PAGE 150m: I'll! OIIARLOTTETIIIIII GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Founded ln 1887) SUBSCIIPTIOII IAIB M _ m.» | mum " “‘“ ‘it; 15 t.‘l.‘.°1..?'i1i1.'.' (in Illll Ion pa nu laud-u Wally: QM our nun In I Iii-Ila Mu lu- 3 month '11-» clllllllkllllIl Gnnlln n; n qua-nu n Iotullnl‘: New: Annoy. ‘Illu- lqunn. Blow Ink; 02¢ loath Nun Anne nu mu Iflrupnlllan Howl ll III vn llnnd ludbnry, 0am In! Iohn-va Shop, Mouton, N. B. “Tlu Shanna! Memory in Weaker Thu flu Weakest Ink." THURSDAY, sir-fr. 2a. 19“ Agricuilural Conditions The cash iticoine oi the Canadian fflrmfls l" the first 11.111 oi 19.1,; showed an increase 0f 25 per cent ovt-r 111: Sillllt‘ period i11 the ptfvlfllls your, iicrortliiig to the Dominion Bureau 0t bla- tistics. 11111 ilic increase was not 51910811 i" all Qvenl) pvt-r i110 Ct|tlllll‘_\', as might be_stipp0$et.l. .\11 lllCTUih.‘ 11f $4,000,000 i11 the hlziritinics was bziltiiicctl 11_\ :1 1 1s. 111' 11:;1r1y' that 61111011111 111011‘ 1111-11., 111' 11111111 M! of $110,000,000 111 all L;111;11;1, 111111111 55,510,000 was iii tjticbcc. $1,0<_111,t11111 111 lfl‘ill>ll 11111111111511, and $100,000,000 i11 1110 l'r.'1i1'i1- Provinces. Lliiiiiiiviiiiiig (111 agrrciiltiirzil conditions as r¢~ flrClttl l1_v ~1111il:11- lieu ‘s 1|110t<'tl i11 its quarterly 111.1“ 111' 1111111 11111111. i114 pQu-cr, the llank 0f toiiiiiituxx- l't'\‘lt'\\‘ 1110s tliiit gratifying as Ere the rt-stili», i. --_v .1rc 11111: to the exceptionally large 1111p ' 1.1. 11f l1 .1, partly turned into cash income 10:11", :14 wull as to the strenuous Cf- {orts of g 1.01‘. 111 meet the tinprcccdcntctl f00fl l‘1L‘<}llll't'lllt'll'1~. 111' this war pcrifld. .\ cliztngt- i11 111i: favourable situation is, hO1\'- e1" r, 111111" to be exptctetl which will adversely zrficct 110111 f i11 purchasing power before the llt'.\". gl'<>§\'l1l_'_f st. -<1i1 and the food supply of the entire Coiiiiii . Limp c-iiditioiis are poor this year over most of iistcrii and Ccnlrzil Canada, while in the 11's.; they are less favourable titan a year ago, thong-H 4111.111: three-quarters of the pfillrll? grain belt has prospects of average, 0r at 1935i riczir-averzige, nllllllfllS, ivliicli would enable it ti‘ continue, c1011 expand slightly, the large-scale meat and dairy production it has developed since r939. The total crop yields for all (Tauada now 3111,1931" to he about one third below those 0f the banner year 19.12. The early subiiormal crop prospects of East- ern and Central Canada. were lessened still fur- ther iii August by unfavourable weather and plant diseases. Cutting of heavy hav crops in Quebec and the Maritime Provinces was gfeiill)’ delayed by excessive and prolonged rains, with losses both in quantity and quality. Spring grains and canning crops in Quebec also sttfffired such (litlltflgv as to reduce the yields well below average. Blight affected potatoes in districts where this crop is of major importance. Clearing weather toward the end of August permitted th". resumption of harvesting and was of benefit t0 late crops. but was too late to repair all the ef- fects of tlie previous inclement climatic condi- lions. Hay Fever Treatment "Hayfever is not the harmless annvyance that we are prone to think it," Dr. R. F. Hughes 0f Hamilton, O11t., warns, In an article published in the Lktitzidiaii Medical Association Journal he points otit that liayfcvvr not only causes loss 0f time but is iicqueiitly .'itt.'1(.lCd by complications. Experience indicates that the hayfevcr sufferer has at least a 50-50 chance of becoming asthma- tic. .