“QOWIVGT. it the same PRINCE ‘IIATINII use-acne. TODA E D. WAR D‘. NIGHT - 8.15 31c. He, 80c ETHEL MAY A ~ SHQREY PLAYERS s ‘dcfNEWlnnYs- Yalideville —— New Scenery -— Orchestra lPROGRAM TODAY Matinee-J‘ The Frameup ” l | BEAUTIFUL, I i i l Tonight-‘One New Year’s Eve’ CHEERY RURAL COMEDY DRAMA TOMORROW MATINEE -—"ONE NEW YEAR'S EVE" ‘TOMORROW NIGHT-HTHE CRIMINAL" RRSMPLETE CHANGE PROGRAM, DAiLYi SEATS NOW SELLING AT BOX OFFICE The Public Forum This column u open ior the discussion by, cuflespfllldonll oi questions oi interest. The C‘ lottetown Guardian does not necessarily endorse the opinions oi correspondents. Continued from page 4 ‘.9, , ._.... .__.-._.___ W-—.,_..., . . water; however, on Prince Edward Island it is not the rain in the sum- mer season that is so objectionable as the roads have been made hard by continual trafllc oi automobiles. but it is the dust nuisance, No need to say anything more oi that, as we ll! realize whet it. is like, the point is to gt. rid oijit." r believe that their eiIorts to put gravel on the " j_- roads is goingto help, solve the pro- ‘ blem, however, I also believe that you would get better results by spreading the gravel over a greater area; ior instance, there are many places on. the roads that you are now gravelling a ioot thick. At this time o! year this is not helping the tour- . lets or your own people who travel yver the roads, but is rather creat- ing a dangerous hazard. as in the summer season the gravel will not pea itseli ‘into the hard clay road. amount oi gravel was spread over the roads two inches thick and then come -back next year aiter the gravel had gen-e into the mud as it surely will do. I'_nd do the same thing. it would elim- inate the danger oi ditching the car, and would help to keep the dust m . This would be a vast improve- ment. ' ' 5i; Another mistake we believe a to bib continually taking out the loam ‘and sand irom the gutters and- piling it on the centre 4 oi’ _, the road to be ground up‘int'o dust which in oi-y ' feather not only ruins the cars and fioils the dispositions oi the drivers, hilt also is’ a great nuisance to. any homes out are-within‘ a thousand oi‘! the road. It would be much litter to haul this mud otl’ the road fltogether and be "done with it. 7W0 know that you have a problem in the clay‘ roads that is not easyw J/isitors in (Iharlottetown are invited to inspect the display of - FARM OPERA TING EQUIPMENTfi ati the showroom of & Wood Maritime Ibinflited ‘ ‘l’ - 1r, s5 solve. However, we know that it can be improved, and I would like to see the improvement made‘ beioro the tourists get discouraged and disgust- ed with the condition o! the roads. and cannot be induced to go back. For instance, ii your road-makers had started in the right way ten years ago, you would be that much iarthe; ahead today. However, not knowing your financial condition, it might have been impossible to widen the roads at that time. but conditions have now changed and you have ep- proxlmately 5,000 automobiles regis- tered on Prince Edward Island- most oi them very iine new cars. The owners oi these cars will pay a rev- enue intothe HighwayDept. ior at least five to seven years and we hope in the next rive years you will not only have all oi these owners. but double the number; that is a guar- anteed amount oi money ior your Highway Dept. to work on. Suppose. ior instance, that you have an aver- pge oi $35.00 per car—$l65,000.00, plus your gas tax; the greater portion oi that money should be spent on the roads-I believe, all oi it‘ should ‘be spent on the roads. Good roads im- prove property iaster than any other investment. One oi the main reasons that prompted