- M’ THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Rim/a III: beau!!! l/llt: $ minute: today u the Duofold ronntor 1nd your Chnnnu: lhupptllfl is u: A . _: _ _. ’ om to be gauged by 117/1911 Frielttfs Discuss [$71.11 You Sent Christmas Ilxo lIlacL-tippcd Iactyut-r-red Iluofolti with Rich {Gold Girdle and 25-Yuur Point -_~ 14a!- _|a t. t_l_ s 5,1 l .1 I10! "H3- » ‘A/LAR‘ letting stump - 1... 11.1 - S Parka- LJLJUrOLD-Lu h) Curve. ‘ Lady I)unfo|d ss '.\.u111-1.,;f..r clnrvlnlnv THE 1111111111111 Ellllllllll Cheater B. llcburo; Ylre-Prrulllnlll. J. ll. dot-rotary, Lleut. Col. l). A. hlnrlillmon, ll. n‘. 0. l-Itlltur and Muller, J. B. Burnett. Anson-lute Editor, l). K. Currln. New York lhplolonlatlve-l-‘ntlh It. hurthrup Chicago Beprnoulutlv " J. Pmver ' Prnldent, W. Hurnoltl .MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1924 h- ENCOURAGING LITERATURE iwhicb cost him his seat in parlia- ltneut for scvcrnl years. Nemisls In recent. years much tangible on I w,“ be Term“ ‘mless l, overtakes 0011111881119111- 11115 119911 81W“ 1° 111‘j.1ud punishes thc Patriot's brazen grature in the way of prizes in Ca-Shhrunsgrggsiolp for ossays. poems and other efforts, along this line. Also muy publishw The Ladies Aid of the Y. M. C. prices for‘ A. know the secret of making five mt-riturious fiction. special nrticlesi 1111111 10-1115 111111 111Wc 1151105 59"" m, SuIJ-itlcls of genera} interest [In llkt} Inultittido in an energency. fortuuutoly Canada has done little‘ 1" 3 ~1‘11111 ‘Snmfnl 5 an?“ g1 "it > z ' 1 ~-’ lILIIliS rospoct and vcry tnuuh of,1 1111' 11111 1111 ‘11111119 111 h ‘g . . . . ~ . I. l‘ r our literary product finds “S ‘vdytitlllllttl up Ilut thc at 1c» at [he larger nmguzines and thejetitittgh and to spare though thcy lIltlI\sl‘1\"S had to feed off the frug- ors are off ring good to tnore liberal publishing houscs in? l . (lroaf Britain and the Uultt-tl;.111“111“' isuftos. This doubtless IICCOIIIIIS for: one "um "HUNG M the wondpp 11h" m“ {M1 Unnpd sum-S an“Bri_1flli m1~u tho (‘hzu-lottotuivn Conserv- fs-h nmguzincs dominatte the (‘unit ‘Hivog mus! m "m, hm‘. surprisingly thc caisily" diam rt-zttling tnztrkct and ntottopo- lsitntilc and tinsophisticatotl ‘lizo the (‘unadiltti vending public. ‘ _ to be so ‘lfimo lvns whon Int-n wrote tot , rouniryniz-n uro l . . . fln- utiqttt-nchal1lo lovo ot writing; _ , ‘ptllptiso wholl It ctilncs t0 sulccltllg 'l‘l1:tt dot-trim- lllttlfilllllfllvtl 11nd turned from thcii" 1~.\"1"itt- us" tln- Apostle Paul girt-nchctl t-unttitlntt-s. ’s. i1‘ wv aro to windt-r compulsion of his message.‘- us ho himself explained it ‘Woe is unto mo if I prczu-lt not this K115" pol.‘ and bclicvo lllt: .ho Patriot twontiotlt contury. preachc d by in this cnlightotiotl The real pools and cssayists 11151011111151‘ ‘Some good pooplo in tho I-{OIIOTO- htttntirists and wrutc us tho birds sitig, us tbc W111" 11y of their ht-urts think thc Guar- \‘l'= 11°“. 115 1119 111W “'111511e5—bc‘11lizl11 has tl\‘(‘l'I(1()kt‘tI tho chiltlrctrof Qlfl|<u thoy could not lttelp it. .