-\rn1y cxniiiining boards “take a very unfav- orable vicw of it, especially when attended by Complications," according to Dr. Irltighcs, _ Reporting on 235 hayfcver patients he saw in 79.12, the plwsiclrtn ti-lls of cztrcftil pollen 19515 made outdoors i11 Hamilton that year, hlaplc £11111 elm polleits appczifcd first and tlicy were followed inhalants and 3t by moulds, A number were by several methods. asthmatic complications. means of skin tests. Specific treatment is avail- able to relieve the condition, not to cure it, and in a large percentage of cases gOOd results are ob- tainable. 1- EDITORIAL NOTES .- record attendance at the course with no other attraction but the race card. u a a a Mr. King's unfortunate blundering attempt to organize a national celebration of the Italian surrender, only to cancel it, as soon as Mr. Roosevelt had said that celebrations were not in 01d". has done him more harm than most of liis recent antics, says “The hatter Review." ll l # I Chirlgrd conditions in the North Pacific are re- flected since Prince Rupert decided war risk i11-l surance carried 0n city buildings would not be. renewed. A recotiiincndation front the finance committee to drop the instirancc was approved sensitive to several pollen; and had to be treated. Forty-eight par cent had] 1 Doctor Hughes counsels careful diagnosis by! Good weather has once again favoured the " race fans, and yesterday's must have been a m“ fllll‘ DOG SHOW .—"A in bl h ld l0- monow 1112:1293!!! tfcloiillnow. ‘J. Hyndmnn’: I 100 which rolm sweets of Charlottetown. o ould tn forthcoming dog show sh size at least beat any on record- s11 t . mominin owmvu. Yes, I Used To Go To Church, But- by the cityvcouncil. Blackouts will follow suit, * i i ll I "A generation has grown up that has not ceased to be religious but has never been a0" writes Professor F. l5. jcssop in "The Padres, Hour", religion is both crowded out and hurried; out in the education of the young, 'l‘h¢ good‘ ground is there but tmcultivatcd, the seed is not being sown and consequently the soil is being taken over by weeds. I‘ i Ii i john Nicholson, British General and admin- istrator, died this date i857; served in the Silth wars, and was deputy commissioner of Bannu when the I’ui1jab W215 annexed to India i11 18.19; made the successful invasion of Delhi i11 i857, being killed after his formal entry; was a bril- liatit ruler, despotic but just; called by Lord Roberts the “bcau ideal of :1 soldier and gentle- nianl‘; his statue was creczrd soon after 111s demise at Delhi, and is still worshipped by a small native sect, the Nikalsains, l i‘ 'l~ l Civil Service plflltOS—-lillfiffl are many —ev€n, in the Prime l\linister’s own office-mm feclitig- very shaky over the signs that the present Ad-l ministration is coining to Z111 end, says an Ontario contemporary; are—in most cases-hoping and working for a C. C. F. victory, and are ingrat- iating themselves with the C. C. F. High Com- mand—wl1icl'. includes many professors of their own stripe. Pro-Cons must note that this 15 going on. A few of the less wise would compete with the C. C. F. for these favours. The wiser counsel would be to let these young men know that they are under observation, U $ i * Stout partisans are still arguing that Liberals and Pro-Cons must remain independent of each other —— since the alternative is that the C, C, F. will be the official Oppnsitioii, says The Letter Review. There is another alternative-which is that if the Liberals and Pro-Cons continue to "E111. the C. C. F. may be the next Government. That is not, of course, necessarily fatal, but it is to be hoped that we have a Socialist -Govern- tnent in some Province first, so that the P€0pl€ of the Province may pay for their own folly, and give the country a demonstration of the failure of Socialism. Prince Edward Island election proved nothing except that sane Canadian farm- ers are not interested i11 Socialism, Ill 1r 1K 1k Live births in Canada during the fourth quar- tcr of 1942 numbered 65,892 (gmreliminary fig- ures) giving an equivalent