19.1929 'riiw ml»\Rt.0'I*rETOwN,CtiARnlAiv _ Attractive Prices 1 'OII LADIES' ovERsHoEs ’ $2.25 ,takes any pair of our < `\ four _buckle high ov- _ershoes medium or *low heels. _Or a fashionable low iovershoe, fawn Jer- _T seyette, with velvet "collar, a. few pairs of I Grey in this line also , , ” `$2.'/is 1 -Buys a. pair of Hi-Low, black medium hlg_h overshoes, with vel- vet cuff, Modern and comfortable o a. _ pair of All Wool Jer- sey cloth (fawn) with ’ low heels. $3.50 * Takes the Countess, " afawn all wool jersey I medium height with ,.1 velvet collai', one of if the best, you can ' have black in this al- __ so with low or med- _ ium heels. -urea rr 1 Alley fc’ Co. Ltd. ‘- Fashionable Footwear ' Charlottetown, P.E.I. POST FREE ai 1 i1?-iniilo EYES TESTED AND . GLASSES FITTED E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR ~ Optometrists 142 Richmond Street O »+m ii 'O-O-O-O-O-GQ-O-*O-Q-O 1929 Carter’s' l3ookstore Business as\ Usual` Buy and Sell STATIONERY and OFFICE ` SUPPLIES ` O-OONr-00494 O-0*-O-O-940-O-O We are well stocked with everything- the BUSINESS MAN requires for his office. 'BLANK nooks, ifii.i~;s, aiimino cases, EN- vsnoras, inks. Tyra- warriiit svrriias, Lapo- aits, nay nooks, oansa nooks, arc. _ Carter’s Feed' Store O __;_ O “ ‘l Mor ~ .°r.:i.i".:-Ll: E33’ 1 /f ./~ -»»- bZ,,ff,.ff,1,.f.2.f.....»f MSIKGC Q ‘ _,ggi gag-f..§-:EE-_ *gffsfaff sie; .gg lill illv li.\-.lust rafasanlu ilu'-‘_ sod Coat par'E|g "5 is otre of the POULTRY FLOGK Economical Modes _,JI roUl.'rlv.Y onrr. 'rake nod ` it will pay\h|¢_dividends. Let _ $- ' ` . 1 '~. 1 1- 'v",'s - ' . l‘ . ll 1 .. .al ~ . talk to 'a llU\°l‘m¥ °f mm 'hu °f°‘""'_°' ° » ` , ,i-..._ ..- 2,- `-4-_ -5--4 ~--'- » ' ' ~ --Li ~» ----3 <5-_¢~ ' bets on the lumbering runners. engqod in the %%blUw¥ ;mall),tlg_>reei is easily the richest and most important lndustry in this Do. llllllioll. Agriculture was the first in. duftfy. You had to have the farms tiled and a demand created for manufactured goods before anybody would be foolish enough to engage in manufacturing. And factories fol. 10W an agricultural population. 'rnere were no factories in western Canada when it was not farmed, and today factories are following there to sup. Ply the demand fo' the things that the people want. when &Kflculture is prosperoiiglii Canada our manufacturers are able to Sell their goods, and they have a bad time. But we must keep this lll mind, that Up to the present l1lm¢. B-lid Pl'0bably during your life- time and mine, Canada having such a remarkagle area of splendid agri- cultural la d, has grown and always will grow more stu! than we can eat at home,.and that the market for Canadlan farm product depends en- tlffly Upon 'the export market, be- cause as soon as you get the home market glutted there is a. lowering of prices; and when the farmer does not make a profit he has no money YD Spend and everything .is in a bad way. . I Spend What They Make, i i As a. rule the farmers spend the money they make. When they reap a $500,000,000 wheat crop in any -year, that $500,000,000 is for the most part spent; and the factories that have been built in Canada have been built upon the basis of agricultural prospilrity, We have really only begun to build factories. We started about 1880, and during the next ten years factories spread very rapidly o er the Dominion. In fact, there wells factories in nearly every small town and village in this province. Some of you can recall I the nineties when' we had a very bad time in this country, when factories were idle, when homes were empty. I saw rows of them in this city standing vacant. Why was it? I was living on fi farm at that time. I was feeding pigs and selling tliemat five dol- lars a hundred dead 'weight-not enough to pay for the wear and tear on the swill pails to feed them. I was carrying eggs to market and selling them at nine cents a dmv. and I had/to trade them for black- strap to get rid of them at tha!