Tasty Meat Substitutes -, We tell you how to make 124 dellcioul meat subm- ‘ tutedhhuwithlirafifliaeu. l in the new Kraft Reupe Book, sentfree on inquest. f Send lorii 0-day and front {your fan-ii ytoFSomt-thnll ' different". The children m-po-cinlly will bench: by l the change in menu. secretary. Lloll- 00 Editor III Manager, J- ll. III!’ how tau-It lleplvlcnl a ifienldont. W. Chester U. Helium; Vloe-Pn-lllent, J. ll- llurIt-Itl ll. A. llucKln-on. l). h. 0 I Chicago Iepresentntlv prosperity oi" "the Dominion. Those who take this view of the casesay THE cmmlorrnrownl tnpuzmhu tut tmlntnttttuwl tnnntn W Exports from Canada now ox. coed imports and this fact is fro- quentiy referred to in a number of e “mm u L cur,“ newspapers as evidence of the few oenturiu. ‘Numbers are the Palaces of Ellxiltooring, industry and Art, and the Government Pav- ilion. These bulldings, too, are de- signed for cenituries oi wear. Are they going to be left derelict, or are they going to be the raiaon d'etre oi‘ annual attempts to revive large scaio exhibitions of the i924 pattern? ivt is not likely that nnnss wnL-lwAN THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1924 the balance oi trade is in our llrlli-tlltLvrrn titrnt-‘eh.i.td."~: m. .\lul we lyre ltrciu 11.5.. OATS g w, are buying PRESSED HAY CARLOADS and le-ss. White and Black Seed and Feed Barley and Buckwheat HIGH EST CASH See us before you dispose of your surplus stocks. _ Carter & C0., Ltd. FEEDS 8v. FLOUR Bank of Nova Scotia B Charlottetown, P, E. l. w? o o J, A- McDONALD, H. F. MGFHEE‘. B A. "Barrlstonl, ‘Attorney, Etc. Chat‘ ttotownt o BARRISTEH, lOLl “Charlottetown, P, E. Island Grnauam a: r4. Y. Pan. “mdtlltol Pucfi“ “mu” I.’ "Mutton is inevitably fixed Office Bayer Building Great Goorgo Itroot Tolophono I604. Ofllfm "hurl-D in ll I. m. I. to I ——<+>—-——- 1- Thcglft of prophesy appears to 00-0 vooo-wcoooa-oaoooo ~ ' 3 Daily Selections ion his ‘shop" at Ottawa. Having inothitlg commendable to look buck llupon, he has turned his eyes to the 11111114111110 future in Whose infinite Guardian Readers vooo-owowwocooowrw» OCTOBER 9,» 1924 ROAST No-r.__nnnst not thysplfftztgc that no forecast of the future ‘luau bt» proved inaccurate. One may tprctilct the cnd oi the world, a de- Vvas-tating earthquake or a devour- the dlsaslro“ saw’ gale" “Lord, for tomorrow nmi its needs.’ pf tomorrow; for thou kitowest not what a day may bring forth. Keep m,» my G0,] [mm staining Hm‘ certain portion oi the world will uvlnit the catastrophe in fear and trembling, till the day fixed for it ltas passed and nothing has hap- pened. in the meantime the pre- diction stands and the propbefs apostles preach it, none daring to contradict it. Just for today." The autumn winds are signing, Deep sighixtg. sad and low; And in their mouthful cadence There is an unknown woe. ‘$5.4’ ~ ghiilg and heaving. worn-out sorrowing hose grief is now subsiding, hat once was fierce anti wild. Each heart alone, i-ias its own sutum its dreary wind a " 1 1100c comes not again." ’ ‘bu: folded with each fflllllil lead. e dreams of long ago, o form the mold of i —Jean Woicott-Pi , p" cult reasoning oh which Mr. King rzMnther Graves’ Worm Exter- bnsed his prediction, minator-wlll drip wo t’ _ 1h, hm’, e1. ndians are still Joe .t_s mutt‘; _ 11111111117! LmQWQDQ-f-Hllll Cuts. thu who could hold h political gun had 811"‘ 111*" cmladm“ 1‘""'“e" W111 *- ~q» “a 9 §L__ ifng consciousness that the Liberal -‘§,1_{Q\‘E'l'fll'il9ill no longer deserved thevhiuc lsupport of the couittry. He made iic splelldftl fight, some hundredslo lot‘ foruter Liberal vote/rs swungiA-t each int-n for the knowledge that the‘ Professional Cards {King government wbuld he in oi- .fice for th tamc would still be its, the other refuaiudct- would tindoubtetilyl Ehuve voted against it. No. the victory in Northumbcr- the Liberal party nnd the failure of! jthc Conservatives to capture it, makes littic difference to the for- lcrtimont is n fixture for another, |Ycat' and one‘ more Conservative ltk-rcnce. The only lesson is that ‘my w“ indicates m“ grow“, re [and that Canadians are still flock- ETC’; y " g