the writing oi this letter is to protest, against the unreason- able and unbusinesslike method used in some parts or New Brunswick in building and repairing roads. In the first place, I will say that New Brunswick has good roads and some oi the road builders are intelli- gent men who go about their work in a businesslike and intelligent man- ner, but the same canot be said oi the parties who are repairing the roads between Cape Tormentine and- Sackvllle at the present time. - This year I left Wollastolnwllich is approximately 700 miles irom Bor- den. Thursday morning, and being advised oi considerable road con- struction between Ellsworth and Calais, we took the Houlton road to Fredericton and came down the other side oi the river to Cole's Island en- tering a little south oi Sussex. We encountered very little construction Kent Street new N0. s "Fltosi a wool)”. ‘ {FROST & WOOD” ' "c _ - ‘i OCKSHUTT” AUTO-TYPE] “COCKSHUTT” FER CAPITOL TODAY' JAZZ-MAD- YOUTH! Dancing boy's and girls. but at heart as true as shell ~ ALSO COMEDY ‘IL CAPITOL College youth and crook, brothers, in one oi the‘ most sensational dramas oi the year. Underworld and t-llefglllih" and had a wonderiul road ior a dirt road going through the country. The rosd- was good right down to Cape Tormentine. We. oi course, wrote back and advised our iriends that the road was nae and you can imag- in just how we ielt on our return when iour or iive miles irom Cape Tormentine we ran into our nice road all torn up and nine miles oi it un- der construction; s. small gang oi men with two orfthree tractors were widening the road and piling up the loam irom the meadows on top or the road; in some places it was two ieet deep, and no provision made ior peo- ple going to the Island-no detour signs or roads ior detours provided. Now this was Tuesday morning. Aug. l3 and we had scarcely got thrc that. and were within about diteen miles irom Sackville when we ran into another gang destroying the road-I would not call it road con- struction, but rather destruction; here we had a worse conditi irom two to three ieet oi loose gravel and dust piled up on both sides o! the road and in the middlp-quczswlynoi ‘escape at all; cars getting stuck, carburetors and distributors on the cars getting tilled with-dust! _Wilen a car went by it-was necessary to Dull in to the side and keep blowing the horn ior iear oi getting run in- to. There were no signs on the nlad to show that it was under construe"- tion and even ii there had been a sign, it would need a bell or whistle continually blowing. and you would need to haves chart or compass. W} think such methods are abso- lutely unreasonable and uncalled ior and whoever is responsible shows very little intelligence.’ All travel- lers going over the roads realise that they must be lppaired. but why tear up nine miles at a stretch and make lt\ impossible? I can't see where there is any saving in such methods; a hall mile oi such road was suillci- ent. even ii it added 100 per cent. to the cost; it would be better than ren- aéring the road almost impossible. l shudderio think oi what that road would b'e like aiter a day's heavy rain. l ' It looks to\me as though your neighbors in New Brunswick were de- i _ , g ff-ELLREKA” POTATO BIGGER. ~ ‘ ‘ “ADAMS” FARM“ WAGONS . ' ‘ "more." CREAM SEPARATORS x “FULLER o JOHNSON” enemas 1 - < Frost. Wo "ram STREET od Maritime, Lini‘iteil' i (JENTENNIAL Following is a summary oi the isermon delivered by Rev. J. A. Gor- don, D. D.,'oi Montreal, at the Cen- tennial Service in the B89915‘ Church, Uigg last Sunday:- “God having provided (foreseen) better. things concerning us, that they apart irom us should not be