-» That gives you an idea of the para- lyzed condition of agriculture' lll this province then and indeed all over me Dominion in the nineties. Interdcpendence of Trade Let me give you a, little illustra- tion that. I thought of a good many years ago when I was a boy on the farm. The farmer grows a variety of things, sometimes calves. I-le sells them to whom? To the abat- toir. What do they do with them? It seems a cruel thlllg to do. but they kill those calves and skin them. Whal- do they do with the hides? They sell them to a man who calls himself a tanner. He builds a. factory which hu calls a taniiery; he hires a lot 01 men, puts them to work, and they make the calf .skins into ' leather. Thus those workmen support their families. What does the tanner do with the leather? He sells it to an- other man who calls himself a shoe. manufacturer. He hires anvtllel- lot of men-they and their families make the town larger still-and they make the leather into shoes. What does he do with the shoes? He ScllS them to a merchant. And what does he do? Why, bless your Soul. he Sell-S them back to the farmer. wllo puts them on his feet to pl`0l1€ClJ "lem frm, the ground \"h1ie he piows it to raise' the oats to feed cows to: raise mole calves to sell more hides to make more leather to make H10!- shoes. 'But there never could l1B~V\l| been a tannery in this country. there nevcr could have been a Sh02 factory if somebody WB-5 “W l""l5m5 calves somewhere io produce skins £0 make the leather. d So the farmer grows 81'Bln all sells it to the miller; the miller gripes the grain and sells the fl0lll` to the baker; _the baker bakes the flour and sells tht bi-eaddtfit isle; blacksmith, he Lats it an _S t i mm strength to pound the ‘win tg to haul l110l`€ Bla ll ninvirgilfilbre flour to bake more bread tofced more p€0pl€- . Foundation of Industry 1 That is the foundation of lndus- try in-this country. We have dis- covered in the last fifty yells 015° the country prospers only when W are creating new wealth out cf the land. Because after all that ls what the farmer does. I-Ie creates MW wealth. Somebody else takes the calf. skins and makes them into Nea ther, another takes the leather an improve; it by adding further labour to it. 'rmt labour is important and l of value to the country, because it is much better for the farmer to have shoes to wear than to have "° wrap the raw calf skin al’0Ull¢'l N5 loci. I am not depreclatlns the “We of éthep bugmess, but the founda- ii laces is laid by the fer- ins country 2,22 °,‘,;:i1 bg' me work creaiasgnew itwu nah wealth from the soil: ll* *Fm his Intl WW . - products to the markets of 01° not writ by qu_b re in .mi icipc to more emma. s ycu..tui»w\» Value of Agriculture ' .To Business of Canada Synopsis of an Address by Hon. Duncan' Marsh all at the Luncheon Meeting of the Agricul- tural Press Association Recently Held _ the days when Alec Pirie edited the Dundas Banner. when Hal. Donnelly directed the'Simooe Rcformer, when Dan McGi1iicuddy in the Godericn Signal was flghtlns somebody day and night, when M. Y. MacLean was editing the Beaforth Exposiwr, when A.