annual rate of 22,5 per 1,000 population as compared with 59,837 births and :1 rate of 20.7 for the fourth quarter of 1941, There were 2.40.1 illegitimate births forming 3.6 per cent of all live births, a5 compared with 2,192 or 3.7 per Cent. Stillbirtlis amounted to 1,695 0' 25.7 per 1,000 live births as against 1,691 and a rate of 28.3. Deaths totalled g8,- 750 with 1 rate of 9.8 per 1,000 population as compared with 27,865 and a. rate of 9.6. The natural increase for the (iuarter was 37,142 giv- by birch and pine. many tree polleus were noted. stopped 11y i11: beginning of June. Grass pollfn BN1.‘ (1'll'(‘fl .1 ivct-k ilfltT 111': ‘rec pollen became gen- Tlit-re was little pollen in the air the middle of July t1. the middle of August, but ragweed pollen, a chief cause 0f tnisl-Qrtunfl t0 the allergic, began August 9 and dominattitl tl1€ eral. 5Ct'll(‘ iiiitil §cp11:i1il1t'i' 27'. (>1 the .13; 11111101115, 209 were affected by rag- ._ i5 by trees, 85 by Other weed. 72 l:_\' 151a. 1 Bv the beginning of May Tree pollination from a rate of 27 per and at rate of —- Notes By The Way — The '50 and loin.» 1 t o L05 Atigeles Tim Talk will not be cheap to listen to in Seattle. Barbers of that city have ruined the price of haircuts to sl-Edniontuii Journal metimcs foolish flTC S0 - i iunally wlse — Ross Munro of the Canadian Press does get about. He was at. Spitzborgen He 1111s at. Dtcppe. He was in AI '11. He was ln Sicily. Now, hc is in Italy. —Vancouver Province For all that has been said, falrly and logically, against tug days there ls many a good cause that would have been neglected but for the pubticls good-natured ability to somehow find a little more. — Exchange Commercial apple growers have not, planted the Astrakim apple tn recent yc-irs. 11nd one wonders why, Recently the price was $1 a bushel above nll nltit-r apples. The goncl old Red Astrakntt 11nd n flav- our all its 1111111. n11rl 11nd hardly a peer as: a pally-maker. But grow. ers tell lls flint as n commercial lpplf.‘ it li-id some serious drfccts. It». doesn't 1111 rinouizh baskets, rlnenlng ls vcry unt-vvn and it ls rather stiblcct in scab. If growers don't see inmirv 111 :1 ccrtnln vnr- tcty -evcu if it ls snmebndyb fav- ourite ~Ll1ey don't plant lLflNlag- are Falls Review The dangers fu the food front wcre only fivcrled by world strategy. Crimlxincrl action of our,~~~~~- J11 1111"» 0f U19 nlglit, so lt ls safe to glve a fl: c United States o1 nearly a quarter of a million own acrlcullurc v: Dominion: and 1.11 has been brilliantly effective S0 great ls the territory controlled by the Allies, so vast its resouxicu, that the Ministry of mod countered J!- panks seizure of countries producing rice and tea by arranging for crops of those exotics elsewhere. To make wlll be no less necessary that it. is now to bring the enemy down tn unconditional surrender. The Un- ited Nations have their plans for the future well in hand. —.Dally geirgraph and Morning Post. (Lon- on). Paper, nut to the human voloo. the most indispensable means of communication. Modern bust- ness would be stalled without it. - without the buy and sell ands, records and information volva use of paper. savings 1n the wartime use of this scarce commodity have already been effected by curtailment of less essential paper prnducta, by magazines and newspapers and by the voluntary cooperation of business generally. But paper sav- imz has to be intensified to make the short supply go around. From the Financial Post. This year's Promenade Concern, which came to an and on Satur- dny with a performance by both the BBC and London Phllr ' orchestras, have broken the at- tendance records set up last year. All seats for Saturday's concert l"1u"erl before the opening ure ing a rate of 12.7 per against 31,972 0r a rate of n.1, one year of age numbered 3,630 and the infant mortality rate was 55 per 1.000 live births, These figures compared with 3,386 deaths and a. rate of 57 for the corresponding period of 194i, Deaths under one month of age numbered 1,792 giving flffllllfi P15 ‘Compared with 216 and the rate was 2.6 as against 3.6 per 1,000 live births, peace secure a world food strategy m 1,000 population as Deaths under 1,000 live births as against 1,724 29. There were 174 maternal .