PAGE FOUR llIE BHARLOTTEITIWII Glllllllllll President-W. Cheater S. Mchute, I. P. Secretary-Licntwtlol. D. A. I tor and Managing Director-J. R. Burnett late Editora-Frank Walker and D. K. Currie .\.... hit-rung Daily ifoundcd 1&7) $5.00 p $1.50 per year tin advance) mailed ADTEBTISLWG REPRESENTATIVES UNITED STATES-The Beckvrith Special Agency lnc. General .\lotora Building, Detrol ovrer Building, Chicago; Building, Sew York Pl lug, Kansas City, \\' Building, St. Lenin; _ Francisco; 1135 No, 05th Street, Pnila i r16 ughby '1‘ lest is the last gift of the Glenn Building. Morning Maxim Vieo-Preaidoat-J. l. Barnett llaeKiunon, D. h 0. er year (in advance) delivered. in Canada and United Btatea. New York Central t, lnteratata Bulld- Syndicate Truat Atlanta; afonadnoek Building, San delphia, immortals. TLESDAY. OCTOBER ll, 103i A CONTRAST The measure of the local Liberal organs interest in the results of the Imperial Conference may be, judged from the comemptible ef-i fusion which graced its editorial columns yesterday. The contrast between its 81211115119836 that of (he Canadian Prime Minister in moving for the approval of the conference agreements _in Parlia- men: or: Oct. 12 ls indeed striking. This is what .\ir. Bennett said: "It is no: my purpose to de- ride the efforts c: past Canadian gs mitts :0 cure that ~ ie of r. trade which. I may claim ‘pcd to bring about. do I wish to 1d suggest that government, ghout. the long . represents has ' supported, must ' ably no the only policies on ch a mutually beneficial plan =' Empire trade could be devel- oped. I raiher choose, at‘ this anxious time in our country's his- tory, to return thanks that the Peoples o! the Empire, conscious of the benefits which must flow from closer economic association, were able. through self-denial and patience and a capacity to see the others point of view, to inaugurate an imperial tariff policy from which every one o! them must obtain real and last- ing advantage. “I 85k m? honourable friends on the other side of the house Y9 accept these agreements in ‘ma! sDirit. I ask them before they prejudice the success of them by criticism induced by the consciousness that we have done What they failed to do, to r9- member that these agreemeritg are for the good of Canada, (or the good of the Empire, and ma; considerations at this time p cularly should transcend the interest of party." i EXPERT OPINION Expert opinion on the new tarifl preferences granted by Great Brit- ain to Canada on dairy and other agricultural products has been ob. ‘B31991 by the Ottawa Journal, and this opinion bears out the prediction 0f greatly increased markets for the Canadian producer. According to Mr. c. B‘. mehwei], Dominion Livestock Cornmssioner, Canada's export of bacon and hams to the United Kingdom during m2 will total from 40 to 50 million Pounds In weight. This will repre- sent more than twice the amount 91'" Shipped there in any previous year. But the new agreement will lilow free entry of about 280 mil- 11071 pounds Weight per yen for five years, or from six to seven times the aggregate of the present, hlihesl “Sure. Urp to now the Old Country has been importing from Denmark, Holland, Poland, Lith- unia, Latvia, Estonia and In normal times, from Ireland. , As regards eggs in shell which are to be admitted free to the United X zxgriom. as against a general tarifl .;-. 2r czuntries o.‘ 24 to 42 cents per long htmdred i120 to the hund- red.) .\ir. .F. C. Elford. Dominion isbandman. states that the great for 1n- ‘ixhtiea are yo" crease-d expo: from 'h-s count . FY "Canada." he s ‘LS in such a posiaon in her that she need not fear a _ other cornpetng country." As Canada exported only 260130 dozen cgzs in shel". to United Kingdom m. the fiscal year 1930 31, while the ‘.o'al imported from all sources by the 02d Country was one thousand tunes t at rium- b‘r. the prospects are aiiiir rig in view of the substantial preference granted the Canadian product. hfr. W. F. S1ephcn, secretary of the Dominion Dairy Council. also sees possibilities of cons derably in- creascd exports io the United King- dcm of butter, cheese, condensed and evaporated milk. The margin the l the trade now going to Denmark. In me products referred to Prince Edward Island farmers are vitally interested. The opinion expressed by the i aiitmmi" “We mm“ it‘ "w" cred several opportunities for sales infection in teeth. tonsils, gall than reassurLng, and every effort should now be made to take earliest advantage oi tbs new trade oppor- tunltes within the Empire. BROOK FARM AGAIN At sooke, on Vancouver Island, it 's announced, a new sociallstic ool- ‘ony is to be established under the auspices of the Canadian Young Peopls Society oi Alberta and Sas- katchewan. 