiccrl to s:.\' months obvious reasons Jril iwpi-rriiiiiciit. dric. 11c 1e April 11. 19W. (w: rificnflfh". 1-‘11- i ii‘ c of above. ‘ '11.‘ L’.‘ll'i'.‘l‘.('f‘. $01115‘. ircaiiiviit. Fri). l3. f“ if n57‘ Fuic 9.3077 .'"'.':iiice111'».1~.-.. 1311i 111111 111d, “a1!!- T 111" s“ ""1. 1'11!‘ F") "'7. O“' r‘i“'1. SYN-putt.‘ 1w». P.- 1111 11:111. April ‘If. Iiitiii. 1711"». Hula Pop" ‘ for <1i~-,‘;\_1-§,- 1.1, .‘.‘"j.' f?! in: that (‘i(‘\’.‘l‘| drunks shuufci haw iron picked up 11y 111-1 1~il.t.i- 2.111;» 5:11 F/iliird iv rilcht and l!“ 1'1" morn 11a. ' is iiic‘. tlicte wrrc 111;’. (‘frurc/i-"iliv (‘arcer Tlicz" i=1 i1"-})l‘.'ll m1 for aiiiliifi-iiin Punt: 1111-11 n1 :l1e carccr of inc l1’. P'cn.“\'l’i11'=to11 Churchill, wl1o.n1arl". rathri‘ ‘Lil ' of his schooling, fail- cd in n1~y exaiiiiitntioiis, n1". cvcn approached matriculation stan- dards, wckc up at the nan of 22 to U19 fact that h1- wa; unidiicalcrl. and proceeded to make gun/i the dcficicn- cy by an eager and pevslstcni. coursc of reading. In spite of his drawbacks and a lack of financial means. he succeed- ed in gcttinc on in the world. I1; is true that he had family’ influence. but so had hundreds of other young men iii the England of that day who never arrived anyvrhcre in particu- lar. By native ability and natural force of character and arcat courage. he achieved an international reputa- tion for himsclf while oil1cr lads ivere still at their books. By the time he was 25 he l1ad 17l1l'i.lt.'.17RtCti 111 wars on three continents. He had oven through two Indian expedi- tions and the Cuban rebclllon against 51min. He. had been with Kitchener‘ 11p the Nile and at Omdurman. He had been present at 1i1ai1y of the cx- zlting battles l11 th, South African ivar. Hc had covered himself with Tine sciwcd to, , and it i":1i at all '=ui'1.-"i".- ‘ about the difficulty which he exper- ienced in learning to speak- 1n those days and, indeed for many years, he | ivas unable to say anything that he had not written out and committed to mciiioijv before hand. As the time came to deliver his first ready-made speech in the House of Commons a sense of alarm and despair crept cvcr l1in1_ and when he sat down he ‘was exhausted physically and men- tally. but he had madea hit. with the most critical of audiences. Everyone l-S oric of the now kiiovss that he lllOSl brilliant and effective speakers in the Engrlish-ivpeaking world. (franc! .i'iiroi's l/rzinforrried Tiic (lranrl Jury which examined, iliio 11v‘ cwntliinzis at Falconwood -'l ispitcl in Jllilt‘, i928, fiilloiviiig the ‘pa and d1 cppcaraucc of the vic- liin v 1111*" '=k"i.‘t1i1i is 1121c brcn found last month ai. East 1 l". ‘ bclievccl lo Piiiii‘ r p d.’ ‘".'.'c u .11 the liiinxitcs of 1h" 111- siiiuium slinhiiy rcrluccd in 1111m- 11. 'l'lic izrcat lllfllflfiiy of the re- li-ins tram discharrzcs ivhicii z-iould indicate a satisfactory con- diiion." E1 i<Zi-:it‘\' thc grand Jurors were not inf-irmcgl ihat thcrc had bccii an csc- upc 3111i that the search for the pa- iirni had been discoiit-niied. Ozher- wis: it would havc laccn thcir duty to nfoim thr- Suprcmr- Court that the sltuahoii with rc-prci. to one at least of the reductions in the number of inmwics was anything but, "satisfac- (‘mmdnfs iiralfh ’ According to a statistical rcport, if all 111a wealth in the Dominionof Canada were equally: divided it would ‘ provide $2.996 for each person. This does not include the value of Can- ada's undeveloped natural resources. The national wealth is placed at 52811411000000 an increase of $1,272,- 000.000 over the previous year. 1 Individually! tile people of British Columbia are 11:2 wealthiest people ‘in Canada, although Ontario ranks first among the Provinces in total wealth. The per capita wealth of British COlllmbift is $1,339. Alberta comes second with $3,717, Saskatche- wan third with 33.613, Ontario fourth with $3 063. Manitoba fifth with $2.986. and Quebec sixth with $2,759. Farm property a11d farm products were the largest single item in Can- ada's national wealth, amounting to $8.052,53l,000 or 27.82 per cent of the total. The second laigesi: item was I T‘ urban real 1iropertyn estimated at "mi “i “r Fmmimnrlilit m m s1..