"‘ ~\*-='#~r.vw<nu|q;~p____‘ < i. a TliE 0lIAliLOTTEl0llll lllullllnllll _\V Ch t ptlelmrtll. hwfldu‘ ' flgreary-Lleut. Cal. l Editor and llllllllll P. I’. L IlGKlnnon, D- 8. 0. Director-J. B. Burnett 3- Auoclnh Idltorwhuk Wllka: and D. K. Currie 5|"! 00.00 our (In advance) delivered. "HLT,‘,P,"}L§"ZTI".'§.I...I maueawlllkimm and Ullllnd amen. SATURDAY, i Coal Strike Settled The news conveyed in yesterdayl; settle- despatches of a Provisional ment of the dispute in the 5011i Wales coal fields which has kept about 150,000 idle since January l w,“ b. reoelved with gem l and in the general cultural level of u“ saflsnwuon ‘hroughou; we the country, Canada. has resources ahmlre The use coal strike lu lsl-l- . for mobulzfltm" l" t“ "aim"! ‘"9"’ taln ind an almost l>ara‘)‘zil*r' cllect ‘l ‘Tmmlal "amllm?" ‘vhkh “e "nlqm: JANUARY 17, 1931 equipment of other surplus-producing In systematic large scale. culttvation, in comprehension of 50H! values and crop methods, in elevator in railroad and steamship freight facilities, in mrl- chine power and mechanical skill, countries. h storage capacity. upon the nation's lndzzstl-lal llfe, cuus- l l“ ‘he “mldt ing widespread loss all-l i , r l “w,” ma, c,_,m,,,.,,,,,,n| 1n51umcm-1, tlli: can be clone the Free Plcos 1:‘, ‘ n ’ t“ s “y m _ l _ l Ann”. con._.1nced_ ~11 15 pfggfeg. no llhilfy. was no nece s , ey both employees and enlp 0}€l5 v nlllretrogrpssmn that me future holds 15am, and was therefore to b, 311mm. arrive . _ - ' ' 1m '10.- CfiXmdfl." This is a good slogan. their present Qffvflé f0 at an amicable agreement, deed, it‘ seems almost incredible that 11°‘ (‘my 5°’ ‘he west" bug‘ n” 211mg lsomctimes indeed by a generation or ‘ mflmg “Harem, 511mm ha“, "_ |Provinccs, during the years that 31¢ ‘an age of mankind. That error lay suffering. , suited in any strike at the present £39134- rritical juncture, with the threat of‘ its extension to all of the miners of the United Kingdom. T‘.- dispute in the South Wales! czal fields was over houn and wages. The Mines Act provides for a nlaxl- lnulll of ninety hours of work spread 1mg Operated on the h]ghways_ over a fortnight, subject 0o a rllaxi- mum of eight hours work in any one day. The South Wales owners intro- duced a scheme of eleven days of work (eight hours work a day,‘ in every fort-night, but they made an in- novation by providing a. scroll-hour shift for one Saturday in the fort- night and leaving the other Satur- day as a. whole holiday. South wales miners had been accustomed t0 work six day: in every week-eight hours a day on five days of the week and seven hours on Saturdays. The new arrangement yielded eighty-seven hoursin a. fortnight and was thus three hours under the legal maximum. Where the mischief came in was that the men who are paid by the day ob- viously lost one day ill a fortnight. They therefore demanded a re- constructed spread-over which would restore the working week of six days. I t is hoped thatthe settlement HOW 'l"l'l‘l'C'l at will b0 n, perlnalv-nt one, and that both parties to the dispute rcallzr- the necessity of rlvcrlinc: fur- lhcr trouble at zllmosi rll._v cmi (‘anada and Rllfir-‘lfl A call in patriotic crWrv, ll: l""._'i|ll 1- lng lllc West is sounded by ill" 111m. toha. Free Press in the first oi a ;~‘f'l‘- 10:. of article: dealing “I'll 1'1» wheat situation and wltll Canal-h’: agl-u-ni» rural possibilities as CCll\l]JP"‘"l v.1; competitive countries. The country that, has come most aggrcsslvtly into the world's agricul- lurul picture this postseason ls Rus- sia, and the unprecedented efforts at mechanization and scientific farming made by the Soviet Government have been matters of world-vclde interest. Russia ivcll lllzly createsi. rival ill agriculture. and in this lirht the icchnlcal posi- tion of the two countries assumes the greatest possible lmllilflflllfii‘ to Call- hoconlc Canada's ‘vorlzl ada. As they sinlld null: ill: l-‘rcc FY05 finds ihc CLIlll§‘Ill'l~ ,‘.l l1» llFiiYllY in Canada's favor. For their i030 r.pl'illl; r-r-lp Lllc Un- vicls nnnounccd pllrcllalm 0i 2:11:50 tractor; 0i‘ which Flllilt‘ 14.000 llllzl been (l/‘livcrcd. Tllclc nvl: llnprcsldvc figures, bu‘. Mr. w. n. (llllflflll, Indian lleml l‘lX|)(‘l'llll(‘l|L.