»-._.:. '1: vex-we: llt 2r t 1i n :1’ fr ~c a n- iv 14 or K U_£".TS=L1;TF¢'1. "iq-izaii-fll-idiilififipC-Ekrifiu .<1ln-$?H.:OO PAGPI FUPR N _ . wavaiitbilflflfiitazrifatltliiiiz-C» TlE cttaatorttmwn GUARDIAN Morning Duffy tl-uuntled V1881) Pies. lvnl. LleuL-Col. \\. (healer S. MCLIIIC lit-t l-fcstdrnt, .I. K Burnett, FJJ. _ Suclelur). LzeuL-Lol D A .\llll.'Kllllltlll. 0.5-0. Editor gnu .il.lll.l|,'|llg Director, J Bum?“- FJ-l . nine Ldllur. Flank \\ 11km‘ -l\l5.\CRlP‘llO.\ RATES 33,00 pf-r -~ ~ tut advance» delivered lo (lty. - < in advance; mailed lu l‘. E. .i autumn» mum-d to Camilla ind U-l ~|~ .\.lLlll bureau of Cm-ulalivni _. . “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the lllealrest Ink.” lf.‘ _ J _ " L"'“‘ ‘ T“ '1. r-i- \v. xovriaiisf-tk. ____ iiilg, _ Lwilt \ For Our Fishermen the hope. assured of "l Govern- a price ...ermc-n to ' r the 9877K? im- ir dmv to have to co =< that red to put rhis '~ had this unused i lto the pllfr. i' wttult’. n02 e else to n. "i t" cwur Lilly inn Nut EnOUgh .-Canada trade .i.tlcn' Liberal) n-ving the read. abroad since r aw. hr- r trade has ss members Ft.‘ "iv-o" of some of our the subject the ' less being cir- . rc- the farmers are to be cap- tn farin products, (‘a atlas greatest .1 is like- ‘tl Sixes, nor t0 ‘it-re else, because . lizin problem of "Wricr john Ilracken, of "sed the opinion that prairie wheat pro- an taxpayers $40,- ducers will ooorxao. Unless fh~re is war to send prices up, the wheat sif ' mrtlx an even heavier de- ~.~>~»1 fwf llritit-h Columbia Summer because "-r at home nor ’ trade treaties will help the n‘... . ' m" of (f-fiadafn apples or other fruit. Tl‘! prof" m’ the lfnivd Stat-s lack the pur- ‘ the total yield of agricul- rhasittg p. ' i z‘ "t .. 11' .:r rl~~titti1e as llittistcrs pro- mu: of farm products ' w tlr" Vnifed States is phcc‘ the w; from all amps C ~ ' hardly t» 1 " ‘u lll-vt-rti Canada- or in ti“ l Y. "F -|=1‘i ' l it, ~ t " ltali_.li to is ncerlgr] rm P-"fr ' ‘ - v wvvic situation in VF“ c I" i ‘t lat ;.. IHlItCr con- cludts. Mons Rmtlelnlvers l~~'-"ig' appears in T/If‘ "l m"; w 1.: t','~- (“lurid-inn lm- rti fln- \'t at" mus< um iiuhrn itbtu lriills- .~-, - ‘Yr, thorq- l.lt"\]»t‘, whrttn ' to fur-ct dur- w", .4’ ‘. "wj “r ‘lll." ' t I , u, r t - ~ w pzh ‘azyl ‘ ' iii 1'01». ". \\:-.~ tl-t'tti:z'.l_t' r-pcu- 1m aw zit 17th fJlll ’~<."l1‘il.~ fl"- ~ ml nll tho lll"l' ' i with fr] f". , ". l ' x in . wits is lliv tliirtl. <~~~ ‘Hm lizunula ' "'1' K111‘! l" . ' f. 2-, 11-,- \\ ts t-f thzt , v :i< cu- .'~ lh itutzwl .l'v“(* is lll" lll<- : l'-‘.l| c. zitury car.- inon forged at .\Ions, so in the .\lons War Mus- eum are two Canadian cannons, each associated with the city's liberation. One is an IS-pounder, which formed part of the armament of the 39th Battery, 10th Brigade, CPA. This was the first battery through _\lons before the “cease fire" sounded on .\'ov. n, 1918, and the gun n0\v in the .\I.:ns museum fired the final round. “The other gun," says The Lcgi0nar_v'»“is a 4.5 howitzer of the famous 36th (‘Brassc’) Bat- tery, 0th Brigade, Through most of its cam- paigfllng this—-—one of the really well-known and outstanding batteries of the Corps—\vas com- manded by .\fa_ior D. A. .\IacKinnon, Char- lotiettnvn. On .\'ov. to, 1918, its commander was Capt. A. L. Anderson, .\‘I_C., and Section Commander was Lieut. F. _l. Longworth (also of Cbarlrvttetmvnl. The gun-crew of the ex- hibit in the .\lons \\'ar Museum consisted of Sergt. C. K. Dickson, Gunners D. _l. McQuarrie and K. Greig. The gun in question was firing the barrage at 5 pin... Nov. 1n. on the catial bank a: the statithuvcszt-rn out-kins of .\I0ns. The Gtrrnaris opened at once on the battery. Licut. L1 wrtrtlt, standing bind the gun directing All the gun- Lieut. Long- m-d in action in the lie was buried in the JlIS, was mortally wot nt-r~ also sizstuitic-i casu: w-trtlt was thc last than k1. Divisional Artillcrv. eiery a: lamapyiesfi’ The Canadian Section af=o contains paintings, scrolls. ty l Canadian ‘{lif'f»ffll5 and other souvenirs r-z stiecial in: rest. Congratulatttxg the ‘Bltns atttburities on their magnificent untiertakiug, The Lrgionary says: “At least this Belgian town does actually posses a museum w .331 cherishes Canadian souvenirs of the Great War. Thur ' more than can be said of Ca .1 or any Can. ..