1h theflelds aridln the community hails of the colony it is mtended that those tired in body ‘and spirit may find relief from the Zcompetitive strugglrs which oom- itnenoialism has imposed on man- kind. It is hoped, too, that, at the oolonu scope will be given for the develemnerit of communal and pa... 1c interests. ' The experiment at Sooke recalls to the Vancouver Province other experiments of the kind, particularly the most famous of all, Brook Ffrtn established in 1M1 about, as far from Boston as Booke is from Vic- toria. Brook Farm was an out- growth of New England transcend- eritalism, and, while it, lasted, had the Dfltmmlge of Emerson, Theo- dore ‘Parker, Amos Bronson Alcott and Margaret Fuller. George Ripley was the leader, and among the members were Nathaniel Hawthorne and Charles A. Dana, later founder of the New York Sun and the most widely-known and influential jour- nalist in the United States. Haw- thorne tells something of the ex- periment in his Blithedale Ro- mance. Doria secured his first jour- nalistic experience on the colony paper, the Harbinger. The objects of the colony were somewhat the the colony at l sums as those o.‘ Sooke: l "To more effectually promote the great purposes 0f human cui- ture: to establish the external re- lations of life on a basis oi wia- dom and purity; to apply the prin- ciples o! justice and love to our social organization in accordance with the laws of Divine Provid- ence; to substitute a system of brotherly oo-operatiou for one of selfish competition: to secure for our children and for those who may bo entrusted to our care the benefits of the highest phys‘cal, intefectual and moral educafon, which in the present state of human knowledge, the resources at our command will permit; to institute an attractive, efficient and productive system of 1n- dustry; to prevent the exercise of worldly anxiety by the competent supply of our necessa y wants: to diminish the desire of excessive accumulafon bv making the acquisition of indlfiiual property subservient to upright and dia- interested uses; to guarantee to each other the means of physical support and of spiritual progress, and thus to impart a greater free- dom, truthfulness, reflnemerit and moral dignity to our mode of life." The aims were laudable enough, too laudable, perhaps, for the human iclay w which they were applied. ‘For a few years the plan seemed Ito work, and the seventy or eighty ‘scholarly men and women who oon- stituted the colony earned their ikeep by manual work on the farm and at mealtimes and in the even- ing discussed philosophy, lterature and an. As inner-son put it, Brook ‘Farm, was "a perpetual picnic, a French Revolution in small, an age iof reason in a patty-pan." Prom the first, the principal troubles of the colony were financial, and lo get rid o: these B reoTlifiFatlon was undertaken by the father of iMr. Hearst's Arthur Brabanc on princples suggested by the French Socialist, Fourier. A great phal- i between Brita n's total exports of In“??? 01' 90111111911"? W110i"! WI! these products and Canada's present emkd- b“ 591°" l‘ @0014 b9 00- rxporfs of them to the Old Country W919‘! n" 451N394 it lfld the is <ufhcient to allow for enormousBmok Farm never recovered from upansion, chiefly with regard to the blow. It dllblnded M11947. 1i NOTES BY TIIE WAY We are once more adjusting our- selves to the new conditions. An 0t- tawa despatch states that "Canada's trade is pointing Empirewards w an ever increasing extent." s1 ghtly over half of the Dominica's exporm in August went to the Eltnpire countries as compared with only 33.6 per cent a year ago, while the- purebasu of the Dominion from within the Empire have increased from 3.5 per cent w 30.2 per cent. This tendency to increase trade with‘: the Empire will be given a great impetus when the Imperial Conference agreements come into effect To the question "“'her¢’s Busin- ess?" we have a ready answer: "look to your Empire markets." We