xi. . flvon Ullrl-o-lmonth. MhcGuig-an & Trainor Spuds taste as good cil bediime as cti breakfast 0/‘ -\ \_\,/’” . f/ _//I ’/"i//I//I//p/;-=.s-_\ 4,1 / l / -./ " L/f /L:/' ; ~41 FREE OF Write for complete infonmati Suite 12, Pardon Building. ms scour-nun or MURDER ‘ITIIRJEZE RIVERS, Que, Nov. 3~—- Freddy Pelferin of Yamachlchc, was acquitted by s. jury under Mk. Justice H. A. Fol-tier Saturday on s. charge of murdering Arthur Boulangcr in his home at Yam- lchlche in September. Verdict was returned after 25 minutes deliber- otion. Ability To See Comfortably The obiect of a modern eye service is to enable patients to sec comfortably. That means seeing without strain on the eyes. And also the avoidance of many bodily results of eye strain. That thought deserves the consideration of all who are not certain of tho condi- tion of their eyes. G. F. Hutcheson Professional llards McLEOD o BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. J. A. BENTLEY. K. C. Barristers and flllflflltyg.gg.la' MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street. ‘Ll. Macilonalltltll: BLIBISTEB. BQhICITOK he. the very inst attention. ll! B. Mlofllllghll, l. C. I NOTAII. Io. Iiik. l Also, Spud Fine-cut Tobacco for rolling your own. 10c ihe package. TYJOBACCO commv, umnro, ouesscgooj ‘Cunodlon ond independent l;;&dimsr. l Learn to Play THE GUITAR With the La Salle Systemaiized Method of Teaching and the beauti- fui instruments furnished, you will have no more lonely evenings. You play o. familiar tu-ns on your first lesson. n-s-ruments furnished La. Salle teaches Hawaiian Guitar. Tenor Guitar and Violin. Students unable to attend the studio may take a correspond- encc course which also entitles them to free instruments. Our Representative will call on you. LA SALLE» COLLEGE‘ OF MUSIC IOI-IOIIOI msmausws ii“; iii CHARGE .31 if" Charlottetown. GREAT BENEFACTOR , or HUMAN nscn Writing of some benefactors of the human race. in ‘Health’ Magazine, W. R. Rldclell says: “In the Royal House of England, the eldest son of James II died of smallpox; his youngest daughter, afterwards Queen Anne. recovering from it infected her infant brother and he died ofit; hi: eldest daugh- ter. Queen Mary, died 0f it, as did his sister, Mary Princess of Orange -and all without comment at the time. The only reference to any of these deaths as unusual that I can find in contemporary writings is that of the celebrated French doctor Guy Putin, who suspects that the princess had some other affection. While the pockmarked person was seen everywhere till the end of the 18th century, the writer declares that in his life of 80 years he has seen only one. “Why the change- Edward Jenner, born 1749, receiving his MD. from St. Andrews in 1792, practicing at Berkeley, noticed that the Glouces- tershire mllkmalds who were in- fected with cow-pox never had smallpox. He tried experiments which were successful, and in the last decade 'of the 18th century. published his theory of vaccination. With no little opposition from thc regular faculty. the practice made its way and now is almost univer- m}. He had a play produced by an amateur company the other night, I believe. Who was the hero of it, do you know?" "I was one; I sat through it." l hos imu. henna oo. We are buying dressed fowl and chicken daily. —Pleaoe Noto- Clean birds- of all feathers. Dry pick chicken. Fowl may be scolded, If we have no agent in your district ship direct by express or truck. I m», Packing Co. _ V .1. n. anxious v-[Buchans Views As British M. P. In High Regard (By Thomas T. Champion, Can- adian PRSs Staff Writer) LONDON, Nov, 3-01’ middle height. with keen intellectual face and the high cheek bones that so often indicate Scottish origin, John Buchan-Tnow Lord ‘rwecdsuiuir- carries himself with quiet dignity and warms his speech with humor. His departure from the Com- mons, where he represented the Scottish Universities, was typical. His appointment as Governor- General of Canada was signed by the King at 8 p.m. March 27. The House was in session. One minute before the hour Buchan rose, bowed to the speaker, walked across the floor of the chamber and crossed the bar of the house for the last time, shaking hands with a few friends in the lobby. In this unostentatlous way he severed his eight years member- ship in the Mother of Parliaments. His career in the House was never remarkable for any great oratorlcal efforts in the chamber itself. He attended conscientiously, and was always on hand when university or general academic interests were being