=1a2.1a4,ooo or 25.2 per cent. of the liirriclon aformng Post and other mm] newspapers. He had written one or ‘ii-n novels and several larilliant works‘ 1n i-hc wars in which hc had parti- ‘inatcd. So. whcn hc rcturnert from South Africa to run for the House 1f Commons in Oldham in 1002. he was l‘3L‘("l\'."(i a: a national hero. Mr- Cbrmbcrlain himsiclf spoke for him- Editnrial Notes Still no indication from the so- called “prohibitiom Government that it has any intention of investigating the circumstances connected with the seizure of a portion of that supply of Liberal election booze. What could be wetter than "prohibition" rum? t-le w~n 111': contest. though hi". rii11- nvg l"i.'it‘.‘il'iil.'i dcfeatcrl in the doti- blc-i-n-"mlaer Cflllfwii-(Ufflffffifl and there- lftqr he was in demand by Lord Salisbury. Mr. Balfour and many other important 111011 in the party. 1110 prisoner who escaped from Georgetown jail is supposed to have been of subuormal mentality. Ergo. “"1112 80% ""0 ‘he “W” °i he could not be held responsible. 0011111161?» P" mi‘ (‘P-PW W"- 119 nexijBut does the Government assume W! iwlfi-"Fi-i I0 l-lPii-iilil ill-Wm" ""01"!" ‘that. the iailur comes under the same moncy upon which to live while hricatgagory? served the public and pursued hisi _ public career. His books and his, The Manna“ p," pres; com- 11¢'»\'FPPVP1‘ rvrresiwndvnrs h"! m" plains that "the Dunning Budget abiffi him '10 Rf-‘cllmliiflie fiimili $20"; which only a few brief months ago P00. He undertook fi lY-‘CWYE Wu?‘ ivas flaming like a star of battle in throughout Great Esitirn, Canada and the United States. at the end of which he had in his possession about: $50,000 which he turned over to his father's old friend, Sir Ernest Gas-f lcl, who invested it for him. After‘? this his course WM Upward and 011-1 ivnrd. until he became first lord of} ibc admiralty, so that he was 1111i!‘ to hold the British fleet ready 101i am pending the declaration of war: with Germany. He became chancel-l‘ the forefront of the election camp- paign dropped out of sight on the inoining aftrr the polling, and is 110w as completely absent from the public mind as the records of lutycarts weather." Notes By The Way Cit-y 1-! Drone to accuse the Guardian 0f Painting an unduly ruddy picture of conditions here under Lea misrule. God forbid; the whole aim and object better state of affairs, to put a per- iod to the steady downward tenden- cy in the morals and manners of not a few of our people. That the Guardian has not over- drawn, or over coloured the picture is evident by reference to the Liber- al organ of Summcrside. No one will accuse the Pioneer of being anti-Lib- eral or pro-Conservative, yet the picture it draws in its Saturdays ls- sue of conditions prevailing under Liberal regime among the rising gen- is ten times more lurid than anything attempted in the Guardian. Referring tn the administration of justice UIldTl‘ the Juvenile Delin- quents Act. the Pioneer supports the Cfil1‘.,°lli.l0i‘l of the Agriculturist that ii is largely ineffectual, and (iCfliilljl with on»: instance, \\l1ci'e an inmate of St. Patrick's Homtullalifax cs- capczl and returned to Siiiiimcrsidc. ii. says: Let us ia‘;c i111: young man or boy 11s an rraaniplc. l-la has bccn convicted of sicaliiii: auicniobilcs, hora. sioaliuc from parked cars and bicakiiiiz and eiifcrinz a store and stealing mcrchaiulzsc and nioi1- cy. Includcri in the nwrchanclisc tam-c iwo puns and a quantity of ammunition. l-lc has bccn lucked in the local and county jails and has escapcd while LlPillll hcltl for transportation to Halifax. This last time lic was 1111 in custody tin-c" vsecks until he was back LICDH‘. He. has b'cn ivariicd lstraics. Judytca. Indu rial Siziiool i =' pays 11o hced and ("ch crlmc ex- ceeds fhe mcccdiniz one. bv Muc- PTOCK-ffllllfi the Pionccr says: \‘\'~ ari- n't lmlding him niii as ai1 outstanding example there are others within lhi- limits of this imin jir-t as bad and puirtibiy a whole lot. vivorsc- This is a terrible indii-(nzeiii, and coming from Prcmicr Leo's and A1.