\l Flu-m, ha; just ullnollllccd that ihn numbers uf truc- inrs in Calllldfi has incrclllmll (luring the last ten wars from 10,243 to 3.’- - 083 ill 1920. 'l'i".e colllllzlrlsoll lll home- powcr is still more instructive. The Soviet Year Bonk for i030 givcs 259800.000 working and non-working horses irl Russia, against a total population of 153,000,000; about one horse to every five persons. 1n i928 lhore were 2,223,724 horses in the three Western Canadian provinces, against a population of 2,000,000, or a horse to every person on the prair- ies, and more than 200.000 over. A detailed comparison would show that all dnwll tllc line the Canadian agricultural equipment for doing business on a world scale is enorm- ously betlcr than the Russian; and k vastly more efficient than the l i ltllin Junk Spells Danger ‘ill-r American Automobile Asso- ciation esdn-lates that eight million motor cars fit only for junk are be- ‘IVJ [these wornout verhicles, tho 1580010.- lnicn attributes many accidents with iatsendant fatalities. Operation of "cars so decrepit that they are not lworih more than twenty-five dollars each l5 bound to menace public eefe- iy. Those in the cars are in danger, it has been pointed out, and so are other persons using the highway at the same time. The menace of‘ these decrepit junkers, with poor brakes. or mp0 at all, with one light lit or none, with drivers equally unfit, is not confined entirely to the United States. We have a large share of them in Canada. The - chairman bf the ‘United States Notional Safely Council, Mr. LOiIlS L. Dublin, gives a depressing accident survey of the year. Those ,who are horrified at warafare be- ‘cause of its unnecessary human slaughter, he-sayq-should do some- thing about the motor juggernaut. [Accidents in the United States alone rlolv "constitute the largest 8111819 crippling, of dependency lmd 0f licleizilztion" among the people Pl‘ that country‘. They produced 0? c") mtnlliih: in 1929 and he esti- lilllf’ |'~ilL total will reach 1 p: ~nl l H» year. More than half of $14,000, will have been due g0 nucnlczlis "in public places." Of I‘ whose M 000. 31,000 "probably will re- =-~l|, frmll the use of the automobile" lhlll-l the remainder from other types nf public accidents-drowning; rail- (rcarl and street car accidents and a long list of others, of lesser import- ance. Whereas the death rate from [disease has registered steady decline since i0l3_ the accident death rate shows no reduction. l Cit use of l i I i lllc W!" l, Editorial Notes Lord Willingdon, who is all enthus- lilStll.‘ curler will be somewhat out of i practice \\‘ll~T‘ll next he tvics lllS ilmnd wl‘ lrsnnl and silme. The roarin‘ slum: is not Popular in India. Lia: likrngllslon slur; ihat he can no lulu. m" indulge ill tile (lcllghis of party controversy’. "In fairness to his po- liilcnl opponents," says a Toronto ex- change," it. must he Jfllfl that, ihcy rzlrl-ly sllnlvll lllr. ill-light." The lltile group of "scccssionists" ill lsa-lkatcllcwllll announce their dc- sire to remain under the protection of iho British flag which will be wav- ing UVfl‘ a uniicd and prosperous‘ Dominion long after their present grievances arc forgotten. Pod. Oflive Dcparlnlclli. officials predict four day mall transmission be- twccn Great Britain and Canada within a year or so, and even picture letters fronl mndon being delivered in Vancouver within two and a half days at some future period. The gloat advance made in the Canadian air mail service in the last couple of years justifies the confidence the dc- artment expresses. Ww-Prcnldnatnul- I. Burnett It is from a highly preferred posi- l , ,_ Doubms, ‘he menlon. M. r115 u? lion that the “est faces the dlflicu has,“ coup,“ T“, ,1“, dflncn. 1mm , tics which have to bc mastered. That better. and urban points of view began. .