our". selves have in tact already discov- in towns and cities throughout the British Comriicaivrealth. We know well that a welcome awaits the Cahadlan trader who vsits his Etn- pire markets. We know furthcrrnore. that those Canadians who have per- sonally visited these markets have secured prof table businms in good volume. To those who ask “Where's Business?" We repeat: “Go to Em pire countries first. A ready we'eome , awaits your arrival. Don't let this, opportunity exLst without really try"; ffig to do something about it. Be-i come a merchant adventurer in the highest sense of the word and go yourself personally to trade with Great Britain and our sster Dom- Commerce of Nation. Communism means ‘Community Interests.’ The educated, intelligent, thrifty and ambitious people of fine characterstics must live on the same lower material level as the ings. In Russia the few in control have been the most. outstanding agitators against capital and yet the government that they are carrying on is operating the greatest capit- alistic enterprise on the face of the earth. 'I‘l-iey have merged all ihe capital of Russia into one great government monopoly. The popula- tion must work for ths monopoly in return for which they are doled out a bare subsistence on short ra- tions. Thus this great Russian cav- italistic. i Sir Thomas Lipton was one of Great Britons most successful bus- iness men. In his recently publish- ed autobiography he writes of hav- ing heard Gladstone remark: “Advertising is to business what steam is to machinery-the sole pro- pelling power. Nothing except the mint can make money without ad- vertislrig." Lipton adopted this as his guiding principle. Others who feel that commercial success in full measure eludes them might give thought to the principle. Greed ls but jtlmale ambition gone mad. 1n the individual the eit- treme of every good quality seem to reach a bad one; love may be~ come lust, peace may become sloth and the pleasures of the palate gluttony, unless guarded against. Ia it possible that the rneu who have amassed huge fortunes out of which they have subseq itiy established vast beneyolent and philanthropic foundations were actuated by greed in one process and generosity in the other? In the year ending June 30, I921, our exports of agricultural products, including commodities manufactur- ed from such products, to the Unit- ed States dmounted to $174,170,553. Then came successive hoists of the United States tariff against Canada with the result that our exports o1’ agricultural products and commod- ities lo that country declined to $47,320,635 in 1930; to $22,308.297 1n 1931, and to $8,849,404 for the year ending June 30 1932. The Rev. Benjamin Spence, a Canadian, has a perfect rght to make "dry" speeches in Canada or else- where, as long as he can find aud- iences to listen to him. He can make a life work oi the subject and he can draw a salary from either for» eign or domestic assoclatons. At the, same time, we cannot refrain from~ saying that Mr. Spence does his own ' country an injustice when, speaking abroad, he paints such a. horrible picture of conditions in Canada. While admittrig. as vs‘. have done, Mr. Spences perfect lit to speak on this subject and . invade the_ United States for thl: urpose-just as Mr. “Pussyfoolfl ihnson , an years ago-we do hop. that in fut- ure, the Toronto man will be more. charitable when he speaks of h‘: the correct thing to "boost" rather! than to “knock" ones own land when speaking of it elsewhere. The Canad an people are eminently safe” Spence pictured them in his Detroit addrua this week. is... ‘with sciatica-that terrible pain in ‘the largest nerve 1n the body-is ignorant,‘ lazy and good-for-noth-i Unemployment monies, your Barton-ALD- . ‘ ‘ ‘ 8| Iona W. 'LO“' BACK PAIN AND SUIATICA DUE TO STRAIN One of the things hard to under- stand is why a patient suffering satisfied to fill himself up with pain killing medicine every 3 or 4 hours instead of trying to have the cause of the pain located. _ In 3 out of every 4 cases the sciatic pain in the lower back, hip, and down the leg, is due to some ready to hand you. ' l0 Ladies’ Flannel Dresse at bladder or large intestine. The xe- moval of this infection sometimes brings instant relief, but nearly a‘- ways within one or two weeks. In the remaining oases the scia- tica is usually due to a slight dis- placement of the large hip bone from the last wedge or triangular shaped bone of the spinal column. "Ihlsisusuallyduetoauinjuryof- some kind-lifting, stepping down when you expected to step on the level, using the foot brake on a motor car, playing golf ‘or other game, extreme bending ‘and so I forth. when an injury has occurred some method of strapping the joint 151°!