-W. Robb _was editing the Walker- ton Telescope and when Andrew Patullo had charge of the Wood- stock Sentlnel-Review. In the days of the Bcbccyseon Independent we had papers of individuality. Those little country papers had men be- hind them who gave their individual Olllllion of what was _ going on throughou. the country, and 1 be- lieve they were a great power in me land. I do not knowi whether _ our ll¢WSPHp€l'S today are better or worse than they were then, but sometimes I Wish they had a. little more of the personality and individuality of the gieri behind them as they Uled. to ave. ‘ The Press a Great Aid to _ Agriculture But publications such as you' rep. resent-and, I understand, you rep- resent some of the agricultural pub- licatlons-have done a great deal for agricultur%a I want to say that the Canadian ily newspapers have sup- ipcrted agriculture in some cases in an -extraordinary manner, and they ‘deserve a great deal of credit for this, because this is 5-lot, done in every country. I do ot remember addressing a gathering of newspaper men but once before, and I am going to tell you something of that meet- ing. I was in the city of Chicago attending the lntei'natlons.l Live Stock Show, By the way, I am leav- ing for there tomorrow night to at- tend my seventeenth show, because where they hold a good live stock show you will generally find me. I had gone a day or two ahead to speak at a. St. Andrew’s dinner. Next moming one of the newspaper reporters who had been at the din- ner tapped me o the shoulder and said, “We have a Press Club in this city, and when ‘distinguished visit- ors'-lf you please-come to the city we invite them io address us." I said! “Tell those fellows I messed around newspaper oflices for three years, and I have colile to Chicl-so to see four;legged animals, not two- legged ones. I will not be at y°l1!‘ meeting so you need not expect me." He laughed and went away. Next day he caught me, as the negro said at the Republican convention, at the ‘zoologicar moment. I had been .reading a report in a. gleat Chicago newspaper of the Intemational Live Stock Show, and when that chap touched me on the shoulder and said, “The boys insist on your coming.” I said, "I will be there and you may tell them that they need not hold their noon edltlors back from the press to include my speech. because nothing I say will ever appear H1 the Chicago daily newspapers.” 'And I may tell you in confidence that it did not. - At The Press Club At noon my friend Dr. Tory, who is going to speak here tonight, and I, went over to the Press Club. I am going to repeat one or two of the things I told them on that occasion in order that you may get my view- point on some treatments of agri- culture. I said: You live in a great city, a wonderful city, but do you know fifty per cent of your prosper- lty_ depends on live shock? You are the greatest packing town in the world, and if the live stock of the United States was destroyed, one half of your population would, be out locking for a job. Today you have gollig on in this city the greatest live stock show in the world. Let me say here that that was before we started the Royal Winter Fair. I said to them: I picked up a great Chicago daily newspaper this morn- ing and it contained about o. sixth- inch report of the show. and three- quarters of that was taken up by an account of how a young lady had shown great temeiity in riding ner horse over the Jumps in her street diese because -her trunk had gone astro! and she did not have her rid- ing costume. I should like to meet the smart young fellow who wrote that report. Their. I tlmied to an- other page and found two whole col- umns devoied *4 plans to reduce the price of eggs. Some young reporter had gone around ilown and asked the people what they proposed to do to break down the exorbitant price of eggs. Some of the plans proposed were to make eggleas ome- lettes and eggless cakm, ani one pro- pieal was to organize a. woinen's sc- ciety to not buy eggs. I said: Did it ever occur to you that the only way to reduce the Price of 0838 is to get more hens inlay. I said: I hope eggs will go up to $1.50 I dozen and beef to $2.00). pound so hal! of you fellows will be chased outof thecityizofeed calvesan__eluck- in he-. 1* - f ~~ors.si _ _* it m°Theh_ I tzumurneg P8901. ' A report of Prosi sage to Congress, terestedin it. gt tlélii? §°.l§§§§;§§§. .