__._- When the automobile first appeared on the streets, and passed the stage when it was a little more than a llorseicss carriage, and was fairly de- pendable, there was still some opposi- tion to it. Even after the idea that it was an invention of the Devil was Jainy well dispelled, it was condeznn- led by some well-meaning but hardly progressive persons as a mere worldly led. 'I'his group made the mistake {so often made by the individual and in failing to see the value qf luxury as the experimental stage of neces- sity. The luxury of today is often the necessity 0f tomorrow. The patrons of luxury often foster pro- gress and by their patrlorlage give to mankind that luxury when it has become a necessity. In 1930. according to figural just published, Canada. prduced more gold than any other country in the world except south Africa. It stepped up from third placate second place as a. gold producer among the nations of the world. In so doing it changed place! with the United states. Canada's yield lust year is estimated at am 040,000,000 while the yield 0f the United States is placed at $41,000,000. It is stated that not a. single Ontario gold mine reduced or passed its dividend last year. --_ It ls said that nothing fantastic lu the suggestion that Great Britain, United States, and Canada should establish a. billion dollar fund through which it would be possible for China. to reestablish herself and become a larger purchasing customer from the three countries. 1t ls suggested that if this proposal ,or scheme could be worked out it would nlean a new market for Canada for at least 100,000,000 bushels of wheat. The difficulty in the way is not the raising of the money, but in the fact that Chino. has not yet settled down from her recent internal wars, and that till this is brought about, any financial assistance rendered would not likely bring any satis- factory results. A campaign against the Reds. In the United States, and against Soviet dumping is being launched in New York. Ill the meantime American manufacturers are selling tens of Tl/otes by the Way' ,,. One change ll definitely for the That is the change in thel attitude to each other of city people and country people. Country folks no longer regard all city people as stuckup snobs, nor do city people think of the folks who live in small , towns as uncouth bumpkins. The reason for this is that city and country people today dress alike, have the same standards of schooling, eat the same sort of things, rldo in the same kind of cars over the same roads, see the same movies, read the same magazines and books, and s0 ‘are beginulrlgto act alike, for the first. time since rivalry between rural grime W- 3411M- M-D 3L use-same raaaursrs Everybody has pity for the crip done despite the time and cost. ailment, infantile paralysis. early so also with infantile monk-gi- nrst forty eight hours. the struck is so lessened in severity that most cuss escape any paralysis or do- formity. ‘rho thought than for all parents is that they do not become alarmed and fearful when infantile meningi- tls is in their neighborhood but that they watch their children closely for the first clam of any kind of lick- ness. When a child become: greatly prostrated although the temperature is not very high, with flushed face, and anxious expression, throat red and sore, pulse rapid, emu»; of the limbs and body, the heed tilted slightly backward, stiffness of the spine u ho attempts to bend for- ward, your bont plan is to c011 it in- fantile paralysis orpoliomyelltla as it il officially known. Get your family hylician at the‘ first sign of any prostration if there are any cases in your neighborhood. 