____ l visitors for the season and an aver- age weekly attendance of 2,000 more than in 1942. Beethoven has again been over-whelmlngly the most p0 ular composer, with Tchalkovs y an even bigger draw than he was but year. Brahms and Bach were described to ma from the BBC as "being on the up. grade," a phrase I hasten to pass on, although one remembers Bach ghts years ago as being “up- graded" in attendance as hlgh as ll; seemed possible to go. It ls dif- ficult to assess the popularity of the modems. Russian, British, and American. Usually their new works were included with classics that could not. fad-Manchester Guard- tan Iorellners and Amorlonn Ate; used to take dellght and ably still do, 1n plcturtng the cal American a4 n prosaic, un-| fmagfnattve fellow with a single minded interest ln the almighty dol- lar. ‘mat. la a lot of nonsense. and we can prove ft. Thin country ls awash wlth romanticism its 1m- aglnatlvenesa knowm no limits, and your typical American will swap a dollar or a, cock-and-bull story any rlfly ln the week , . . The fut 1|. the typical American goes Around with his head in the clouds just aching w be played for u vucker. Remember Barnum? Custer-Musics? And how the 0 s Mar; stuff when Orson Welles got voo renllatlc on the radio? To any nothing of the press agent feats of turning Brooklyn tom into exotic femmea latalec d langour, glamour and ft. prob- typi- 111111 Pond? Qm“ swallowed the men-from- mop“ D078 n‘ rt in: 1th ‘Ffie mciial? o1 (By Rev. John 0. Denny, B. D.. in Mlmloo Presbyterian) Perhaps someone wh0 PM" MP this paper and looks at. this page may be one those people who does not bother any more with the formal worship of God on Sunday or any other aay. You aze not alone ln this. my friend, but on the con- trary, you find yourself with the majority. That. alone should give you food for thought. ‘The majority are rarely right 1n matters of; morality and 1n things of the spirit. The Holy Spirit ls aristocratic. We want to let; you in on a secret. Them is no one the minister likes tn talk to mom than you, and further, there is no one so exasper- atlng and so downright discouraging as you. The reason for this ls that, though you pride yourself on your reasonableness, you don't; think with] your intellect at all. you think with your emotions. Well, if you are still reading here. is what we mean. You used w go to. church but ycu have discovered that. the church 1s not Interested, ln justice for the common man like yourself, but; instead fawns on the rich. Is that true of all church- es? Is it true of your own church. ln Mimfoo? Is it? Are you goingi to desert your whole religion wlthl its pmfundity and its truth simply because certain churches do certafnl but you had an unhappy expert- ence with another church member. or with the minister or with some-l one connected with the church. You cut off relations with the Eternal God. then, simply because someone annoyed you. Is that right? Can] you not find a church where suctii troubles would occur? 0r perhaps you were at fault. You used to go, too hese strenuous war days. That is true. You are over-worked. But tell us, do you cease t0 love and praise. your wife when you are tired? Why} then does the Eternal God have no attraction for you? Perhaps- have you faced yourself with thls?