~ at 5 S" r I lone to aid .g ciu-fire is to iampoon the farmer and to make sport oi iilm. You have never had the priv-_ ilege cr meet-ins the real men oi the United States. If you ,want to meet the aristocracy of this republic come down with me this afternoon md 1 Will lntioduce you to a few of them. You will find standing at the heads of their' I-lerefords, their Aberdeen Angus, their Pei-che;-01|. their Belgian; and Clydesdales, and other live stock in the judging ring, the time of mea who have matic it possible for you to publish news- papers in this great city of Chicago. Then when your cheap poet, are hard up for a subject they wi-ite something like this_- -Farmer Brown camo to town, whiskers Breen as grass; P“1l°d gel; his bccis. lumped into And then blew out the gas. For twenty-five years the news. P8D¢rs of this republic have been dlivlnil' farm boys ca' the land and have been trying t drive them into your cities, where they are paid thirty dollars a week for their work “Hd heve tc pay about thirty-one dollars a week to live and the only °°”‘P¢“S°t-1011 theyset is the priv- ilege of walking the hard cement sidewalks instead of the good gi-een grass that they would have had un- der their feet if they had sense enough to stay in tl-ie country. Keeping The Boys On The' Farm ThLs is one of the things- that does not help agriculture, and the farm journals of Canada are doing splendid service in removing that misconception and keeping the boys on the farm. 'I‘hat.soi\t of wrong- headed opinion that the farmer is condemned to his occupation by the accident of birth, that nobody ever chose farming as a business, but he happened to make the mistake of choosing a. farmer for his father and had to stay on the farm for the rest of his natural days-that wmng- headed opinion, I say, must be got out of the heads and heal-is and mindset the boys and girls who are growing up in this Dominion before we can expect to see agriculture in the_ position it ought to occupy. Cites Great Britain Why is Great Britain today the breeding ground of high class live stock for the world? When men from the Argentine, from the United States, from Canada, from South Africa, want to get the highesi; class of pure bred live stock, where do they go? They goto England and Scotland. What is the reason? Sim- ply that the men in the Old Coun- try realize and understand that the breeding of live stock is the most scientific business in the world and requires intelligence, ability and ap- plication to do the job well. And so they go after it with that pride and that satisfaction in their business so essential to success, and they have made the greater; success of it in the world. - The great problem today is to keep the intelligent boys and girls of this country on the farms where they were born. Every once in a while somebody starts a. back-to-the- fami movement, but I never took very :mich stock in it. On one oc- casion a body of such people made the mistake of inviting me to address their first meeting/ I told them: The whole thing is very '="~lple. If any of you want io ge* to the land, all you have to .._. .. to buy alpair of overalls and start out on the road and hire out for a. month with the first farmer you meet that wants a hired man. At the end of the month you will know whether you want to get back to the land or only to "get your back" to the land. Native Born Boys and Girls I think the problem is to keep our boys and girls on the land who were born.there. We will have to let it few come fo the cities. There will have m be a. few great merchant princes, a few great doctors, a few great-lawyers in the cities. '-l-'lien 55 only one place to breed them you know. and_that is out on the land. Great cities like London and New York would have died of their OV-'Il rotionness within the