- I . . izeieatzazxgzzaa: ~Sc fiI-LWZW. i". ere-i . taln Pens, Rulers, Erasers, ,1‘ Cgpying Paper. Fooiecap, Ac- 6 count i ink 4 etc. See TA Boa rd of Education. f ‘GO O-QQQO-O OOQQOQ-O-OOOGO-OQO th If‘ ut Bl‘ Ill Profe -_ Schools y Supplies--- Work Books, Scrifobiers, Ex< Books, Blank Boote- Stenographers’ Q Bcokn, Drawing Books, Pens. inks- Penciie, Crayons, Foun- and $1200 each l ‘ All l, Books and School Supplier. i,‘ sold at prices fixed by the / l rig (‘\'t‘l‘_Vl)i_)ll y. Scnii along llic Children for _ their wants. Store upon all i y,’ day Tuoi-"iliiy and Wcducsilaiy. g Carter & ca I Ltd. may hav enbire Nerve Energy. a City Re-open - . Tuiisday; Sept. 2nd ‘ Cartefis Bookstore __ his‘ alyvays bead- lquarters for hool and College ‘1 _ Books and Schoola 0f all kinds ' l 5e Books, Note Paper, Fountain Pen , Mucilage, ink Wells. etc., our STUDENTS’ FOUN- IN PENSpbigvalue at 50c School Books. Text iur grin-ins are lliilvili‘, prices lit. prompt attention to insidious Eye strain We use this adjective advl; ediy. from Eyestrain perfect vision and orefore do not suspect the esoncq of any eye defect. The motive power of the human organism is Sufferers Normal eyes. it is computeo lilze about 20% of this I srve EnerIY. ‘mt when Eye- , strain le present, a much larg- proportion is required. Hence defective eyes. through elr, consumption of an ex- pllvg amount of Nerve En- ce l ergy. may seriously affect the i functioning of other organs of 4 the body. and produce Ill health. l HAVE YOUR EYES ‘EXAMINED Ii. F. liiiicheson Optometrist DR. A. B. MARTIN PHVSICIAN AND SURGEON -.__. Palmer & P Bank of Nova Bcotle Building EZnumuii &lMcPhee i J, A. MoDONALD, H. F. McPHEE B Mt. Stewa rt H. J. PALMER. K- C, Barrister. Etc. Money to Loan Charlottetown, P, E. l. Berristens. ‘Attorney, Etc. Riley iii-ii iAnnisrizn. eoLici-ron. ETC. Money to Loan Building B. A. Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P, E. island -Dr. C. C. Archibald Graduate of N. Y. Poet Graduate edioal School end Hospital otioe limited to lye. Ear, Nose I lldlng , rest “fine, almost ‘schooner “Anna MacDonald", Heart ' i a have reached sonic near by shore. g so far as has been learned. are not a natives of this province,‘ yet nuiy “yours zigo, when 0n her maiden i auoihi- uncertainties of the sea. Sympathy ssional Cards almer Charlottetown R. - McGuigan ilHi iiiiii l Chicago lkpesnaoataflv-—” J. Power \ FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, IP24 A cALAuiirv Much sympathy uill bi,» felt-for lion. J. A. MacDonald, Minister of Pllllllc wuhis, in the lose be has sustaincll In the destruction of his new, three masted ll [felt sympathy also, yot mlnslfll _'\vlth liope, goes out to the family and relatives of Captain W. A- ‘Mlller of Stanley Bridge, Master of the ill-fated vessel. Wlillo, up in llie-tinic of this writing, no tidings U; u“. crew have been "ccoivcd. 4-. tberc is rooni to hope that hey may 'i‘lic other nioiiibcrs of tlio crew. too have relatives and friends up- ‘ on whom this disaster has luid its heavy hand. Mr, .\fucl)onalil's loss is a very heavy one, tho vessel being practi- 1:-. euliy new, having been built at (‘uriligan in 1920 at u cost of S37.- iiiill und insured for only SYJFUUIPIiEs loss,- following that of the Barbara MacDonald, a sister vessel, a few voyage is a misfortune indeed Mid ilenioustration d! the Mr, MacDonald and tllc relatives of the crew whosc date is unknown, will have in ncighborlyfisbundauc-a. lnit sympathy, heartfelt though it may be, is but poor consolation in the presence of death or heavy financial loss. successfully; n; plsjit, made up of railway systems. canals, and other public works on “vast sinle was created; laws for the protection of life and property, for the epreadinB 0! ell"- cation and the securing of liberty