n s.’ a.a 'r°'. l scour arses on‘ Inas- tll advance) delivered. heads and Ballad liaise. pa. uovnasaaa i1. mi viaaahaatsasa. an Ins-asst. r.s.|.' w 111cm, states, Japan and R-lllil have Mad for disclaims IIIMQBBGIIIIIJIISlIIGNIIOSOVBICiIBtMY (Rudyard Kipling world-renown- ed boot oi the ‘Bri cuss»... ti..." it... I .;. \. 3 ~. For. c G S _ _ and c b L D S By livery Teas A 3;".i.'".1."':.:'" "".::.':1":-.:.=.ii"‘.:'.::: i$5?‘2§.“§'...‘i'.l.i colds as wall _ss incipient ones. . Buckley's goes farther-costs less because it can diluted with “m! i I a ‘m m" m l.“ 5°11 m 1905- ‘t 5 wmcululy w‘ m; Dqkg. 9g water without impairing its marvellous power tob collglta, t " .4 tyoisboIhigtbelrinta-uresnotonlyservetoahowtheen- lntbsnoyflcoutnaovsmentand orllwul Wash 01 Ill‘ DNPltstimll». sfigsgmtupgegpgtmigiqas-tbeysbowalsomhowprocanoiua Boy position Great Britain stands. Ht local indirst-n. ‘bola days no now a restore "Ivory province in Canada. The advautusficetac campaign ebb Province is that we have an ’ t quauty oi apples which wider publicity such as a toithiskindaifordsfifltc t~ --- winter sppleoiPrince .9" _ mole are being ieatured in to- campl-ign. Over 100 Scouts ylrnl be 0n duty u. chirictmcwh, Qlnnmersidc, Alberton, OIieas-y and l ' their oblcctive being the disposal oi ,. ‘L000 luscious apples. The money received goes to the support of the local organisations. Under the Scout ‘rules and rcfllllatioru the boys are i not allowed to beg for ilnancial sup- port, but must render service ior any assistance received. 1n addition to the general sale oi I ‘lppldtfillfmlghbilt these centres, the premier apple oi the cam- paign will be auctioned oil at the Canadian National Hotel at I o'clock, the auctioneer being the Boy Scout Commissioner, Mr. Wil- liam Warren. The use oi the ver- ' andab in iront oi the hotel has been granted to the scouts ior this pur- pose by the genial manager, Mr. Mould, and it is crmected there will be keen competition ior the . honour Oiobtalnirig the prize. i! r 3- j ssa during October. 3 valued at mmaiis. with ’ 401,010.10 in October, 1m. I‘ - l! sm, LEA SILENT cozvnwurn cams Aigneat increase in Canada's for- eign trade for tbeseven months oi "_ ggtheiiscalyearwhichendedflitober 111 last. when icompored with the corresponding period of i909. is ( trown by fllures Just issued through ithe Department oi National Rev- ‘enue. The total oi exports oi dom- estic produce during the seven “months just ended was $114,100,352, ‘or $58,&2,794 greater than for the corresponding period of i088. An oven gm-ter increase was ’ d in, imports which Jumped iron: ‘DQ121631!!! for the seven month ‘Ilflilllllbd to $01,147,800 es compar- l I fed with SBOA-IGJIO in ostensi- oi last Imports which entered Can- 1004, were south oi dollars by reason oi the Jubsequent rise in bond interest ' grated. m, Iea, according to our con-| 5‘ 1. ary, "vcry quickly tore" this ‘v ~.- nnmt "in pieces"_at a recent ', _ betel Political meeting. A report -tn_, ,s oi the Liberal organ, and '1 tosaytliereisnoreierence anykindtohisstatementinthe ~ atumwhbhmightbetermed . t‘: l ., 1 mtmiy mam has comm», lly‘? . ‘ “Thine: liamoco I page oi picture Island is the McIntosh Redd n. requesting‘ shirt up’ delay for the referendum inythe Bur. pe- . that a Nsai reign oi terror DEATH AT THE‘ WHEEL “will”! "m" i“ "l" n» “cw 1gb y?» - .“.‘.‘.’°fi"..t.‘."‘t.'"é.?.“.3f":§ W scribes Nsliis must be apprehensive d; g “pigeou, Lgguynony o; m, the iormer sons of the Fatherland havoc wrought in Montreal by rec- rdrusothilgtgzgulgg malflm ent motor accidents. Thirty-live to France. or for s continuation oi dead look out from hehihd their t!