ll ' l F i‘ l 4 and 4 u 4 S chool Supplies 1 i . We have big values for the i students and scholars in _ l Work Books and Supplies ‘ coalwhenyouhave a Fawcett Plpeless Furnace, yet you’ll have an abundant supply of heat. ill i: ll§-<\-- W. Chester l. Helena, President J. IL Burnett. Editor Ind Publisher K. Currie. Anooelnle Editor Igvnln‘ Dally (founded 1S1) NJ! $4.30 per your (mulled) In nlnun In (Inn per ycnr alelivelvd) ll ndvnneol l all lfnlted States MONDAY, SEPT. 3, 1923 oun MARKETS ; Many of our readers remember‘. the political bunkum talked during: election campaign about the value‘ to us of the United States Market. We were told with that sorrowful Ask the Fawcett He'll solve your TherewuFalnceft furnace, stove, llcaferor range for every need- SAMUEL Ksmlsov Charlottetown. P. E. l. _ ___,-_@-o \ A Clearing l of Wom,_en’s Patent ‘ Sally , and One Strap rumrs it $3.19 All sizes from 2/2 to 7 in every kind. sroclc STYLES ALL xnw lx NEW A L L E Y and Co.,\Ltd. Fashionable Footwear \L___._..__--§ CITY SCHOOLS Re-open on Tues- day, Sept. 4th 4 CARTER’S BOOKSTORE is always to the front with a lull stock of School Books 1 of every kind will-Ill“ l" ‘ School and College use. 4 ALL COLLEGE AND SCHOOL BOOKS are sold b)’ us at prices fixed by the BOARD OF EDUCATION. Our Bookstore will be 0P9" nil day Wednesday- Summ- ber 5th. CARTER & CO., LIMITED ;0-OO-O4§040-O4-0+0&0§4044-O4 ' BAYER Photographer 163 Great George Street mannearest YOV-Eticlans are in the habit of rcj ~ their tariff ti‘ ‘in 12m we . .1921 when the latter amounted u? llritnln f0 $373,141. solemliity with which certain poli- - 3 ‘their hearers at political meetings headngproblmlthnt we oould not live without the lAmerican market, that without l! we would become practically bank- rupt within a few years. These ‘political i! elected. were going on pilgrimage to Wash- ‘ington to smile upon the politicians there and beg of them to let us economists, ‘ into their markets, to give us recip null)‘. to let down their tariff bars do the in fact we have kept our and we would Same i0!‘ them. bar: down ln- the hope that they would reciprocate. The finned States ‘politicians ' in-‘tcad of reciprocating raised considerably higher ‘and our Liberal politicians are still clamoring for a still further lower- ling of our tsriff. Now what are the facts? The United States market “ use to us so far as our principal ‘products are concerned; more than good to us with the exception of for certain ‘that, it ncvcr was any icommoditles which. whcn it suited ‘llhe United States, they‘ bought lfrom us. , . Our home market, as has fre- quently been pointed out couslm- 0s about eighty of our foodstuffs. iplus in bacon, dairy products and per cent We have a large sur- This surplus goes almost to Great ‘Britain and ‘eggs. exclusively [has gone there for many years. ‘table recently compiled by the Do- ,minion Bureau of Statistics gives‘ Idetails of our export of them‘ by ‘decades since 1871, of which we! f-give the following by way of com-I parison: in 1871 10,258,000 ‘pounds of bacon to Great. Britain to the United This proportion has been with yarintion until 1923 when our ship- wc shipped lam; only 71.100 Slates. maintained .meuts to Great Britain amounted .m 100,818,300 pounds to Great ‘Britain and 168,000 to tho United States. exported to Great ‘Britain 8.163.659 pounds of cheese ‘and to the United States 86,374 ipounds. This proportion also was ‘maintained with little variation uln- ‘til 1923 when the .106,550.400 to Great Britain and 5.902.300 to the United States. In 1871 our butter exports to Great Britain amounted to 9,954,- 531 to the United States 4.276.661. Whllc the increased very largely and to quantity the both countries remained relatively the same during the years follow» lug. In 1923 they were 17,527,- 607 to Great lBritaln and 2.423.086 to the United States. Our shipment of eggs to Great Britain did not begin in earnest un- til 1901. dn 1911 we shipped 11,273,452 dozen to Great Britain and 