made mriect," Heb. ll: 39-40. This world is a theatrical stage on which iindivlduals, iamilies, genera- tions, nations, civilizations, ages, play their respective. parts, .in the one great act, without rehearsal. In this movelnentwe are not spee- tators but participators. All the portraits oi the heroes oi iaith were not in place when the ilth oi He- brews was written _I: IhePa-stz- (l) What a procession oi heroic actors are represented to us. ‘The writer mentions by name but a iew oi the characters that are typical oi the vast unnamed host, whose names are recorded in the Lambs book oi liie, Abel, Abraham, Enoch, Noah, dtc. All these great men and women, inspired“ by the promises oi the Promise that they greeted irom siar, "One God, one law. one element. Ono ier_oi! divine event, (2) The supreme. objective here called the "Promise" is the unifying iactor oi the unbroken procession, composed "oi individuals, iamilies, generations, nations, civilizations. agar. (3) Paul teaches very clearly that the nations oi the World are in the programme oi Gcdr with this ob- jectivc in view. Acts 17:28. "He made oi one every nation oi men to dwell on the lace oi the earth, hav- ing determined their appointed season and the bounds o! theiinhebi- tation. that they should seek God." (a) The Kingdom oi Israel had its task. assigned to it, its appointed season, and the bounds oi its habita- tion determined, Note its contribu- tion, The O. T. Jesus Christ, gospel liberateiy attempting to handicapthe lrince Edward Island Tourist» Also- elation in their eiiorts to promote and encourage tourists to go to ~ the Island.’ 1 unwary confident that it bending your Exhibition, and I believe that you would be Justin-ed in mekinl a protest to the Government o! New runswick because they had practi- ally the some condition lest year at this time. I will also say. that the workmen on the road show‘ very scant tioiiciNewBl-unswick. Iiitvnre necessary and could not be avoided. itwould be a diihrent putter, but tbs whole thing was uncalled ior all! and-should not ‘be p9!- rmttod to goon, any timber sow. Sir. I trust m: Lee To which the whole creation moves." e will prevents lot oi people iroln et- coertesy to the tourists in that n01 Will‘ V ulon-r-rbo a us ' Mo. 81c. . (b),.'I‘he oi-eeun Nation, reuowEl on the stage and had its task, Its appointed season, and the bounds oi‘ its habitation, its contribution, clear thinking, accurate language by which this gospel message could be carried to the uttermost Part oi the earth. (c) The Roman Empire, had its place in the htesremme or Cod on the stage, its task to contribute order, organisation Jesus adopted the term by which it designhted its ireemen as the name by which the organized Christian should be known lk-Kelo. llkklesis, “My Church" (4) Even so each individual and generation has its own task, appoint- ed time, andbcundroi its tithin- tlon, like theennuai crop oi the leaves on the trsqmsde strong by the contribution oi the leaves oi past years, which in‘ turn they make their contribution to the tree that abides, though they iali. In the words oi Oln Mcliae I hear our an- iestors say; , ‘ i "To ‘you irom tailing hands we Throw the torch, be yours to hold it’ high, - Ii you break iaith with us we die. We Lilalinot sleep though poppies grow on Flanders field." (l) m iathers and the mothers that made the out,“ I havp it; “are passed ofl the stage, with but iew exceptions, even those who were then the ‘eons and daughters are now like solitary rsmplkes in iields that in our day‘ was a nourishing (crest, e iew suchieaves, still per- sistently clinging to the branches, ‘in spits ‘oi wintry winds, and ‘blthg irostl. l .