‘A. ,.. I ._ anus: nnfqqtarors of pH gluon of ~ 131M111 .--~1 l 1 l . i AUTO INSURANCE ‘l8 AN EXTRA TIRE FOR THE OWNER'S ‘aunt unumnnaumsrlauo'”' can rel‘. ' _ ifl-ll s‘: rear (lulled) In ‘airman n‘ ofii.‘ qnovamdl- ‘t-o _ bl! GIIIIQ DIIIOI; Paulie-II. ‘ that-is. the eve pf All I-Iailowslani. l __ in divers ways. lstreeis. removing dost-steps to sur-l \ y "J. It. Burnett, l hi} Puhllulon K. (furl-lo. Associate Editor. ' THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1922; l-mttow sins K ldiq reputation lllj‘ the American - ' ‘market nutksrelstill being largely 1 Boys. tonight we of all agessld qmponad , uotwflhamndlai} the ma’ Wm cehbm“ ‘fimm Ewlkflibrdnoy Motif! ollsixcent: a dos» _ l escillliiideslers find it good policy All finial: ‘Day. From time imme~ _ _ ltogsssura their ~ best cilstomers mo m u“? we h“ we“ mwerved {that the eggs they offer are genu- In this countrlul ' 1lno Prince Edward Island sans nieanimi America, and with spec-l M Be d d m w. . . . a lal reference to Prince Edward ls-l r mo“ ' u n8 e p s land. w? have observed n by “ulslweak has addressed uieetinps -in "m: ‘up prank‘ on the ma“ mdlthe principal sections of Klnls ‘ The meetings invariably lCoun-ty. lwere largely attended and the men fprlsei the occupants of the house. . land woman present entered en- waaused an under current of dill . 1w ;, The swift. 1:11 111 ,pt1s!11‘.i4'111‘1 fluid crops within the or. (W9 hug given the (avatars n!“ 1c and tile unned citusvqr for serious thought anthbga .- contont that had not existed (Ofethe war. it il_ rams“ , 11311111‘ pronouncalb across the bolder than it is in cnljada. and has aroused 11 iielerrninatlpn lin both cfluntlfiloalttl J cnd certsiu conditions that 511,111.. exist. l . q. The awhile farmer on both QldQB of‘ the line owns hill farm. the buildings, live swell and ~in_l- plemants thereon. He. also works daily at his calling. He .is thus lpntli a capithllst and a ialbarnr. His daily toil is‘ not a matter of sight hours, but_of twelve, or four- teen hours. l._f lie Ila-s soils at h0i11B they work as he does. If other- wise, ha m'us't employ hiredlabpr BANK ACCOUNT _ lly; removing gates, fences. car- We will furnish you an auto in. v ourance policy that is a complot lluagmi and other effects and coverage for all contingencies. Fire. lsomciinles injuring them and culls Collision. Property. damages and iilblllty are all covered at one ex- pense to you. ' l in; .i'lle owners heavy losses. "Fhnse oi‘ its who have been train- An Automobile is a Liability, not} P“ m people.“ ill Aiilil 181'!“ R 15 "isurfli- lpropcrty and tn be careful not to llynliman 8i ‘"0. Ltd. The Oldest insurance Agency lh:\\'ll1l(‘ll no one was injured and no P E. l. ' 113219601." other lcailsc any injury to persons con- ‘prilperiy rlunlageti- and we general- ri .l.\' nninazcd in pui in a very en~ llillvlhlc Hllllflw E'cil. Some of us. Hi9 Salli lllowevi-r. SOIIIHHIIIPS became mix- All shades in stock, sold at half price. $1.50 to $1.75 shades 75¢. faelulp with t1ho>lc who bud no res- {Prvt for the property of IIIIIPI‘! laud who did not care whether ot- llwrs 1v1~rl= injured or not. lii this \\':l~_\' we have gut into tronblefliu- “guilt-sully. except that we hud ‘an h ‘business ,to become so nlixrd up. 