were established; one ofltho beet great liillii BliliiiliIN President. W. Chute! l- Idliires Vice-Pee Idle-t, lull. Burnett: secretory, Llclti qol. D. A. lllaeKl D. S. . u. It. ' Issues. n. K. curse. bcr 7th a third federal byacontesi, New Yuk RcpRae-ntatlvn-Jtranl ll. Noirtlrw national good On September 2nd the federal bye-election in Montreal and Rim- ouslii will take place and on Ooto» will take place in Northumberlsnd, u. u. For the two seats In u... province fo Quebec the candidates have been put in. nomination-and represent the straight Government and Opposition parties respective- ly without being complicated by other nominations. ii. now seems probable that the contest in North. timberland w-ill be conducted in tho sumo sensible fashion. Both the Conservative nad Liberal part- ies have called nomination eonvon. tlous and it is said to be lniprob able that either the United Farm- banking systems in tho world was not up. As for the people who wcrc attructcd- to Canada their worth has been proved by the fruits of their industry, but their loyalty to thc country and tho Empire, and by tbc manner in which they cnmo through some of the severest orileals. Considering all these things, why should any Canadian 0 C held by Liberal they became years sent a Liberal rcprosmtative to the House of Commons. shown an equal fidelity to the Lib. eral cause. rs or organized Labor will place audldiitcs in the field, The three seats in question were members before vacant. For forty past Nortbumborland has ltlmouski has St. Antoine has with his country‘! own country to seek his elsewhere 7 excuse fur momentarily heart. not have iibounding confidence lll Why alfiould Canadian turn his back on any his torumedhia Conservative opponent. There ls but one condition that can give Canadians the smallest losing and that condition is but ii passing one. lt is the oiiistenccat the National Capital of an adminis- ln that time changed its allegiance upon occasion, but In 1921 elected Hon. G. Mitchell, Liberal, by al- most 4,000 majority over Mr. Ross In Rimouskl the Liberal majority in @1921 w... 5.110 and iii uoriiiuiuiiur- llanii the Int/o Mr, MorrlsseYUe mill ority in thc same ycsr was 1,421. The largo majority of the electors in the throc tidings, speaking col- lectlvcly, iirc of French-blood and still more largely ltoniun Catholic the iioily. tru-tlon that ls utterly unfit to govern. its day will not be fl long our. Public opinion is collecting its mont l! ‘wept away. its place will be takcn by men pledged to establish und bring 'up VIP of Sir: John MacDonald country, struggling to keep ' .---.-.... A DECEIVER 'f‘licrc has been standing in the general waiting room of the Char- lottetown Railway depot an In- nocent looking penny-in the slot weighing machine which has Val- victinilz-ed a OOQCQO I Q iroady -o-¢>4-4. uoss. The machine is politician of the present evidently a v federal § variety as its sole purpose ls to make promises which it is power- less to fulfil. it promises to weigh but win-ii thi» penny is dropped in tho slot the only reply, from the machine is the reverherating echo of the penny as it wanders along the tho the the. are ‘ho empty corridors down to iaapacious uiaw below, where accumuia-iioiis of the rlay or ireek await redemption by operator. The machixrc. we mouths pastva somewhat shorter period that our federal representa- tlvcs, but, like, the latter it has so far glV-Jll no return for the pru- inise it boars on its fricc. A gentle- man from the country who wantod in know whether he was holding his own or. like Canadian industry, ivas iletcriorating, placed his hard i-arnoil penny in the slot but no re- volving finger swung aroundlto giv. him tho ilcslrod information “just likd ihc Mackenzie King Govern- lnonl!" ho said as ho stcppud off the