-. Even the Catfadian conectroti of \\'ar Sletnvrial paintings, valued twenty years ago at more than $1.000,- 000, continues to repose in modest obscuritv in the basement 0f an Clttawa s! ‘rig rink." i its ‘ed. ics. To The Privy Council It will be a gracious gesture, suggests the Windsor Ftar, if King George makes Hon. R. ‘l. Manion a member of llis .\la_icsty's Imperial Privy Council during his trip to Canada next Sumntcr. If His .\la_ic='._v acct-tics to the thought, Dr. Manion will be entitled to style himself Riglif Honorable. _ It is customary to summon major party‘ lead- ers to the Imperial Privy Council. It is usually d-ane during a trip to England. It would be a unique honor, if Dr. .\Ianion were accorded the distzttction during the royal visit. Editorial Notes I Commander Byrd flew over the South Pole this date, i929. I w w w Tomorrmv, Scotsmcn and their friends the world over celebrate the festival of their Patron Saint. I I i U “hen there is work to be done at Ottawa it is noticeable the Campbell Government send their officials instead of attending to it themselves. ¥ i i I An aged pedestrian requests the police to station a traffic officer a: Hughes’ Corner, as she narrowly escripctl being run over by a car yesterday at noon, when the vehicular traffic was heavy. w w a u The Provincial Council of the Boy Scouts Association are combining their annual meet- ing and a farewell banquet to President Mur- ray a: half past six in the Canadian National Hotel tonight. w w w a According to Dr. Harold F. Dorn, statistician for the Cnited Public Health Service, the chang- ing character of the population may double the average annual contmittmcnts to insane asylums two decades hence, without change in the incid- ence of the disease. Dr. Dorn based his con- clusion on the changed proportion of age groups which will occur as a result of the declining birth rate, and the fact that the larger proportion of mental patients come from the older groups. u w w a It i: reported that legislation providing for l comprehensive scheme of prison reform will again be introduced in Parliament next session by the lllinister of Justice, Rt. Hon, Ernest La- pointe. Last session he submitted a bill not long before prorogation and based on the re- commendations of the Archambault Commission. The bill was defeated in the Senate. One of the principal legislative tasks will be to create a new penitentiarics commission to administer, under the justice Minister, the various penitentiarics and the penal system generally. Many of the re- forms or changes in the present system will be achieved through the making of regulations by the Commission, on the advice of the Minister. The treatment of juvenile delinquency will be one of the principal innovations sought by the Gov- ernment in the new set-up. Another will be a more acceptable management of the peniten- tiaries and an avoidance of the troubles that were epidemic three or four years ago, clue large- ly to overcrowding and to improper treatment of the prisoners. Another will- be-passing the buck to the Commission. w w o w In connection with the recent illness of the Pope it is interesting to learn that for the first time since the eighteenth century, the Pope is in have a personal representative in Britain. Mgr. \\'illi:nti (itxlfrcy; [ircsi-nt rector of the \'t'llCl’.'ll1lC English Cnllcgt: in Rome, is to be the delegate. With the appointment of Mgr. God- frqv, who succccdcrl Cardinal lrlinsley as rector of the littglish College in 1930, there will now be six agiostolic th-ltgqzititms in the British Empire. 'l‘h<- rtlhcrs arc Canada, Australia, South .\frica, lntlia. and the itiissionaryt (lelcgalion at Mom- ilmsa for the African colonies. None of the oilur dill-galls. however, is of British itatiotf- z .ty. .