- iorney General Campbell's personal organ in the Attornc_v-i:c11ei'al‘s home town cannot be ignored by the Party, nr treated as Conservative propagan- da. Something must be done. and done quickly if conditions arc not tn become utterly out-of-‘nand. l_v i-calirles the seriousness of the sit- uation, rr-alizes that lawlcasncss. ‘smog the rising generation 1n Sum- merside is steadily increasing, and asks almost hopelessly: What is to be done with them? They are giractically’. owing to their age. outside the pale of the law. Thcy know this. and others only too ready to take advantage of the fact know it. Bootleggers use these small boys to carry their "Teddy's and as crrarxi boys. When this is done the hands of the pro- hibition inspector are tied. Hc crin- nct prosecute the boy. he is outside the pale of the law’. The worst that can l-iappcn to him is a suspended sentence or a term in the homc at; Halifax from which he seems w have 11o trouble in escaping. The Pioneer ls of opinion that sterner measures are necessary to handle the situation. but concludes 011 this most pessimistic note: A good old-fashioned spanking administered at regular intervals might have the ‘desired effect but we doubt it. lf the Guardian had written as luridly of conditions as thc P1011001‘. the city Liberal Gagged organ would have charged it with sending abroad a bad advertisement of the Province. Inslnccri1y' is so ingrained iii the editorial mind of the Liberal Gagged organ that truth in its opinion is at r10 times permissable even for the purpose of diagnosing the state of health of the body politic and securing improvement or complete recovery. Suppress! Suppress ! l isuppressll! all- that reflects on the Lea Maladmlniatratlon is a main ob- ject of the city Liberal Suppressors existence. but it will avail the Mal- Admtxiiatratnrs nothing when they go to the country within the next sev- en months. The Pioneer la to be congratulated on its courage and independence in setting forth the facts as they are. and encouraging healthy public opin- ion to be formed. Both newspapers in Summerslde are of one mind on the subject, and all right thinking people there sre behind them. T!" U“!!! Gllled organ of the~ of the Guardian is to bring about a‘ eraiion of that erstwhile idcal towin, The Sunimerside Liberal organ ful- THE CHARLOTTETQWN GUARDIAP? , What $111111 of 201111 Db Iona ll’ Babe. NJ. SWELLING 0F FEET ! l One of the distressing conditions wliich naturally frightens the indivi- dual is a swelling of the feet and legs. This ls called dropsy and ls an accumulation of water in the tissues. It is usually due to a falling action of the heart. V‘ Now there ls one type of swelling of fcct, ankles. and legs that is not due to any failure of the heart; to do its work. l1. 1s at its worst in the ev- enings and is worse after work or ex- ercise that keeps one on the feet a great deal. This swelling sometimes ‘lasts for wccks. disappears for weeks i or evcn months, and then comes back i again. "During the day the water in the system tciids to drain down to the ‘fort. and by evening has there col- ilcctcd in sufficient noticed by the patient. There seems ‘to be a lessening of the amount of bicarbonate values in these water lorzizcd individuals." While the cause of this type of droyksyi is not really known it is thought to be due to acidosis, and so baking soda seems to be of l1clp.