century if it had not been for the red blood that was pumped into them from the country districts surroundina' "hem- But the duliest fellows born on 111° farm will do for than JON- They CB" get through the Universitiesfthat -‘S no troubiwthei' can set w » tlwse positions and carry on very Well- But for the great burlnmo of tillinl tho soil. tho most uncertain. the most dimcult, the most fascinating businw in the world-for the EWU-li business of breeding hlilll Cl”-‘S live stock we want real men, and we shall solve the problem if we can Bet me boy; and girls of this country to understand and appreciate lv-if what that means. . _det Proper Appreciation of the Importance of Agriculture ‘That is what is wronf! Wllill °“\' whole system. The boy! and Kms who are raised on the 19-lm "We" get e, proper understanding or lp' prcciation of the value and iml>°n' ance of agriculture, that it offer! mem an onccrwnliy tc lead 111°" useful lives than woulclii be OHM? hem in other sp ere o - :mn ‘ny e kind of education .r is :af “every _ I was glad aomstbihg in th". rigs. ri sig; iii; SI f 1 W°\' ‘ ~ “gina” mann' soon!!! a'A-rss Nor wauran are ont or two thin!! ifezsrzdlrhis '-V -°-l*;"*"_' 1 . P,-3|. _ s c 3 -s on mn do nm 132 "o‘t;:=\tl2`§&l\l;d\¢ll ,deb-gilt viléltculturai th2`lriIei;'kthmll’Id-Idlllvs lr;-zDli`i?f`l"i lm Fl” ml' m are h will exclaim Gosh darn England and Bc " vi ..i. av .. 5.; Morell Shipping 'Morell Shipping Club held their annual meeting in the hall on Mon- day evening January 'fth with pre- sident J. R. Compton in the chair. The attendance was good considering the roads and weather. The report of seasons shipments since organiza- tion last March were read by the Secretary showing a total of 895 ani- mals shipped also 2.417 lbs. of wool, and gross receipts of $10,510.68 with a. total plid.to shippers of $10,219.06. Loading expenses totalled $41.15. A few small bills were ordered paid and report adopted, after which Mr. I-I. W. Clay of the Dominion Live Stock Branch addressed the meeting saying that considering the small area covered by the club, _"we had done very well for nine months work. His figures showed that P. E. I. clubs shipped 8,000 lambs and 10,000 hogs in 1927, 16,000 lambs and 13,000 hogs in 1928. Also that in one week of 1928 they shipped 3,000 lambs and 1,000 fhogs, showing a large increase over 927 which proved the success of our club system. . I-ie spoke against lnbreeding sheep and urged the introduction of new blood by getting Oxford or Bluep- shire males. also pointing to the benefits of treating sheep for worms and other dlseasm. He urged shippers to get more lambs away in August in- stead of holding back until October when they simply clogged the markets and brought down prices. 50% of our laznbs should be shipped by October ls . Referring to swine breeding he was strongly ln favor of breeding York- shire and nothing but Yorkshire as the best type of Bacon hog, which commanded a higher price in the markets, moreover people must cater to the trade and give a market what it wanted. Mr. Clay then explained some of the points that constitute a Bacon hog, which was an eye opener to all present, and he advised against keeping hogs untilthey are 8 or 9 months old making them overweight and developing their shoulders at the expense of the hind quarters, in other words increasing the low pric- ed parts and decreasing the higher priced meat. As to raising veal his opinion was that heifer calves should not be veal- ed, only the males. because of the shortage of dairy cattle, in the States, Ontario and Quebec heifers were too valuable. He also gave a good explanation of the marketing of our stock and warned the farmers to be aware of the propagandisis of other interests who were spreading misre- presentations and adverse criticisms in an attempt to wreck