“ mam Commission control- phmmp“ u’ "mind “‘ °‘ ‘h’ aithuughhsisicsithiseqiis iden- Wflble carom oi our roads in tit . Jdhn w. Whittle was betrayed the past iew months. All these fly his watch and he has been pub- " cly honored as a. hero in Sydney, ‘mum’ 1:" rm‘ m“ “m” 1"‘ New South Wales. Whittle dived ""- "l W "l" 11" mall" 11° into a pchd in university Park shd pretence to aJuHlDlBtCDOBS since the segrged a lboyirom drcfiby drag‘; full toll oi dead is over eighty. 3 the m ‘mm ti’ mud m clinxing weeds. then disappeared. In with Dani driving’ m“? m“ the rescue he lost his watch, which automobile a fearsome bore his name. Aiter being in bed engine imed uhtc destruction." grhslzvcralggegilisiémthkalxicgt: was summoned to the Town Hall and was presented a Royal Lire- saving Society certificate oi hero- ism. How do you find your Island h u. “n. m“ ‘o M mmh us," one won -ever M B“ 7 suggest that the war dead were sacrificed in vain? Can anything 1" 18 Wlwme news. as an indica- done in good faith and for a good tion oi the return m normalcy, cause be in vain? The ideal may not that the Amherst Winter Fair is to b” "whim 1-‘ ‘i “V” ‘WW4’ I” it ideal ii it is reached? We may mum‘ m 1°35‘ have hoped that it was s war to end war, but who really believed it pos- It will take nearly all the bu“ sible? We may be drifting back into clerks m the my and town's o! wmiTifr’ buthsxtdlghbnweotngitedlie ti: case me n n Charlottetown, Summerside. Alber- Great WM? It is pessimism u, hold tun, Olfiary and Montague to that they died in vain. and it is count the receipts from the Boy cruelty to those whom they leit be- sc L, _ mind to take ircm them the com- °u App“ my “u” fort oi the thought that at least from them the sacriiice won some- thing worthwhile. EDITORIAL NOTES Thc controversy over the Uberal deficit loan resolves itscli into this: ‘h ‘k HadtheLeaGovernment-befolo hmmmlumu‘ ° ' last election funded its million-snd- £‘,,;“°,,,,“,;’,';‘3,"‘,§,,";$5““‘°“' fl-quarter deilcit at the then market require weeks and even “b oi rates, there would have been no time are covered in a iew hours. oppm-gunjgy m, my alleged ma? The diificirlty reported is to get 111W or "w wt or we wcccc- Kfimfitififilsfié. 135...... ... i118 Stewart Government. 1t is the stake out claims. Increase in Can- old stcry-"0h, what g, tangled adian gold production during the web w, we," when m.“ we mu year has been marvellous and ii the tltioners t, tbs League oi Nations‘ to render an impartial vote wouldtionsshow the tise to deceive.” Only, alas, it was not the first time a Liberal govern- mmt sractised deception. 1t is the 111051. unlikely thing m. sible that Britain should send troops to reoccupy the Saar Bum, Britain has slwsy! been opposed to Mb a policy. and consented in the iirst instance against her better 104811!!!“ to conciliate France. At the iirst possible moment she evac- uated. France :15 g, pee _, g3 well as a. polit..-al irltcicet in, the sear. for under present arrange- mentsshegatsl-sercoaltbere ate. comparatively low cost. Should the Saar revert to Germany. she must buy German coal. which would be IWl-lillll-lnt. or get it from Britain, which naturally mum would ilioier. In other provinces they are at". ""117 Vltllfllt lest the Msritimes fit I-becd of them. In Quebec for instance they want the Padang C to ‘ a “container bu!” on West Indian irult because (W! the Maritimes. owing to their moxemity to the sea, can compete with the United States in making and supplying the West Indies with m9" bflfll- A881“. British Colum- ncrts. fwsetnn that that is ronder- ed which British (Jolumbia has no experience. bis protests against a. 5c rate for "but transportation w Maritime crop to mature by over a y by the unfair competi- tion by UB. railways and ppm, o1 qnmm A m flu a“ “m,” mm According to a usually well-in- ‘ Silence on this