1f he is l.n doubt tollhimyoufl soon- er that he used the serum than have any delay. He will be quite willing to do this as there is not likely to be any serious leaction from the serum even if the child does not have the disease. ' ‘Zhianerumwhiahcanaovvbolec- ured from government or state sourc- es when absolutely necessa y, has taken most of the tragedy out of these cases Under proper treatment at least B0 per cent of the deformities which used to occur before the serum was discovered are now prevented, and deformities as an after result should entirely disappear. And even where deformities do result, the skill of the orthopedic surgeons has been able to correct most of them. Infantile paralysis seems lo be fairly common this past year, s0 par- ents should guide themselves ac- ccrdingly‘. Maily a man lives a burden upon the earth, but a good book is the precious life-blood of a master spirit embalmed and treasured up on pur- pose fovr a life beyond life-John Milton. millions of dollars sf their products} to Russia. The Russian dollar is ' still acceptable. But. perhaps this development in New York will give I Stalin an opportunity to reveal anotherflcapitalist nation plot" against Russia and induce the people to eat less and work more to save his face the five-year plan Great Britain has succeeded in pro- ducing fighting airplanes with a speed of 200 miles an hour, although they carry guns, oxygen apparatus, parachutes, navigating instruments, and other necessary apparatus. It is evident tint in the air as well as on lnnd and sea surface, Britain is keep- ing up with the times. The King of Slam is coming t0 the the United States to have his eyes treated by a specialist. If he visits Chicago he will see things that will open both his eyes. Federal and provincial authorities hrlvc expanded $141,185 on the rep- aration of 882 French Canadian families that had settled in the United states. ,'I‘llese families em- brace 3,990 persons who have brought bllck with them a capital of $1,505,- 817. Docs reparation pay, was a question asked a year ago. In the above facts we have a response. It is conclusive. Any up-to-date Dick Whlttinglon will need to be amply endowed if he is t0 fulfil romantic destiny. We lmvo heard lately how impoverished ale British prime mlniate a, who cannot rlln N0. 10 Downing Street on a pnltnry official 025,000 a year. That is true enough, but the up-keep of No. 10 la a mere bagatelle compared with the running of the Mansion House. The City of mndon makes irs lord mayor an allowance of $00,000 a year, which looks handsome enough 0n paper. There ia talk, however, of increasing the honoraium When the dark comes down, oh, the wind in on the sea With lisping laugh and whimper to the red reefs threnody, The boats are sailing homeward now across the harbour bar With many a jest and many a shout from fishing grounds afar. Bo furl your sails and take your rest, Ye fisher folk so brown, For task and quest are ended wnen the dark comes down, When the dark 00mm down, oh, the landward valleys nu Llka brimmin, cups of purple, and on every landmark hill There shines a. star of twilight that is watching evermoro The low, dim-lighted meadow: the long, dun-lighted shore, For there, where vagrant daisies weave the grass a silver crown, The lads and lassies wander when the dark comes down. by when the dark comes down, oh the children fall asleep, And mothers in the fisher huts their happy vigila keep; There's music in the song they sing and music on the sea, The loving, lingering echoes of tho twilight‘! litany, For toil has folded hands to dream, and care has ceased to frown, And every one’! a. lyric when the dark comes down. -L. M. Montgomery. lord mayors an additional out-of- pocket expenditure of $100,000. It says much for civic pride that wealthy city fathers are still willing rnlz' "cuxrlsl5l~l_ c- ; l, omumrrrrcsj. Chicago's Strutting Thugs pied child, and anything and every- thing that. helps him is willingly And yet most of these crippled children are victims of that dread Whenever it begins to spread in n. district parent: are almost terror stricken n: they think of the possi- bility of their loved one being attack- ed. Now just as in cancer, heart dis- ease, or tuberculosis, great things can be done if the ailment is recognized tia-Iftbasorumfsusedwitbinthe