ing to the United States because vulsion in Canada against thelm _ I ,_ ~ ere is o en t f 1 flung government. n revulsion sol n w oymen or hem I l 1 -—- --~-<-o§_____ l have fallen suddenly on the Rt. ‘lion. W. L, Mackenzie King, and womb there are all kinds of pos- r sibiiltics. There is also the advan- ing flood on n certain day and a The 0mm. d”, a, a public ma“, Premier King wants to reform lng in Port Arthur, Premier King announced with the confidence oi an inspired prophet that before the end of the present fiscal year, 50.111116111101911‘ The "Uncrowmd" K1115 n00 Canadians would have raturnedtcannol do as dm the Cmwned K1115‘ “mm the Lnmed states! And the|threaten to create enough addition- made by the "balance oi trade" in Eupostles, not then but since, threwtnl members of the upper house to flesh and blood under the Km“ gov. luiktheir hats in the air and shoutedlnlake n pa" government makings‘ eminent. "C-ertaihly Canada is on the up-’ new dreams willhlrade!" We shall not enquire into the oc- NORTHUMBERLAND ELECTION The present probability is that the still increasing stream o! emigra- 11111191‘ 111 111° 11111916 11111111)! 0f tion-wiil continue increasingly as it has done during tho first six months oi the year tion has t-he merit of uncontra- Idictlbiiity and skeptics must await {the cnd oi the fiscal year before No doubt the air will be rent during the next few days withl boustings of tho “great vlctoryi’ inl Northumbtrland, N. B.. on Tuesday.‘ Well may Premier King exciaiin ‘uuvdld King Pyrrhus of old who, I - . . “mu remghicohnxgalulated on all‘? [they can with any assurance place . ' i ~ . wry n w c s army was d9 the prediction in the things which Premier King would happen nnd did not. yesterday Still predic- cltmttctl, replied sadly, “Another 1 such victory. where will my army The Liberal government succeed- J ‘H! i“ milling a Sea‘ which h“ beenfimille another prediction, one for of the world. I ‘unbrokcnly Liberal since 1904. The we benefit of Canadian Iarmers ilnubfira] nlajomy o‘ M21 particularly and for those depend- .“ 1021 “m; cut to less “1'°"““’ “"11"” ldntn huif. “in face of the This generally. “tract thnt thc federal and prflvlncinllushop" m Ottawa and not "om “my tprcmit-rs with all their minister's; . m _ a part oi the growling wealth wand their would be Inmate“ and tvibuted to the former. It is to the least it is at- ‘Ciililptftl on the ground for weeks rec'd” 31200001100 °11 111° 1151*“ ‘)1 nlpruviuus l0 the election Mr. ‘ms year's amp whereas’ m“ year‘ iSttowbuli, the Liberal candida-to, "They 11111119 1101111115 111 1111- 1'11 11ml ‘lion-ts an old campaigner. an GXlGll-lshowed a 1°55- °11 111a Year's 911°" lslvt- lumlwr operator with many T1119 19 5'91" news 111111 re is good reason to believe that 5o Ioflngd lumud. i-iis Conservative_opp0n-|C1"1111111111 farmer-it 11111119111811)’ 11191113911011 01 1 .h|_ h“ fiickgy‘ was h young nmgfwheat growcrs. will receive muchlhus lmnmvfid ‘1 ' Icontparativcly unknown outside of ""119 1'01’ 111911‘ C1008 111811 1119)’ 11111111116 ls paying Interest’ nwm is bs own town of Chathnm; his111>11 Yefll’. Is-trnngth lay in the growing dis- tug, like that of the Canadian ex‘ ltuvour into which‘. the King gov- lies. throws the moment had fallen and the grow-land Qlltttttlrctis of employees xtt his 00111-111“ But the definite figur- uncertainty on the prospect. . "is qdmirjn f" u ‘I IBritain has been for generations ( g o owe“ ca ' rpast the great money lender of the world. Canada has been for gen- gs in-Jerations a borrower. -lt is equally 1119 11111111’ 011191‘ 3111188 111R! the future constitute optimisnnlul"? “"1111 19511111 1° c1993“ 1119151115 opening session of pammlthat Britain receives while Can- keuzie King a great optimist. is—lf his frequent peerin ‘round to his side and, had it n0t'm¢= 119 5111 01 11113’ F1°1111ca1fors the end of the year, a rigid system of economy would be lilElll-liF not an evldeuce of h“ prosper, lute-d, the national debt would be re-t sent year it will have been increas- |1I11 11y $300,000,000 since 1921; that '_'—"—“ lthe cost of living is still 0' r , Nlark