issue, however. “m” on“" °°"°W°“d°"i» U" . alamore loudly than words. Mr. "mmh "°'m° ""5159" °Y "'0 "d" he is obviously ih a hole, she the "'9 cimmi "W" i" wit’ 8mm V of our content, y toflmhn’ m’ “mm” ‘t ‘he W"! l5 _, ‘ “flvmnnmhimmt pmible for several months insa- m much as the printing oi the more’ lfi Ofllltldlilflg $0,000 ll-IIIIQS MM be completes bedore the middle of robrusry. The task is to I rm: anus mu. new territory should develop even a moderate 50 per cent. of the gold believed to be present, the yield would have an important influence upon gold prices the world over and possibly restore the flight oi the doub1e-esgle.—lJtics. Observer Dis- patch. Four pr‘ hers who escaped from the Cayuga county iaii. New York. leit behind them a note 0i thanks ior Sheriff Willard Wilcox. “You have been a very kind and genial host and we have thoroughly on- joyed our most exquisite vacation |with you," the note said. “But cer- tain recent complications have appeared in our business assets which have made necessary our hasty and unexpected departure." Russian farmers have discovered s. way to speed up the ripening oi. their cotton crcpa by a month or more. They use coal to warm the cotton plants without burning the coal. This seeming paradox is being performed at Kanskstan. Obtaining heat from coal without burning is the application oi a simple tact of physics that dark colors absorb the heat in the sun's rays better than light colors. The Karagstan farmers simply spread coal dust lightly over their fields; about one hundred pounds to an core. The darkened surface of the land is a better ab- sorber oi the heat during the day and reradiates more oi it as warmth during the night. The higher aver- BBG temperature oi’ the land during the growing season, thereiore, shortens the time nece y for the month. In any event, Cabinet resigna- tions at such a moment suggest a consciousness of eglect which can hardly help French prestige abroad. although in Yugoslavia ltseli the damage seems to have been slight and the population has evidently decided that Italy is in some way to blame for the murder oi the dictator-king. The circumstances oi - the death oi M. Bsrthou at the handsoithe sameasssssin oughtto nuke it. apps: that. whatever error oi juihement in respect to police protection at Marseilles may have been made. its consequences are as serious to France as to Yugo- slavia. But when Frenchmen begin, throwing rocks at the Gcvemment ._._-._ lscan the solicits of the Harald! - Association this table oi J " eapanditilrea oi leadlnl m the pas-war year and as - for 1N6: ., ion 1 "“‘ ""55: ‘ifii-“iifi Witfiafi ~"1'.':2"“"*% hairs: "Gsfi 111m Inc 7T1. m .000 ‘his; -, II,I0,£4,0l6$4.0l0.1U.8& +miaisthastaccrthI1asaaistesh V 'Itartbawar’toa7id‘war.'lho In new equipment and an stafl oi proof readers. ‘rhea-e are nearly 0.000.000 names and addres- "Iwbvmflvintvnc. soooooo nrral voters and 3.0130000 urban voters, with the urban voters ap- pearing alphabetically as well as 80081191110139. "l"! mil"!!! 9.000,- OM. The first inetslment of the elec- toral lists from the urban districts wlllbtlnthehandsofdobdolln ‘Ilsourpsosr, Dominion n-snsbise @esr, this week. while the lists be peribnned by the Government Principe Bureau which will require logic ceases. In French politics there are no Oflillfir-Blltilflfi! Bun. monsbyavoteoimtosaihe bill will go to the House oi Lords which may endorse, amend or re- ject it. While the bill deals with many aspects of gambling, its out- standing ieatirre is regarded as alm- ing at the traific in sweepstakes ofprisewinnersflrhsbilidoesnot pmhiitit an individual from buyins one else in Great Britain. The pro- hibition on publishlngilottery news was extended in the bill to the cir- cahticn in Great Britslnoi Irish it iuseai toprlnt. sell or dis-l" tribute lottery tickets or to pub- . my description 0i a. icmi-y ci- list‘ Wm‘- $ ml i~ ilcolt time. Lord Ouracn is roport- ed gs saying. when informed oi his successor: "Imagine sending to suc- ceed me a gentleman who only WWII! WI! Notwithstanding awloicleanlineasoithoi ethatthore isairyromeiwthstwillcureall foot and the thorough drying oi’ toes alter trashing-id the first. consideration. There are in- dividuals bathing not once a day who never think to dry the akin between the toes- . 