\lgr. (iutlfrt-y will ltzivc direct ztc-‘css tn ltlu- Foreign Ufficc in Ixmdou, and ticcortlitig to sfmlf‘ vipinivms his zippnintiticut is due to the Pope's growing concern for Roman Catholics in ltia-rnuttiy‘. For centuries lriton has been ce- [prc-r-ntt-d at the Vatican by a minister, but the usual reciprocity rule has nnl been observed. i U fi F NOTES BY TIIE WAY In the thermal lying‘ dbl-riot of New Zealand there la a geyser that. dlsdiarges a stream of luke- warm water of a brownish hue at irregular intervals. A correspon- dent says be has one exactly like that In his bathroom_ —E:- ARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN PUBLIC FORUM mall-II; ulauo lb opinion-n urruponlontn. Pnnoe, having pt rill of tho spectre of war with Germany; is now engaging in the usual bor smke troublm. There Ls much rea- son w believe that Communism f: boring within. —St. Catharlnea Standard. ‘f “ car namen have an easy time of it compared -wlt.h parents, says the Louisiana board of vital statistics, which lists these among the registered names of new babies of 1938; Minus, Two Bus, Castor Oil, Gee-Whlzz, Hard- times, Loveless. Trouble and Evil. —Buffalo Courier-Empress. Punctuation. so often a. mere luxury, is a necessity if you want to make sense of this from the Sunday" Tlmes: "That that ls is that. mat is not ls not is not that. it it is." With a few commas and things 1'. reads: "That that l5. is; that that is not, is not. 1s not that it? It isP-Toronto. More than 100 over-meage- limit. ex-gunners of Weymouth, have applied to the War Office to let them form an “Old Crooks" coastal defence battalion. Ana why not? lsn‘: Weymouth just. the place where an enemy would hope to sneak ashore without any- body getting to hear of 1l?—EV€I1~ lng News. Every war scare produces Ito crop of pseudo-military experts. One columnist now predicts that Ln the next war every second British infuntryman will be equip- ped vrith a machine gun. which leads our No. 1 Office Veteran t/o recall that in the last war lt took seven infantrymen to carrv up ammunition for each machine gunner. ~vancouver Sun. Hereditary titles are not ln hur- rnony with the ideals of the Dn- minlon. but there 1s no reason why a public servant who has earned recognition should not re- ceive knighthood or a baronetcy for his lifetime without the level of democratic citizenship befntz disturbed. There 1s no valid reason why ycanadlan subject. of the King should not be able to look forward to a reward of this kind It would be an incentive to young men to give their energy to public service, and 1t would help to retain the British connec- tion. ,_Toronto Globe and Mall. “Cost thy bread upon the Intern and it shall return to thee after many days" Ls one of the wisest words of Scripture. It expresses a. great truth. which applies here and everywhere else, that ff you do helpful things for your neigh- bors and home town they a prec- late ft and give you much re- turn. The people who glve their time and effort freely for the benefit of their home town gain far more than they ever expected in return. In this unselfish serv- ice they made friends and asquir- ed a wide acquaintance so that people are keen to do things for them. Some people say there ls "no money ln public work." so they won't do any of lt. But those who give generously receive generously. —-Deseronto Post. ' Municipal offlchls everywhere who lose sleep over the midtown parking problem may well keep an eye on the rooftop parking plan initiated near Times Square. New York city. Stores occupy the ground floor, but above them. reached by a ramp. la space for 157 automobiles. This 1s one real- fzatloit of the long-cherished idea of roof parking, and the degree of practicality it. proves will merit close study. It. ls an experiment in temporary or semi - permanent utilization of vacant or non-profl- table midtown areas. With the parking problem now one of the most. pressing matters in every community. and with little being done to solve it, a. test of any com- mercial or civic venture which seems feasible can be welcomed.