R. McGlllganlntt-nttler would have made little dlf-I g m” "Di ‘expenditure incre1sing their debts. conclusion that his predictipng gm ‘no more reliable than his states- I To OTHERS. PROPHECY manshlp and (hm, as a statesman’ at enormous cost. For other pro- ‘ he is me greatest ra-“ure that ca” ducts exported 511g receivesapricc wmillious oi‘ tiollars—but for this ado has ever known. Even his own friends will not seriously question this. Bluff ls, or rather has been. skill in handicrafts, sturdy‘ frames ; eve“ that h now Behring nnd willing hands, she receives no Bu, and when n is gone there Wm price or payment! be nothing ieft_ hi! fortr- <IQOi--—-—- EDITORIAL NOTES Last Sunday, we are reminded. tic and the Pacific are so many was the fmyflnh anlflversary or open and bleeding wounds tbrottgb One Liberal mem-ber of the Sen- Wm“ 51m“ we say of ‘the “balance ate is over three over ninety years of age, $151111’ 31111 1°11’ W" balance? it must be taken into Yet they passed a the account, for from month to bill last session declaring that hp. month and from year to year, un- ter a man reached seventy he w“ tier the malign influence of misrule no more use m the service of Cam the wounds gape wider and ada. seventy-five. the Senate because there are now city 11101‘? 410911101111 1111111 Cllflflvtle" 60 (jonhervauve Senators’ 31 Mb, town has been swept away. iu gram, one Labour. and only two six months past 96,000 Canadians Sir Arthur Currie, as an educ- ational expert. says the reason why ‘fifty percent oi~the first year stud- ents of McGill fail A1 Dfelenlithat they have been poorly ground-l 1 111111- C311‘ 911 by D0011? paid teachers, or did pouring over the hm wm-h sport, border into the United $18165 anflltle o, nofhfl]! h, l W11’! few of them are returning. we know. heAays. had lit- Nowyand are fond of amusement. You ‘ and will be very fortunate in the Britain, until recent years oi imports over exports. or; we are selling more than we buy. As a matter of fact, Great wealthiest nation and the greatest How, then, has Britain managed to pay the adverse balance? From other sources. One of these sources has been the interest and earnings long list of derived from untold millions fav- the 1-111- T-HE VALUE OF THE PLAY- tlons has for a century past and GROUND d i h ’l -- ’ . .,,‘,’,:,';,§,,',,° “fiat: flélegngrgrgg: A very striking fact was learned for instance), and there is no rea. by a llldgg of a juvenile court rec- ently, whose customers come from certain definite sections oi the city. The boys in these neighborhoods were more ‘or less grouped Sam pounds loaned or invested abroad. “m” to Mme‘ the the nation. parutively livttie money loaned or invested is but money nnd receiving interest yatla pays. nt he predicted that through his. masterly handling of Canadian fin-t priceless produut of brain and brawn, of intelligence, patriotism. Those human exports are Can- ada's very life-blood. Thc [laths by witlcb they cross the border lino to exile in a foreign land at a score of ports between the Atlan- \vhich the very life and strength of the nation is being poured out. of trade" in that regard? is it a favorable balance, or an adverse Canada's life-blood pours forth in an increasing torrent. in a month the population of a ha‘ e gone-a number greater than th entire population of Prince Ed- ward fsland! That is_ the showing ‘L?’ thoughtful mind, common sense. and confidence in your own pow- ers. You love children and animals. Another source of growing income and wealth has been the earnings of her ships in the carrying trade Within a very short space‘ For n. long period m on IL m“ var r h“ ships decreased greatly in numbers, _ _ lfatl-G t\ Bit~ WPFB 1101118 110! 