0f the ner- spira-tion in the space between the fourth and the little toe might have some bearing on the iroqtiency with which this space was in- fected with the little vegetable organism or iungus that causes ringworm. They iomid tibat the of the skin between the toes was neutral or irearly alkaline while the perspiration oi theskinontherstofthe body (except armdin) was acid. ‘rhey believe that because the air can't get to the spaces between the toes the perspiration rs ' so long that it becomes lees acid and so the fungi or organisms got s. bd- ter chance to inc in number and cause the irritation known as ringworm oi the feet. - ‘They believe that these observa- importnnoe a! iiequen/t washing and change of socks. They rocununend the use oi talc powder col-ruining l to 2 percent Saliyclic Acid to prevent the growth oi the fungus. Among other remedies are boric acid solution, solution potassium permanganate (1-4000); 5 percent anunoniaiod _rn y ointment, 0 percent crude ccsi tar ointment. A Grim Sea Tragedy (By Fred. Williams. in the Mail and Empire) Last Saturday was the 117th an- niversary oi as grim s. tragedy as the Atlantic holds in its records. The military transport I-larpooner. on her way irom Quebec to Eng- land, was mocked on the clwfe at 5t. Shotts, in the dutirict oi Bt- Mary's, Newioundland. In an ac- count bri the Hor-poonei-‘s fate. publ ‘in the Acailian Recorder oi Halifax towards the end oi 1910. fear, pathos and heroism combined toiurnishatalemorcvividtltan fiction. A unique detail cit the wreck was the fact that mod. oi the survivors were indebted to a d0¢ tor their lives. When the Hanpooner, in com- mand oi Captain Joseph Bryant. left Quebec for England, abe car- rledailiipassengersaswellasthe ship's company. llPmflPB-ll‘! 0119 “l! Royal Veteran Battalion, com- manded by Captain Prime and Limit, Mylrca. Also 0n bond were detachments oi the Royal Artillery. Artillery Drivers 70th, 70th, 99th. 103rd and Dewattevilleo and Glengarry Fbraciblee under corn- numd 0i Captain Willock, 100M Regiment. Many oi those soldiers had fought in Upper Canada in 1812-14, and a number were still suffering from wounds. The weather was moderate as the Harpooner sailed down the 5t. Law- rence River and Gui! through deep fog. 1-‘ ‘ing at a speed ci about at 9 oclock at night. The Ea p §§§§ iii ship, iosmingasolid . to get a line to shore were fruitless. Astbe passed. many fit they had m receive me. We enteiod the house man rider. As a matter 0i iact Lord Mintds term in India was account- ed a greet success. . l Describing ih his private journal ibis arrival in India Imd Minto assembled on ‘wrote: "We were ready, the deck. but no one appeared represent the Bombay Government. x1e had expected an oiiicial recep- on. "Our surprise was great when the pilot arrived with a message that the oillcial landing had been can- icelled. “Arriving at Government House, Cumon himself did. not appear to and Ourlwn then appeared, dressed in a shooting coat and slippers. “The morning after my arrival, Cumcn took his public departure, with troops lining the stioet and a full Viceroy! escon in attendance." Lord Minto writes at a little later date: "We now have it omcially from the Bombay