- Phlludelphls Inquirer In Toronto there dled a few days ago John Daniel, and he operated a small bake shop. It turned out. he was a Welch knight, Slr John Daniel. former! a prom- inent citizen of Cardlf , director fn all of some 15 companies, but 11¢ was ruined nhortly after 1929. I-le came to Canada to start again fn a new way, but never men- tioned ln any way that. he was u titled gentleman. Baron de Ylilvetlle, the eighth to ca the name. with his wife an two children, is at present living in Toronto, where they find ft neces- sary to secure relief. The title was originally granted by Louis XIV of France 1n 1690. In his day he has slept ln palatial hotels and on park benches. and now he ls fig- uring that he will go to New On- tario in tine Spring and take up land as best, he can-Peterborough Examiner. The bowler hlf, known llFlhls country as the derby. recently cele- brated its slxtleth anniversary. It. got. its British name through hav- ing first been made sixty years ago by William Bowler of St. Swithlufls Lane to the desl n of a Norfolk farmer. The bow er or derby is still going strong It. la the most many adherents here. The bowler ls a symbol of solidity. The high sllk hat. represents lofty social standing, John Hetherlngton Ln- vented the "topped" ln London 140 years ago. when he first wore ft he was arrested for inciting a riot; the complaint was made that timid persons were frightened by its sheen. A century ago a French- man, Antolne Glbua, contributed the opera hat spring. This is the only successful mechanical device ln the hat business, and the 1n- ventors family still receives royal- ftfes from ft. High hats are all made by hand, for no machne which can turn them out. satia- factorlly has been developed. Sales of silk hats provides a reliable economic barometer. During econo- mic depressions they fall off: when conditions improve they pick up. New York sun. The result: of the municipal elections held in England recently affords n more accurate index to the trend of n political opinion fn the Old Country than fa usually the case. As a general rule these elections are fought mainly over local frsues but are nevertheless watched closely by all political perm-s for any indication of the direction in which the wind Ls blowing. The last two triennial AIRWAYS EMPLOYMENT Gun-Citizens will approve the Council's protest against interfer- ence with city t W those not elected for the Purpose. But theme is objection to the ccln- . allowing Mr. Douglas. m‘ any outsider to mcnkey wlm our business l» Govern- or a Liberal Party lnv t? Do Liberal taxes Day the whole bill. or are Conser- vatives also contributors? n; it, a scheme to buy votes and a bribe to electors. or is ft, a. Public under- takinll to help cut unemployment and public accommodation? 1t the latte- why ask the nun-political cm- Counofl to co-operate in mak- fnl it. a mrty to corrupt and bribe voters with the “cabins? dole in exchange for work? Hon. Dr. Man- XOII Shbllld be asked to congnlf, Parliament as to whether the m- tlonal treasury Ls to be degraded into a partisan election machine. And if politicians are to be per- nuftted to nose into this kind of wbhc expenduure, whv 1.5 only one party represented? Why has not ure or Mr. Myers been also invited to represent the Cmserva/tlve party? I am, Sir. etc. NATIONAL CONSERVATIVE. OUR GOVERNOR Sin-No doubt everv zood citizen will be glad to learn that our re- E overnor, Hon. George D“ 301s l8 Rufus to remain as the king's Ls the undertaking merit of Canada one, representative for_ another ‘ear or until after the visa of the ma: and This ineure a hearty Q1199! l reception to ‘Yheh- Malesties and Dflrty for 1 believe no man was ev- er better suited for that office than Our present, Lieutenant. Governor, R8 lust too bad 1f he cannot be in- duced w remain 1n offzc: for anoth- er full term. but if he ls compelled to entertain as he has done rhrorugh his preaen term of office at his present “you cannot blame 1m for refusing