37.197 to tho United Sluice. in 1923 the figures were 3,15R,070 to Great ‘Britain and 290,480 to the United ‘States. shipments to lVhile this trading was in pro gross, according to the same ststis tics, Canada imported in 1881 from Great. Britain, "provisions. includ- ing meats, butter, cheese, eggs and} lard,“ from Great Britain $13,135:? and from the United Staten’ 81.510515. Our importatlons from the United States increased: more rapidly than Great ‘Britain. those from particularly since $15,417,614 and H1086 from Great pra ctlcally In figures were imported from tho United Slates $13,382,895 and from Great Britain $330,818. These imports practically in meats and dairy pro ducts, all of which come from the of provisions Llcized States either free or under a low duty. come into direct com- ‘petition with our products in our ou-zl markets and we receive prac- tically no value in return by way of trade‘ and yet there are those still ' flood of 1911 who wvsglt reciprocity. surviving from the LIMITATIONS. l it was long since discovered that mil human achievement has 11.; illn- ‘ltations. Perhaps the earliest and ‘most forcible example or this was iin the building of the towen of iBabel. Humanly ‘was nothing to prevent the building ‘with brick and stone and mortar 10f‘ an edifice lcend the floods and make a safe ‘habitation for the people in_\.lnlc of storm and danger. speaking there that would trans- But some - ithing happened, something not lak- ell into consideration by the bllilzl- H of “wagers. Tile tower wvas never com-f l ville-ted. l The farmer figures out with pains- {taking accuracy the capacity of an iacrc of laud. He computes the icost c-f clearing the land. of iertil- lizillg i’. and the expense‘ of work- I ling it. He wisely chooses u mark» stable crop and after making due lallowancc for possible changes in like market. he estimates his pro- lfits as secure at u generous figure. (-118 proceeds with his venture and .lt succeeds. lhim a profit even beyond his His acre of land Holds pcciations. Thus encourngwl. iincreascs ills acreage. works lwhcre he hud worked only one. ‘Something happens. he loses his {work and his tinle. One good cow y-iclds a large not ‘profit in a year; by mathematical lcalculatlon twenty cows would yield twenty times lhc profit of one and ‘lho increases his herd to twenty. Disease strikes tho herd and the venture ends in failure. Farmers inform us that a flock of twenty sheep is a profits-hie one. but when this number is increased to fifty or sixty, disease develops and there is loss instead of profit. Similarly a flock of twenty or thir- ty hens returns a. very considerable not profit while in the flock of a hundred the opposite‘ is the case. And so, it is argued. it goes through all human activity. ls this the case? think so! We donut 1n the case of the acre of land as compared with the ten. the trouble is that we depended up- on one crop only; we put "all our 855s in one llrasket." biixed farm- ing would have yielded a corres- ponding profit on- the ten acres. 1f we undertake to herd twenty‘ cattle in a space large enough for only two or three; ii‘ we try to raise sixty sheep or a hundred hens where there is room for only a fraction of these we invite disease and disaster. There is no reason why twenty head of cattle, a hun- dred sheep or a -shollld not yield n thousand hens proportionate profit provided thoy had as good a chance as tho single animal or the smaller flock. Our limitations are largely due to the fact that in our inordinate am- bition We overestimate our capac- ity. Within our capacity there are no limitations. -—-—-<oc-_. The various summers that have occurred during the postseason have been somewhat spasmodic and none of‘ them particularly mar-like. sum- They are all now practi- lillllllliiil N»@- B-”**~ r*i Eliot £0111’ at yours Butch. M-Dt it is a common complaint in the United Staten and Canada that vmilotho legislatures»: constant- ly turning out new laws and regula- tions to improve morals