'l‘llesr- fr! tinlzli ill tlw. hope that l‘ _.-,.nid '» 11111.11 . and nut ‘ rt iirilu-il up with doubtful cum- plmy. The doubtful company gone- Eflill)‘ gc-ts away and the innocent for will tulle \\'il|"ll.ll_l; 3 light ‘fixtures, coni- plete with shades $7. 2 light fixtures, coni- plete with shades, $6. m'ill‘t‘ Zilllliilfll sure lo be caught. We do no! killiw \\'h_\" this is; it" l-sometlmes to injure them SP'I'l0l.IR: limited lull-selves with real fun in rcmluiscellccs are l‘Q£l'ii|i-_ ithusillsticallylinto tile spirit oflm least lllll-lllg lilo season ofplaii- the cooperative principles which ‘ting, cultivation and harvesting. or !hc enunciated. He. was assured EIIPOHKIIO!!! the I~'£*11.1'. Tlllw hi‘ 1511i ~ . ones a capitalist a laborer and an lthat tho great majority of his hour _ l employer of labor. But under pres- lem hm‘ lmpmvad and ‘mmrged ent conditions in inlliiy cases lie ltbelr flock and that they are deter llmlfi m," llls cl-ol, will not pay i iii: llfluoslon by Julius-evil? l w qusations of lntli-l- '1'!» Ofi-rlomtlttlfl. iquirdlan docs not mods ' _' |y QIIQOQIC ‘throplnlono hymns by its some “pendants. 1 i Wlnt is llle Maltcrlwithl: ‘John D McIntyre 7 l 1Sir,——.\'o doubt Mr._ McIntyre. in quotlntz plisi history. speaks ib-onl pargqmgl experience. and .l aln sorry for lliin, but even that doe! nc-t KlV6:_hllII the right to libel our fairfProvllire an" he has 110118- Tukn his letter clause by clause. as they say lll Llle House, and bare is what it saysw-“lvo must delve and diglll order to llud llle cause that. is giving life und strength to “H1113 IJIOPLORABLE SOCIAL LYN- REST llt illc present time iii P. E. ' ll la strange that u mun lms to 90mg all the way from Boston men left ‘their posts. leiivfngtlle city to llll‘ uiercy of llletpugs am- plclrpocliets) to pUlIlll out this ter- rlble sluts of affairs? He nexl tells us_:—— “We will easily illlll A WOEFUL LACK 0F AM'Ei'l'l‘I0.\' AND INITIATIVE 0N nllilied to continue their support the cost of production nlonc. with- ~M m? movement Stilt cliargiili: anything as interest I . . ' _ on his investment. This week Mr Benson will tirrn lliis attention to Queens and Prints, We 11"‘ slmlkmg "t m" V"“m“"" i ‘who ilepends w-holly , l or mainly Counties and will nlnd- up lriniupon “PM "Dim as do “mm, m“, tPrlnce Eilward island tour wlthll-alllllllan West. Mixed falniing an address to the business menlpuys hotter as prices of meats, ‘and citizens of Charlottetown ozilllifirl‘ I11'°<'1"1‘1*1. e151" ‘"111 WWW’ the eveivlng nf Tuesday, >NOV9IIIb8Pl"av“ not lane“ so SwmtLv i“ gram illnd rooi crops The grain grower 7U‘- m“ memmg m be hem l" mefiinds the value of his product ‘Pdran 'l'l1l‘lllI'P. Mr. ‘Benson hasshrnnk to pre-ivar prices. while ‘mum "l intern‘ w w" and it exorbitant freight rates cut deeply i _ _ lirtn his returns. These charges m“ be w me “males” 0i busmelw- lhe must. pay butll oil what he buys ii" “-'.'"'