\lnny tlro Ilwhanugis in Its optical for a put-t. many 1t world fauna-d writcrl m, m. {mm plueflock (yf ulinst s. of 6t} years continuously since his Notes By The Way Senator George Gerald King of Chlpmnn. N. B.. celebrated his clghq-cighth birthday on Thurs- tluy last in health and vigor. He en- joys many dfstinctlons. Hls public career has a number of notable features. He was elected to the House of Commons in 1878, sat. there utmost continuously tlll 1896 when he was appointed to the Sen- ate. Ile was the first Senator ap- pointed by the Luurier Government. He has two sons holding legislature seats, one of whom, Hon. Dr. J. H. King, is Minister of Public Works ‘In the Federal. Government. and the other. George H. King, ls M. L. A. for Queen's County in the Legisla- tive Assembly of New Brunswick. Senator King is still in active busi- ness life as the head 0f a large mcrcuntilo untl lumbering firm. llo is also the sole survivor of the baud of Liberal members who in 1870 voted against the National Policy on its introduction by Sir John Mucdonaltl. Hon. John Yeo, Senator. who is icgitttably reported to be in fail- ing health. is slightly younger than Stitutot" King but has been in public life for a longer porind. He sat in tho Logislutivt- Assctnbly of h.s province front 185$ to 1891. whon lic “'11s olcototl to the House 1f Fonnnons, whorl» ho hold his soar until his appointment ‘to thc Sonatt in 180R. Ilc has thus sat in the llogislativt- Assembly of this novint-o for 37f ycurs- in tho llottst- 1f (‘timmons sovcn yours and in tho Stiuult- for 26 yours, in all a total first oloctlnn. lIo has bcon fttvor- -d wth longth of days, a goodly mtusttro of wonlth and the confid- lfornt or by whom is tho problem, [l1 is worth noting in this, connoc-l llltlll thut tilt; Vnivorsity of .\licl1l-, {can last your lII\'il(‘(I Dr. Ilobortl tho Iinglislt pot-t luuroatoq '11 sojourn for :1 your at Ann Arborfi llr. Ilritlgos llccoplt-tl the invitattioul illrlllflbr‘. i‘ SANTA (LAUS ‘Headquarters I5 again located at CARTEIVS big BOOK and TOY STORES where the largest and best selected stock of we oomowvoooo-rovooooooooomoooooovovoooooovoooa0000011v: i¢¢4'4°'*“""7"' Books and Christmas Sta- tionery. Seals, Tags, Gold and Silver Tinsel, Colored Twines, Christmas Greeting Cards- Christmas Post Cards. Holly Gift Boxes is on display. Books For Xmas by popular Authors. Hund- reds to select from. The Poets 1n different‘ bindings, Blbleb. Prayer Books, (Catholic and Protestant) Church Hymn Books, Gi-ft Books, Toy Bcokls. Children's Picture Books, Llnen and Painting Books, Boys and Glrlo, Own Annuals, 1 Chatterbox, Chums, Young Canada, Waterman Fountain Pena ctc., etc. Toy and Doll Department (uP-ermns) Wellz-Comc In and coo tho endless array you no lure to get what you want at 1 the price you want to pay. 25c Tables Boys Ind Girl: Sled: and slflllltl- A splendid now stock just received time; from the Factory. Snow Shovels. (Wood and 51%|). Rocking Horacio. Doll; Cart-lag", Klddig Car-to, etc. i CARTER & CO., LIMITED. , Headquortoro for Ohrlotmln ‘m 1hr mrtnagod to koop almost cntlrcly i é s i 1 1n0dosty,1 l lbut- with t-ltaructt-ristic ‘out of tho limelight during his term £1 1 ovor, for the university has now .>I' sitluncc. lIis proscnco scents I11 ltnvo had a pleasing offocl. 