nvrong side of the law. For Honest Trading (Montreal Gazette) Misrepresentation and ciller abuses, practised by certain traders in inc United states fruit and produce mar- kets are being rapidly swept 8W8)’ by Government enforcement of the recent Borzlh Mandatory Licensing Law, and a Toronto correspondent writes that the workings of a stmiliar enactment in this country would do much to improve the statute of the Canadian fruit and produce trade. The primary funciton of the United States measure is the protec- tion of honest traders against those guilty of malpractice-l, such as un- warranted refusal of shipments by buyers owing w depressed market conditions, attempts to obtain allow- anoes and reduction by unjustifiable means, overcharges by brokers, and misrepresentation of their consign- ments by certain shippers. The lalw is no rcspectcr of persons, and strong action from Washington in the rigid enforcement of its provisions is rapidly weeding out dishonest tra- ders. ' _ Several exampls of the forking of this act are given in a recent issue of The New York Packer, a 1iublica- tion devoted to the interests of the United States fruit and produce trade. A car of cabbage sold f.o.b to a buyer at a distant point arrives at its destination when there is a. bad slump in the market. Fifvy cent-a a cwt. reduction is asked. The enforcement division at Washington Ls called in and wires the buyer that a man 1s being sent. to inspect the car. The buyer knows he has no ex- cuse for turning the/car down and aalclng for an allowance, so he im- mediately calla the stripper on long distance 0010111111110 and up] igllzes. Ho pleads for the privilege of accept- inl the car at full invoice price. Af- ter this experience, not wishing to have his license taken away he will not be gililty of further misrepresen- tation. Thelawisjustaaapttokickbaol: _ and hit the shipper as the broker DEM!!! hk first W110. Kathryn. 867,- or receiver. For example, a shipper 500 at the rate of $050 a week, but sells a. ca: of Maine potatoes to a the divorce cost him an additional jdbiber in New York, representing $100,000. John Gilbert Illa also 00m- the-ln to be us. No. 1. The stock lpletcd his shore by which Beat-rice was so graded at shipment and the Joy beclefits to the extent of $100,000 purchase was made f.o.b. The ca: but he must continue to pay $2.600 a was refused at destination on ac- vwr until their child is i8 years old. count of quality. The market was It; W111 be twp VHS-Pa before Holman! also off. The shipper stands on the P. Fineman can really ‘forget Evelyn Government inspection. but the buy- Blunt. whom ha married ln New Gl’ has reported tmwashlngton and Yon: in 1m- Thev wmmtcd 01m asked the Government to make a venue 180w. and in 1927 she brought very through investigation since the suit for divorce. Under tllldllflflll} of potatoes lh the car were largely trash settlwlwnt Plnemw awed t0 pay hidden by No. 1 stock to deceive the her $200 a week for five years. Well Government inspector at the point mldht Miss Brent exclaim, "Such a 0r mglh. A cozrlplete investigation u Hmmanl" Bh- in new married made by the Government and the mull. lmve yum m Rom-Id 001- verdict is awarded on the merits of’ man who astonished to 111000 1n the case. - Hollywood theatre his wife, Thelma, Dishonest brokers are also reach- Wm‘! I16 80111305011 to b9 in Ill-RY- 39 ed by tlleAaw. 'I'h0 broker who pux- fefla U10 W?“ 011d W" 11W 41589- chmses goods himself without telling potntnd. A Ilflb WM b05113 Ind a the shippers that he u doing so, find claim made for Mt! his rlwww and at the same time charges a broke- an allowance of $1.000 l. lmnfll. 00l- rage fee for selling u» himself is 1h man continues to w. althmlsh the for trouble if he is discovered. ‘rile amount la not known. broker who sells promiscuously for 081w A. Wilson. a widely known distant shippers to firms that make 860111710 Wfllfl‘, WM llmlillllllly MI- it a. common prMtlCe to refuse the poi-lewd b? I 0011f!’- dlfilibfl 3W0!