for it is nothing but a thankless 10b under these conditions, 1 understand his salary la on five thousand dollars a yea: wit two thousand extra. as expenses, find this would 110i R0 very far with a man who entertains as our Gov- ernor does. That. would be called chicken feed among some business men and judges who are not called upon to entertain every Tom, Dick and Harry that comes to our shores. His salary should be nm less than seven thousand dollars n. year and five thousand dollars for expenses. I know many will say I am crazv but 15f we are to have an office ma: requires the best brains we have on our Island one who must entertain lavishly. then he should be support/ed and not be ex- pected to spend his own money to make a big front for his Govern- ment. But our Government ldea is let George do it: but George should let Thane and his Government do some of ft this time for it. ls not often we are called upon to enter- tain such Royalty as our Kin d Queen. Almough we are "a small Island surrounded bv water" should not let that. stop us from showing them that we are loyal cit- izens of the Empire. So get behind our beloved Governor and make this vlst of our King and Queen something they will long re- member. It. can be done if every- one will get, together. I am Slr, eta, J. W. MITCHELL, New Dornlnlon. FOX PELTS h COLOR MARKINGS flr:— At the Rotary club last Charlote- week and later at. the town Fox club I was asked to dis- cuss the Fox Pur market and at h places I ventured the state- ment that our fox rrmn tn th country were not mteroretmg ‘the . gns of the times with respec. t0 the colour phase which was most eagerly sought by the buys!“ VIZ- full silvery and near silvery sorts 0f fox belts m“ breath sooner doing the same ex- is received bv auction at the mldwtn- ‘I'll! EABLIEST AND MOST IM- PORTANT SYMPTOM 0F HEART FAILURE -- BREATlflJSSNl-ISS We k of a heart as normal orheal yulongultlsdogig its work properly—pushin bl out as fast as it flows ln. there should be a leaking valve, an ex-' Lra be t, some irregularity, any one of which ls not normal, but. still the heart continues to pump blood out as fast as ft comes in, we speak of the heart as being ‘com- pensated’. As long as it is cum- pensuted, the leaking valve. extra beat. and irregularity are not fm- portanq It can thus be seen that main question about the heart is “Can ft. pump the blood out as fast as lt comes in?" that the heart la not able to o its work properly is what is called dyspnea or breatfilessnsro which begins to come on earlier or sooner from doing the same amount of work or exercise. Other early symptoms are pallor of the face and a slight swellfn of the feet. "Dyspnea. lfffcult breathlniz, or breathlessness ls one of the most, 1f not the most. important symp- tom fn early failure of the heart. The patient; will notice that his breathlessness comes on with less work or exercise than before." A simple illustration of this ts given by Dr. Harry L. Brnltb 1n the Mayo clinic number Clinics of North America. ‘The moot Qomrnon exercise 1s walking, and the degree of distress or breathlessness that this pro- duces dependa upon several factors such as speed with which one walks, whether route 1s level or up- hill, whehter walk ls taken after o. meal or when stomach ls empty, whether a. cold wind. After u large meal, walking mpfdly up n steep hill, on, a cold day, against a strong wind. and at the same time talking, will produce breaithlessness 1n most healthly individuals." The test then ls simply getting out. of erclse under the circum- stances. _ By recognizing this breabhlessness as an early sign of a fafllng heart, the patient, by doing less exercise or.work, leams to live wfthln the power of hfs heart and so lives many years. If. must be remembered, how- ever. that other conditions besides a failing heart can cause difficult breathing or breabhlessness such as (a) nervousness, (b) eating too much acid foods—meat. egzs. fish, cereals, (c) nose being blocked, (d) chronic bronchitis, (e) over- weight, and