110W" lot-toil a poet laureate of Its own. l1 bus crtiototl a llfc fellowship for fobcrt Frost. who is probably the host known, though not the most aggressive and pusbittg writer of vorso in the United States; Mr. Frost is not expected to Ion- turn, to teach or to rcad essays. Ho issimply to remain In residence .1: Ann Arbor and to write poetry. 'l‘h1.> Nation. commenting on this un- usual way of treating a'pnct. ex- prosscs the fear that the university may. in spite of ltellf. bocome a taskmistrcss, its kindly intcntions will go for noth- ing. “Ann Artwork; lsusincss hence- forth.” it says. ‘is to let Mr. Frost ztlonc-to dine him very seldom. give him no work to do, make no complaint when ho is not. produc- tive. and above all, in which case refrain from uttggcstlons as lo tho kind of poetry he ls to write." This is about tbc way the British pcoplc have learn- ed to treat Dr. Bridges. .\ (AA-i..- EDITORIAL NOTES Mr. L. E. Prowse, comptttiictl hls son Wlll to the Father and Son Banquet, while Councillor T. W. L. Prowse accom- panied his boy Lem. J1‘. ox-M. P. nc- lf Captain Welsh was a former surcly then so ls Mr. Donald Mac- Klnnon- for he farms nt North River all the your 1-ound—not sum- mer only as the Captain did at Kep- poch. So the United States ls going to follow Mr. Gardiner’: ndvlce. The Senate has approved the Naval Construction Dill, which author- izes a programme expected lo C081 8110000000. The City Patriot's Instill to the farmers lc on a par with that of .2219! 11.1115 1° !119.111¢1‘1.“"'1°" tknitpluim almut ‘the the me 9n- motmm cm-twrlglrvsaltvr paid to clvll spies and be- quontlnnn of lntorcnt. The Charlottetown Guardian doe! The Public Forum | This column In uwll Y" "I. I Q|Q¢|||IIQ|| by correspondent: of l § not nocunully endorse lho op- I n on! of nrreo o don! . *1‘ t u: p n n. V £01m - S- y w_ Baum. M.D. PRINCIPAUS FRASEWS BELIEF S1r,—Prluc2pnl D. J: Fraser. Pre- side‘ t of the Prcsbyterlun Church Association. hus declared that ho is neither a "Modernist" nor a “Fundamentalist? He compljilns bitterly of being classified as a "Modernist," and says that 111068 who thus classify him tire "guilty 0f an unjust and unbrotherly act." What kind of an uct does Dr. Fraser regard thdt 0f the authors utbthe notorious “Kew Beach Pam- phlet." issut-J undor the name of tho Preobytoriati fihurt-h Associa- tion, of which he is President‘! That pamphlet contained a most scurril- ous attack upon his Methodist brethrtut- It declared that the lllcthotllst Church was “apostate" and applied other unjust and un- brothurly opitltets to the doctrinal views of blozhodists. This pamphlet wns circulated with the full know- ledge of the leaders 0t‘ antl-ttnlott- fsm and for verification of its churgos rtntlers were referred to the unti-ttnionisitt and for verifica- tion of iI-s chargtes rootlets worc re- tcrrt-J to lho tltiti-ttnloitist head- quarters, St. Antlre\\"s Church. King Stroot. "Toronto. B]; jnmu THE QUIET ‘LIVER I sometimes thitnk that If the llvercould talk as loudly as the stomach when things go wrong, that it would be worth a lot to suffering humanity. If the throat or 110cc gets lrrltut- cd you hear from it, and llkowlso from the stonmclt, intestine, and other parts ' Bu: this live\of yours, the tart; cst organ In your body. the tuosl llllllOllfilfll organ from tho building up or tearing down tiroccsses cl’ the Iiody, keeps strangely silent ivht-il things go ivrong". Wbcn you remunbcr that at leust one quarter of the blood can llrlllflil)‘ be found ltt the livcr at any time, you can girasp some idea of its importaticc. 