‘ Howevci- in real dropsy due to fall- ‘urc of heart to do its work properly, 1111c (iFfllY-fl docs not usually disap- pcar of itself. but requires doctor uscs as a rule. 11s it strength- icns the heart. and helps the kid- i ncys to rid the tissues of water. How- jicvci- i11 cases whcrc digitalis is not effective research physicians are now recniiinicndiiig a dict of raw fruit; and vfwciablcs. which produces a marked ncrcasc in the water throvm out; by l‘ tlic kidncyis, thus relieving the swell- ‘ingz of fcct. legs and hands. Although this action lasts two or three days 111 healthy pcrsons. in per- , sons with failing heart muscle it per- skis until all the water and salt in tlic swollen parts have been removed. lt has provcn of great value also in 1193111111; cases where thci-e is consid- erable distress in tlic intestines. one of tl1c symptoms occurring frequently with dropsy. Now tl1c mint is that a diet oi’ raw vegetables only influences normal in- dlviduala for two or three days, and thus a dict of raw fruits and vege- tablcs all the time is not necessary; in fact may sci. up trouble of an op- positc kind. So if you have the strolling that is not duc to failing health action you usc baking soda, and if due to failing heart action you use the raw vene- tables. T Tlicsc little points are worth know- ing regarding this common ailment. A TOWN WINDOW Beyond my window in the night Is but a drab inglorlous street, Yet thcre the frost and clean star- light As over Warwick woods are sweet. Under the grey drift of the town The crocus works among the mold As eagerly as those that crown The Warwick spring iri flame and gold. And when th.» tramway down the hill Across the cobbles moans and rings, Thcrc is about my window -sill The Luniuli. of a thousand wings. -Jolin Dnnkwiiter, in Modern Brit.- lsh Poetry. Pampas of Poppies (British Exchange) For eleven months of the year the cit-Service men in England who make the Remembrance poppies for Arm- istice Day are busily employed on shat wurk_ ’I‘hls year their output totals 40,000,000 poppies, all passed and hall-marked to defeat the con- temptible enterprise of those alien’- deaiers who attempt to folsi: forgeries on the public, and thus to rob the disabled soldiers of the Great War_ ’I‘l1e twelfth month of the year is utilized ii-i packing and dospatchlng the artificial flowers all over the Swiss firms are reported to have refused soviet orders for the menu-f facture of 5.000 machine guns. This Six hundred people from both sides of the international boundary line are said to be engaged in the search J for a Boston rubber manufacturer who disappeared in the Maine woods is a practical stand against the. i "Rods" which several cther countrlesi would do well to imitate. l hr of the QXCYWIIUCI‘. Mid m8! Oiwyon Novcmbcr 211d. The search is bang hue and cry raised after him by the i dry be prime minister of the United’ ffiiigrlom. 11 is interesting to note what he conducted over 400 miles of terraln.'aiithor ties. world. In addition to these flowers, no fewer than 20.000 wreaths of Flan- ders poppies have been mode for graves in British cemeteries abroad. It. is an honorable fact that, each suc- cessive year. despite bhe hard times, the POPDIes m-inc 1n a bigger revenue, and this November ii ‘the British “T ilflkion hoped to pass last year's £500.‘ 000 record. ' Of cnursc. the Boston ' " i ‘A t is k‘ f ' . Thc unfortunate inmate of Falcon-‘man was a mllllonaLrP; the Falcon-l m One md o A‘ hm ‘and?’ » wood H-i-plni ‘vi-ho dtsappcared in wood patient was just "one more ‘un- ~ . i .. ' 11.11‘: 1n "My Dari)‘. U30" iNelsonir the woods at East Point had _no lucb fortunsts.’ small hat. I Tii- r-iicsty man always wear; a‘ amount to be, special ' ' treatment. Dlgtalis ls the drug your’ /==/ I cone that, Ind heard no more about it until Saturday's iuue of the Guar- dlan. The Public Forum Iii coll-n b 0pm II the a ! am sir. etc n. n. iimnavcnmiv, u. n. ‘uperlniendent, Flloonwood Hospital ‘THERE; O WHERE l8 IT GONE? Sin-Seeing a notice in the papers .re Civic Tax Appeals reminded me that we once had a Court for hear- ing appeals against Provlzzicial In- come Tux Assessment. What has be- come of that Court? Rumour has it: that the asseleor is also the Appeal Judge. This may be a very conven- ient way for certain persons to have their taxes adjusted. but it is not u:- cordlng to the Income Tax Act. Al: any rate we have no Court of Ap- peal such as the Act provides for. Perhaps the Provincial ‘Treasurer when he gets through his travels will find time to pay a little atte/nion to this part of his duties. He might: aim inform us whether or not a. per- ATONISIIING; PUBLIC NEGLECT Slrr-‘Ihe absolute necessity of an unshackled press is shown by your revelations in the matter of the uyl-. um patient, whose body was fourd in the woods at East Point. Here was a man who had been entrusted to the care of a public institution, a man from a Christian community and a Christian home allowed to go away [Ki die in the woods, and his remains to be buried there like a dog. I once knew a bear which ‘dad been caught in s trap buried in the woods beside the trap. This case reminds me of it! No inquest, no publication. 11o Christian burial! The felon, afier 5°“ “m” “m! "sesmi i" ‘“°°“‘° the law i.- satisfied. Ls treated as all“ m“ be ‘““““‘°d Wm‘ a hm" human. is buried wlbh tokens of 1mm" upon which w make " retmn o! chrlstla..,.;ty_ iTll-S income for the preceding year. If Bmmd hand and not by its party this is the law why areithese forms the Patriot. has nothing to say. Itfwt furnished "s? He might iflso ‘m gives room to “P; corresponding gcs_ eiulre why our income tax notices are 'sips to nose into private matters. Ev- 1m,’ sent “s ‘mm the 155'“ of the erycne to whom I have spoken is year‘ "w" 9599mm)’ as We are be- ishocked at such incompetency snclrmg tax“ o“ m" earnings ‘or m“ ‘neglect 0.1 the part of the Govern- ‘igmfris Why ‘pass 1T1)“ A: certain 01' -mcnt. The Guardian will have the m‘ can gm" mm‘ thanks and supp~rt of the people if it , I m" sir‘ etc pushes this matter and places the‘ ' INCOME TAX blame on the responsible parties. I_ I am sir, etc. i ' ISLANDER —- i .______ (Mo. treat Gazeiici THE E1151‘ POINT TRAGEDY Wherefore ‘has November fallen in- to such 111 reptile? Ii; ls not altoget- _ Sir:-I11 reply to "Citizens“ ieltcr lzcr adlrgie 0f 8T9)’ 138- dlY-k °d'~‘1'5- m satin-day".- issue of the Guardian. and crumpled ' lwves- About ""5 ‘and to correct a false impression that lime 0f Y6K!‘ Indian 511mm" mm“ ‘may be given to the public, 1 “r1511 to earth. whence the name is a to state emphatically that his state- matter of dispute. Pioneer New iiicnt in regard to the action and at- ‘Eiiglandcvrs are said to have believed tiucle (.1 the Qmciflls qr Fmmnwood‘ hat the habit o.‘ the Indians burning Iicspital is a complete mLirepregc-n- prairie grasses produced the smoky lotion of facts. as the records of the atmosphere characteristic of this Hospital clearly show, scasan. Why not so named simply Indian Summer 4i when you wish to send money assay- -—to pay an out-of-town account, —-to a relative or friend. -—to pay for goods from m cuticle print; --for any purpose, call at any Branch of this Bank and senire a Draft for the amount. Sold “over the counter," with no delay or formality, Bank of Nova Scoria drafts ofier a safe and convenient method of sending money away. 1111a BANK or NOVA scoiii Zfblifi/llf-liililllill) ill? ‘ Capiliil $Iii,(l(i!i.iiii‘i i§'.‘.‘1i'.