‘ cars when they arrive on trumped-lip of hi! Wife Nancy. HO was ordered pretexts as t9 alleged damage or as l0 Ill-Dd Mm’ in‘ Ill-Gr hll home 1n to grade or quality not being as or- Benedict (M003- Wll-lch cost him dered will also find himself on the mm 1M0 6100.000: 0600 a month alimony fa‘ a year. an $18,000 auto- Tnere is fl. consensus among those mobile and an lddttional $250 a interested that the slum aha most nwnth for the support o! his two impartial form of protection for all 9111151011- Nl‘!!! 1154i 1B"- WB “I11 pin-ne- engaged in trading m and, equity vnluid at 00.000 in s Piece handling perishable articles u o! m! Mm and hi4 clothes. He prompt and rigid Government in- b98111! 1110 IMW- ‘T735916 I110" as spectlon. he ls known 0o nldfo audiences is in private life the lidr. Clifford Edward; wiho made a settlement of $104,000 onhiawifewhanti-leyoepamtedlaat (Excmng?) yea-r. n: iihla eettlemvat she promis- The other day, according to u. dis- ed w umdmt huge" pmpmw’ but patch ,0 the New ymk world by A he says that she has not done so. I“ woolmdge’ shame Chaplin s“ When Mm. Edwards, seeking $250 a at o. desk in his studio lulu gazed 0t w” “mm” w“ °l m‘ "mm!" 1; 11m, 511p of 1.811,”, pap“ u,’ N_ as a 5111891‘ 118 remrkedr "If 1M Ville minded him of a much more serious mm“ my ma“ u‘ 9° mud,“ m1 slip. Ybwit ills mulhg 1,, love with m“ h“ m‘ °" W“ l” Lita Grey. It was a ch lle made out t0 her 10l- u... sum ofeq$l50,000. and The Cost Of The Loaf represented the residue of q, cash l (Vancouvor Province) THE (JOSE OI" settlement of $025,000 which she wrung out of him. For two more years 11,, W111 be requjycd 10 my 1m. l Why docs bread cost as much when 01,000 p. month, after which he will whim l! "fly 01' I"!!! w!" I bushel elmbnsl, 1m- he, a 1,1151, gum, o; as when it is two dollars? Principally $200,000 and 1,119 5181,, W111 be Mped because, strange as it may seem, the 01mm He W,“ not owe h" any more price of wheat has comparatively little to do with the price of bread. Tho. committee on agriculture at money. Miss Grey was his wire for less than two years and that idyll will Washington has been doing some tn- vestlgatlng qf late, and has learned have cost him $950000 in addition to the money he lavished 0n her while thatin a nine-cent loaf flour a0- counts for a cent and a half and they were husband and wife. It. transportation and dist-button for proved a. much costlier experiment than llls marriage with Mildred four cents, while the remaining three and a half cents goes for labor, in- Hlflls for he had to pay his first wife Only $107,000 in full settlement. Miss Gray's lawyers and court costs rep- 511951180. lfltrfflt- 11M 811d Drum- resent, $135,000 which 1s 1,11,01,11“ 1n The committee discovered that tho the amount Chaplin llus paid her, variation u! tho prlco of when: from His two matrimonial Bdvfilllilrcs wlu extreme high to extreme low couldn't have cost the comedian more than a. make a difference of more than million dollars. Yet; surprue ha, been half a cent in the price of a loaf, and decided this was not enough to bother about. expressed that he continues to live alone in 11L; Beverly Hills mansion. Distribution is the big thing in the cost. 0f tho loaf. The modern house- Ohspllrl is the king of Hollywood alimony payers. But, there are other wife wants what she want: when she wants it, and If the baker will not (Ottawa Journal) ‘organizations that exercise so re honest in the making come the recognized condition-an ledged by one of "Scarface" excited suspicion. How could he live on this sum and keep up appear- ances as he did? The suspicions were well grounded, as a little probing established the fact that this man cleared up in 1928 in the neighborhood of $640,000. In extenuation of the little deception practiced it should be said that the suspect probably mm to give some assistance to two brothers who were making only a trifle of $100,000 each. And the three of them had super- vision of but a small area. 0f twenty blocks! No wonder