and ma»: ners and secure public safety these; enactments in an increasing mess-Z ure fail ol-enlorcemenf. We have’ a strict prohibitory liquor law ln_ this city and province, but judgim‘ from our own observation the nuru‘ ber o! drunken- persons appearing on the streets has of late been in- creasing. B” W- TH E COMPLEXION The complexion means a lot to €\'l‘l'_\'l)0l.l_\' irrespective of age or sex. The difiicullyl in the matter of . -.1-'» here is t at Just as eyes. it is true that in oomptrloon with nollicmoulhl M“ and disposmou 0th" tvwnl of like wnulltivn w= vary with different individuals so have a credltahiy sober city. And does the Skill 8150- l" 511m‘? the"? because of that fact a drunken man L‘ a imam“ M texture m“ cans attracts more notice on the streets than would otherwise occur. when on a walk of two or three three or four drunks are enccuuter- ‘er that {lip bootlegger is plying his nefarious trade. Some of the places where the illegal stuff is obtained are by common report quite well known, and it would seem to be high time that they should receive the attention oi the police. tions are being constantly violated in this city and province. This is ltrue, we believe. oi" every province: of Canada, and of every SIAIB in the American union. lt is true, not‘ withstanding the efforts of our ex- cellent Automobile Association and notwithstanding that most cl‘ our car drivers are both capable and cautious, and that serious accidents have been relatively few in this pro- vince. It is the few who are either not qualified or not careful to ob serve the regulations who are to. danger to public safety. injuries resulting from motor ca?‘ ed States during the past fclv years. The number of the killed and umiln» cd from Lhis cause have been a r---‘ fan's famous prophecy tllat— v "Carriages without horses slulll, go. woe." _l That prediction was first‘ llllfilllrll‘ ‘in the railway accidents of almost‘ since the advent of the motor car. - and maimed have been the result. of collisions between automobiles‘- and railway trains at level crossings.’ In this province almost all our rail-l way crossings are level and they"- are very numerous, and in hundred of cases the view is so obstructed‘ by trees that those responsible for the safety of precious livos tire un- aware of the danger until it is to“. late to avert a collision. it is true‘ that in the country districts 0|‘ our province trains are and motor cars also than in many countries and this is probably one rcasonovhy we have so far csczlpcd so well. The cautionary maxim-Safety Firit. which has been so persistent- ly drilled into the minds of trairy- men by the railway aulllorltiv-s dur- lug the past few yours, htls prc- ventod hundreds of railways 2w dents that would olhnrwlsc hnvt- or» curred and has doubtless saved thousands of lives. Alike caution should he reiterated and impressed upon the minds of all car-drivers. The motor car is as conlplicated zls the locomotive and requires quite as much skill to operate it and keep it in order. Moreover, the lo- comotive has exclusive righls on its track of steel from which all other vehicles and l'oot passt-ngoru, well. are excluded. HS The motor car, weighing a m" t.) a ton and a half propelled by, “y, twenty to forty Horse power and capabiepf a speed of forty to fifty n iles an hour, is turned loose upon cur streets and highways, n, is much the heaviest vehicle on these roadways. When running lit high speed ll has a tremendous moment- um. It must make its Way 31119115 horse-drawn vehicles of all sozts. and other cars coming and Zflll‘); among pedestrians, among occasion- ul droves of cattle and sheep, nll of which have equal rights on the highway. l: would seem that til-e car driver should have apprnxima te- ly an equal apprenticeship, equal training and skill with a locomotive cngineer. Yet. how far short of this standard is the qualification of even the average csr driver! There is‘ fvod for thought In this. Violations of the regulations gov. Bl-ll-rvill be. blocks to and from the post office I ed, it serves as a forcible remind-mid have a skin that looks to be And accidents fill the world with ‘° a century past, and doubly iulflllerlfmlich 1mm. less irt-qu ellt . Pd l1)‘ too many drivers in town fer nine o'clock we were met Phased on each occasion by three 31009-000- calu that showed no head lights. lflassistant forth our admiration, while in oth- (\l\$'lll9 skin is less fine and always Also many skins secrete more oils than othem giving one almost .1 greasy appearance. Others are actually deficient in this qualify um. i...