“’"‘~‘l°w“ ma‘ m" b“*l'i"“55;:lnil Willi-t he sells. Ho is tilt-refine ‘men hear him. deeply lutcrosteddil froiglilt rates. i . -—*——— ' uT||_|z|Nq VACANT FARMS He sees tlllli the la-bor llIllCII“‘lIy ‘ ___>__ lthelr organizations. by stnlkes Tili- trek to the CHIPS i-ztriltek other land u"“‘”“t"“°“ MHkQL‘ “we been “my” at the labia to inainlaill war prices lm‘ 2P , _ _ _ H iiheir lafnor on tile railways and in l rlilce ludnaiil Island. iii the lllIll-llhe cmll mllms‘ thus lwldlng up 'eri Suites till-re are probably lIl0N'}fl'lfl>(’Ot4t of lailor and fill-l which lvacdli-i. iiirllls in IJNJPIWUOI’! to po- "T9 U11’- blK 1191116 in 1111.‘ flllllflYfm‘ Pflldlcilll tlmn flI1_V\\'lIt‘J‘('" else lnlwanspmqa-uo"' Am‘ the “m?” lll-‘IR not struck nild cilniiot strike. vrtrrlrl as wcli as '60 Queen fltrosf Phone 722_-J i l Daily Selections iol i buaidiaii lieaiieis 5? From tho W. l. Louson collection 0000-0400-04- 4 ALA. SOULS’ NIGHT Lonely as we two wlloloveil lliin so (The old. old dog. and I) Watch willie ille lire burlls low, so l low, _ And dreary hours crawl by. If it be true that souls illui roam. The world -tl'lIIlgllI.-lllS wall collie home! The clock strikes twelve! liolv ' still lily ‘room! Hark! ‘iis the dog's glad whips, Who brooding peers into the " gloom! “'18 eyes with welcome shine! Beyond the power of bullion sight, Whom does he sec. this inystlc nilht? ‘ Iii It the wiild that liloans outside? Who's there? Again who's there. Both longing arms I open wide And illllsp-tlll- empty air! Tears fell unchecked—against my knee The old dug leans in sympathy! -—<Mhzie V. ifa rutlu-rs. THY LOVE_ABIDES It sinnetll low (in every heart, We hear it ear-h and all——~ A song of those who answer not. . iiowevei‘ we liiay call. ‘ They throng the silence of tile breast: . ‘l ' ' . We use them as of yore- The kind. the true. the brave, the sweet ~- Who walk with us no more. ,&ore home-like seems the vust lin- known lSince they have entered liters; "to follow them were not so hard: Wherever they may fare» They cannot be where God is not. 4011 any sea or shore: . Whattefer bétlides. thy love nbldcs. Olir God ifpr evermore! .~i_ l‘. _\__\\. \_. l onus ’ \_\\\‘ is s. & lenoluzll to knew that’ it. is. l bow, tolilurrow “ill be All ‘lSa-inlis Day and all lllt‘ Saints will lbs ill the Police _(‘olirt preferring icharges against the boys who are lczlught tonight by llil- Police. And ‘(you never know whom the police {are going to catch: the)‘ won't Icatch them all bull depend upon l-lt, they will catch somebody and lsonlebody else will see the gen: ldolng nlimbief and of course they ‘will identify only the innocent alld he is the fallow that the Saints will ‘be entertaiuingiil the Police Court. tomorrow. Now- boys. let us be cal-chi] to~ night. Let us have lots of fun but lei us hot do anything that will injure property 0r burl. anyone for we have it on good authority that some people are “izl_vini:" for us and that if we are seen doing anyl thing wrong or a-re miixed up with others who are doing wrong we'll catch it tomorrow. THE POULTRY BUSINESS Mr. T. A. Benson. formerly Dam lninn Poultry Representative. for this province and now |li°lf"f‘l’. Poultry Pronloter for the Province nf Ontario. has Egg (‘ircle meetings iii tlw east. been addressing . em portilon of the province From his previous experience here. Mr. Benson is Iln a position to make (STTIIIIYPIHHOII with forllle‘: conditions and to form