0t‘ course ivhen you think of nll zhe work it had to do in IHJIIIIIRC- luring bilo, ntunufttcttiriug sugar, Simmu. um“. . have bee“ made and likcwlso storing sugar for any I1y nnti-tittiottist speakers and lctt- 11111119 119911. 111911 Y0" @1111 1411119 1r WIHIVI"; upon lottdin-g Prusbytg! Wily it Itccds so much blood, ;an Iniuistors, 11nd no word of ad 13111 1111:‘ V0121’ Bflitciclltgi’, to our monitiou or correction came front thr trhio." 11111111-11; of uuti-tittionisin. It is significant 111.1: his present pvtbcnt is puhlisltt-d in solf-tlefcttuc. utoroqv. Dr- Fruser spooks of the "prcsettl 111-1 ntmititis debnto" and "th.s dislr 11g controversy." Tho ncflmouy Wits injtet-tctl into thudo- hallo by those who started it.~by his own fnlltnvt-rs who publisht-J poor huuntn minds. socms to have its dangers. One IIIVOISIIEHIOI‘ of tho liver llils Ilcntonstrutotl that four fifths oI_ the- liver could bo IOIIIOYdII. bclorc thcrc ivoultl be an) disturb- ztttcc nutotl by tht- body. And thou whnt shows‘) Oftcu only u little _ lowislt dila- rolotnlion of the skin. the - l trdt-iwnt-z pnmpltlt-t against N1“ “111111 1‘ 1111' 111‘11115111'1 the Slathznlist (fhttrch. "Tho dis- 11111111 11 1a‘ l10>1>1111t- 1111' your liver nwssh,“ Q,,,,n.,,,.,,r§y-- was stqrmdgt) be st)lllt.'\\'ilill sluggish, your bIlo ___._ii_-__--_-_— '11 llttlo too tliivlt, you are outing too (Continued 0_n Page 6) utuch fut and Jtlfllll‘, and yt-t urc H enry Franklin 's Son had a real start When Henry Franklin's boy Charlie en- tered the University. friends. of the family wondered "how lhfly did 11- . Four years later, when Charlie Franklin hung out his "shingle" and was given a generous start by his dad. those same friends 1 were amazed- In truth. the FrankIins could never have done these things for the boy if it had not been for the $5,000 North American Life Child's Endowment Policy which Henry Franklin took out when Charlie was a wee kiddie. , To-day, Henry Franklin congratulates himself. v The moderate premium payments were always easy to meet; and he was always se- curcin the knowledge that, even iflte died, the North American Life Assurance Com- pany would itself assume the payments and guarantee his boy the full $5,000 at the maturity- of the policy. These and other advantages of the North American Life "Child Endowment Policy will appeal to you too. The attached coupon will bring Y0“ 0111 booklet “Child's Endowment" which will give you full information- I would like lo read " "Child's Endowment Policy" Na me ...................... ..... ............................ .. Address Age . NORTH AMERICAN LIFE has lcarnctl to oxpcct a session of ,four o1: flvn months and is not lik- llarvvlt PX" l-ly to be surprisod wit h at short oncl t-ursionists is that as 11 rule tbt-y do in ' hllVu n bigger tmtrgln of profit. . -. Ifuur months 11.11.11.111» first, nut romllin long enough in one platct- .11‘ Ft-bruury would lakc to Lin: end1 of .