=. -. . ,. l (I) The past having ‘served the __._,,_.....i. will 0i God, ixntheir own ‘generation. have been dismissed {ram the gtage to give their successors _a place to play their part. "One generation 208th Ind lnothir .ioiioweth,‘~ but the earth abideth iorev ." -. . (8) The peelent 1w become the heir and inherltnr. oi tie ~ achieve-i {Milli Premises-the but. A very celebrated-professor sent his clever son abroad ior post graduate Ark, onvhit return one deyhe lec- tured bflorehis Vintner's, class, he so. interest-ed and thrilled they atid. wily he beats the 91a man ‘eu "Pile"? The e14 mic-m repute. "res gentlemen, but no not iorget "1191?! fiilfliilqfl, F119‘, 014 man's 1m new». ti» , Mulder: o! the none-mete, they, oueht to hm twidér endoplas- vision’ out‘; n-olhue out the ma. veneered manual-J. - -. "Ilybelltisaotltilltlsducrmy fimfiiiihtehedaniiynllm ottbe‘ ‘ma. . Buthlgilor that,‘ “h: _.eeio ‘ "The "n" girl numb a eel-ma o! "their: Clan ma. college, _ gets a lot oi new.“ ledge and _______________ _ . b, the use. contribute to the with“ growth and streniih, 91. n" m.‘ that stand alter tbeyzhsve 511W"; ' 13) flqwgvgg prolonied the i-lmQ» and varied, the actors, gt-he neit- 0B- jectivo is one. i8 W! Wm“, “hm” i," gm‘ mllmlment oi LII; the iaith lla- eeinnz premises’. - ‘-, . min "some iel- on div e even " Towards which the W i! W919i?" moves. ~ ' ,2; e-l, "Yet once it is a little vihile, and-Iwill shake the heavens and the earth; ind u" "F “a dry land, I will shake ,1“. MW“!- andlthe precious htings oi ail nations shall‘ come: and r will fill the new with glory", saith Jehovah at‘ host." Hag. 22-6-9. ‘ _ \; a . (4) A m“ inspiration. ‘Kern iaithiulness.‘ "Thereiore let @189- legmi we m mpasted eboutlwifli s, gust eicloud oi witnesses, lily aside the sin which doth so will! beset. us; lot us run with Mum“ k" ‘race set beicre us. _ 10°31"! ‘mi? Jesus‘ the author and Peflevwi‘ ‘u! our iaith." From the amphitheater- abovothcse whose Dlliie- "Th!" tlkem are looking aowlrto» lie PROV we are playing our-rut in the" 8"" 4 game oi liie. ' - r The Markets MONTREAL. Que... Arm. zu-Ilzere were no changes in the local grain- lnarket here today. Cheese prices were a little lower with Number-One Ontario white anceoloree at 16m 1.555 cents per poundsnd No. i 0. white and colored ssllingst i756 t? 1m cent per perm. aeoeiitn ivere 0,015 boxes compared with 8.107 es on the same div n week nee- Trpding on the L. C. L- buttcr mar- leee was steady with nopi-iee change." Iteceiptswere eighty three hopes es compared with 4e boloespa the some any, e week ue- The m market w" iii-n with no ermine m atoll prio- es and in a wholesale fwly cation prices were asiollows: mitten Ool- ' fumble. iresll i. o. b. fveneeum a cents par doaen. iorgexthralid i’! cents rei- iirsts. sleemliruh i. c. b. ‘Edmonton. i2 cents levies,- trps, so cents m- tints mandrel ior ‘eeooneel meeuiu e490 cuis- compared with im» eewwtir . new aavJweeiom-‘knirlvvieb market wassptmdy witbnew ‘I locally growl. canine ‘er-quite us)‘ oer museum __ " 1 " so we» m. ‘G rei . . , selmuiim.e13l=!.¥en:, mt __ as was inadvertently sieiedilffihllieidlng. I f ' , raw-Jabs. the aghlpluop from thellr. Curtis Robin Oablnho- pmie. Sister this e: the so um, iouinriletcepc. SttI-IlngLIJUJDe memos time semi-ice. ratatoui- w. w. adieu-moth machines‘ we: cp- pa the heme: (Murine Wharf) utniuon Week. sue-ego 1441.- ‘sell one summon week SPICIALS insults, ci- over-coats, all, tailored to individual measure-nib my gm; “Asp iit guaranteed. I carry a record ior accuracy incuuiiemeiits. Twenty-tour iiity up. mm your order now. s. s. Tarbush, 1cm- and Kent.