“ On Cuba Lotteries General Crowder, American en- voy to Cuba. has been summoned to Washington to discuss the Cub- an lottery, question. Washington is said to regard the lottery as a violation of the economic pact be- tween Cuba and the United States. Cuba regards it as one of its most cherished institutions. Not only is it approved by practically all Gub- ans. but it constitutes a most inl- portant source of government rev- enue. To abolish it as the United States desires, wmlld be to deprive the government of several milllvlls of dollars s year. It is true that these millions would remain in the pockets of the Cubans, but it doc-s not follow that they would n5 cheerfully contribute them for the lpurpose of running the country i‘. the lottery were not the bait. More- over to end the lotter!’ "'00"! be baked or parched. And so when you read in “beauty"l hints that hot water and coal!- llfl deprive whatever government is Mo,“ 1L in office of its chief political mach- shuilltl never he used on the face.|il19- The IIEFBOIIB "filmed 1° Se" you cun understand that such ad- vile might apply to a skin defic- ient lll oil. but good soup and hot u-aier would he all actual neces- sll)‘ to an oily akin. If you live ill the country sway lllc skin ln good condition. - But you know that. i-‘le skin of the isce reflects usually the geu- eral condition of the body. know also that a plentiful use of. Epsom Salt swiil so rob the blood of its constituents that the skin assumes a pallor that is so fashion- able at times. at the expense of the actual health 0i the body. ‘So in the mutter of your pnr- ticular ccmpicxioll you should just ell down and figure out a plan to znnke it the best that it can he lliade. I You can't do more than iJlat._ clear skin, don’. spoil if with hut; \\'1ll0l‘ and poor soup. Be careful with it, using .1 good by thc warm unzer. if you have n dry skin your druggist will soil; fiCflflf-‘YIIS l" Canada. Mill ‘the Vllil- you a good oil rlllrll). And remember ii. that your (rnmplcxirln roller-i»- all-"ni the condition of the intestine. ' .\ person with pimples or black-i, llczlds must make cvcry effort to- ulurly. Exercise GllPll as milking; in the oilldoors ls Nzllllrc-‘s miy oil providing yo ilwiih a good complex-- n. Exposure to willd and sun vnllsi for n good izu-c r-rczlm that suits. your particular skin. I A liitlc fave powder ill the sun». r is ll ncccssify‘ and "iillflfll do; The skin is more‘ hnn a covering. lt is n pic-co nfi mec-hanislll as is every ofhcr part, il, hilt. don't interfere with ii. if; Nature ha»; blessed you wizu u; good colllplcxion. . l mom-i- OO-O-OQ-FOQOQO-O-Oi O-DO o-OOrO-O-OQ- Daily Selections FOR‘ Guardian Readers THE DRiFTER All, m_\' system's lacking. lacking, For Hi6 want 0i pep; Haven't got the action nocdcrl, And a chance goes by nnhccdcrl; Wllcll if needs a. little hut-king. Just to make a rep. __ , (l Ah. mjy mind is dreaming. dream- "Li. Dreaming 0i‘ success; When it should llc zlclivc, schem- lllI-Z. 