an idea of thr- proi! ens mudr- l! the poul- try bilsviness. The poultry ‘business has vast- l_\' improved during the scvcu yours since Mr. Benson left the ivork. In number and in tllr‘ oullii- ty of ‘will rgns and ‘poultry there has been s vast llYlDPO\'3II'il'lIl. Br-l ter than this. however. is the fact. which Mr. Benson is always proud to mention, that the reputation of Prince Edward Island eggs UNI poultry has sone far and wide. In this connection during one of his addresses he mentioned the of a Jew on the Boston market who was trylnz to negotiate ‘a pur CRIB V‘ clinae of poultry. II.- was assured by’ the wholesaler that the stock offered was arnulnb Canadian poultry/I'll this the‘ Jew rwpllcd: “i dont want lions ofyour d—-- I Canadian bean. i Wl\l'lt“P?ldi'.8 Ell Efl-l ward Island liens!" Prince ' turd Island egg: also have a spies ' '. .4 lprvsrfibelvnhk- 3 All: Plljil. lilii the shrewd Yankeal af'ti-l' llselcssl)‘ bemoaning for sev-l lersl years the loss of, agricultural lprotiuction and. ills consequent! lhigli cost of living, ha‘ "trot. onto} iliimself" and ‘is now sensibly over- coiliinz the handicap. v In the State of Vermont, farm; actor farm had been abandoned un til the state looked like a veritable Wl|d8TfllQflB._Th9 land had oncel been. fertile and shrewd men realv ized that the fertility could be restored and the waste made good. A gentle-man figured out the_ ' possibilities. had sufflicient vision to look into the future and, bee‘ of all, had the courage of his con- victions. He. raised the necessary capital. bought up 3600 acres of the abandoned farms. started an orchard severallyears nan. and to- day the orchard. the largest in Am erica, is bearing spilled ‘and pears on a scle hitherto unknown in lii-I United States. ' "Q . ~ This years crop now being T1111‘- iaf 100 apples each. carefully pick- led. each apple wrapped in oiled paper and placed on thb market ills Number One apples and selling at a NKUPO which assures a. sails ifactory profit. Many of the tree; lure s-tllll too young to bear but‘ a lcareful estimate places the oroll inf’ three years hence at 15.000 cur llonds. Each full grown tree pro~ lllllflfi‘! 30 bushels of apples. Then llhere are pear trees as well which. lure expected to contribute their liluota to the profit. . From an unproductive. waste land useless area of abandoned ifsrms this immense orchard has {been evolved and it is still grow- : n: _Without the enterprise ‘and lvision of this one man this great wealth-producer would have lain ldls indefinitely and the people. would have indefinitely bemoaned the loos sari the waste. l I _ What an we doing or going to do‘ about our vacant forms? True we have no 8000 acre areas but we have contiguous fsrnisof a hllllfl< rad urn-tors acres each. Anyway we have yacant‘ individual farms any one of which could probably be ‘purchased for s nominal slim tmd- rein/ember this -wliothor nlie ofnlsnv can bsrlllllgghl fill fledged producer vrfthla two yosrl. v a vested ls estimated at 36.000 boxed ' He has simply stlsck to his iohl and llils gone on producing graini ,ilnd other field crops which do notfPrlni-ll lildwarli utpresent. prices pay the cost of, their production. As