| -perhaps there is a deeper rea- son. You may have ceased to care for Gad You used to go to church but the church was always asking foi- money. Remember the parable 01' "The widow's Mite"? Why dld you not glvo what you could and explain that; you did not have very much? But then perhaps your rrou- ble Was a keen conscience which told you that you were spending on Yourself that which should have gone to God. You used to go to church put the minister didn't preach the‘ ‘f1111" gospel. Yes but did you i1e1p| him by deserting’! If you have the Whvle 8051291 Why don't you talk to him and give him some of it?‘ He might appreciate that. We could carry on with this “ad friflnltum" but ft all adds up to an inner decay of faith. While we list-i en to an sympathize with you, there Ls a persistent vslce talklrigl to us. and saying, “This man is on the defensive. manufacturing reasons for his actions; , , think lng with hLs emotions," 5nd 1.11m we go sadly away for there seems, to be such great. possibilities. Do vou think lt. is fair to the church, lhlal kind o! thins‘! Do you 11111111 lt is‘ fair to yourself? Why don't you 5WD patronizing us. and op se us? At least, that would be healiffiy. But this condescending nlr, this recogni- tion 0f our work. these bnckhanded compliments —they are so deceiving and so discouraging. Why don't you take youzself in hand, and speak some straight words to‘ your own intellect? Or will ft alwava be. "Yes I used to go to church, but -?" If this 1t must be we will have to suf- fer You as we suffer little children Wlw W51" l0 80 somewhere, but are not quite certain where. and when they wander astray, gtvc reason; which they never had foi- their 111;. obedience. mn/gll You not do something about Now, Or Later ‘I Th (Syldneyl Postngolcprd) e aer es o p0 c setback; which the Liberals have affmd in Ontario, Quebec. Mont on. and Saskatchewan-the latter m: tn Federal b clectlons, and rc- ductlpn o the Liberal Govern- ments representation 1n Prince Edward Island, has stlmd lenders of the party in Ottawn into some kind of action to halt who continu- ing falling fortune: of Mackenzie King‘: party. Reorganization of the National ‘Liberal Federation and the launching of l. new organiza- tion program are u: be dlccugecd within the next lwo wooh at 0t. n caucus of mini-d mun- t-ho Senate and the Bonn of Commons. and by the Nation Liberal rbdenrlon which holzh its first meeting alneo the war started on September 2'1, with neven voting de m from each Province u tad attend. Usually t sort. of action by a Government party 1n preliminary to the dissolution of tho House of Commons and an early appeal to the country, and there are ln Ottawa who hold t. a enl election will be he t! but ff there ls, all the 1n the world can do a 1n Oh, write your own ticket. We've got to nee a man about a snipe- hunt. —New York World ‘hhlmfll- nlalonn which things? You used to go to churchl”! AUTUMN Now when the time of fruit and gr n come when apples hang above the lar- den wall, And from the tangle by the road. side stream A scant of wild grams fills the racy a . Comes Autumn with her sunburnt caravan. Llke a ‘long Gypsy train with trap- n D E5 81W And tattered colors of the Orient. Moving slow-footed through the dreamy hllls. The woods of Wilton, at, her com- lug, wear Tints of Boklthara and o! Sum- around; The maples glow with their Pom- peiun red ‘ The hlckorle 8 I And while the crickets flft along her march. Behind her banners burns the crimson sun. . —-Bllss Cannen. s 111111 burnt. Etruscan feared to make itself. Added t0 these factors contributing to the unpopularlty of the King Govern- ment is the system of p_rlce, wage and rent. controls, and rationing goods —necessary in wartime, but. nevertheless creating a spirit of discontent among the people- The vacfllattxig labor policy of the Government has done little to en- hance the Government 1n the voL ers’ eyes. and ln fact. has actually contributed 1n many cases to tho strikes and tie-ups in defence 1n- dutsrtes which have been far too frequent for a. country Bl’- WE!