\l:1_v- null fivc to the k-nd of Juno. to muko good for thcntsolvos or tho furtnor. 'I‘ltt-y kcop moving 011 A feature of the King's Speech at in. Ilponlng 11f the lfrltish Parlia- ment was that foroshutlowing tllv i'ostorat'oli of the preference pro- posals rojot-tctl by the Labor Parlia- un-nt loss- than it ycar ago. The at-htnn- will givo rt frco tuarkot to iht- ovt-rseu Dominlons for u num- bor of their products including raw ipplos, ltonoy, dricd fruits ttrpplos. pours and peaches) canned salmon conned lobster and cray fish, with duties upon like products trout foreign cuttntrics. Apparently tho tireforcncc on Canadian motor cars which was abolished three _0r four months ago ‘is not to be restored. .\'o intimation is made that the Domiulons will be expeclotl to re- ciprocate by Increasing their prefor- t-noo to the Mother Country, but any diminution of existing favor would 1111111111 stirprisc. front place to place with tho consc- tptontrt: that at tho cnd of the sea- =on thoy havc practically nothing to tnko thcm home. Brilliant critics do not. Oflvll muko sticccssfttl leaders and ad- ministrators. Frontier Mackcnzio was Onc of the most able, vcrsatllo and catmtlc critics that ever led a pnrty in Canada, bttt. as Premier hc provt-d a disappointing Iullurc. A politician must have the quality of a gentleman I19 well as a critic to be able tn lend successfully; he must know everybody whether he docs so or not,hc must outstretch the glad hand before it, ls sought, ho must c-vcu be on tho outlook to oncourage and bring tn'the front desorving back bonchcrs 0r humble folloivotzs and tn putnew hopc into the hearts of those who have appar- ently fallctl. Such was Sir John A. Illacdtinziltl ‘the beloved. such was Sir Wilfrid Lattrier the most courtcotis and diplomatic of states- men. In Toronto some Presbyterian churches arc inking prorautlons as strict as those ln parliamentary olcctlons for thcir voting on Church 11111011. ’I‘o this end thcrc ls n call for rogttlutlon ballot boxes. and The lllobe tells tha-t one Presbyterian older was seen walking away front the Clty IIull with such a box un- der his arm. And rcqoosts have been received bytthe Clty Clerk from several chitrchrs for (Ito loan of ballot boxes. Ilcre another diffi- tzulty has arisen, for tho hoxt-s wlll be witnlcd (‘or the civic elections wlfhlu 11 few days and lf loaned might not be returned in time. It ls to bc hoped that as once happen ed ln apostolic days, the Town C1911‘ may be able “to appease the people." Olherwlse there may be 11111111191" §9111Kc of letters to the newspapers from parsons, elders and laymen on the new and vim] 10bit: of ballot. boxes. C. M. Lampoon & Co. 64 Queen Street, 1 London, E.C. 4,, England “Blood moncy“—the money ob- 111111011 11.11 securlnl! the conviction .1f murderers or other malefactors was formerly looked upon as doub- ly cursed, cursed by the catisc of Its being offered and cursed by the betrayal of the accused. These old time sentiments [have lost their hold upon American clvlllans who not. only hurry on the truck of an itccused but glory in the "blood- money" their detective cuteness brings them. We are ,' " to