platform. have Just how many pennies boon (lroppoil Into this machine since it wont out of commission or whether the King Government in collecting a campaign fund through it; there is no moans of knowing but, having demonstrated lis usolr-iii-inei-is, a5 the other m. proi-ieniatives nf that august body have dnno, it and they should be fllfltlflfl where they can victlmlzo DO more. A BLIGHTING GOVERNMENT Thori- are no people on earth who have mnro reason for faith In their country and the greatness of its future than tho Canadian peop- lo. No other ‘country liss a richer heritage of natural resources. And have we not much to show in the way of progress? Under Ibe guid- ance of greet statesmen of the ~psst the development of those procofrled national resources told, has been in povtin-i (n1 Bimfi] tremciiilqns'attractlon of the great nation- neltfdoor. Tho National Policy changed this wilderness In-- i to a land of rich promise and of‘ "Ty considerable achievement. If; that Policy, bad been adhered to! .up to the present time. and if the- number Qlifldmlllllilfflllflll of the country hail, Much depend‘ upon the. NW“ peopli- and will likely continue itslnever lapsed Into the bands of o‘ mesa content which can hard- work until It is put out of busi- feeble men who looked too much 1y (nil to give some Indleaiimi of l" llle “filled Slfll-fla. Canada would‘ ‘he a much more populous andi much more developed than ‘I-t is to-day. Of the many ‘follies the King Goverumoni haul I l country to answer for, the gravest jg (in ‘llfilflfllflllflu of the National Policy. iNol only by three revisions of tho tariff has it damaged that policy, ,but by its studied endeavors it has in tariff sizi- biFty. Producers who have caplfal shaitcrcii confidence tied up in industries that normally employ many workers have been forced close dmvn or greatly m. duce their output. thus throwing out of employment large nuinbors tlvnending on them .for wages their families. When this state of affairs was at its worst, when hunilrgilg n; thousands of workers were quitting Canada in where-with to provldg im- ilcspalr and going in the United States to find ii living In the protected lnilniiiries tbcrc, when ciitiliial was forsaklng or "Vfilflllli; Canadian industries and being invested in Government and two of the Min» Ottawa announced with also, that the Robb budget would be followed by further tariff’ ro. diictions and that the knell of pro- tection had been rung. After that, could own hopeful, municipal bonds, istcrs at stout-hearted believers In this country be blam- cil If they cut down their produc- tlvo operations still further and relousoil still other thousands to whom they hail been ilistrlbutlng ivngcs? No Canadian Government could commit a graver crlmo against lllfl b00910 of Canada than tho King Government has been guilty "7- Th" PIBM i0 llVo is a primary right of the citizen. Of this tho KIM! Government eeoms bent on flb-PPMHB them. The destruction "f Protection meant the expatriat- ‘flk of hostYof the skilled workers that received their training and their education In Canada areal coei. to the country. li meant the loss of what had been s strong“ element in- the formers’ home at in faith. tion; to euit.the Opposition us a force's for the expulsion from rule. office of this most unworthy Ad- chosen to fill three of the five ministration. When that Goveru- seals now “mum ‘n “Nance of the - ' other two, prudently selectini! three in which Liberal chances are believed to be best, to date um provcrbially uncertain. It was the National Policy that the goniusfmly W" applledlwhlc with magic results to this youngmnd returned a Conservative menr nsiber by u handsome majority. it is feet and ‘move forward against thelwei] ‘known that the King Govern Governments do not limo Qlw The King Government has But elections year that Kent County h adjoins Northuuiborland. 