». ,-'-~a i~~ . .- ,. exhnu . from! My nothio me llll‘ I ‘Fruit- _ remar’ I br -' nndxh l CSZOTCI hands . Stihat ." Iwiip- ' 'i‘o'u _ (‘niisti . grout ‘Fruit 1~rv\-¢.~_-.~sw=s-w-~ = ~ E. R ' PAGE EIGHT . ‘F 53f. Everything You Need Choose from our big stock and you’ll surely be able t_o get just what you \vant—and at the price you wish to pay for it. You’ii be Proud oi Your Home if it is furnished with Beer Weeks furniture. We don’t sell shoddy goods-ewe believe in giving value. A .Word as to Prices BUY NOW-and you will buy cheaper than in six months time. Prices are steadily advancing. BUY N_OW while we are still able to offer you goods bought at old prices. Glad t0 Show You We are always glad to show you-whether you wish to buy or merely to look. You will get the same courteous attention in either case. i Come in and See us ior Bedroom furniture Carpets Dining room furniture Oilcloths Living room furniture Linoleums _, Parlor furniture Window shades v x ‘.-. Hall furniture CHPLQIYIS Kitchen furniture Bféddlng Den furniture Llnens etc., etc em. etc- HOUSEFURNISHINGS is our .specialty—we can please You- YOU ii \\'l~‘ is GOOD .‘\ (‘union r0 Wis THAT $1050.00 (univ- ROLET AUTODIOBILP] as ANYONE ELSE. All you have to do is to save your cash sales-slips. Each dollars worth bought at Beer & Weeks entitles you to one guess. ASK US ABOUT LT! Wonderful Value A kitchen cabinet such as this is a won- derful convenience in the home. you SHOULD HAVE ‘om: while we are selling them at this special low price because it will be absolutely impos- sible for us to offer them again at anything less than . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . .$-r0-00 FREIGHT PAID TO YOUR NEAREST STXYPION Money back if not entirely satisfactory. construction-tone-up-to-date features—-and design. Plays all records-l-no attachments necessary. $77-00 up. i The “BRUNSWICK” phon ograph leads them all in quality Compare-mm] you will buy a “BRUNS\VICK-” This $39.60 Kitchen Cabinet is a 00000000000woooooooouooaoeea” .. ber boots, Redman brand. Price - following days of each week at . -Bord'en. “090000000000306006000600000000004 000.. ranonaammnrown GUARlJLIAITL —I‘l' PAVE to buy 1n this Prov- ince. _ -—IVI‘EN'8 RUBBER BOOTS. Red- nian brand. thigh length. Price $5.- 90. iSinclalr and; Stewart Ltd. TITE-B-BI-MEZI -—RE-DUG"ED PRICES on odd lines in Empire and Mohegan Pho- nographs to clear. See them. Sin- clair and Stewart .Ltd. 7175-2~21~ME2i —MEN'8 KNiEE LENGTH rub- $4. a pair. Sinclair and Stewart. Ltd. ' 7175-2-21-ME2i —NOTICE TO FARMERSF-WQ are prepared to buy any quantity of live and dressed hogs, paying the highest market prices, on the the following stations. Albany on Thursdays and Emerald on Fri- days. Joseph Hughes Ig our repre- sentative at Emerald. Green Bros, 7152-2-20-ME4ipd --SERIOU$LY ILL-Friends in Moncton will regret to learn of the serious‘ illness of Mr. Lester lilie- Callum of North St. Eleanor, P, E. 1. The young man has been em- ployed in Moncton as a barber with Mr. G. E. Foster Keith, and has niademany friends since com- ing to Moncton. He contracted influenza some days ago and on Monday his case developed into pneumonia. Mr. McCallum was this morning removed from. ills home on Wesley Street to the city hospital, where he now lies criti- cally ill. His family has been com. inunlcated with, says the -Moncton Transcript. Shipping News ALL BUT 25 WERE LOST The Minister of one Colonies has issued u note in which he stated lliut the French steamer Ville D'- Algcrc, which left Retinion islund in the Indian Ocean, off the Madag- nsciir, February), wih 91 pungen- gers and fifty members oi‘ Iier crew lrnd been lost and that it is believ- ed that with the exception of 33 persons, all on board perished. The disaster was due to n ilro WllllCil broke out on board the ves- se . . 