u flliul result; lliin lands liuvo fallen in value and: Elie filidls his caplilud investmentiwarllgdslalld uri- ‘and the reward for his labor iillfillllltll 111511 _ lour Brant Ilc-mlnioli, and nra vyslcarsfully to get the dirt out of it: llo believe that this "llAPlfi-AZAltDwajres. then be sure to cllt. the toy l lll ~ A _ ‘ - IMETMQD" is responsible for ourlrnd of! to allow tll n w I m mm“ “n "mes “r m operating his farm both painfully diminished. All this is discouraging to Lllfii grills-groaning farther and gives ground for the prevalent discon- tent. It also operates as a dezer- rent to immigration which is on every side so greatly lltffllrlllllt". li'| fanning in the Prairie Provinces‘ ceases to be a paying business llll-l during the war and according to Mr. Gompers the labor leadenit at B0'ceiits per bushel ivhlls- brick layers. ___needed to build a uaw school house, charged $1.50 per hour for thelr labor. What was further discouraging to the farlneri: who wanted tile sc-hool. was that it would cost four cents to lny a single brick and 300 bricks was n day's work. ‘Th0 price of a bushel oi‘ Wheat would lay only twenty-two and a llalf bricks in the school house wall. The bricklnycrs would get $12 n day for his eiulit hour's work and it would swallow up the prim. of 18 bushels of wheat and isome- thing over to ‘pay hlin. Siilcly there was not much cnlnfurt for the wheat-grower ill this incitlenf. such lnequalitiu; in the rewards between the farmer and thr» artis- an savor of rank injustice. How are conditions to ihe equal- lsed They have in the "lii-livid States the Farmers‘ block ‘and i... in (iallada have tlic United Farm- ors. imli of which are seeking It remedy by political action, but with very doubtful-results so far. labor orsnallnimnsin the llnilad State's and Canada are uufnrtunu. lvlv interlocked and this tins a vcry serious bearing upon“ mum-i Mliitile nrleejoi ‘coal oi‘ vlllicii Canada lra. V0.1? heavy inlporler M111 1190a the: cost or transports- tion ln Canada.‘ Apparently‘ we mu"- "flll £91‘ further time~to "l"! ""1011!- lhytliliis like n nor- mal squallsatloiigii pitésniii gblmf. lnal conditiossf In lhorinioqbtlme ‘it is clearly dpmbnstratell ‘inst imcil. raising. 111111 en n‘: an whole-Alli mo. fecl-tthat Inisration prospects cannot be- .. drink. _ come bright _until conditions “l” lmuglnm could allymle change. Labor 111111111 are-st gains blame hliu for léaving the farm. tlofi my: better l iiiblnoi-o fortunate, pd halal-Irwin; b} Jhq, THE AVhJlillGE) FA-ltM" llllll this he claims is partly responsible for 00!‘, yuullt: people leaving the l6- ' nd. Here lllliiill lie may be speaking with duilloivigv. for ,I presume Mr. Mclptvrc is one oi" tiiose who loft the island. but I claim ll takes IN- I'I‘.I.-Vl‘i\'I<l for any young mun or woman to pick lip and leave their home and tl-iclida. even ii the home is not llll llllll. it should be. and I think most people will agree ‘with m.