see that Attorney-General Nickle frowns upon paying civilians for ae- curlng convictions. I-Ie announces that under the 0. T. A. any clvlllun who accepts remuneration ‘for ob- taining u conviction ls llnble to a flno of $500, or six months In jail; and any police officer or official paying for such clvlllan services In liable to almllar sentence. A free people must have their free- dom protected, and British Justice demands that no man's liberty shall be endangered for thirty piece of i Public Auction Sales of Raw Furs Represented by Alfred Fraser, 212 Fifth Avenue New York f ’ lflfl-ll-llh '1, - ~ i 1.111 you either. Loss 0f weight. :t"1d a yIt-llowlub color, would cull for oxuntliintiuu by your fnnilly doctor, (‘hnrlutlt-lowtt, P. E. I- litnr Sitzwl luul Illnntir-tl to atct-oinpzttty Sir lltatry 'l‘lt0rnton v inspot-tititi trip through tho M111 into l’ro\‘in<:os during Novom- l1 r. and hupotl .11 that titno to hnvc hnd un t1p|1ort|1ui1y of halving n fow Iuinuto cmtvoretntiott with you ro- uzttdim: n lt-ttor which you wrote to i111- (‘lI:ivl<1Lt--t1I\\'tt “(lttztrtll.tn" in -cocoooooovoooooaooo~voo t Daily Selections _ i i gscptt-mbt-r last on tho subjoot 11f FOR ‘" ltln- nt-t-itlvnt ut Wost Dt-von. ' l l For your inforntntioti I may stills flint tho train t-row affirm utider § I 111th that tltt-y ltuvt: novor ltcartl‘ “"“""'*”*‘"""‘ any ruilroutl mun on Prince Edward1 Island stntt- that “it wus- us much us t; man's lit‘: “'11s worth to take :1_ Iruin out," " With regard to tho DECEMBER 15, 1924 1 NEED OF DAILY I‘IIA\'II-III1~—» Koop back thy soiirunt also lron11 prolstttnptttotts sins; let tltcln not have dominion over mo; thou shull1 I be upright, and I shall l1o1nnoo-‘ slntomcnt (Continued 0_n Page 6) -——i<-o>——i- out frotn lho gronltzst Lransgrosoi 1 lon_ Pt-lflilll 19:13. PIIAYER:—LortI, help us to l1r=ly without ceasing. A GREAT POEM DECEMBER 15.—You and retiring, lovable, and accomp- lisb a great deal ivlthottt tnnklin; a are quiet The years slip by bttt the memory of the ivontlcrtul splrlt which oct- uutod those who gave their lives will (‘IIIIIIIIIIP to linger when ntuch olst- ls forgotten. Cunon Scott has wrltlcn recently 1t poem which we vonturo tho opinion will live its one 01' the best ntetnorlals that ltus yet been created for dead comrades. noise about it. You are bright, fond of itmusentent ll‘ it docs not interfere with anything lmportitnt, and extremely fond of travel. You lmtrn readily, have u good ntetnory, tuul are often nblc to give Inform- ation to others. Love will never 11111116 Yflll- The poem, which is entitled “The Your birth-atone is the uurquolso. Warrlgrg," fpflds 5's gopowsm. W1110l1 111011115 11108119110‘. . 0n Vlmy-Rldge a-nd Pasecheudaclc 110111‘ flower 1S 1101151 Our silent armics slecp. 110111‘ 1119115’ 001012 15 1111111. 