“ That's “he” bumess 55!"—"should be used just as when there ‘ is a sprain'or strain of the ankle ,or other joint. Usually strips of ad~ hesive tape are applied beginning about 2 inches below the point of the hip bone at one side and going acress the back to the same point on the other side. I have spoken before of a. brace ‘applied by Dr. J. E. Goidthwait, Boston, and his associates with a leather pad for the abdomen, and a brace for the small of back Joined by leather straps, the lowest strap of which comes directly across the affected joints, at the same level as the adhesive tape mentioned above. Dr. Orville Harry Brown, Phoe- nix, Arlzoria, suggests a veryasimpie inches in width. The web is cut the necessary length to span the hips, and the patient slips it on under the clothing and draws it so that ‘it makes gentle, garteriike, pres- sure upon the hip bones at a point .three or four inches below the top |of the hip bones. The overlapping of one end is marked upon the other. 1t is removed and small saf- ety pins are put in to hold it at the desired size. The patient then steps into it and draws it up to the proper position. In some cases it m5)‘ be necessarY to apply thin straps or thin rubber tubing around the legs to hold it in the proper place. ' For early and moderately severe cases of strain of this joint, this gshould be a simple and effective device. PUBLIC FORUM Thlo column ll open [or the dlaonaalon by w-reapnndcnta of queatloria of lntereat. The Charlottetown Guardian doea not neoeanarll! undone the opinion: of wrrelpondenll, HIS WORSHIPS COME JDOWN Sir,—In your article of today's ls- sue headed "No Shirking on Govern- ment Part" you fail to explain why it is that it took the Government seven weeks to make an answer, not now directly to the City Government but indirectly through you.1n a newspaper article, to the bills sent in by the City seven weeks ago to the Govemment for its share and that of the Domitian Government of the Unemployment Relief ex- pended by the City. , When the bills were r- ‘ ’ to belt of elastic web. three or four_ 8 dozen Baby’s Bonne Ladies’ House Dresses. Al Ladies’ Coat Sweaters and Pullov clear at . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Clearing line of Ladies’ Ladiesl and Misses’ Felt the newest shapes. Specia The newest in Garbo Berels, all the latest shades. Special at . . . . . . ... Ladies’ Chenille an sizes, clearing at . . . . . . . . A special line of Ladies’ Ladies’ Brassieres. Special at .. Extra special line of Fleece-l i children's sizes. .... . . . .. ‘j Chiidrens Fleece-lined Sl A full line of D. 8r A. Co price $1.00. Clearing for All colors . . . . . . . . . . . .. Very special, 15 dozen Regular price . . . . . . . . . . . Crepe Back Satin in Bro Regular $1.75 yard for .......---¢- Clearing at . Ladies’ Silk Bloomers, all Ladies’ Winter Coats, fur TWILIGHT 0N TWEED ‘Three crests against the saflron sky, Beyond the purple plain, The kind remembered melody Of Tweed once more again. Wan water from the border hills, Dear voice from the old years, Thy distant music lulls and stills, And moves to quiet tears. Like a loved ghost thy fabled fl Fleets through the dusky land; Where Scott, come home to die, has stood, a My feet returning stand. A mist of memory broods and floats, 'I‘he Border waters flow; the Acting Premier 11¢ made not the slightest objection. Now it seems it took the Government seven weeks to ascertain that the bills should have been presented monthly. For business promptness and despatch, qute a. feat. But the objection that the bills should have be'en presented monthly is purely technical and flimsy at that. The City neither knew nor had the means of knowing any of these regulations. Is there any reason whatever why both Governments should not pay their shares of the City expenditure! for the four months beginning April lat and endln July 31st? It will not, do to ahirk behind the American, invaded ( made some pregame o; the