others. SHIIIO marked tendency to produce veil-v giog. By veiling I mean the back nts which come on the silver hairs and provide a beautiful over- liwlng contrast to the silver bar be- low. This has a. tendency to give a somewhat darker appearance w all our foxes who possess a large am- ount of silver where the animals are 1n good health and condition. ‘Ifhere are, however. some promin- ent breeders and fur men in this country who contend that half to three quarter silvers with good bind: neclm are more desirable and any controversy. but support my contention anent the desirability of producing silvery fox furs I to subunit the following statlslcs which represent the average prices fer January Sales held in 11011110" for the past five years. The am- ounts received are in DQ111165 5-3!- ltna and decimals of pounds. These figures were prepared 8nd published by MI‘. J. _D. J, FOHWS when manager of the London Fur L tnk-Lww“u=:eg1a!¢;= Quantity of Your Skin! Charlottetown m: sues. 1M- wncnans 1n coarranrsou Bun-Press challenges have levied on our memories for storm and weather records to P8111811 our recent storm, Our friend. G. w. Ritchie was quoted in the Patriot as describing 1880 when m9 "Schooner Carrol was frozen 0M off our harbor about that. date. Mr. Ritchie was either mfsquoted. or his memory has failed. The Carrol was not a "schoon- er" but screw propelled steam- shl with 400 passenger and large fre ht accomodayfon, 0M 0! W° steamers —Oarro and Worcester ._g1v1ng weekly service between Qhgflotte , Halifax and Bos- ton. I cannot now give the exact date but believe it was later than 1880. Carvell Brothers were the popular hat ln Britain and has age t-s t: those more atone-salve days we had a regular steamship servloe uid l large freight and passenger trade. Back in the sixties and seventies. the first ship was the Greyhound. This steamship was wrecked In the boLsterous Boy 0f Fundy. Her successor. the Alhambra, was also wr~~‘--4. Th= Carrol and Worcester amn- n mud ref of service, gave plate b0 the Merrimack. a large Iron steamship, was wrecked on the N. 8. was!- Then the Halifax. a Canadian shl I think. continued tlll the Mclimiley Tariff segregated U. S. Business from us. Our overland freight connected with the mainland ln two aide wheel steamers. Princess of Wales and 5t. Lawrence. taking tutm alternately between Charlottetown and Plcwu and Shedlac and sum- merside. Semi perishable goods °°"ld_fl°¢,_l0, t9, .1!<>=t<>.n yLqi-rsm; | . -____ .. .-__.s gains. In the recent election. how- ever, the Labor tide showed un- mlstakable signs of receding. Deo- plto the alertness and excellent o anlzatton of bhe Labor ma- cbnery, as compared with the generally sllpuhod methods of the Conservatives, the opponents of Tabor made widespread headway. The change was particularly Average Price in l‘: " nu mgnest Dar-Ls 1A Sllver l6 Sllver 94 Silver Silver Paid m4 58.728 25.6 1.1 02 gr» a m- ms aaaso 5.2 e1 as 7 7 1 a m- m“ will: if: ‘ 1'0 s14 n01 iii: ilslooo 3.0 3.x i6 l4 M m- 1 llfl, au- a: Sales 1M. unfuc ‘b. nawson, sun-m er, taking four days each trip. and such went by the tmln route. On the year 1n question I ship- ped several tons 9f hides to Que- bec. sheep skins to Montreal, a ton and a half of Geese. and 2.- 900 lbs. eels to Boston and New York. about November the 32nd, via Summerslde. These were returned to the City on the 29th, Summers?’ harbor over, I placed them with Steam Nev. Co.. to tgo via tou, I was again notl led that be- cause of harbor loe the Princes vuupeot going to sail. I then mcv- Od oozb to the Hallway to g0 via. the "Northern ugm" to Georgetown Nlr. W. W. Clarke. then agent for the M. A. Btar. asked me for the freight, stating she would posi- tively sail, even thcigh to out her way out of the fee. and would con- nect with the Boston steamer at Yarmouth, with four aays to spare. I moved the Eels and Geese and shipped by the "Star." ‘The Star was a very slow tramp steamer. missed the Yin-mouth bolt. my goods had w watt tn Yflflflflllill a fortnight to meet next trip. The Geese