'l‘lirottgh Summer's sun and Wlu- IS THERE A SANTA GLAUS? T112 Qunsrtotv Dear Mr, Edif0r,—— Is than‘ a Snnla Claus 0r 1.1" it only Daddy mud 111111113: nmking lrvlictu’? I rwmf l0 know Ttmsc my brother: my flu‘ follows 1'11 lltrir grrulos lcII 1110111 than‘ is no Santa, 11ml lltal Fathers and Iluthcrs 111111 friivuls fill our stockings when we go to sleep. Please, Mr. Editor do loll 111a if Santa Claus 1': mil or only Inakc believe. Your Little Iiricnd, VIRGINIA. Tut: ANSWER - "Yes, Virginia, there is <1 Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love attd generosity and devotion exist. And you know that they abound and give to your lifc its highest beauty and joy. Alas! I-low dreary would be the world if there were no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if thcrc were no Virginias. There would be no childish faith thcn, no poetry, no romance to tnakc tolerable this existence. Nobody secs Santa Claus. But that is no sign‘ that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are those that neither children not" men see. "You nmy tear npnrt the l1:tl)y's rattle and sec what makes the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest mcn that cvcr lived could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love. romance, can push aside the curtain and view glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, Virginia, in all this world there is nothing else real and abiding. "No Santa Claus? Thank God, he lives and lives forever. A thousandhyfarsfromlnow, Virginia-may, fen limes ten thousand years from now—-he will continue to make glad the heart of child- oqd’, » -m1s 15011012.’ " 4 n. w ... 1- - _ . _ . 1- - _- - ‘ - - - ".- “11111-1 "1111 “T9111 1111'111""°1"1'5 1111“ gctitlt» knockors- Father Alaurict- ant-o <11 his olt-ctors Int" an uncx- - ‘\ Pflfilgjlég Imiilylfiltflglélléfsfla", filo? rblis _ _ _ _ _ -> .. an", 1 s t ,.1\"t1'ty Itlfrllkillg all olso to 1111- m“; [m-h. 11ml inforttiotl tho (luar- 1111101011 period-a combination ut RECENT RAILWAY ACCIDENT offhcolola ‘Sofia as ‘he confine“? 1 w. .11 un' cow, 111- gvlllllc‘ that -. ,1, . . . H ,, .01, ~'<"‘“111°'11 141118 1111"“ 119-111“ 111' _ _ _ . 11' you =1 1'11 111111 1119111111 1111111" . , _ U _ 1 _B ‘ .L _A I .111“ 11“ 1 1 “mo: “mu )1 “y nnny puhllc men and very rarely , 119111 >111“! 1'111_'“e1111111 111m. 1111111)‘, tho simple tnallcr of bondinu Head offlto - TOIOIIIO, clftlda 11111111111111“ “W” hymn u m do“ n‘ 1111111“ 1111111 by 81mm ma“ mm’ "rltin 11ft "4 11m 11m" 111161111111“ m Wbhshlvottr bo"lv trout side to sldo rnni ... . , . . ‘1 1 . -_ 1.,‘ ' 1' ' *."l’. “‘ . ' ' . 1111 51 "1111" 111ml‘ "111 11*‘ 1119 111“‘111”.>"t-lf. and ltskul that 1b.» (lunrdntn ~ ._..._~ 18011 fPttf-lzolfftffhtifzft1111111: 11 10w step‘ 111 11W m“) 51ml m CHARLOTTOI-zglgggs BRANCH 1 ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ ‘ " . - - . 1 '- , ~11 1111111411114 ""1 $1111‘ 111*‘1'111'Y 1'r°"shoul1l bolp to got tiliuscs for tho n g5 announced that parnamgng rousottyotnvillbtiinlovcstod11111111110111 1191111111111‘ 1° 11111111 111* 111-11111 R, h d st t "d _ . 4 _ , “mu-hm mm. m- mlm- that] have 1am sink a IIIIIO lonct. will stnnu 140 11> 111°" f" a 111111 11>‘ 1111s 110th 1110111191111 l" a11t1tlnr ltss ftfrlttlltltcly sttuutt-tl 111- s txpocletl to titeet un January 29.1w“, ‘I“(‘V m m. Jan,“ “axwell late the circulation in your liv-r. Bank of Nova Scotia Building. . _ , , .:~. . . . . 