our club system. At the close a hearty vote of thanks was tendered Mr. Clay for his .very interesting and instructive address. Compulsory grading of swine was not-discussed. After a vote of thanks to the secretary for his work and the reappointment of all Directors, Vice- president, President and Secretary for the ensuing year the meeting clos- ed, satisfied that from the top to bottom of our co-operative system of marketing all were doing their best to insure success. Our part is to keep our course, stick to our guns and be loyal to our club. _ Thousands of Mothers Use No Other Medicine Bows own 'rabicts are the ideal Remedy For Babies and Young Children Canadian mothers are noted for the care they give their little ones- the health of the baby is most jeal- ouslyy guarded and the mother is al- ways on the lookout for a remedy which is efficient and at the same time absolutely ysafe, Thousands of mothers have found such a remedy in Baby’s Own Tablets and many of them use nothing else for the. ail- ments of their little ones. Among them is Mrs. Howard King, of Truro, N. S.. who says:-“I can strongly re- commend Baby's Own Tablets to mo- thers of young children as I know of nothing to equal them for little ohm." Babys Own Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.. Brockville. Ont. _ SACKVILLE. N. B. Jan. 12-The ldecision of the Mount Allison auth- ' ° dungeon of ` ' Club Meeting .7 Banned Books i my ai-limi uuiica rms ` LONDON, January il-in the in-i 'ti-in Museum there are more than lil ty-four miles of bookahelves and illeifly 4.000.000 books. Some of thc , volumes have been in official posses felon for more than 150 years, and gr-ey are doomed to remain in iii' iviuseum, “forever." _ ‘ This is the answer to Sir Chai. Court a few days ago said it had 3|. Wlys puzzled him to know where th rets the Museum is one of the most Room. the doors of which are always locked. No member of the public has ever. been inside. It is the thought seen-ily for the public to see are hidden on the shelves behind the closed doors. Not every book cover which a. vis- itor passes on the miles of corridors where. An attendant presse; 3 ,knob and suddenly what looked like tering thenbook lined study of a which the most worthy and well- known visitor .would be allowed to read only while under the ever- watchful eye of officials. These ue the rooms in which valuable first ed- itions are kept. ' How are all the books dusted? Thanks to'the activities of a. special staff of “dusters"-who dust millions umes which want re-covering and re-juvenating generally. He works with a special mixture that has al magic effect on book covers. , books a book-worm has never been seen in the Museum: 'the deputy keeper explained. “The very level temperature of the museum is an important factor in a. shelf of ponderous tomes swings P 8 - "We have any book with a London 1927 we collected, for instance. 286,- pamphlets and thousands of other We h0pe to have it soon! An aerial ropeway car line 4000 SESSIONS RESUMED AT MT. ALLISON orities to begin the Christmas Vaca- tion a little earlier this year than usual because of the influenza. ep- idemic has been justified by the re- turn of almost all of the students. From the University roll there are two'absentees. One of these, Outer- bridge of Bermuda. was hard hit by the unusual climate of the north; he is-still absent after a. hard bout with double pneumonia. The Ladies College completed registration on Wednesday and is able to begin work immediately. The Academy is able to start work with one or two ab- sentees. The hockey team had its first work- out today; in spite of inferior ice some fast work was seen, but it,will not be until after Monday's game with Amherst that Mount A.'s pros- pccts will be known. The basketball team is not discouraged over the