Government that Order's for the public arrival were cancelled with s view to meeting Curaorrs wishes." Beioie this lord Minto noted that Cur-son had held a pistol to his head over the sale of the vice- regal stables. Curron wrote Mint» giving a list oi 00 horses, six landaus and stable equipment, and enclosed his own valuation. A iew hours afterward came a cable saying that unless he accepted airport's terms at once, the latter would sell every- thing privately. "He knew I should be obliged to have iull stable equipment almost immediately oh account of the Royal visit. and thus held a pistol at my head-a matter oi’ between seven and eight thousand pounds.” ($5.000 to 840.000.) Eleven years after his return to lmgla-ud the iirst oi Cur- non became lord Privy‘ Seal, in 1015. In 1916 he entered the War Csbinet. From i919 to 18M he was Secrets y for Foreign Affairs. l-le died in i925. The Saar (Vancouver Province) The peace-dc ‘ tesman oi Eirrope-whicui means to say, de- spite all the war scares, most of the statesman oi nu would sleep better these nights itheyknew how a n date, some ten weeks hence. would eventuate. 'l'hat date is January i3. when the people oi the Saar Valley. about 830,000 in number. will vote in their plebiscite oi self-determination. They will vote to say by whom they shall be ruled- whcther they shall return to their old German Fatherland. whether they shall become a departznent oi the French Republic or whether they shall remain, as they are now and have been since the ‘rreaty oi Versailles created their status, wards oi’ the League oi Nations. The population oi the Saar is over-whelmingly German in lan- guage. tradition and popular sym- pathy, but the prospect oi a natural and peaceful plebiscite decision in iavor oi Germany is anything but to be taken for granted. Germany was forced in the Versailles ‘Ircaty to cede government of the Saar to the League as part oi the treaty ar- rangements which gave the rich coal measures oi the Saar basin to the use and ownership o1 France, in compensation for the wanton des- truction by the Germans during the war oi the French col-lieries in the occupied territories. The Iieaglle mandate in the Saar has been the very symbol oi German humiliation in the war-and the Nazis have never ceased to inflame the national feeling about it. Theilazi icelinx about it is that the plebiscite itseli is an outrage to the German nation- al pride. The extent and the bitter- ness oi this feeling is such, and the complications and pomiible conse- quences oi it are so much iearcd in Geneva, that the Council oi the League is holding a special session on November 2i to discuss the prob- lea oi a iree and uncoerced plebis- c . Because. r- ‘withst the natural German preponderance in the Saar, the victory and the record or the Nani regime in Germany has ieariully complicated the plebiscite. The Saar is naturally German, hut also hourne's “Bbrina cf Remembrance.‘ and roadsz) Bo long as memory, velour, and faith endure Iiettbsseswneawitnessthrotlglrthc yearstccome, Nowoncetherewasapaopleicllccfl secure Behind great waters girdllng s far home. Their own and ranslde bysi Ilse elsil sold everyvl B their lands’ youth de extended tours oi the country. ‘the educational value of , this journey i3 beyond computation, and these young Canadians will return . home with an intimate knoyledss Thus, suddenly. wartccrthem-scas- of the countries and movie do“ and skies under"— aho with a great collec- Jomed with the earth icr slaughter. m“ e! trophies won in competition In a breath with other oi the mom's youth- They, scoiiing at all talk oi sacriiice. m; ‘mum » Gave themselves without idle,worda ____-__-—¢——— to death. laoar svansnnnann WITH OUT A SHOT ‘rhrorlging as cities throng to watch ' a game, ' The Governor oi one of Canadas 0f their "w" hm" "W"! "mum"! , most northerly iorts of the fur-trad- with the year, |ins days. sahiuei Hearnt. when 40° BREW. 8mm!’