‘- The Liberal need not blame the xlse 1n the Progressive Conservative rind 0.0.11‘. fortunes on more ac- tive organization, and they cannot hope t0 check the swing of tne pendulum by organization methods themselves The most: ImDOItB-rlt question which will arise at the coming Liberal meetings in O1- tawa will be whether to face the music now: and hope for election of a Liberal Government. after the war, or m wait; until the legal life of the present. Government runs out early in I945, ln the hODe mil much political fence-mendlnli 111W be accomplished in the interim. The calling of a Federal " this fall would be no surprise, as in the ordinary course 0f event! an appeal to the country would ho made next year anyway. 10mm" ing four Parliamentary sesslonl. Cadet Corps Changes (Saint John Telegraph Journal) The Dominion lnter-szrvlce lcadet committee has been meet- ing here to arrange somé 11881194 adjustment in the cadet. corps 01 the province. Its plan ts to sub- stitute co-operation for defififlm- tlve ccmpetltloxi. The idea B t0 distribute cadet; training among the' three mrvlces. At the snmfi time it was desirable not to dlsorganlze the. existing school units on which the cadets, cadet officer, teachers, principals and local commlttzes have put ln much devoted wcrk. In some cases “open" of nmt-schocl corrs are tn be forcod; transfers will be u‘- ranzed, new units will be raised on a oomrolled quota and the o0- operatlrm of the provincial depart- ment of education is invited in l- pollc that. wiii ensure heflllhv grow h of cadet corps all round. There have been some signs of damaging competition among the cadet corps of the various aer- vloea, navy. ammy and air force. Healthy emulation, striving to ex- cel smartness and efflclency and proper esprit, de corps are wlendfd things, The kind of com- , " ‘ , however, that tcndl t0 build up om at the expense of another f; not good. Of’ all the things that this war has bro ht to public attention, one of e most important 1s the fact that oo-operatlon and combined Opel‘. atlons are what win battles and cam gm, 11111151101111! permeate the aervfcas through and through. The necessity of oo-o-perntlon nu long been known in the active fighting services. even if it has not always been put into practice, In the ‘past undue competition and even m1 1mm have ham cred groan. but this has been Arge- y overcome and now the co-oper- ntilve principle l5 curried on n90 the cadettfirgps. ‘that will be I. ve . rv swd c _ 1t a FIND CAUSE OI CRASH IIJON, Sept. I! - (OP) —A court of inquiry, investigating tho cruh of an American bmnber at Gibraltar July 4 fvi which Gen. Wladlalaw Slkorskf Premier of the ‘nouns 11. . 11' h‘ ‘(amt “'11 11111 11~' to the people for de- ' tho Ovnnmflo 1 I I II ‘VIN: Polish Government. was killed, FARBANKSTJICURSE flwfinwflib com sronen O Provides even halting automatically I Requires minimum at- O Obtains maximum tontlon-wonaorves combus¢ion-oon- bout nerves coal Commerclnl and Industrial Models available in sins from 50 to 500 lbs. of coll per hour. $00 In sound F-IA cinder; u wrln TMGANADIAN FAIRBANKS-MORSE I20. Lllllllil Factory - Shorbroolio, Qua. Sllni John. N. B. Offlco: O Una lower coat stokni- coal 15 Prlnna Wlllllm Bl- DEALERS: PALMER ELECTRIC P B i 121 Kent Street, Charlottetown ALME WILLIAM Water Street, Snmmenld: found today that it was caused by fl Jammln of the elevator controls shortly a fer the take- ff making the aircraft uncontroll 1e. How the iuruning occurred wu r debermlne, the tn- tnllry report said. but it was esta- blfisheedd that no sabotage was 1n- vov . FREE ADVICE GIVEN LONDON, —~ (GP) — A vdun- tary organization, the Poor Man's Valuer Association. bu been not up here, to give free advice on tho W111- Damaca Act. A almllu" crun- izatlon ls run by the Law Society. HAR DWOOD 1 We require a quanitity hard wood- “Rock Maple” split, 4 foot lengths. Write or phone stating quantity, and price. DAVIS & FRASER Charlottetown PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND - NOVA SCOTIA FERRY SERVICE VIA WOOD ISLANDS, P. E. l. - CARIBOU, N. S. M. V. “PRINCE NOVA" "The Connecting Link Between These Provinces” (DAILY-SUNDAYS mcnuuam Starting July ht the Non South-Prince Edward Inland Ferry Service will operate three round trips per day. Caribou m. Will Leave Wood Islands Will Leave 7.00 nan. 0.00 g, 1M0 un- and 1.00 p.111. 1.00 pm. and $.00 tun. LUNCHES SERVED NUHTHUMBEKLAND FERRIES, LIMITED ' cnAnLonaIowN, e. B. l. l Auction SaLe AT THE AUCTION WAREHOUSE, GRAFTON ST. 011 Friday, September 24th. At l p. m. I am instructed by Mrs. Anna D. Wlilfc to IQ“ by Pub- lle Auction her household furniture, consisting of: I electric refrigerator (Simcold); 1 electric lron; 1 hot plate with nlckel tea kettle. silver tea service; some nice pieces of china and cut. glass; 1 Chesterfield chair; amok- lng stand; library table; lamp; coffee table; 2 foot llooll; china cabinet; tea wagon. fire screen; fern table; 9 x 12 Axmlnator rug; 1 vacuum cleaner (Premier Junior); I sldeboards; 2 single cots: 8 single mattresses; card table: 2 small mirrors; 1 rosewood chest drawers, table cloths and napkins; curtains and overglrapes; occasional chairs; 1 large fern and stand; 1 carpet. sweeper; hall runner; cllult- ec, pots and pans and several other articles. W. l-l. BEATON, Auctioneer. S-IS-ZI-fl-Sl. A t’ S 1 I To be sold by public auction on the premises at Woof. Royalty on Tuesday, September 28th, 1048, at. one o'clock, (70 acre farm of the late Albert W. E. Douse. The farm In splendidly situated with ample buildings, well watered and the land ls of the but. Also at the same time all household furnlturc n contained in dwelling including several mit- liogany chests, piano, tables, etc. Also all fann machinery Including disc lint-row, clrlll, sprayer, truck wagon, llovon, roller mingle plow, hay rake, box sleigh, light barrow, curt, cultivator, tormcntor, grinder, vlu, saws, tools and many other artlclol. For further particular: apply to W. H. Benton, Auctioneer. l-I-ll t ,_ , , fllnlitrv of war 1 F: rm 111171? ecrelnry transport W‘. consum- I-I. J. A. BROWN, m. A GHIROPODIST Ill Great G 0IABL01TE$$NF iii‘; <4 —~—~a'v GASSY STUHACIIS RELlEllEll }-_ person who In tfvllb- Ind wl fin In ‘h; stomach and bowe should vet a bol- tlu of Dr. Evan's Stomach Mixture and see how quickly ll will rellevu all distressing lympmml. DI. Inn: Stomach Ml:- turo liken at meal 1mm, not only prevent. all bad effect: from In but It promote, lha functional activity of the mull» lllllll digestion Ind IN": the appetite. m 11 111 a t» u: ma; lint: iii 1153i; Land a quarter . , _ Help llvo l. Life! Drugglsls’ sales If WI!‘ Elvin: Stamp; Ire lo DI IlId l0: llylng Medical Illlmlla for our anncd forces Wtfllll. fly n Stamp, Buy lure now TIIE TWO MAGS l“ Great George Street Professional Cards l McLeod Bentley I W. I. BENTLEY. l. C. I. A. BENTLEY. K. O. Barristers and Attorneys-at- Law Ill Prince Street é "llfffllland companyl II. F. AIllllIlBllLll Ohlrlured Accountant; Elton ‘mm llulldlnl Charlottetown H, F. McPhee 8A., K.C. NOTARY 1w. IBIBISTIII SOLICITOI I-IHIII Chnrlottclowl a m? RALMIER B. HASLAM l. I. IIASLAM. B. A. Ll- l . IABIISTB ETG _' lull of Nova Soo In Climb!" Charlottetown. N! ‘your. 1'0 n a M“ BELL a MATHIESON ONIY T0 LQAY‘ Olllhrlloul Chnrlomklfl I’ l- 'L____ eves , iafiifiif snsssimrmrn J. S. TA YLOR OPTOMETRIST can» n»: and 0'1"" 5" lvullntl 5! Ahligénllhelfl rhunigflldaglldl Ill!