0111)’ 4116 P31111118 whereas the other centres’ when, tore-st, and its oducatloltal vztiur no pluyqroundq were (‘Slabnshud for the public would "bc tuatchutl a . . H _ , continued to send their usual largo only by n” prmmal 1mm” h” 11'1",“ trade of the British people but to a largo extent that of other nations ns well, and the yearly earnings quota to his court. of her vast tonnage were brought Canada's case is different from Britain's. One is a young country accumulated wealth and has com- invcsted abroad. Wlmt has been t.hc amount which she broad und on which ‘tall the difference in the world be- twecn paying iutcrcst on burrowcd the "gang", wit] ity but the reverse. That a-ppettrsy Aside entirely from the duced yearly and Canadian Indus-ll‘) 119 a 11111‘ 9111101119111 °1 Ca"“‘1“"‘1“a“‘1p°1“1' Dmygmullds are a try ivould fiourls b '—'___"_“'_—_—"‘,'1111111 Bffflrtis little consolation to v Blafilhfllflld & McPhee‘ tvalttes sold and the values bought" " is: absorbed in the payment of in- ictost abroad. and treights »pald to _ increasing by the end or the ‘m, British and foreign carriers, and Illlucs of Canada.‘ The King 5011' Its finite insufficient to pay these lcltarges. Hence the Dominion con a tinum to borrow while other more pwspel-ohs countries are paying bitms on the future of Wembiey and the desirability 0f its re-open- ing next year. The electrical in- dustry for one, is tleflnltclyamlnst u continuance 0t‘ Wembley next your. in answer to a (llltft-lllOll whether they cottsldcrcd Wemblcy had been to thcm in the broadest scnso of vthc tcrm “worth w-hilte," whether its effects on thclr turn- ovcr bud been immediatc or wheth- tar, on tho other lmud, its results would be cumuiatlvu or nogutlvc und would consider trontittttlttg their t-xhlblts for nnother your. one oi’ the largest sxitibitors stated that though the exhibition has been worth while- front the points of Unfortunately Canada lis sending abroad other products than those other fields and factories, in much 1clcnrly told in every hygglgctionl _ larger 1111311111195 and value‘; "m" a C. C. since 1921 that the doom of thc1 Looking back over Mr‘ Mncklmlshe l“ receivmg- S110 18 Exporting ‘ Z16 mug-s record as a statesmanpnctl and women and children in g"v"1'""“'“1 a1 111“ 1191191111 @1991. l ltcns of thousands. These are thc M“ a prophet’ we are forced to thmmost precious and the most needed of all her possessions. They have been bred, nurtured and etiucntcd tiffects will be felt for good during gineer told me that lis much ad» vantage could have been obtained for his firm from a iortnighrs electrical exhibition as from Wem- hley. Many other Oplnlfliis have the future of the Exhibition grounds ntt Wembley. This is a very real problem for London, and it is not capable of n simple solution like that. confronting Paris after the great Exhibition, and Gothenbnrg after the 1923 Jubilee Exhibition. Wi-th buildings in the Grand tPhinis ' and the Petit Ptllals, situated be tween the river and the Champs Elysecs, and in Gothenburg the Exhibition which crowned an im- portnn-t ltill commanding the city leaves a permanent an gallery v with n splendid approach as a re- cord of that great Swedish achieve. ment. At. Wembley, the permanent buildings lnciudd the Stadium. which as a recreation ground may look forrward not merely to a. few r o life, but to faore- an a ocronm 9.——You have h y“ a m selection of your mate. which means hope. city authorities. or _ renum- futuro trcuturics will ' no lmnrvvvltlrtlt In 111s bvimvlor <11 111s doubt dtrivc l‘i.'lll clitcfttllltiltlent BOYS. from the spectacle of u vusi under- WhY? taking likc the 192i i-Jxltlbitiott bu- Well a growing boy or girl. any int: intuit-lull und carried t-ltrottgh 01' nctivc. biddcn nuturc. llDOIl. . Otntfl fill t‘ll hmhwhwwh-mhmnsnrnnrnnm. September 26, 1924. view of orders, increase in pres- lfix-hlbitiotl is open next YOGI‘ or not. ’l‘his opinion. which may ix» tukcu as typical, is not surprising. Went- llllly, oXcRpL in a fcw spccialcases, bus not rcsullcd ln any great. rush of ordnrs. it is not too much to Buy that few expected thnt it would. The chemical trade, Ithe frablnet makers, nnd utmost every other trade that docs not tioul iu popular and cheap stuffs of which samples can be given away, sot-m 0t‘ the some opinion. it has, how- ever, luld a foundntion on which each firm has the responsibility of building its own superstructure, and has givcn un impetus to British design und products whose any time for the ‘next ten years. But this is no argument for con- tinuing the Exhibition for another year. To do so would be anti-cll- max. An important electrical en- hcen expressed to ‘me regarding .