‘"\'L* Z7lI",iE~‘lii,iiii(i Total Assets over SFZBYSJIQIIJIINI With the object nl’ giving the but pussfiile service 1'1 our m; time customers the Eastern Supervisor's D“[1Rflm0lli is located Saint _.ln lm. N. B. ~ * THE SAFETY W’ SERTAIMTY AS the lighthouse on its rocii foundation is to ihe _ navigator. so is The Great-West Life to each policy- holder. It gives him confidence to shape a course to anywhere. ‘ . For ihirLy-eighi. years this (Toznpiiny has lighted 1 As soon as the patient was 11115594 because they thought it peculiar to from 1115 “my, bging 1; dining room 1.1m land i‘1 which Indians lived? At iirlnei- at the time. a, diligent Search any rate. old autumn of the misty Iv/as instituted by the than sumo-m. morn. spinning gtxsiamer network it-ndcnt, Dr, 1141111111051; and the p“- among the ivilied 1ilants of aged giant's brother immediately nctifiedigardens and the bielmed W355" 9'7 meadows. rounds off her cycle in s. For some unknown reason the broth- 'ei' made no inqu1ry_ though two let. cluster of bright days inset like some fair picture between the leaf-fall and tors were sext informing him that n Search was being mnnnuecL the wintry snows. Nature follows a. circular th i When it was fciind that; a man ‘answering the description of Mr. Gay ‘W, seen wgndgflng 1, the vmnnmback again w seed, so that each end‘ of East; Point, the Superintendent isent two men there, wilm with the help of some residents searched till ‘the following night. using lanterns when itbecaiiie dark. They return- ed to the Hospital, but having a clue smnme‘? ‘mild u" "ek 1'1 fresh-i “Vent hack on the following d”, and ‘ploughed soils or the rustle of the’ observed, there is a remarkable correspondence between the colorful of Maytlme. In like manner Indian lr-ongmued jnqujyjng at a“ me houses corn-shocks, harks back t; the har- ‘ill the community. Then on May 17 vesting days as if in pensive reverie: ‘the late Mr. Bom-ieh with three men and for a brief pericd the la1dscape its enveloped in an atmosphere as. went to East Point, leaving Falcon- as it is exhilarating’ wood at 3.30 a. m. and arriving about m"? and 89mm g 1L m“ and “wk up the Search mfand glrrious. It. L: the after-glow of the “weds. Deciding the woods werfiaummer proper when daylight £1115. cm large for such a 5mm numberllurger spaces close to the earth level. of searchers they “n; to Madnnflhd descending through the stripped t.vre's factory where they were join- i “u!” “m1 their leaf-Shadows re- eu by thirteen VOIUFLCCFS, making a.m°"°fl- Warm“ on the brackened Dari-y c-f seventeen. These continued kmm" gnarled “m5- scorching in the woods 1111 night. "ii-ms flanking the As Emerson says. the broad hills h"! PBPOrt which is on fyle in the 195v“- course, from seedtime to, harvest. from seed to flower, and, is a new beglrnlng. And it has been‘ foliage of October grid the fresh tints 1 1 .U m¢.dI£XCJJQOQCRQ-QCEQDC‘D shrubs a'.".d,the clouds ~ ivorclland aislesfaffluegce of rainbow dyes. we best rand sh: tlaws, ccrrcsilllili Wiii‘ ' on return Mn Bouncy] made cutdieaped with the debris of fallen 'feel the subtle influence and emstbn- 1011221111 round. "The day nl uplift of Indian Summer season. and the The sense of the sublime best 601110‘; the ivay for life's vqvagcrs-first for the policyholder himself and afterwards for his widow and his children. Food, clothing‘. sheitcr. education, indcpcniicncc- these are what life insurance stands for. Consult our Agents orvrriic iii- Prince Edward island litxaiicii Office The GREAT WEST LIFE ASWRANCE 00 liyniimaii 8i i311. Ltd, Managers (Ihziriotteinwn b Lower Queen Strect * BRAHMIN TEA I When you want a delicious dririt .