d-‘scussed. His influence, however, lay in putting his views before his fellow members in the lobbies or the smoke room. He en- joyed the direct friendship of such leading figures as Ramsay MacDonald, Stanley Baldwin and L C. S. Amery, ,' Law, two New Brunswick boys who ‘rose to eminence in the mother Like Beaverbmok and Bonar country, Buchan is a son of the mnnse, born Aug, 26, 1875 ‘at Broughton Green, Peebleshire. His father was Rev. John Buchan. {From Glasgow University young John went to Oxford, took a sheaf of honors and was President of the Union in i899. Two years later he was called to the bar. but his voice was little heard in the courts. for in the same year he became Lord Milnefs private secretary. He married Sumn Charlotte Grosvenor in 1907. ‘They have three sons, and one daughter. now Mrs. Fairfax-Lucy, who with her hus- band lives in Scotland. The eldest son. another John, is 23 years old and tin the Colonial service at Uganda. William is at Oxford, and Alastair will accompany his par- ents to Canada and’ enter McGill. “I think a year at a Canadian university will be o. splendid pre- paration for Oxford," his father says. In addition to the barony con- ferred on him another honor which has fallen to Lord Tweedsmuir in connection with his new appoint- ment has been his selection to an honorary msstershlp of the Middle Temple. He is also a Freeman of new cosrumu - JEWELERY rmsr rnoon Peri-h, his birthplace. Among his recreations Lord T eedsmuir includes fishing, deer- stalklng and mountaineering, His intimates know the ascetic-looking Scot- as one who can regal» con- genial company Vl/iih a inexhaust- ible storc of anec ctr-mostly legendary. At a lunch to tlu- Canndlan schoolboy cricketers who visited England this summer he confessed belonging to “a barbarous country where cricket was hardly played," and expressed the hope the tour would bring Canada. through cricket, into a partnership of inlcr- Imperial sport. "It might also teach people here that Cunadn is essentially a summer country, al- though it is true it has a bit of winter." Speaking at a Canada Club din- ner he told his story or ‘be Aus- tralian and the Scot. The latter ious ports of the Dominion, of these 234.746 were carried in the central region, 41.843 in the west- ern‘ rcglon, 17,287 in the Atlantic T981011 'I‘rimk Western lines of the com- Pflny- BXWIIIUBB from the Ontario border m Chicago. Included in this total were 3,482 Dlks-‘éllsers carried between Mont- real and Toronto, some of these was a bit boastful. "You have a good many of our people in Australia." said the Scot. “Yes? admitted the Australian "But they're not our worst plague. continuing Smart New Hats-Velour 3.95 4.95 and 654 on the "nu: UHARLOTTETOWN GUAltDlAN STYLES Dramatic Showing of Hostess Daytime and Evening Frocks VERY material of importance, velvet, satin, 1| tcff tas and laces all arc rep- resgnteed firs: froclfs that tell the talc of Paris designing modified and improved by New, York. Just in time for Winter gaicties in every good type for women and misses in a range that embraces all the best at $10.75, $13.95, $16.95, $19.75, $25.00, $35.00 You’ll love the new Deja Dresses HERE are the gowns that bring the story ot Paris approval of braiding, big sleeves, skirts with front fulness, high necklines. Most of these are_ shown in misses’ sizes l“ Sunday iiites ” Crepe. of Moderate Moire Price Crystal Cpepe If you buy in a store where style is studied and every garment chosen with correctness tn style always in view you are safe at every price. For example in the more moderate priced ‘SUNDAY NITES” and street dresses, the new Ideas are expressed and the new bright shades arcshown at 2.95 3.95 4.95 5.95 New Bags First Floor “ Sunday iiitss" $5.95 HIS group is one to which we ask your special attention. It is at once inclusive of low price and thoroughly up to tomorrow style The popular bright colours are rather notably well shown in this very spec- ial value dress. between relatives and friends, a g 1 c -- _ recent survey showing that B5 par 3d 8538x2228" tram“ stat “OHM steamship“ clpwn R‘ A‘ cant; of this travail being made for a purpose, ra er than strang- Grand ' ers going to another city to stay at S. S_ hotels. Another feature which has developed in connection with these excursions is the interchange of visits between service clubs and fraternal societies, numbers find- mgwgrd as m: u icngeltlléalt: the low fares provide an Detroit and Chicago While in the opposite direction were 4,543 con- veyed eastward from Detroit