reac ed Boston two days before Christmas, In the finest condition. and ‘sold at a then phenomenal price 20c lb., and the Eels got, to New York two days af- ter ChrLstmu with a like result, selling It Mo. (\f- date of chip- ment. price was 9o) the goose fsllscikened appetite turning to reah The remarkable feature was that. from the date of ahlnment till ar- rival there wu no let up from the hard frost, not even a day u for ls I can r . which ac- counts for all the consignments, to all places, reaching destination in the most perfect condition. when the first snow came it stayed. I recall another heow storm. I think about lfll-i. on New Years shovel n tunnel under the snow- bank to get Into communication Star. electlonl realm in definite mm giiiiti-iaiiflecsiilirslile 4mm miilitiir“ h“ lliwlh ‘h’ m" w” m one a thou old‘ mm mm. with me that. a real old time win- burled a member of his health law violation, Kent Downey fine or 30 days ln Jail. the City Board Room on W. A. GAUDET President FlSll and GAME MEETING The quarterly meeting of the Fish and Game Protective Association of P.E.I. will be held l5 1 FRIDAY, nncnmnnn 2nd at a o'clock at", Important matters will be brought up J. E. STERNS Acting Secretary For a Delicious Cup of Orange Pekoo Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: l Use BRAHMIN FuH Flavoured Tea WHO ‘WOULD BE TO BLAME ? be your fault. call on If you had an accident that resulted in heavy hospitalization and doctoring bills, it might not But if you had to pay that bill entirely out of your own pocket, and perhaps suffer financially to do so. that would be your fault-because you can. get adequate accident insurance at very little cost. Ask one of our representatives about this form of insurance, or IIYNDMMI & B0. LTD. Offices: Charlottetown, Summerslde, Montague All Classes of Insurance Transacted I Black Sam's Bridge was country teams. per custom, wok a cent. interest new road course. and a resident of what was then known as the East Bog. complained to the Po- lloe that horses were driving over her low roof. the hoof putters an announce and danger overhead, , Our oldest inhabitants will agree ter snowfall and storm would be a surprising novelty to present generations. I am. Sir. etc LEWIS B. TANTON Swine Now vrourren LAW l HALIFAX, ~<o1=>- Backus: he fondly within M0 yards of a dwelling, a of Preston. neg-m settlement near Halifax, was sentenced to a $26 RETURNED TO INSTITUTION: (c. P. by Gwlrflltn‘: Special Wlre) MONTREAL, Nov. 2a_1=*q; mg second time within two months, Molse Handheld was koulzht back to St. {can de Dieu mental asylum law wuav by Provincial police of- ficers who recaptured him at his “WW 111 the vlllflfte of Contrecoeur. ———-——-_ n m a new ommn wan none» nrubhll. simian: w. (A. P. by Guardian‘ s Lu w] BERLIN ZBt-Sliloéirlptlon) a new German 1,500,000,000 . Nov. Owned today for Government loan o! Prescription: lemon‘ A SONG After the wind 1n the wood, if??? liidbllii “m might‘ and the brood, After ‘the he ht and the hush illéiéflrlhl 6235215 t” *- - v shflken with wings. n“ rush ._,,___M§..1I1ode Plckthal. ASSURE YOUISELF 0F HIGHEST RETURNS CO-OPERATIV — SHIP US AN BE SURE - 201 Weyrnouth St. " ‘ "m? t» y; buried. tmarka ($600,000,000) at redeemable at from Nov. 1, 1953 to 1958. It is the fourth loan floated by the Gov. emment this year. there f: heifer for your Stunncb lhan Dr Evans’ Stomach Mixture PRICE PEI! BUITLE 85¢- ATTENTION Breeders, h the time to Ilurll against PIG -‘ WORM by!!!“ the molt remedyonthomuk Mac’s Pig - Worm Tonic Powder It will thoroughly abolish all snoop of worml, and Improve tho health of your herd. Price 35cts per lb. clay. Order by Phone All orders promptly Phone 315 m 2 macs A owl-m MAIL ORDERS PROMPTLY ATTENDED T0. We are handling Chicken and Fowl dull)’; Turkeys, Geese and Duck: on and after Decem- Also ln stock: Feeds put up enroll"? 1°!‘ Poultry, besides extra good values on Flour, Barley Meal, Bran, Shorts, etc. ma. ISLAND colortnlnv: EGG AND POULTRY ASSOCIATION Phone 575 Oflecllva e1: . nolhln: 4 1-2 per per