1 - ltgos without any thought of r9116 0mg; -\fi 111111’ 1% 11111111 nBCU-‘ifilfy 111151‘ Murphy of Charlottetown, ‘and prevent congestion. “Hmvrnhnl ‘ I055 to be transacted and several lam Sir, ctc-, Culling tl0\\'1'1 (111 your fats lllltl ______ \ 1 1 v f m p‘ Arc told tho tivctjaI-tt: 111111101‘ 011i mntrovcrsnl questions in the uff- "111- s- '1‘11U1111'%O;\|t 1 51111611115 1mg)“ also 1w 1111511" 181% £1116 .\ud shnrt-tl 1111111.‘: thou- llol-l- 11, :~..\. ,.,~. . _. w. - -. -. .. . - ... ~ 1 1111*“ 11111 1°11“ U F1100“ ‘g ‘\\'1.§[ quite $llllsflf1l with this nt: which tnust cull forth protrztc- ‘I _ ,1 n, fmlficuizqutl “Hm 1' _ H ~10" ‘He 1m“ 11111111111 11°11‘ 11111 And Wreath tho starry dccp. tl 11th 11111111 s111111111 110 111111 ""1 1° 111“? . .| 11-. ...“, q- i t. m v.1 i, wln 1‘ ‘mum ' H‘ ' “'1' ‘"10 “Q1 11151111: ‘my 1111mm. ‘mNo murc fur thcm tho dawn of 1l.1_v. 'l‘ho outnratl-u-liip ol doom. 1~ u'l womon of "torn" bont wlll bo your-s C1011‘ 11 11',“ on” “m; I11 (l “Lu-vi n 1 1 n m l“ 1' (E losure) stren-gm’ an.“ 110111‘ 11111111‘ 15 “11 1' 211111 Nor sunset 011 the hill. 1'1 I _ M 1 y. I ‘11111115 Q1 111B‘! 1111115 11111 1111‘ 1111"“, 111.“! 1 I“ “mm that ,1)". b83510“ "c I 110111.111“ 59111011511111 11” 1111' 1111111‘1,1",’l‘l1eir shouts uud songs ltnvo tliod Yot not in vain thvl‘ W111 11 -‘1’l'1_ lzrooly" {HIIIIIIIPII but Just 1n whatl_ V _\vill ho u short onc. The country , . ' \l* ' ‘ ll \l l A “m0 bendm‘; “m m" 1m" m uway " ' will 1 ‘l5 so tnuch highcr that the farmers .\‘l1. Jumps . .|.\\\1' -. urpiy, 1 - - ‘Strung t-lmntpltltls of 1111' 111111. 'l‘hoy 11-. o .l1o uardors ut ..1|Ir Th0 tnart-h of tint-a got-s swiftly by .\nd guitlo u..- thtnitult I114: ui And IIIIIII-In‘ liq curo and toil, Front s. Illsh nim uud pztllry 1:11‘. llut in t-tol" ‘onlvh Iltoy lio I»‘1"11111 s-litvov)‘ 111' 111" -" 1111- Iivllfllllll n for gn soil; 'l'l1.- nun that suvc lllo With iron limbs 1111111 firo for broutb Ihof-io, '1111"-' 91111114111 atnitlst lho gloom. (flit-y point us. I11 tho K11111- Thoir giant strtetigtlt is still. luud r cuuncu ORGAN 1 T0 sttt rou $250 This is an Aeolian Vocalian Organ, pipe top, 8 sets reeds, 1 set Botu-don Bass runs full length and was made by Mason & Risch’, of Boston. The tone is all that could be desired, while the appearance is beautiful, and the church needing‘ a new organ can get a bat-grain on one of the finest reed organs in this country We need the space this organ is taking" up, and will sell to the first customer if we can only’ getout" price $250.00. The regular selling price of this Instrument was $350.00. MILLER BROS Great George Street To F0 firedersof Prince Edward Island :-- Tho keen demlnd for Sliver Fnxeg lo-for rcqlctercd novk- 91"‘ crlmlnotlng buyer: Ira lnalatlng on pcdlgrco, and you would bl Wl" ‘d’ "lood to moot tholr domnndo by roglotorlng. ‘ 4:08a- N your otnlnc are of pure Plnoo Edward Inland orlgln they I" '11‘ glbln for reglotrntlon In the Silver Block Fox Breeders’ Auoclntlon 01 Prlnco EdWlrd Illllld- A CERTIFICATE OF BREEDING FROM IT 19 RECOGNIZEP THE WORLD OVER A8 THE INDICATION OF DESIR‘ ABLE BLOOD. lntilllgonf and onterprlolng rln anon throughout tho Province l" roglctorlng thllr whole ronehu with uo. All ftmoc tilt-Wll- For furthor L-fwrnntlon wlto. The Silver Black Fox Breeders’ Association of Prince Edward Island "w! 0111a. Ohlrlottotan Prlnoo Idwo n d