and Westem Ontario points to Mont- real. some of whom went on to h“ also been used during the pa“ (Monday) morning. consists of sugar, molasses, bsnon- hultued- ' asmoitrus fruits, cocoa be , POPE Sitllll‘. J0hll corned bee! and general, m“ mm M“ (Special to the Guardian) NUVEMBEK 5, 195a i See today's new blouses. Colourful Satins An absent-minded Jewellery sales- Clarkc arrived at Saint John this man was getting married. He was presenting his brlde-to-be with the Besides the passengers the cargo H“! dim"! ‘he “Tummy Ind he "With ring," prompted the min- .. .. The may rmwum Wm u“ ‘m a: girl/gab, written guar- rcturn cruise to Bermuda, the Lce- ant”, m . _.. a m‘ custom”, that QAINT JOHN. Nov. 4—Brlns1na ""1 ""1 Wlndwfl“! mm“- mt" the price will be cheerfully re- Vlllt passengers returning from a, (muse bados, ‘Trinidad (British West ln- “ma” H no, u represented" members of the same club or so- to the sunny holiday island; 9r dies) and British Guiana via Bos- ' ciety in other cities at economy’ Cggflbegn and arms), qulsna, the ton from Halifax on Thursday. railway fares. The coach excursion liner Ledy Hawkins, Canadian Ng- November 7th next. Use dlinnrri‘: for Dandruff It's the rabbits." Coach Excursions Aid To Travel MONTREAL, Nov. 4—A train of coaches almost 60 miles in length would be required to accommodate the throng of passengers carried by the Canadian National rail- ways on their low fare weekend excursions during the first eight months of this year according to A. A. Gardiner, assistant general passenger traffic manager of the company. The numerous economy excursions operated by the Canad- ian National Railways have pro- vided opportunities of visiting num- erous poinis across Canada, stated Mr. Gardiner, including attractive places in the west as, far as the Pacific coast and in the cast such centres as Montreal. Ottawa, Tor- onto, Niagara Pulls, Quebec City. Lower St. Lawrence areas and the Maritimes. not to mention the many inviting places and beauti- ful territory comparatively near at hand. Hundreds of excursions between points in Canada have been oper- ated so far this year by the Can- adian National Railways, convey- ing, during the first eight moniJis a total of 301,266 passengers from station to station tgoighflt var- Ottawa, Quebec City, and the Mar- itime Provinces. Figures show that People in the Maritimes travel considerably, for excursions oper- ated from those points to Mom- real. Ottawa and Toronto convey- ed 4.312 passengers. most of whom choose the metropolis as their cen- tre or attraction. Coach excurslcvls from Montreal to the Gospe Peninsula. and the Mflfmmes. 1n addition to other tourist excursions, carried g total 01 2.155 passengers. Travel between Eastern and Western Canada also has a consid- erable flDDc-sl. for on two occasions 1.886 passengers were carried on these bargain excursi from east to west. wh-ile two similar excur- sions from west to east conveyed 2,775. Canada's ever green play- ground on the Pacific Coast also Prairio Provinces. there being 1,587 Pflssengers who took advantage of one excursion to visit the Pacific Coast. while 480 excursionists trav- elled in the opposite direction to various points on the Prairies. those being odditdotiu to 41.483 par: sengers carried from point to point in the west on low fare coach ex. oursions. Providing o. very low fare and generous return limit, the coach excursions have been the means of encourlling interchange of visits h“ "-8 apnea-l for people of the l season by honeymooners, l Ctmgid- erable number of newlywed; h“. lng been carried to various cities and summer resorts for their nup- tial celebration. “The policy of the railways in conducting these low fare excurs- ions of approximately on; mm g mile or even less, for both short and long distances, has demon. strated that the public will travel by train under favorable conditions and this traffic has brought the FBUWRYB many many thousands passengers who were not likely to have travelled otherwise, the 1n. tentlon being to create the urge to greater travel on the port of the seneral public rather than to carry business men and other "regulars" on these excursions at the expense Tl-tl IA n“ M III ‘ oniylllwflisoqvgll- I .2 zixlsausiicnnguh I ilfllNARDis iLIN|MENNT l-iiritish Navy at Marital-Ready For Action vacuum Brlthh Molttcrran- msmu-wtmmsunuuum can fleet u anchor. nus blttlc- u» Italy. should the isms cow"! crdssrsanchorcdiuihis decldotowidcn no nmflm" It-Mqilln campaign. 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