1'0- verscd itsLIberi-il verdict cf 1931 mont alter its illsappointing ctlwfl- enceshas a wholesome dread of bye-elections. But death and un- expected resignations of sitting members cannot be prevented and vacancies must he filled however reluctantly the party lenders may meet the demand. the iinn of political opinion l" both the urban and rural constltu nu dniiiumrinsovrs-‘iirisoise = NOW"! B! Th9 I, -' a ‘ . B‘, “m” w_ Barton. M.D. R EMOVING TH E CAUSE. it has been interesting to follow the trend of the physicians and re- search men who have been inves- tigating goltre. Twenty yours ago those men thong-iii that the enlargement was always due to too much lime in the ilrfhking water. This had been the prevailing op- iuloii for a great many years. li wt..- discovered luter that Iodine externally. and later Inter- nally, seemed to reduce the size of the swelling. From this grew tbc idea that the eating of sea fish would bc of hono- tit, iiiiil it was shown that poople who practically lived on tiea fooil were lrce from goitre. Thou _it wag- noticed that some pcultlk‘ Willi l1 EOIlFDus condition hail other conditions of ‘the body l-h-ai were not normal, particularly the heart. The heart was boating many extra beats ito the minute, a-nd was sumotlmes irregular. Ac- companying this was a fro-moi’ 0f the muscles. and a bulging of the eyes. . Tin-n for uwlille goitre was bliim- cd for the condition of the heart, because tbc thyroid gland is a regulator of different functions of 'I‘lio removal 0f u part 0f ilii- gland hclpeil many cases. ‘flint research tmcn have gone even fiiribcr now. and stale that just its poisonniis substances manu. l8(‘iilf‘l‘ll in tho teeth, tonsils, and nosi- inc canning joint and muscu- lar disturbances, so also do they affect iilu- glundn and other organs of iiii- body, and ill-at when this imleolutus siibiiiiinci: gets into the circulation, it interferes with the sci-ri-iion oi" the Illyl‘0l(li'lfl(lt.'fl?lng— 0c tiii- >1fl‘llf'illf‘P. Tiiai is, that Itlie same poisonous condition that affects tho heart, af- feirta- llic thyroid glan-d also. ii is for this reason that Olltgn win-re the pliysltwian was doing cv- ery-iliing to liolp Ibo general condi- tion oi‘ tho goitrous patient with a badly acting heart, that the remov- al of bad tooth und tonsils, u“. Clmring up of sonic chronic llfii-lf?‘ or car condition. or a sluggish 11.». er and Intestine, ho has had the grc-ut satisfaction or getting u coui lllvlc (‘uro of the heart und goitmus condition. Germany May'- Adopt I The Dollar Goinage The dollar an International coin’! The proposal of the Federal Ro- servc Board that Germany adopts the dollar basis has stirred op position in Europe. Bankers there argue against lllu duclrig an Am- crlcan coin. But the dollar is. oddly enough, not an American coin; it is ii German coin. That is, speaking historically. in tbc same sense, ii. is a Spanish-coin, and. furtherii has made the nearest up- proach to universal money that the worldhas known. The story of tho dollar ‘is a tale of many times and many lands. _Dollurs were flrsi, minted before Columbus had raised the money to fit out his ships to cross the Atlantic. Quito possibly.’ when be did raise that money. dollars were included in tho contents of the sack. The Chin- esc trader in Canton knew and handed the big silver cartivhcels before the Pilgrims ‘bad sighted Plymouth Rock. Dollars were 300 ycars old when Congress adopted them for the national currency of the young United Stiites, 138 years ago. siiys the New York Times. Birthplace of the Dollar Germany might well reaidopt tho The English ‘colonies, ou- account of their _counection with the Mother Coutrtry. reckoned their“ finances in pounds and shillings, . yet a traveller jn Connecticut, remarked, es curly as 1704. that Spanish dol- lars were commonly used for con- siderable payments In cash. when Congress issued its paper currency to meet the cost of tho Revolution. ury War. 1t issued notes in denomi- nations of thc Sp.iuish dollar. Spain thus supplied thirstimdard coin of our first notional currency. American _coutincntal. currency came to grief after tho ‘Revolution, but thoihabit of tho, dollargrow fnoro firmly fixed. Jdycn so. iiio pound and tbc shilling remained the lawful moncy of Cunectlcutun- til 1796, scvcrul years after tho adoption of tbc (lonstltuilon of Foilcral dollar coinage. The rival. ry bciwccn sterling and the dollar ran high, but in thc end tho dollar viiou. lt owed its success partly to tlic anti-English t-Wllllllllllll that followcil ibc War of‘ Iniicilcnileiiizc. Various Names llnilor various nanics In u, miiii- bcr of countries tho, Spanish dollar or pcso has survivcil ilic fall of tlic dollar as bolug originally one of her own native products. Joachim. sthal, the colu's birthplace, lay for many centuries within tho Gcrin-an Empire. 'l‘oday Joacblnistluil is no longor Gcrniiiu. It pusscd from (icrniuny to Austria more than a century ago, and it bcciimc in 1918 a part of tho now nation of (izccho-Sluviikln. It s u ltllc old Bohemian hill town a fcw iiiilcs northeast of Carlsbad and a short distance from the Saxon frontier. The inhabitants of the llllivfi "Mill. 'n the Middle Ages, to enrich their lords and inustree by nilnind silver und nlckol from the depths of tbc Erzgcbirge. The feudal lord of the valley about 1486 Wile n Ccflfilll Count Scliliclit. Being supplied with silver bullion from his own mines, ho coined mom-y on his own account. ilavliig sonic dis- tinctly uioderu ideas, he believed , ll l“ it lffiuit Iiloii to gct all i-uicli perspiration. and tho rloansinirof ihc intestine. ‘ii is ii greater idea to prnvoni tlw Jnwnufaoturo of those poisons by removing the cause. ' ‘- AllllfiU-ST ‘2ii.—Ynu are fond of Inuslc. reading. Zlllfl lhc theatre. eneles. if the Government can hold m. 0WD iii mum; the Heals now vacant. a reconstruction of the, Cabinet. long overdue. will no doubt be effected and the takinl; in of two or more new ministers will involve further appeals to tho electorate to endorse their elcva. tlon.. if on tbc other iiiind the constituencies now open slifllllll prove to be strongly adverse to tbc Government and its llfllllfi’. T156011" siructlon would probably be delay- ed. and would likely only be made nuthe eve of a general election. hastily decided iipou. The Government lis feeling its way blindly and with faltering steps. The. Premier's promlsel that thorc will be no general elecv tion this year means nothing. though probably it may be kept to the letter, which would not provi-nt an election hcihg held In January next. Nobody trusts or is ilocolv- ed by ii pledge like that. As to hi» talk about taking a ycnl‘ 0T 1W" more to provo the soundness of his oii-iii policy. unit may be will“ us mere camouflage. The Grout llncrowneil King no doubt rcallsew that his present elevated position is qiiltc as precarious an the plat form on which he mounted so cou- fiiicntly tbc other night in Si. Antoine, which collapsed bonozith his feet and tumbled lilni iii tbc dust As to what may happen within three months. or what he may be compelled to do within that tlinu. be knows as little an the uiun in the street or his uniformed office boy, He is not leading, but is bo- ____ _________.