0n February 1, the steamer. which was loaded with rum and sugar sent out wireless appeals when about 130 miles oiT Reunion island. The Ville Du Havre, which was in port at Tamstave. put to sea on the following day and found the Ville lilAlgere still burning bu! 90111919181)’ abwdowzl and drifting northward. Tile steamer Parnasggg left Tamatnve February 3 and made g»..;§..».¢-'. ,TIIE WESTERN GUARDIANL work of pumping this out was com. w-MOMEWS BRIGHT FINISH. first quality ruibber boots, rwarni fleece lined. $2.90 per pair. Sin- clair and IStewart Ltd. 'Ill.7‘5~2-211ME2i —-LET YOUR PHONOGRAPH be a Brunswick. frlien you are sure of the ‘best. Prices $77.00 to $395.- 00. For sale by iSincIalr and Ste- wart Limited. 7175-2-21-‘ME2i Meal-e a stir... this. ll9-l2l Queen Street Charlottetown —VLCTOR RECORDS are good records. Hear them played on‘ the Brunswick. Price 90 cents and up. Sinclair an‘; Stewart Ltd.‘ 7176-2-21~M'E2i The Situation in South Russia t is Uncertain CONSTANTILNOPLE, Feb. 18.- The situation in southern Russia is so uncertain that the allied offici- als care ifeaiiiui of a general Bolsh- evikl triumph, more, however, from internal "dissenslon than from the entrance of reg forces from the outside. General Schilling is now at ISebastopol, the great Russian seaport in the ‘Crimea, command- ing the volunteer forces which hold the Crimean Isthmus. The sur- rounding lagoons are frozen hard, however, and it is feared the Bol- sheviki may approach on the ice. Sebastopol harbor is clu-tted with useless shipping. Ten thousand persons of the city are registered 11S Wflfllills to set wivay, while elev- en thousand iiiore are on the ships from Odessa, without adequate food or medicine. Typhus is raging among the refugees. The British battleship Marlbor- ough and French, Greek and Amer- ican destroyers are at Sebastopoi but it is impossible .19 evacuate the population, as the commanders of the warships apparently lack authority for such action from their governments. Also, there rim m) ports available where such u large number of refugees can ibe rc- ceived. An zigreeinent has been reached between General Denikine and the ulssjack Supreme council. The ’I‘er- “k (“msackii "P9 Elvin: their Iwhole iwarwd Hllllnort, but, Ethc Don and Knhziun (Yossacks, are making resei ‘ivllidicrililawgalrren Lthe nnti-Bol uution doubtful. 1e “mum “i. This Splen Yours ior a Successful Guess Every dollar spent at this store from now until May 8th gives you a guess at the number of kernels of barley _ placed in the'15-ounce jar. _ _ Every dollar paid on a bill at our office entitles you to a guess for the automobile. Ten dollars-means ten guesses<—One hundred dollars, one hundred guesses.‘ Save your sales slips-—keep them together_-you can guess as often as you have sales slips amounting to one ramumm Z flqfelleok. will undergo Tejflirg, hilltzfllfiy HTLBTIIOOI] l1. SIIPVGY WZIS i? on board and it was found that there was 18 feet of water in the forepeak. Immediately the .. Remnant Sale proceed. Her verso of wheat is un damaged, The Aghlos Geraslmos. which is n search of the scene of the disas- ter but found no survivors.The sea at the time was extremely rough and the searching steamers gave up their task and returned to port. where later a whale boat with the 33 survivors arrived.- The gover- nor of the Reunion Island says the wreck of the Ville D’Alger is a menace to navigation. The steamer registered 4,857 tons, ——-—-—<0&i-- METAGAMA net/wan sv sronm h The C. P. 0. S. liner Metngamn due to sail from St. John to Liver- gool with some 456' cabin and l2 stecruge passengers will he held until further notice as trains from the ‘Nest with passengers are delaiyed by the storm. Among those to arrive on the delayed Montreal train are the Duchess of Devon- shire, her daughter and party and Sir Richard Lake. -——-—-¢-o&-__- U. S. SHIPS AT BARBADOES Admiral Wilson in command of the UnitedJStates Atlantic fleet. which has been in Bridgetown for some time, gave a reception on Sunday in honor of the people of Barbadoes. Later