monthly gumtgh. ing of the bills. If duplication of payments hal taken place tho City la no more to own wimtrv- It is usually considered blame 101‘ that than the Provincial sum of $150.12 expended by Government. It is quite clear that, as to the idea of a journalist's duty la to defend sensible and 3013GT. They are 157.1119 Qovqmmgnt, flghfl or wrong, from being the "sols" that Mr- pins to place my action in the mat-- ler in the worst poaabie light, and in doing so to resort to misrepre- sentation and suppression of facts as often as the occasion calls for. I am Sir, etc. W. S. STEWART Mayor's Office, Oct. 17, 193‘). (There has been no suppression or mlrepresentation of facts in The Guardian, only in the fertile imag- ination of His Worship. Evidently His Worship is of the impression that it is the duty of the Dominion and Provincial Governments to wait upon him to explain the terms of the unemployment grant. What the fact really is has already been ex- plained, vii, that while the Gov- ernment in seven “‘ expended $2,083.96 for direct olvic unemploy- ment rellef His Worship has been milking a great to-do over the petty the City during the same period. In making this expenditure, had H18 Worship been as attentive to the duties of his omce as to seeking bones of contention he would ‘have seen that the requrementa of the Government were fully met with and obaefveti-I-Jd. G.) Ladies’ Winter Coats, very newest s out fur trimming, the largest range that we have ever had on display from . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $10.98 to $55.00 Special line of (Ladies’ Children's Pullover Sweaters, worth to $1.75. All sizes . . 98c Clearing line of 40 Ladies’ Heavy Regular . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ts. Regular Clearing line of Ladies’ Blouses. Broken sizes 59c 'A'p§r}§i§s',' t... all colors and Children's Felt and Velour Hats, va Brown, Sand, Navy and Green. Specia style, all sizes. Ranging in price from Extra special, Ladies’ Capeskin Gloves, all s Black, Brown and Beaver Special line of Ladies’ Cha Clearing line of Ladies’ Handbags. Ladies’ Si k and Wool Hose. Kiddies’ Hose, all colors .. Ladies’ Fine Wool Scarves, seaso patterns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Plain and Brocade Rayon. Ladies’ Felt and Velvet Hats. Special Ladies’ Silk and Wool Hose . . . . . . . SUNSHINE SPECIALS Two great shopping days at S. A. McDonald's 0c tober 9th d 20th. A dd d f ' - that with every $1.00 purchase on any of our 4 shoppin g floolra frinm now unllfila Tlfurscigmeeveonfiitglsgfitlrfbles’ 20th, you will receive a ticket. Keep it and you may be the lucky winner of $50.00, $35.00 and $25.01) in cashr Try and catch the Mystery Girl at our store as she will be shopping here and she has $10.00 in her pocket: ocroaan 15193, s, worth up to $5.00, clearing P 00 .--...--..--. .-....-. 4 Ladies‘ Tailored Coats, regular $20.00."Special at $5: Celanese Dresses, dark shades, all sizes, Special $3.00 Ladies’ Jersey Dresses, all sizes, newest styles. Special $2.98 9tonly Children’s Coats, regular price $9.00. Clearing a $1.98 Ladies’ Knitted Suits, all sizes and colors, beautifully styledfrorn...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........$5.98up on. with or with- . Gowns, . . . . . .. $3.98 for $1.98 $1.50. To clear at 49c l sizes. Special to clear at 49c ers. Reg. $3.00 to . . . . . . . . . . . .. $1.98 cial at 39c Hats, velvet trimmed in all‘ l . . . . . $1.59 and $1.79 $1.50 . . . . . . . . . . 59c gabond style, in ls $1.98 and $2.50 al at 49c . "Ilia. 39c ined Bloomers, ladies’ and 39c and 59c eepers. All sizes 89c rsets, including the Nu-Back . . . $4.00 to $7.50 Bloomers. Speci izes, moisett-e. regular . . . .. $1.25 for 49c . . . . .. 75c for 49c tyies and . 98c n’s newest s Green, Wine‘ and Black. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.39 yd; Regular price 45c yard. BARGAIN $1.49 ...35cpr. ...29cpr. wn, sizes irn. S peciai $10.50 roadcloth 36in. wide. .. s. A. MacDON The air is full of ballad notes, Borne out 0f long ago. Old songs that sting themselves to me, ' Sweet through a boy's day-dream. Whilst trout below the blossom'd. tree I Flashed in the golden stream. Tweed, and Elldon Twilight, and H111, Fair and too fair You be; tYou tell me that the voice is still ' That should have welcomed me. I -Andrew Lang. i I "Don't you suppose." said a P0- llcc officer, "that a policeman ,knows a rogue when he sees him?" _________-_- "No doubt," was the retell’. "but he trouble is that he does not al- 4t ways seize a rogue when he knows him!" Hair Restorer A Dellcately perfumed pre- paratlon which reatorea. "Pflllthena and beanflflea the I-Ialr. f 1T WILL RESTORE GRAY HAIR TO ITS ORIGINAL COLOR An excellent halr food lon- lng up and Invigorating all the Ill!’ , blood veaaela and nerves of the hair and aoalp, thus producing a no]; u"; abundant growth of hair. Promutoa a now and appor- lur growth whore tho hair! falling alul la remarkably us. ful in preventing damn; and rlealruyllll poraaltic halr killers. Just follow the lllroa. "on: emf-ll: aaa- you will ho amaaad at the results. Got ' a bottle today. Prloo 50o. Mall Order: given prom attention. M ifor ‘Garment 54in.Flannel $1.45:Speclal 98c yd. Black Tricotlne 54 in. Regular $2.25 for . . .. . . . .. $1.39 Heavy Black Serge, 36 inch wide. Regular price 85¢ 59c Bleached Sheeting-Gil ‘in. wide, reg. 38c for 34c yard; 81 in. wide, reg. 69c for 63c yard; 63 in wide, reg. 24c for 22c yard; 72 in. wide, regular 35c for 32c yard; 72 in. wide, reg. 25c for 22c yard; 81 in. wide, reg. 38c for35c yard. Pillow Cotton-42 inch, 35c for 28c yard; 42 inch, 30c for 24c yard; 40 inch, 48c for 38c yard. _ Pillow Cases-w inch. reg. 38c for 35c pair; ~12 inch. reg. 38c for 35c pair. ' Lace Curtains, 2% yards. Reg. $1.59 for . . .. $1.29 pair Cottage Curtains. Reg. 98c for 59c set Marquisette Curtainarose check. Reg. 98c for. 59c pr. Manquisette Curtains, blue check. Reg. 98c for 59c pr. Shopping Bags. Reg. 49c for 29c each Men’s Over-coals, colors Blue, Brown’ and Grey, Chin- chiilas and Herring Bone Patterns at $12.50, $18.50, $22.50 and $25.00 " ‘ Men's Fancy Stripe Brown Worsted Suits‘; Spec. $19.50 Men's Blue Worsted Suits, all wool, single and double- breasted, special . . . . . . . . . . .. $15.00 Juvenile Overcoala, fancy Tweeda, colors Grey, Fawns and Browns, sizes 2 years to 7. Special price . . .. 52-69 Boy’s Leather Windbreakers, sizes 6 years_to 14 years. Special $4.50 Boy’s Leather Coats, Horsehide, sizes 6 years to 12 years. Special $5.75 Youth’s Leather Coats, sheep collar and belt all" $9.75 around, sizes 28 to 36 . . Men's Leather Coats, beat. Special . . . .. _ Boy’s Odd Pant-Q, 911095 - Men’s Odd Pants, prices . . .. . . .. $1.00 to $6.00 pr. Clearin line of Men’s Work Sweaters, all sizes, good heavywe hLWorth$2.00 . . . . . . . . . . . .. Extra special reaker Sweat- épééiéi 'v.i‘..".;.' ifriéé ' and to 80c to $2.00 pr. Boy’s V-Neck and Windb ers. Regular up to $2.50 98c Men’s Heavy Police Brace 39c pr. Men's Work Shirts, all sizes, extra special to clear 59c Merfs -Fancy Hose, all new fall patterns . .. 19c g‘. c Clearing line of Men's Dress Shirts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Men's Wool Uri _ Men’s Caps, assorted pattern _ _ 13W Boy’s Caps assorted patterns, all sizes. .. Specm t Men’s "Red Back Overalls. Worth $1.35 to $1.50. Special $1.19 (all sizes) Boy’s Blue Combination Overalls. Regular $1.35. 89cm‘. Men’s medium weight Underwear, two-piece, all sizes , _ . . . . . . . . . . .. 7 s, all sizes. Special 69c 9c "Merfs medium weight Combinations. All sizes $1.49 suit BASEMENT Chiidrerfs Fleece-lined Sleepers, all sizes . . . . . 79c Bath Towels 65c pair Men's Fancy All Wool Hose, all new patterns . 59c pr. Men’s Work Sweaters. B/pecial . . . . .. $1.38 18c yd. ~ The Island's ending Store KHIQIS . "Is your boy Josh ambitious?" "Yes," replied Farmer Corntossel. "He's plannin’ to be so rieh 811' relation." w; derwear, all sizes, two-piece 98c per gar. . successful that already he's b98111- nin‘ to look on me as a sort o‘ poor “Gonserve the Home and Stabilize the llation” Adequate investment in Life Insurance is vital, not only to the welfare of the individual, but also from the standpoint of the nation. The Great-West Life Assurance Company is the “ Champion of Thrift” and the Guardian of thousands of Canadian homes. For full information concerning rates_ and policies, consult your nearest agent or write or call on . iivituimi a. co. Ltn- "The Great-West Life Charlottetown Provincial Managers Lower Queen Street 15., Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. sun Only In u Airtight Packages THE 2 "Afls trainer omii some