‘ on moron run-m. =me Jenn-shaman. m. sodfllrs. mu- dock m. ms noyaltygillvc this morning on a vim-w irisuds in neutrons-m will duo visit mete w. and . a. s. mile, culina- being arliiugiiter ei-ln- ass-me" noeewhlulin-monotheywilitexe in-the cieilun"ue_ liihibi- nnaulsan-eilmea: the yisitoib to the city-u m. menu stores. oi ilew worship, storey ‘is anIslehder having in lliiliview, tom's new veiitlugo. n. ha‘ mtumeato we‘ nuiiaypvq-ei‘ times ‘but’ t‘ u i: years ieen,_-m-p tore; sees prcipiritythroughout, ry‘ still" 1a." improvement - ‘nieur eh! Itreets‘, m mt no ‘iindl it hard tie-recognise the City pat all- He u viiiilllg irieilds throughout the CiiYQI-IIUTYIYIDI ‘With hi8 lllillfuide Worth, Emilee Street. avatar‘. YllTlIDAY-Jfhe iun- eral circulate ma‘ piece Y‘ v y’ morning at Q30 from zero outboard.- mrpmieéjeio u hence Leigh and 1dr. 3-’ ‘F. lililefmeiitl-eeirrleee in Sherwood Cemetery. ‘ , m‘ Airs. sillvllkfsr-il-libwi glint)’ m, - lace-u also 5m. Annie». lie-mu ~ bee!“ he: naval he anaemia-viii" ' vméa-n-‘ii, wberethe y will be theluseliioii up Q similar I P. I. 1., from we.‘ h-eyn p: noun, e... 5,"; ewe. u: m, W, m. 99H; Few neurons. ma. o}: u, W"!!! Jiefln oet. 1i she d,‘ blflinBqy-uluh‘ ‘ wswolmn nous-o. n, "QWlliPI-“fhililtflsth; g, 311mg (Headland relatives or mo“ m lfiliillllrk lilemlllsdletflleir 110mm Keviwwi 3° fin honor whiz ti“, . . l. - south 8min: Maine who had been lpfifldln‘ u” Pelt We Milka visitins her old he... land on Prince Edward Island. m evwincvu Pllisontliellentl u m... ‘ic contests and other old time gum we welcomed the M, 1M elilfesled be: pleasure in a iev welidseeen words ior the very m”. 9P1‘. “W” fiber 1M aim her. gtliliiity lunch was lervedby u, soung ladies ‘at which some ‘lumen. ilifi stories were told o! by evil; any: olrP. Ii, I. Aiier-slnging“‘sbould oil! Aeqfliiiii-[lliea be tel-got, “Good nigh] Jessie," and‘ "bod ‘save the King‘ ‘u mm"?! ‘"1158 they lied spent, a very enjoyable evening. Mrs. Kipp m" Jieeqmveeied. by ma. Cllu. RIcllIIHIOn'_-(ns: Belle Paynter) m; morning ‘ car ior their home in Booth , Maine. Iheir muiy irieodfwil themsuie trip toms CONDUCTOR! QIOLD MEETING- Tbe aanuslimeetixig oi‘ the Orders! Railway conductors‘. ior the dlaiird Wdllhdld in Charlottetown on Sunday August u. s number oi import-mi matters were ‘under discussion. Go:- cral chairman oi the organization, iii o. n. sumac-mul- o: Joiiette, Que, vlw we: present presented the report oi‘ ’ the work oi the order ior the past yea The visiting members, who came iron Menctcn and other centres, wen entertained by the Island member! with‘: drive int-the country. an out- ins W1¢§i;_iih!¥_.°'¥19¥“ed very wr-‘i. Officers preient were Chic! Conduc- tor, l. J. Nevnnen, Mansion Allis taut Qhiei Conductor. J. F. MacDon- ald, Charlottetown» Senior Conducts! '1‘. ‘B. ' Ryan, “ Charlottetown; Junlm Conductor, O. B. ldcMsnus, Monctenl Secretary, a‘. Morton; inside guard. l u rmm, ciiuloxetown; . outside "guard, c. n. Clark st. John. columnar} conmrmrrv cm H heldiiheir annual picnic at Brui- leyjsachcn Saturday oiterapon viii phi-re number ‘o: mernbm mi Hill? iriends in~attcndonce.~l\i41i¥ W lunch tllemellqwicr heave» ru Norms Ayers. 2 Emily Plstis, s ‘my ueexinnon. . ' lbylrlmning rece.i Gordonflla- 2 Mattie simniui, s m» unnu- aool-j. W ~ » . Boysjcekll Race. Louis mom! we Lorne Scott, m. am Biunllill ‘ i“ Wilmi- i ‘wheelbarrow M 1 In!!! ‘Plath and Jl-Cklofum ilhnalloeliancoeaddordesliif‘ tlhllflfllael Mrs. 0's jnf-eneh leit on mo; toyed excellent bathing and sits. Ciris under sixteen running ‘noel sell; 2,4»: sem, s Louis Mentality l mlilyrlem ‘ 'Boylbackwordrece. i Gordon ills-i Nil. I Jae! Oeott, vs Louis Meoemli soy-i nee-sup and rumnifiei Gordon Russell. a M