'Slcad, with hazy idcas, teeming; Satisfied to go on rlrcalnlllg, Dreaming tn excess. All, my life is spollr-d with thinking. Thinking of 811009561 When -I sllmllil he up and working. ‘Even small things I am sillrking; Never dreams with acliml linking, Only dreams with idleness. t All. ml‘ systems lacking. lacking. Actions needed lIOTo; Lacking pep and motive power, Reaching vainly for Willie's tower, Wllcll [should be hacking, hack- "ll-i Like HOME Old-time pionoor, JEWRIISALEM Aug. Ill-Til:- Droposr-d fcilcratioll of’ Arab sta- tes will be discussed at a confor- ence of tho Arab rulcrl-l to be hold at Amman the capital of Trails IOPIIlZIIllH. in October. ii. is announ- col. “‘ lncz was t-lcclcd. ll‘. rzlll his caul- nickets, who are called the 001cc!» orias, constitute the most illlltlen- iial political element in the purple tlon. They have patronage to dis- tribute; they have nloney to con- $°m0 of the iuiitml-‘thil! requln-jrllfif: adilriiy 351:‘! ilgfé'“,\gf‘erlf"olrcgtfilr‘stribute g0 me pqlillcal funds. They pcn to be drawn fronl among un- ivhvfi thmdgh the day ‘would keeplm-e glwgyg the priends of the gov- sold numbers, which must occasion- ‘Bfnmelli in power which 41000105 them, and robbed this organization Youicilbildl politicians would be at sen. - The Gambling instinct- _It is commonly Sillfl that gambl- ing is inherent in the Latin races. but perhaps it does not differcllil ate them from other races. Tin- Cubans have alivzlys galllblcd, bu: what distinguishes tllc-nl from lllosl other peoples is the iuct that llll-j-i love a sheer gamble with no 0llll‘i' 1"..'- - ,- ._ _ ‘flame’ and who are a source 01mins lf you l. it‘ a flrle IBXilIFOI-‘(ilelnenl ma“ ma. o; 41mm. demll ing the platter. More virtuous i100” 50am and lples have decided that gztlllillling ill There has been an increasing and Lllcll use cold ‘vntcr to tlgiltell llD-llsOlf is a sin and is only to ln- appalling number offatal and minor ‘he 5km wmch has been |°""‘7"n“ddolerlltcd if some (‘lOlllCTll o! skill or calculation or Slfullgill niu-lld- That is why they lTl-‘iiffl lollc-r» ics with horror, and lllis is why though illcre was n lrclllcilduus vii lotion Tor a national lollcry- curried lllarkzlble fulfilment of Mother slllliwllllVfl the intestines working rug-fun by Horatio Boiionllpy, ihr- l-Inp lish government rejected ii. Bul- tomley argued that thcri- was still <1 grout hoard of riches in l-ingluwll rr-nlzlilling aiicr lllc urcailcst oi‘ wzn" viforts had been nlndo in lllp nlnttl-l‘ o!‘ raisin: money, and that it could be lured forill by ll sllccr zzlnlblc. lie may have been right in his facts. but. his lllfifllllly was voted The Ingest numbers uaugmeredlpart of the body. Aid il, if it needs “T0112. T110 Unllflil $10108 :_'0\'<*l'll-_, merit casts ll similar vole with n». gurd to Cuba. and Cuba demands that filo Fnilcd Sfzlics lllilld its, nwrl business. Gomez and the Gamble. Wilt-n lllr-rc was all l\llI(‘i‘[l‘.'l!l ,.\lilll.'lr_v Govcrzlor ill iiulm. in» sup-F‘ ‘pru-lstrvl tho lottery, and undv-rluw»; sldcn! Pullllu and during llli‘ sin-mull Anlerican intervention lllcl'l* \\'ll.~‘ no, some resemblance of lorlililrlc, lllf‘ suppression of the public bull rinc. but they fratlcd under tile aulli-lrli- tc-ry restrictions. It licrunn.» n pull‘- lical issue, and in 1909 hligurzl (‘ro- puign on two chit-i planks. 1m- of illcnl lacing tho rr-storlltiun n!‘ llli‘ Juttolqv. ll» iulfillcrl his prnluisv and illc lntu-ry has lu-cn running cvor since. ll is strictly a Llnvvrll- lncnt ziiizrlr, with 70 por (‘l-lll. 0i lllfiffllitlltfllli; retained for nztiinnnl punposcs. The Prcsidcnt llppoil s. fllc colcl-torias, or major uucncics. llunlbcring 961. list-ll n1‘ ills-so is entitled to buy a spteciiir-d llulllhol" of full tickets and to rr-lziil llli‘|ll nl a profit. The zigelll pays $19 for a $20 tlckct and soils ii. at $21. Tllc- orcilcally. each of illcm (‘illl llmlu» logitilnnicly" $450 n month. but in praciica the privilege call be sllhlci for $200 or $300 a monih. whole tickets are divided many times, an that a mun with pvrlmps only a dime to risk can pun-has» a share and stand in win his pro portion of illc capital prlzc. ls $l00,0il0. Stories of Graft. AmOIU: the poicntnfcs who will 5mm" a"? Kim-K Hussein 0f ihc‘ HEIU-‘IH. King FQlSlll of lliosopob- anlia. tho Emir Abdulluh of Trnnsl Jordanla and the Elnlr Zcidi Prince ‘llutnfallnh. Hussein's rc-l prcscntative in Europe, will