___... (Continued on Page b) market. Canada has had some e1- perlonce of disaster, sometimes in the form of crop damage, nonm- tlnise as devastation by forest fire, sometimes as the result of storm and flood. But what Onc 0! lllllll? iuiu done the country’ such immediate end irreparable injury as the Government that has smitt- en the source of the livelihood of hundreds of thousands of (laund- iiiii people who were encased in and derive the groiitcsi pleasure from travelling. You do nm wan; Io) waste your time and oncrgy on frivolous things. You like to asso- ciate with a lot of people, but you form Vvcry [cw close friendships. lou arc a fluent talker, und vory entertaining wiivn you irliooso l0 make the effort. Don't lct money rule your life. , Your birth-stone is the surdonyx, which means a iiappy married l|[,._ Your flower is the poppy, rpgoul" hick)’ colors are orange and + 44 a i, Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers sonc. or THE summon mun. 4 When the winds oi’ dawn go sadly, Wi-tb a slilvcr and ii moan, Through tho (lusty, (lcwiugg ygr. duro of the plain, Th9)’ lre calling in a comrade, for they will not sing alone; They arc seeking for the body of the lRilifl. . wooing. pleading. boar them say, “Come and dance with us today! We Will sing our ncwiasi, loveliest refrain; Iiut our music all is dumb, Harps aromiiti-d till you Qflnjg, Blessing-laden, gracious Lady of tho Rain." . They have culled hor, now Llicy listen: all the breezes liuid their breath. Shall the lover-winds of summer woo In vain? Not a whisper‘, n01. a murmur! Woods and fields uro still as death; ' Birds arc faint, and languish for the rain. lfark! u. low mysterious sound ill-son tremuioug frnni the ground; ‘She is coming with tho tempest in her train. Iierald winds are bugllng clear; Leaflets quiver no in fear; “Oh, doai gently with ~ua, Lady of the Rain!" Now she comes with ldud. wild laugh-tor; ‘thundors, llghtnlngs ‘shake the earth. While tho tall trees shriek and bow themselves in pain; illut a broken, qiielle he" mad, unholy ‘mirth. blossoms tile Rain. Hiding Tfittlffljiflld caverns under. greening plain, , _ Now on silvereandalle-l feet, Ami with music mo dndWWMet, ' the productioabf Canadian wealth? -Mail sniflflmplre. I tbovod, we . - ‘lsLeeie Pol-sons nut of tho sysitnm by bums" teaiwret blossom "l em sorry!" cries the Lady of Down the viilley slinke tho thunder, And a rainbow hangs above tho §¥{fl‘_il?lln.l“%?}l§ WY l" in what people today call a sland- niriiizod product. When he minted la batch of coins, ho dl d not vary the composition of the mcial that wont into them. Though tlicrc might be many broken pewter spoons In the castle scullcry. b0 put an honest amount of silver Into every co’n. The Count hail tbc further happy idea of turning out the other potoiitates then were striking. The Dollar Spreads The huge resulting demand must Iiavo found the Count wlili- uwako and ready to do business, for in a few years Ills silvcr ploccs, bour- lug a likeness to their inaki-r charging In full armor on a capari- soncd steed, begun to pcrvudc till the markets of Europe. They lost. their name In tlicir travels, however, and found a shorter onc. People came to call tbom "Joach- imsthalers." and then simply "thalers“. These became "dalers" in parts of the Low Countries, "iloldrcs" In Antwerp, and in Spain "dollars." Thus our dollar dc- rlves its name from the (lormaii word "thal," meaning "valley," or “ilalc,“ or "iloll", and having no monetary significance whatever. There was no effective trademark law to protect the name. Before long cthcr colicrs of ninncy began to pay tribute to the dollar's popu- larity by turning nut ilollurs of their own, Onc of these competitors hiid a peculiar and unprecedented advantage. This was the Spou- lsh monarch: ho had acquired iii Peru und Moxlco tho rlchcsi. sllvcr minos that ‘the world had over known. Tho Spanish colonial mints hogan early In tho sixici-entli century to coin silver piece-ii re iicinbling the joachlmsthiiiur iii weight and shape. These were the pieces bf eight, justly popular with the froobootcra who liitcr preyed on tho Spanish llllVGf‘ flcct. Thoy had about the same quantity of silver as that mnlntuincil in tho United States silver dollar until tho last war. Their nmno lniIicuti-tl that they were worth eight Span- ish reaies. For short. they were usually calldd pedos in Spnnflgh lands. But elsewhere the name of tbc dollar clung to them. Spanish Dollars Th9 sllanlsh peso or dollar wont "Vllfywhoro. Ii worked its way up Into u...