Chicago had been experiencing a period of civic penury. The “racket” and other methods of collection have diverted ta: money elsewhere than to the city treasury. It ia claimed that the three mem- bers of this enterprising family divide among themselves each year a nlilllon dollars. They are wcll known, live at the most expensive hotels, and~ exclusive circles. But great wealth is nBt without its drawbacks. For these three brothers it has stifled ambition, and so far none of them has aspired to the Presidency of the United Statnl, which carries with it a salary of only $75,000 and a. little spending money. -__, Star Alimony Payers because their brief l2 months as host at the Mansion House involve IOIIII I to pay that price for the honor of be- ing chief magistrate of Britain's metropolis, prlnoely Myers. Chief among them deliver it that is the end of the Chicago continues to provide allot icf queer news about the underground markable an influence in the city's l F o r e k affairs. The latest revelations have l qllfaitive persons apparently had an been due to activity 0n the part of Federal income officers. These in- idea‘ that some of that city's gorge- ous-looking creatures were not quite cf their returns. For instance-such has be- lncome of $18,000 modestly ‘ - A1 Capone's most trusted lieutenants their satorla} adornment is the envy 311° mlumlum ‘Tm “s lmsy- m“ of the elite in any other of Chicago's 91" “n39 “m!” u“ Bemasd“ WFI-I;%;.;#;.;_%:_:E__s:_:§:( srecllisi i‘! ‘ xE-E-xszrz-zi :-:%—:-:§ mu a! bfaznesia .. . 43c Beef, Hon and Wine 19c Wflzwugenefi “Wtdsvu - u _ "' _ l!‘ I 0|] eel; °'1ZI§,'.Z'ZI'§;'..'.'T‘.‘..TTT’Z‘J. ,1 §;{,';,,§"'§,ug§d $55; u III s. II- Vlnol 81g E1101 Fruit. Ball: .......,, 83¢ ,Andrevv'| Liver Balls .-... 53o Irolnfzcd Yeast 880 Lydia Plnkham’: Compound ...................-..... 08o nun-nu.- __ These soaps ctllnprlu , some well known make; ‘ ‘such as Baby's Own, I11. " fant’: Delight, Prev-em n" (catholic 005D). Glycfls.@ 34110} White Caatile, A]. berth Lavender and Soap 5-; Babi S. 6 l" All being cleared n. gardless pf cost-su- l vvlikcn orm wmnow roll 0mm SPECIALS The Twollacs 140 Great George Street window. E. A. FOSTER l , can", Dfllflllore .-.' Get your Dyes at thlam store. I suspect that the root of most evil Large Stock :- is, b l! tlJ 1 . I . "' , ' “mh§.ll§§.§.?§’§.”e: m1 A" "w lwdina make- l 0011. _ _ ' :-: ' _@ ‘ll-aunt's 4 c. ; One of the main functions of art in its service to marl, is to arouse D001: and the art which does not d0 this is false and degraded in its mt. ure-Ruskia. l ',- .___- ___ The L. C. SMITH-bu‘ more time-saving features than lay other Typewriter Built. ‘fl an Bail-bearings and u Long-wearing. l’ r Prove it for yourself-Ask for a trlal. ' Soulis Typewriter C0., Agents for L. C. Smith a. Corona Typewriter! l Corona Addlug Machlnel. ' " ‘ Halifax Nova. Scot-la A. , Local Bepruentotlvo-H. M. Slmplou, v 88 Queen Street, Charlottetown. - Check Your Bearings ! We travel fast on the journey of life, striving to reach a haven of independence, before the evening of old age def-takes us. K _ The New Year comes, anothernlilestone, and bids us check our bearings. The road to independence plainly marked-tho ‘highway of life insurance. Whyjfitafké an unknown road‘; lYou canpurchase a‘ Great-West Life Pension or Endowment at age 60 or 65 for a moderate annual sav- ing. It protects your family too. Let us send you par- ticulars. l HYNDMAN a; 00., Limited Provincial Managers The Great-West Life ' Charlottetown If you want n really fine, f uIl flavoured rich “bodiwP Tea Use é Hazards Brahmin , (Sold only m red. nlrllflllt package!) a , ‘Flrisist onoul-Blaclc ‘Twietm-lfit has’! better taste. it laflsta a longer‘ is Bill Hart. He has just completed baker's business so far as that house- his payments of $200,000 to his for- mer wife, Winifred Westover. But he wife is concerned. 8o the baker d0- livers and the lady pays. still has his horsehAdolphe Menjou another screen, idol has also finished IlICIKEYeNIC-HOLSON