- that ‘rt is AIMBITION unit ltziken‘ our itoung people off the is» laud. lllorl- than illlyxtlllllg else, ille- cziuse our lsluntl is too sulall. there is not the chances for u young pPPSOII. there is in some oi: the larger Provinces. unless be in- tends tn follow farming. To prove ibis all we have in do is point out such outstanding fig- lures as Jacob Gould Iscliurnlnlifli QSir b. ill. Davies. Sir Andrew Mc-l Phall, Dr. Dave McKenzie and, iiumvrhlpl others and ask. didl these men lFIIVUIIOIIIt‘ throullh lack of .\1\l'l1l"l‘l()\‘? From this _ PllfllTZi" llr jumps to‘ our ml-illnd lii’ farming and says: - “’I‘lils' l-onlbilisd with lllc hnphllii? zard nletilolls 0i‘ fflflllilllt’ brings about lli l_lli" and oi‘ each ..\'11111' NIP-l lusual crop oi‘ discontent. it‘ our ulctliiils of farming are us‘ described by Mr. McIntyre. will he, kindly explain, bow it is tlintl‘ lslaad advanced! Hi6‘ "iilllldllin Guvernllii-nt more‘ money for Victory Ilotlds p: i" a to than nnv other Province 0t" hutwliifl is lltllfb'\\'t‘ in ‘Prince Ed: worth more per‘ pl-opll- in. ully other being kilown us "Tlie- Garden of‘ tho Gulf“. ‘Tile Million Acre Farm’1 ur “Tile home of tbs Mcliltyi-el lilotatbe l " I ‘Plwmfiélftfltlllielllldlli is to the lei-i their?» "lloulustlclani- _ iuula have been brutally treated.- lliiprisoneil during cold winter- montlls in cold. dirty. icul smell- ing stables without sunshine venti- lutioii, bedding or proper food nnd' uiill lie also rlclnelllbel's:~>-“W'here AND I-‘OR. NO i‘ AU SE luercy has since kept the gains then wllATEvDlL" ‘ V, ‘ ‘nude- l", ""9. Middle‘ wesmr" Where was lthe Law. and whY States recently wheat was selling dill not IMr. McIntyre report this‘ platter to the‘ proper authorities. instead of lbeing a party to tile crime by shielding the mail who wuuld-‘lll- such an iulluiliaiu thing and he has overlooked the fart that there is always u CAUSE for every effect. and l, would say in a case of this kind the cause was, ille nlan was crazy. another cuse of where the sooner he called an auction the better. Here in another outburst. on ll par with the rest 17f llis letttvrz~ "We cannot shut our eyes io the fact that cows have been stoned. dogged and staked from the buck pastures lo the dirty cow poll." this no doubt must account for ali- other fact, that P b} l. holds tile re- putatiou of being the foremost dairy Province of the Doiiliillon for its sine and wily it is sionic» titties culled ' "The Denmark of funailn." After ‘treating with the. "DFr PIIORABLE IINIREST". WOEFUIN bA-C-K Q1" AMBITION.“ "THE PIEAFHAZARD METHOD 0i” iflAiIbMINlG." ‘VPHE FOUL SMELL- ING STABLES,” "The ILL TREAT- ED‘ oases anfn cows" and the "DI TY COW PEN" hc lnlic-s up tlieh inhiilnliil trciill-ulilt our children rcceiv 1 lii tlv 1' their parental: y:‘»—-“l ‘ hoatless sclioobl. beaten -by \-.'l1 . _ qplil ll.ill ‘.\llh‘ll‘lllllt‘fl» tejlchvrs. (prim ll inclining for the child that the teacherliils _. not, in training otherwise it might , not have sur- vived the bsdtilns) and then when theylgel bdiileu-‘fthey violild be sent to dtuclitfres they, were phy- sically unalbleito db” ,0 ‘ state bow they gut 1 “Fond doing the chores. tllcy physically could notdo, this would be interesting slid might coins in handy for some at us grown up folks, if he would only tell us how lt i: dope. , 1 wouilLnot hnvc- paid any atten- ml‘, “trfillfllltll OIOIITQP tho l ' “ 44-004‘ o4 coo» new eoeboh o4» " (where even the police