‘ English colonies of North America. ‘Thcsn suffered from an insufficiency of currency used in place oreeni. meanwhile. Ifillmlflifly Pndloss supply of coins a bigger sliver coin than most of no great that In Virginia, for Es. ample, tobacco by the pound was " Spain. was ‘turning loose a I . -- > silver, and this reached the oney- 3pm.“ Ides portions of the New World.lcomml“_ season! , " \ . AUGUST 29, mi , l n‘ '\-i\<a“1_“-_ -.V l” M‘?! M these suit '- “. ll“ "l" Unliui l clatlgfikm’ " gums‘ the debts. ~°l.\-9:..'Pll'°r l1)’ chllflglng m ‘m’ “lit-it'll The 11080:: of Ar. son ‘kajnd Venezuela eiid u“, gourdanoflilaltl haves vain o! liiiyguccnts in. our money on“: Uruguayan peso is worth 3193p! Garlands dollar has the ssnis value as. tllfiAmcrlcan. So hag in,“ M Newfoundland, though iniill recent, l)’ "Jllellfliljwlofih a cent nail a hiilf ""361 ;"°i‘“.'""* "l" must curious ilullur vofltlie lot, on account of Iiii .5; is the tibia-i of Any... ii‘ oii; iimesiryufliwulune" Jzalgignsibghnlziendt "i: 31.1w. h. $HOPS TO currrAu. STRATFURD, Ont. Aug. 2X» (lUllllflBflQlflg September l, ii... m" of the Canadian National llailwiiy shops will be roiluccil by w“, prOXlmatPIyWII-Ifi men. Tho romain- ills Ollllllllll-‘QB will go on ii in 1......- wcok, and work but ihrco weeks a' tnuntli. Aunouncom-mi to [hi3 i-ffact wus made at ilii- i", N, [L shops hora‘ this morning. -'l‘hc iiwliwiiril waiter ilropiii-il tho steuk on the restiiiii-aui floor. "Now I've lost my. liiiiirli." said lllil angry customer. "Oh, no, sir." iuilil the "I've got my foot oii It." ivaiicr; ___ _ __ _‘ ‘ Next month the oyster l)on’t servo soggy biscuits. with your oyster when the best may be had by simply zisiiing stews, for I Hamilton’s Cream Sodas tizi-tp! Appciiziiig! Frrsli from tho tivon! 1,4; cup liilik l liilllenlitliiil butter ‘,1- cup oysters salt buttcr. iioziril the ilviitori-i. V; l’ oysters and cook flvc llllliillCh‘ in dnu-blc boiicr. with Ilainliitiifs (‘rt-am Soda cruckcrs. OYSTER STEW up oyster liquid and [lhlllillp 2 lublocpoom-i Hamilton's Cronin - Soda (‘rocker (Iriiuilis llralii lllf‘ llqiriil lirimi tbc oysii-rit add iii ilir uiiili iii ilonblo boiler, ailil salt und popper and cracker crumbs iiilll Wlii-u ilio milk is hot. iiilil tlii- Sin-vi- I l \ a. 68-... this store. QT ///, ALL Guaranteed 550 feet to guaranteed as to quality. We Dill both NEW and OLD BTVLE BALL. factory price, buy early. Garter 8i FEEDS d “Stop Run” Silk "sou: EXCLUSIVELY IN CHARLOTTETOWN by Absolutely the last word in silk stocking perfection. they wear longer and fit better than most, the RUBY RING stops garter rune, we guarantee this. i // THII TRADE MARK OIZNOTKI HAT IS GOOD \IN' THE BRANTFORD CORDAGE CO.. I LINITID OnAwrs-ono. out-Ame. I smoan "rwiiis y A - The ‘ Guaranteed Stockings ALLi-zviisz: FASHIUNABLE FOOTWEAR Binder Twine i All ill - f/lfi’ Wp gall OVIlY .,, us. , ‘ Bl ocn "rwmzs. I’ ififii‘ IO NOT s: rsssuAoso mu onus twmu All ‘ the celebrated “h! . As coon 0s strrss - flit/A! IUY ouav. “ _ ;,' ' ‘T EDGE. Pure Menilb. ($0 fr. perils. my], ooLo LEAF. Mamie. son ii. u. m. Silver x”; Y SILVER LEAF. time»! Mai-ls sso i. w. lb. n MAPLE LEAF. awe-is. m ii. per lb. Leaf IVIIV IALL FULLY OUAIANTIIB 1 brand. the I16." BINDER TWINE on the market. the pound. and every bail fullY Get our Limited .01.. c... d FLOUR