- 1Y°m ma!’ W"! French soldiers under Admiral La. they came, . pumu“ appmlchbd decided to sur- Bo that before hali earth had heard rend" m; {on and did so without their name ' Kali earth had learned to speak oi them with fear; yoked seas- Lavisb o'er all, and set in stubbo de 0i udgment nurtured by acceptcdi pesos. Because oi certain man who strove to reach __ the red surf the crest no man might bol , And gave their name iorever to a‘ X s beach Which shall outlive Troy's tale when old; “me u IIIIIIIIMQ Because oi horsemen, gathered apart and hid Merciless riders whom Msgiddo sent forth ' When the outilsnking hour struck and bid ‘Them close and hai- the drove-roads all times. » to the north; And those who. Vi,“ men feared‘ the last march flood Of western war had risen beyond recall, stormed through the nllht "W! Amiens and made , At their glad cost, the breach that‘ periled all. you” m. .. r s- appointment. ‘flu db cbilisinslm all tian thsnit 31".}; it. c‘; .1533. u hucsffimluue ~~ szxn-iiiitiziitrriztiztzai: i *- i to HM“ M mm‘ u W“ W riusnS LARGEST 5mm s to tell TODAY. For M4 Acts Ilka a Ilasla. A Single lip Proves It UCKLEY NHXTURE ‘S COUCH AND CULU REMEDY tiring a shot. The daughter oi a previous governor hid in the bushes as the enemy approached and tha Indian chic! oi that district, away on s bunting expedition. committed lsuicide on his return to Fort Prince of Wales, according to an article by A. Philip Norton in the current issue oi the Canadian National Railways Magazine. l HELL CATCH UP Neighbor-Whore is brother. Fkeddil?" lircddie-“Heh in the house play- you. a duet. I finished iirst-“—-_ Arcanum Bulletin. An air liner its own chef. A mar oi high reputation. What ls Your Problem ? m". mm; wh d i inlorrnatibn or advice on m. proyblsrens and regllyesshbenld have a revision of their u, mug present day needs, have put oil f arin t-b t oi an interview and adlustnsent. $3211.11’, iendelr evzrynpcssible information and asalsllllac. (n; e: east, through our Service Department. Those who have drummed Insurance during the depresion, as I vrli into iedlnnewlnsarnnceorare- mmfim. Q's-fie of ‘ca-rein! and courteous attention at Thu sq-viee is available not only to our thousands s! present bu‘ h .. s .. as well. v.1 with td Ia dletnsadviacyonrc- gun“ influx: all trusses oyi “insurance-Mali”. U". Fire, Automobile, and C16!!!" - Write or phone 10f l“ Then they returned to their desired inn d__ The kindly cities and plains where they were bred- Baving revealed their nation in earth's sight So long as sacrifice and honor stand Ahdthelrownsunatthe“ “‘ hour shall l!!!“ The shrine oi these their dead. Young Canada Steps ' Out (Toronto Glob) rccorrb for schoolboy atlaletics, and, sCakaryyouthaddedsevenieettn the shot-put mark-which is likely to stand for some time. Whether from Eastern ‘or West- ern Canada, member; oi this team oi schoolboys rose to each occasion witnequai slclltmviewofthelong journey to the land oi the South- ern Cross, with tin inevitable effect physics condition. Atlltfclockfllat onshoresawthe‘ unavaiiing. Ideut. one oi the aided tlsialtyb ssrvioc. hogan Ila IIYNIIMAN 8. 00., immzn ESTABLISHED 1812 Lower Queen street chidwf w“ Buy the Best TEA Brahmin Orange Pekoe ' ‘Ceylon Small Leaf Thegithariottatown Pelt Receiving Station for the Marketing Department 0f the ilanadian National Silver Fox Breeders’ , Association will be h. charge of Major A. s. ROBERTSON and 'W. F. BURKE in the Massey-Harris Building, Kent Street, Charlottetown. It wvillremain in operation throughout the fur season. ' \/ s’ Sou ‘s