____-___.____.. Your birth-stone is the opal. gangs, and it was different mem- bers oi these gangs, that appeared o, before him for ntisdemennors. from in two of these centres pluy- Etnplro. grounds were established by the no such record in time, thu number of boys atppcnring before mm "om these two centres glimpses of progress. 'i‘his musc- um “mild grow your by your in ln~ A H l i _l_ u really instructive (lomoustrzttiuit ' 111f1“v“315111‘111 5110111?“ of tho tibiiity of lllilfllllllClllrPIS in home m Brmsh puns, m become cd the idol. that tho playgtoutttl was entirely responsible tor llll‘ growing unimai in fuct, tnust, have appart-ntLv without any plans being , , opportunities for exprtssitlg the titanic for the futur". Muybc soun- and for w“ reason h“ but "m" needs of (he hrhh, hm] hm]! But-h thing in iltt» uuturc 0f nu tmnuztl hm“, and body wan, m h,“ m be world lair oi the tnugmlttdc tutti ‘li thcrt- is no normal ottilet such F1111" W111 11"“? “mmlney "Hm" n as thc firgzt-tlized or group play _ The Labor Party's Foreign Policy. found l" m? Playground’ m“ the Tho Premit-rit efforts have been hm“ 311111 mm“ Wm °“'“'“1’y_11":"" succtessfttl uud throttglt thc inter- sclvcs Willi things that are oi a tor- Tht- group oi‘ boys that compose B0 85 11 1111111; in this column tin-cc Wtecks uguhthc on wherp tltcre is somcthitlg that shadow 01 hhlfllmoney that has been saved, accum- 3,119? llfifllfllls thought and physical‘ or . lulated and loaned m “Home, pal-m it may be climbing fences, breuk- that vrhether the itussinn treaty ing into warehouses. wayisylng a 1s right 01' ‘WOYIK. they ‘have B110- bgkey and stealing his bread and needed in six months in nchicving cakes’ upsemng a gm“ calm and more for the pettce of Europe than “gang” w," think about’ “pd ac, the war. Although they may wait But that same gang will use lltelt‘ ';'f""“’,”‘1" illlflgel fmrfilulxlrhnfllogtl’ thought nnd physical effort in a H" "M" h r e '1 mp e .gnmc of baseball or other group The farmer who "is In debt and 53mg ances, taxation and the cost of liv- W110 1S Dflyillg 111191951 '10 1-119 e “"111 1'91" 111 a"? “"6 in: would be greatly reduced be-lamwut M ‘ laud that t Palmer . & Palmer t t H. J. PALMER, K. C, Their energies will be expended. ha],- (he value of his their growth physically intprovefl-hvhqhm- |crop must of necessity sell much.“ 119811111’ 1119961118’ “m1 {Trade and Commerce (From a Special Co-respondent.) l have been at some pains to dis cover tho gcnerul opinion of exhi- tige and propaganda, they will not continue lhv-ir uXlllllll whetltcrtltts cxtotlsivo prnparutlous und dis- oround what is to u»: pcrltaps the tnost important tnwn iu China, Shanghai, is cuusithg some uncusi- HPHS. lands in the Cattlcrotms, the form- cr property 0t‘ (iermntly, are for sale "without restervatlon," has caused some sin-prise in the fruit. tobacco, nnd sugar trades in Lon- don. Thcrc may be economic ren- sons for such a sale, but it is irri- tnting to British sentiment to see the possibility 0i Germany being once morn in thi- possession of the factory sites, piers nnd commercial premises in their old colony, our ucqttisition of which should have mnde a iinfle opening for imperial enterprise. We hope that this will not prove a precedent for "sales without reservation" in S. W. Africa, E. Africa, Samoa and New Guinea. The chauvinist party in Germany is as we know looking out for oppontunities of imperial expansion and we hvae bought these territories too dearly to sell them buck. rcprcsctitzciivma who wished to see the, British Empire. ilistoriuns in iiupnrttttlcte, of lhu pro-nun‘ Lelpsit‘ ccssion of iir. Nattsctt, tlPFiillllLV llus dct-itlod tn join l-ht- “l.cilgut= of Nations" and as was forcslttldoweti Labor tiarty will bc rcndy to ‘fact- un clcctloti in the Autumn, with a clear statement from their Dliillflffll much enthusiasm ls going to be roused by the idea of repeating the British Empire Exhibition next year. The real concern at t-he mo- ment ls the utilization