four of the Uni- ted States ships left for Colon. A moat marked friendly feeling was manifested between the American sailors and the British people of this Island during the visit of the United State“ ships. STEAMER DAMAGED iN ICE ARRIVES IN HALIFAX The Greek steamer Aghios Ger- Continues all day Saturday _ Saturday morning at nine o’clock—-another record breaking sale of remnants will be ready for you. 1 YOU- know what a remnant sale at this store means! _ . , There willbe remnants, odd lengths, _odd lines of every sort, during this sale. Some of the things you may look for will be ‘ Remnants of Dress Goods ' Remnants of Silks _ Remnants of Embroideries Remnants of Laces v , - Remnants of Flannelettes Remnants of Beach. Cloths Remnants of Galateas _ Remnants of all sorts—Come early Sattirday morning ’ ' here that ou wan . illllilehlleliill/IIEEEEERESQREIE YOUR. SALES SLIPS-YOUR under command of Captain Costaro pulos, is bound from Portland, Me. to Greece, and was to call at Louis. burg for bunkers, While going through the ice to reach that port, she suffered damage. and thus headed for Halifax, Furness, wit. hy and Company are her agents. mo»? SHIP RELEASED AFTER EIGHT WEEKS IN ICE A Newfoundland exchange says: —-0wing to a railroad tie-up due to the severity of snow storms, in land settlements are facedl with a serious shortage of foodstuffs and feed for cattle and horses. Lumbering camps are hard hit L-y the loss of work due to the scarcity of food and other essen- tial supplies. The railway tie-up is partly due to the severity of the weather, but in a great measure to inefficient motive power and snow fighting apparatus, such as rotary plows. The Government cannot remedy i matters very much and the Rail- YWIIIIIII\\\\\\\\§ QXWZIIZ tll.“5.?;"£&l§.i:.“".".l.:2§‘:£2535; 1' GUESS MAY GET YOU A NICE CAR FOR THIS ed period of mild weather sets in. . The steamer Prospero, after be~ ‘_ Ing for eight weeks jammed in the " Ice. For the past three weeks the sengers, and 15 crew on board, _ reached Twillingate Tuesday night. , The vessel was in danger of being '- forced on the rocks last week, l but westerly winds loosened the ._ ice. For the past three weeks the passengers and crew have been SUMMERS DRIVING . . . - I - - WIZ IZI short of rations. and supplies had to ‘be taken to the shrlp by lands- Q men over the Ice on sleds. {ti- asimos, which arrived in Halifax Tuesday morning leaking in her will be willing to pay. of our work. ‘mkakn-AAAAAAAA ENE EEEEEEEE EEE 3E -. READTDRESS TALK N0. 40 < People judge you more by the clothes you wear than by > what you are. therefore, it behooves you to see that your clothes ‘ are always clean and carefully pressed. ' t’ We dry clean and press men's and women's wearing appar- el ln a manner thtit permits of no criticism at prices that you Phone u; or drop us a card the next time you have any- thing to be cleaned and acquaint yourself with the superiority x ' The Webster Dry Cleaning Co, Ltd. 6E0. L. PROWSE, Agent ior ilhariottotown . ' Phone 757 , _ , , iq-Qnooodnoooownuwtivuwwwbonnvowweow . Mlnartfl Llnlmant cures dlphthe it- Reninant Sale of Men’s Hats $1.00 ' l ' ’ STORE th re’s an interesting rem- Bgiiinsiiietiiitiiirliiiig ioday. Comeein and look it over. You will find some very tempting bargains ready f0!‘ YOU- REMNANT SALE MEN'S OVERALLS . .$l.§0 Heavy denim overalls, in plain blue, plain grey and blue stripe, bib and braces attached, good _and roomy- Here’s a lot of soft hats 1 I . some of them Stetson make, E either black or fawn, worth Regular. $2.25 up c 3.50 REMNANT SALE ....s1.00 REMNANT SALE ...s1.5o ~ 1 1 REMNANT SALE or » ‘ REMNANT SALE OF MEN,S SOFT HATS at $239 Soft hats of all sorts, in grey, black and brown, they are not new shapes,‘ but they are great value at our REMNANT [SALE PRICE ..........$2.oo_'_J ' Boys’ and girls’ knitted woollen caps ‘in white, grey and khaki, regular values to $1.50 each, for REMNANT SALE .....29c 1