and iire- _ horses have been beaten wltllfllli-j t ¥> Take’ advantage of “ p Price Savings. Bigllgiaij QLadiesCoats“ l. 1 Dresses Miilinery ' I Clothing l Ulldeltivltdllrf ‘A . y Stockings Waists’. ‘A . p . _ ' r __ . " and Men's Furnishings I ,- ATQNS. LTD. lion iq glrlliicnlous letter like tbls|escape otherwise it will turn Mr. McIntyre Winds hls lulu,’ only farvfie. fact that he slum-l black when ii lisllcft over. and as up with some good advice. but h ‘~'I find from personal observatlolllior peeling a tur111l1 l 11|_W11YB 1~1'1-1111l'it necessary? Do the pfiflple ul- P that the domestic ziliimalls arc still l it a 5111111 m” i" c111 1i 111 Sllcéfllld. Island really need to ‘be told (l; mistreated; and the little Jliumies] iind peel lifter 1Y1l11 11 KXIIYB Oflsiiow mercy to their dumb animals slid the little Jaiies have to slliverl course. l and klndnessio ollr children? I us usual and get their licklllgl. ‘Now how _m11l1y x1115 think not. from untrained teachers as in the know this ‘bclure.’ If bc really wants to do a gooll pasty’ ‘ P. E. l. girls do not llzlvc m- tuke llll-ll ll; llle ppnple Ql» "Ila Provmcp 1 lieyel‘ knew that P. E. I. tcach- u buck scat from ilnynllc wllell it [Qt m", leave ourlllmllng method‘; ‘ers ‘hjlfl to take ll course in licklllglcoziics to cuOklllll __ alone, also the dirty cow pens‘. the pupils. lie (i088 not say ivllat; You lilust pardon me ll l get. u and write about the {m}; allll part cf the body they LICK. this‘ little personal ill tilllos but this flharfig lll- ‘vlllll he “Elma as Hm mum m siomellllnx new ' ln ll“, ma“ gels ml- gnlll, lilo _wil.l unilci-Jtiij-y for no amount of cow dung States or it may be a fashion Lllotl stand" this it is American slang. W111 lllll-l even ll ilqlleen been and Stsfasson has lbrougllt back iroiu l think they guilt irc-nl llnclc ll wlll gm“, an lmnmnse crop or tile North fol tile Eskimo lltlilsllllbfl goals»). Lllilvll. to illis:-~ llll~llllls_ their children instead 0i' wllshiilgfl ‘find l1 great unllly ol the your“; Proud! 1 ghmlk] my We an‘ lhenl. lbovs allll girls leave their lliIllIfil-i wlly should,“ w“ be wh -1 - . l0I1 l’. E. l. to Cfllllt‘ in Ol-R Aulorl- hllvl, ll“, l-lnllsl llllle ‘ 9" w“ ‘Mr. McIntyre has not fol-ifl-‘twmvflfl "lllrfi Without any definite when; lhurc is no $1M m‘ emu“ anything. for from the school cllll-faim as in cl-l-ilputioll. This is and w“ "ma. Grim Ill. no vice 111011 lit? fflllflwli U191" Tight- 11l1 due iii ii grcili ulelisui-e to impro- pel- lllolislllul or pupulaetl we m!“ lhffilliill "19 P01111111?! flPiP- WW1!‘ UPI‘ lrzlllliili: lii the home uud an a people ml lluyllnlerlcu o" of 3")’ “PIT? 1H1." 11 “We? 111 111711‘ Ilillellrcsult oi‘ this we llnrl- lllllliy l'(lIIl- when w‘. "n. pa" M n cpmm°nt' out driving, and along 110N195.‘ Pzlulllll! m lllll» L-lllll,» “qll, lll-n , like Cllnml“ which In t a 99114191‘! who bllys a limousine and (‘lllliislyallowllll llll llllll fold-vol. m. the Brlush Emplm “"1 l5 Dllrt Percy out. Well what of it. is illi _ lll- (lflFk (lllllgl-llllrl u!‘ Vl('( p ' ._ l _ __ H roud is ilo name for it til t i not dune the woilil over. ls ll not lllld $1". "lilev c1111!" 