re- Train C rashed 5 Into Mo tor Car ` l (Special to The Guardian) sm BRANTFORD Jan 17-S ctators stdod and watched hor: on the Brantford-Paris high- way This morning when a westbound_ C. N. R. train crashed into a motor car driven by Wm. I-I Armitage, 107 St .Catharine Street Hamilton, and` former resident of Brantford, and, cd car contain- llfeless body und engine on i ~ . Pe ln impotent l then saw th: crumpl ing the apparently struck by a fast eastbo the other track. Coroner ' li. S. Hicks Bhd those! at the crosslng` the nrst im- who had ameinbled near the car, after pact, stood aghast when they saw the second train thundering towards the wreckage. It ashed into it and cal-ried,lt almost to the feet of the crowd. Tha car was first hit,by what is known as No. 15 C. N. R. ex- press going west at the toil-gate cros- ed the the on iii? a§g§_ stag the car and its track. A fol- wreckage on _cha y the eastbound that and immediately placed two vborpedoes to warn' the down train. The oroin which struck the car ap- parently didn't know of the accident as it continued on to London. SWITZERLAND SEASON BUSY i ill.i-:rnaiwr aaciNo,~_i.A'rlls'l: ` rent set-back by the Moncton Pawn- ces and hope, when the time comes, to obtain that ever-sweet revenge. Gerald Stewart of Campbellton, President of the Student Body, has returned from Kingston, Ont. where he represented Mt. A. at the annual meeting of the Federation of Can- adian University Students. The Students' Council. the out- standing feature of Mount Alllson's student life and government. met for the first time this term.Tl'ie new council is composed of: Seniors: Fred Wigmore, Emerald, P. E. I. President; Linsin ChaPD01l. sydney, N. S; Bill Mould. Sydney, N. S. and Bill Emery of Worcester. Mass. Juniors: Archie Humble, Truro. N. S. Secretary: Fred Black Charlotte- town, P. E. I; and Harold Chowen. Saint John. N. B. Sophomores: Bill Fraser. Trenton. N. S. and John McKay. Pictou, N. S: Freshmari:_H. L. Pottle. Fiat Rock. Newfoundland. Prof. I-Iunton. head of the Math- ematica Department. W” bltlen by 9, deg during the Christmas vacation. The professor is still unable to at- tend classes, infection necessitating an operation. 1-lo wul probably be lb- sent three or four weellc. during whieh time the work will be cared for by Professor McKiel and assist- ante. _ __i__.-- With snow frllizig c:i:~ll~r tiiani if-"'.;:l rj' i_:':"‘~ ~d i-~`rori< ri ‘linger 1 n -A - `- . ,-~.- .---. »\‘. ‘T ...van I w , ,W ‘ °"' °"H,¢ em- eénci-al rncvl: tinuated moo; tae intelligent far? l-_ -I- _ , .- 1 _ < ben I VU 5 1* i ' _ .- .. , - _ V .. , __ p wmembn. me “ye when n$Wllili>¢l'i if the Chi-.ago . i.-uie. Al 1..-_ A big stock of BLATCH- FOKUS PUULTBY SUP- PLIES in ltook., I CABLDADB each CRUSH- ID OYSTEB SHELL! and ll hllp [Gilt i r 1]' ~¢\'» ¢,--..\ *r;,.'\ .. _ ' f- I » 'M U__- “- . .11 " ~» \ °- I 1 ~ “"‘°""'°““" ,M in ww our uni:/ii .-1 tin. ...A-- l"°°" °'° N" ff gemeuef yrimay ‘hmm oreiii '~ould fibrin t.u cm -- §__i,i_i_i9',c°u\\t~§1`.;l1s4 a, ggaopalin. np; to ny uit.; about ui iw nun- cy . .= ..o.._...i 1. .~ _ ' \ Elephant racing is the latest form of sport at Kabul: Afghaiuatan. Book-makers, in unusual mornin; "rats, induce the tribal ohieftaina to .. t i-fli\:_1 laces. and ‘wr is poiuirir. vi "And in spite of the millions of i i it Records A Gay Caballero ,_ tres Biron, who at Bow Street Pollcei Comedidn A FrankCrum.lt , 7173] Museum stored all tae books inc; Y0u’re the awllllllllted. and asked' if all the ‘ , 502158 :Oil-itlsd 11233 tgere always. : - ,_ » o 00 , pe ca , and pape C - ,.... .. ,,, .,,,,,...,., ,, .,,,,,_,,,,;; V ,.4 _ ream ln gxyplygafxfgr a iicgy of each voi- M s e mus e sentin. , 2. And for those who know its sec- y romantic places in Landon' _ Fox Trot Ted Weeins and ' 21767 There is a kind of Bluebeard‘s ‘ H" 0’°h~ Dungeon of the Banned Books. and ' O . all those volumes which it'is not the Dials is really the back of a book. My- The Happiness Boys tell you a few things about 35953 Sl5€l'l0llS "Secret" doors are every- radio broadcasting! Ascreaming burlesque! back and o visitor finds nimrelr cu- _ Boy ,I / _ Museum 0 iclal. _ __ Then the” “W P99610! rooms in Thema Sony of "The Singing Fool" M 21633 in Fox Trot Geo. Olsen and His Music Organ Jesse Crawford Vocal Gene Austin Instru- Victor Salon Group mental ' I I of books in a year and never stop I G L k dusting-they are kept scrupulously t I e Clem- li tFunn llelod thone man has spent years giving Fox Trot Johnny Jolizilsgn and Higdtatler .lllnnsylvanians 2170l\ ° b1°°'“'°f "°“”‘ “’ “ded "°" ‘ california Humming aims mas ‘ There’s a Rainbow ‘ . 's~,\ ’ Round My . Shoulderfi @, it ror 'rm ailsmorcircmo aim.. reservin the books L » _vom Johnny Me;-vm mul Vocal .li .. l "`=‘s'_"_..§" Q -__-`* MILLER \ it 21725 - 21779 35945 -B -as - A " ~'._`-` -- , - 1 ; H1' \_ _ J, \ _j-\_ _. . l."§?Si’2§'df.’i`;f"‘L‘1i‘¢"Zf.’§‘sZ§T.§i`.?"°°§`.§ ' an me moi: raiser: records by famoio victor Artur., . acl newspapers and :ia,'loa books and ‘ //'W-\ ' publications. / V. @ “We have a repository for provin- y _.f If . _ ~ cial newspapers at Hendon. But _ J f " -‘ vie; Talk! _f 1 . of Canada 1 Emore space is urgently needed, and Magma CSF' ' .l-/M A _ _ Limited ' . -- State is declining with th: bette - ment of living conditions there. I Sold In Charlgttetown only By gg bv' _.i.____-¢ ' \ ”` » 'gm .1 feet long, is being constructed to the l “F1” , » . _ top of Table Mountain. South Africa. _ His MASIERS V0lcE . lUavl|l>il(iV(A>4a,.»< No.1 nl D411( lltii hifi I Emigration from the Irish Free ` - BROS., _ Great George Street _ UNITED KINGDOM TRADE CONDITIONS The trade barometer of the Unit- ed Kl-l1€d0m has shown practically no important change during the past few weeks, 'vritcs Harrison Watson, Canadian Trade Commissioner rn L°nd°ll_. lll lhc forthcoming issue of the»'Commercial Intelligence Jour. Hal- UDOH the wllole, the curve is in an upward direction. For instance, British exports for October were nearly 528,000,000 in excess of those for September and aggregated ap- proximately the same figure in N0. vember, while imports rerxloiiicd; steady. i One feature has been i'c'bcivliig nk gicat deal of attention. recently, and) that is the policy of safcgiiardlanirl Strong representations continue io i bu made for the prdtection of the lallguishilig iron and steel industry. Lforeover, there has'simultaneolisiy arisen a. widespread agitation for the S21l0§U\1T€llni,' oi’ various branches of the textile industry. For dealing with these applicants and investige- tions the Government announces that-if it is returned to power it is D1‘0DO-Sed to substitute n. standing conmiittee. of the type which deals with the Merchandise Marks Act, to replace the casual comlilittees which aio no\v einployed. otn Law soriinns l-‘l..ai°Paas A lriw p.i.\\r-cl iii l'l’7n_ and never rcpealcd is causing some apprehen. sion alnoiigst scheming woiiioil of Nance since it was recently brought, Dsmuo I. .. ___ ` -li@___*__ _;;-Q*--i - _,».,.,` got. If the name Bayer appears, it is not! Headaches are dispellcd proven directions. Anvirin ia the iml~ no ii " 'rimin mal A -» .neu uni og ... -4 Physicians ;,;i'e€;cvilae,Aspirin; - it does lil?" ` '_' ~~. izeart I ' “ 1r.":".~...'."lu.L* PIRIN The whole world knows Aspirin as an effective antidote 'fort pain. Bufifs just as ini/iortnrit In I.-naw Ilmf tlicrc is only out rn|§~i`na Aspirin. ,T he name Bayer is on every inlilet. and on the its genuine; and if it doesnt, by Aspirin. So are colds. and the pain that goes with them; even neuralgin, ilcuriiis. and rhcilnia- tism promptly relieved. Get 'Aspirin-at any drugstore--with 1 a lurk. 1