of the con- crete structures in the Exhibition grounds. The Palaces of Engin- eering nnd industry would -be ex- cellent buildings tor housing trade afirs (the British industries Fair, sari-u son why one of- tho-se buildings should not be empioyde as a per- manent museum for examples of the industrial Art of the Empire. l“ so that in the grounds oi Wembley there should be sn enduring ro- minder of the great Empire Exhi- bition of 192i. and a very valuable record of the capabilities of Britisii firms in tiificrcnt parts of the At the moment thero is this count.ry,al- though tho nnnunl exhibitions 0r- Of ganizt-ti -h_v the British insti-tutc 0i‘ industrial Art afford illuminating L001: for the label in the inside pocket a their predecessors hnd'd0ne since until tho Spring when another which to fight. they have now more than over a good whnncc of being returned with u working majority. Mcamvltiie. tho question as tol pnign. urging that t-be treaty hci rnttfletl and stipulated ionn made 51m tho Soviet Govermttcnt. 0n thcl miller hand. 'llI‘l‘f' ‘t: a considerable amount 0f feeling in the countrvl jupon the other side. and the Fed-l {oration of British industries seems [likely to throw in its pvclght ag-f toinst the treaty. Opinions arc div~1 idcd to ‘.~'llf‘ll nu extent that the-rel lwas much talk before the news lr-ame in of Germany's joining the Lethguo. 0t‘ a general qlcctlon lacing fought practically on this lssurl aloftc. China and British Trade Although the civil war in China ors not cmhruil more than a fruc tiou of thc (Ihinost: population and the commercial ‘clussos us n whole stand aside und pumuc thcir-trttdvs illilltlSl. rcgartlicss of it, tnuch zilurm is fclt in littgluud for tho dumugt? lhzut may he done t? dlrltislt trade. For (lite first six mouths of 1924 imports into this country front China umotnmzti to npproxlruatteiy 5 tnilllotn-l und our exports for the sumo pcrioli to £l0,ll00,fIil0. We cun ill uffurd the loss of such a ntarkot, und evcn thfmglt ruin is preventing nny serious fighting ut tho llllllliPlll. the knuwiedgc thnt tlm (icutral (iovcrntuctit is tucking patching fin army to Mnuf-httria and tin.- loctttion of the fighting the Anglo-Russian lreatyl- a 110111181115 1'0 hr ratified or not at the] ytforthcontlng session of Purilammttt I t, ls rapidly bccofnlng a first-clttss p0 gno energy left to get into ntlschlefjliticztl i-‘stte. Tho Labor party and 11mm] the trade union hmvcment general-l good ly are to conduct a great cam-I h as new be‘ r “we m regard m m‘, balance ohinvestment for any municipality. ' r o e. : _ flrafie. The diflerence between the issued only the other day show in cold fi- gures that the national debt is stlll‘ 3W1‘? at its best- '1 i The call is . for English Models Styles for the {past few seasons have shown an English trend. This Fall English Models predominate. straight lines,» loose easy fit and u note of formal informality commend highly to the Well-dressed man. Society Brand suits show this English They have the first essential so often missing in ordinary clothes-worrcct cut. specially selected all-wool British fabrics, assure an unusual degree of smartness and effect. ' We have a splendid variet worsteds and Scotch Blues, GlengarryPebbles, and other ex- clusive Society Brand fabrics. You will be pleased at the-moderate cost of a Sociely BrondSziif. lfs long arid _ aafisfacforynvear wffl surprise you. Prices from$35. 1'0 $55. .1. w. nus-the | l 135 Great George Street Charlottetowrfls Smartest Store for Men and Boy's Wear. ' Germany and Her Old Colonies Thc attttotitict-ntcttt that certain \\‘~~\1-\\t. lnonusi Your flower is the hop. tare Just and loving, in your home- white. Your lucky colors are yellow and HANDSOME FIRE IRONS MAKE A HANDSOME ROOM For tho woman who like: to have her homo u beauti- ful and artistic a It In comfortabtolnnd oonvonlsnt- hero an firs irons in bran and iron from‘ which she will enjoy making selections but suited to her requirements In- \ Fire Dogs Fenders Flro Scrum Poker: Shovels rm Iron Stands Coal Hodog n‘, SUCCEEDV Y» ..n' . " r111 This, and the y, of English twccds ~~— Powder