‘- O O 2 g Sold only in red, airtight package” R U€LQCUQQUO1QY€$GC GQ0.0Q3€C'O‘QFO'OICiCICLQUQ'Q£fQ'WFL ultuuzite rcnzli of with the pcrsl-iiaiv liil i" 5 ansivcrablc to I masterly sovereignty of the 511F1- Besides. public notices were post- ed at Bridgetown. Aimandale, George town, Montague, Murray Harbor and Murray River. difference on the part of the Hos- only s. lunatic, and nobody cared?" You can readily see that everything humanly possible was done i.» find i110 urfortunat» missing patient. and tho search was by nn means a "farce“ as your correspondent would have the public believe. When lvllr. Beaten called the Hos- olial the clerk advised him to re- ocrt the matter to the Premier's of- fice. which he thought was the duty of an eye witness to the finding of a skeleton. We thought he would have 32 Shopping Days 305011511 yslecps over warm wide fields." At such times we ikeenly realize the magic alchemy cf ‘the sunshine in giving a new touch 9f c0101‘ and of beauty to the oddest Now, sir, does that record show l"'.- “mm-it! °7 the Biliumllfli festivfli. The cones of the sumnch, the red pital authorities. or that ‘the was berm“ °f U" rise-brim". the silken floss of the milk-weed, the stiff! brown stems of the golden-rod with ‘is trey locks. the bi-onzea teiidrlls of limp vines, the clusters of silver- “red. the ragged alccampane. and the sunshine which somehow har- mrnizes the wildest litter of raturelsi P artlcas sanctuary, itself the perfect-i L R lcn of art. "The softened season all the land-i scape charms." ' There is no study more interesting‘ than to trace out the colorful grad-i ation of the seasons, which begins i111, mrinstime with the memo-es peep-' ing above the black mould, follows i-mi with i-hv hOMl/ed snow 0f blossoms,‘ "1 "10 iwdserows and orchard trees 1n the month of June. uprises into "l" ‘Prismatic symphony of flaming! g 1F YOU ARE SUFFER- the llcliens that spottle the eternal 8 Wicks-ail catch the golden glow of § M1189. i" ‘h’ sepmrhber days; and ithis strain cf poetic beauty ‘in its‘ Wm Bil/H pine: to the blsssomlngi kenlus of Indian summer when mei atmosphere itself become; 11k, “m, vast bell-flower serenely tnveloping, the world. Now it is the dreamy, W" encompasses the landscape, aha 1,. n summer softness saturates the air.‘ The distant hills dissolve in" the g. To Christmas The Metropolitan Store "IRE" Chrlltmu Store of P. ll. l. has now cm display a not showing of ullhblo gifts for everyone from Grandmother to the Baby. To eliminate the usual last. minute rush you will be well repaid to vlslt the Metropolitan Stone now: and besides the efnln on your puree would not be so great. Don't. forget l umall deposit will hold my article until Christmas. golden mist. At the edge. of the woods. there settles upon the shrubs“ a delicate gauze of rarest color, n. mere breathing of ghostly beauty revealed in subdued tones cf Imethyst and purple. No wards can dcwribe its tranquil loveliness, and the effect vanishes on closer |ppro-- sch. But It is when the sunset Do your ChITIT-Illll Shoppln, NOW Iii. The "girgpglltan stflf’ viii-hes the 11111-111111 and r0111: 11-. m m. ocrrw- 5i- Flow “T?” ‘Intern T I '- l. Iii-me tio us in these silent lrurs of wander and admiration which 1iezirc- i fully invest our lives Scfclliy as lichti awakens the flowicrs at dawr. Fugi- tive as are such plcturcz and impress- lcns, they elevate our thought", and ' strengthen with us U12 gocrliy hope that the uppermost influence and unionism-nabs oboe-moonwalk» oooc-oo.-:¢-:->sa;cs u i ING futon trxriiiiiui o. CA TARRH :5! CREAM JUST WiiA will give you 111111111111 of You ' WANT Iiflfiilflli“lfiiliiifilifffi "i PIPE 5 benefit you permanently. _____ - Penslar Catarrh Cream usually insures quick rc- _~ lief from the very first _; 1 time it is used. Try it io- I511 day and see how effective o” duccd In our Introductory "i" it really is. 50c iuhcs .- ‘ESE on a141,, . _ ; THE aowts or TI__ P P any nddiess PIPES Mm GUARANTEED, ’ out within one 7B3!‘ - " "' we Central Drugafore Something new in Pill“ " the latest styles oi’ the _hcsi quality A cool pleasure 1N1"! smoke guaranteed. THESE PIPES $111.1. roll DBo-A real Ilp-lo-daie P111: fl‘ replace the Pipe. Look over our high" llfi°afl Pipes we have a full line. m0 ' erately priced. The Two Macs 0Q .O'0OCF¢~§- Penslar White Pine and Spruce Balsam siopa a bad cough-Bfic bottle. - OGCFQ