111"‘? why we always call " a S done in the City, ' ‘ QWMHV“ dill not. ivith- of’, Boston riahtqlut lFlVdU-Z illl- lrllsi cilnl-i-lptiilz: oi’ i:*:'*:.i..l':: ::*.i:~:.:"::L-.'1. ‘r1 .I":;:r:. 1 "‘..‘i."..‘::i.’... ‘. ' "' ' ‘ ‘ I s ‘V. \\' H i5] E ‘i kllld- 7111i W111i" “I'- Mfllliyii‘ do iviiil ll plan's future occupilliilil '_“*-<0¢~————- Still?“ m1" 111"’ 151M“! 151'} “i ll a libel oil 1hr umiburs oi this‘ "doesn't. know how to peel ulprlivinlzl- to iii) that thcir t'lIll(ll‘Ql‘l'U- 8. AGAIN TAKES LEAD; turnip, cook d spud, Ul‘ CANADA'S BEST CU8TOMER _ "lw" “ills ll rllit have not. ll llfilpvl‘ lllllllt‘ W111’ 111 111T."11W11.$i1l§kl11R"‘| Ulinkrllklllllllg and 99% of tliem don't! ._.._._ lid l]?! fihnwlllg 0/9111‘ "ills TP-“Ili-‘Vi kllow and cilliuct realize wliu! OTTAWA. Oct._ 30.-—'l‘he "United l1" I $111111 nlyie 15 11E‘ 1l1I1I11‘11-‘1_l"-ltllli_i oi‘ r._ plat-tall city like Boston-Slates is again Canada's best cus- ‘N11’ m]. lncnghao [have 51:11‘! 1111's. ior "vii-r. l-rlnle Jlllll sill" ltflfll- tonler. For a few months past the ""““h'""_"“‘“. m"! _l W" 111111111 purl-d with l1. u. 1., llllll when Mr. Lnileii _'-K1ingdom had supplanted "Lgfinfi: ‘fllltfiillflgfll-Vollliitlllrll alclill-Yiii?‘ says lthnlt “They clzlne gllfcglglliiteg filtzrltels in tufkiélg llirst " '- _' ‘ .crc wtlout tie cast concep ml- 1 11: user o nilil inn "M59 m" M]? 9" is it ‘me ‘hm of the proper stalidurils of llving,"'l1°°d“‘- T3311‘? figures for the Bhmfm b“ d‘m‘°d' . lie says something that is not trneflwewe months ended 89918111591‘ . ('1 his ls not a swear yvord.) Prince llldulml“ lemmas“ [KNOW however. show that the Uuflgll .‘M““" 1'" “““°1"“““‘=.l)}* 1.11 ' . THE iqlorm srslwoalsns oytslfllcs 110w leads the United Kin:- 5m" “'1'” d° "M ‘WW’ 7 o?" IJVING," but have"no conception dmn- °9'"°°"‘P11"1’-15"'"41I; "19 3°." "wk m Mdmywe- m“ “an?” of tho ilaseness oi’ some 0i’ the Prmlellmg- lm-‘Teliied IWEYIQY-BIX characters they are likely to f:lll"n““°"-“~ while Canaddan 93179111‘ ' to the United States decreased dark color to IIlIIOLV-YWB millions. fact any large city. .5. 1U’ B - For tender, meltingly delicious and wondrous flav- ored turkey, you must roast it in an SMP Crystal Ware , ‘Pearl Ware roaster. This roaster roasts as if by magic. ‘fill/tastes the roast or fowl-the tat dri ping down from _ Bevel“, The delicate Juices and rare avor are cooked ‘Ehtzln. Nothing is lost. There is no wasteful shrinkage. When you buy expensive roasts of meat, turkey, or other fowl or fish, you want them perfectly cooked. ‘ For l from $2.00. to $_4.00 you can purchase a splendid SMP Roaster that will positively guarantee the roasting. To ensure the perfect cooking of an expensive 15-lb. turkey, surely it would play you to use the proper utensil-an SMP roaster costing only one-quarter the price of the fowl! A roaster that fully guarantees perfect roasting! _After the‘ hardest roasting, an SMP Roaster cleans as easily and simply as a china dish. No scouring or hard " cleaning. There are styles and sizes to suit every size of roast, fish or fowl. Finished in Pearl Waréitwo- ¢<>=1=d curly-grey enmeled ‘wage. or Crystal wins,- . three-coated snowy-white enameled ware. store. You can inspect‘ them at any ‘Q°d_‘ha;dw“g_ A _! l -. 1.1