all-ml lic invited. son. The speed regulations seem’ to hp quite indiffercntlyr disreganl. both m"! And on two country. Not. lung ago tho t-nlcclnrias WPTI‘ incrcaseti to 2.000. the ftvowcd 0b jcct. being to increase sales in nr- rlcr that forthcoming for pensions and bon- uses to government while the agents wore appninicd for life. The Presidcni ‘vi-food Lill- bill. but it was sent back by nvr-r whelmlng majorities. llc appointed his director, SUN l? lottery. The Cubntls had bnnzlc, \\'lIll lilo not roccipls going ill prizcszilnl - which ‘ ' I more money nlicllt lli‘ ~ empl oyces. ‘ 1t is said nights within the past. ton (lays 1;, that. there are now 500 of his rc-la- __ a walk of three or four blocks, 51.. lives in these posts which an» ' m- worth for a four-year form, nearly and his unclc ,‘ lapsing info may safely depend. in 1923 wolno Summor! cslly over. and we are gradually the 300d old Winter an“: m. openuon o’ mm” ca" “m9 on the duration oi.’ which we ‘l l" “m” "M" °"' °b“""" tlon have been mainly breach oi Y» I H‘ w“ h“ the speed limitations and running l‘ "r 90'1""! Possible that the omis-irhief director. The whole thing filon of lights was caused by acci-iwaa run by the Zayas family. There dem- m‘ fiillllclhing momentarily outlwere revived old stories or graft, "f md°" l" "'9 ""9"!" 0T llublic The Cubans believe that there is without headlights in tho night sea- unllghtod mr in here polntod m", MiG-t)’ tho special danger from nn but they refuse to become excited Kraft in the conduct of the lottery. A Royal Yeast Cakes reach the user in sealed air-tight waxed paper Wrappers. each cake bein by machinery-wot by haidwxpm even after package has been o m‘! the cakes are protected fro pend. and other harmful oontamingiofllllt RGYAL EAST - AgKES nevertheless, Zuyzlsl’ eno. “In. are made an ‘ ' ' Public .- cycs of all my ,9 p", who can crowd“ “me ‘n H‘ _finto . l)~l‘llill‘lllliflll_ There is a I l a sphorc u-illch Contains M5159 .- s . the SlZe 01 nlarblgs. a ntics forced an enquiry which re- sulted in nlllnerous indictments, bu! not in prison tc-rnls, so far as wr- urc aware. the guilty pGTSOIIS being .too higlfiy placed. The chief grnlt supposed to consist yi-n handing} nunnbcr “Mn k To meac will out winning tickets should they hap- led liuh- blinrlftlllleq Qnfhslob illnlst lll 1ll9ll'_ll.'iI1d5 andazih ullv ha 1 . - a ban‘ T110 number is d . - IIPPYI. Slice all the tickets "ad lllc lion's llffillv": lllmfllul - .u‘<~ llcvcl" sold ‘ "i1 l-"Ptr ' in‘. l . _ , or lo bl ulograhllp‘! I0 an _.'l!!(‘ll(‘ff-_< in (3.1; . I , The Drawing. ‘ 1 , . “ ‘m’! l" Blllwar l 111‘ "ION llllpurill": m“ . . " ~ 0i v ‘ 11")’ ll] tile l. ~ ~- ' l _\.~' TPUZITllS lllO drznvillcs lllplll- “pups imml tillers. palliation...” . ~ - - 2 w-n p‘. _ Sl‘l\'(‘S tllcy are (lrzllllulicullv Zlllll “PM ,1 “.11 l ‘. 1“ n" m? 17 . , _ * - ">- lzfiu» - .» v pnillclll-ully- frq-e 1mm any kind m mm, l m“ m J ‘TR of .2 lab» ' ‘ -' I ‘*1 he 1w...- .l cr<\<lk<~<ins_~.=s. Tllrcc 11mm; ll lnollill llwsc inlpurilllli events tuku plLlCl- and are or‘ morn illu-rcsl to lllt‘ i-' llcolnpz (‘uhzllls lhull tllc running oi tlu- will htrvt lk-rby to lllc l§llflll<ll pc-aplc ur in» in: mp1 p“, World's Sh: a; to l-lll‘ c-i lo lllo» syn-m of 501110150“ U! ilt)llill‘~'. 1 ‘ S“ for 1hr) n“, d“ _ * 510i"? ullil 03119913.; .~\ill(.'l'll'llll.<. for zllloillcr inn d“. ‘ And protect your credit. Approbaiion bills have just been mailed and are ' , are due and payable monthly as we‘ " arc doing a strictly cash business. ' Please attend t0 your io-day amounts outstanding over one monih zlresubjcci‘ i0 draft through the bank. Kindly lei ushavc your cheque. Patons Ltd. -.. §VQQOQ§O4FO+OQQ~FOOQO-O QOOO OQO~O'O 00-0 0660009005 “Be Prepared” is the Boy Scouts motto, and a good one it is for all of us. Are you pre- pared to face a disastrous fire? “Itiis better to be sure than sorry? Hyndman 8c Co Ltd The Oldest Insurance AgcnCY i" I’. E. I. Security Service l . QO-OOQ-OOFO-O'O§-O>OO¥‘“4““‘**‘ ‘ ‘filo _ I School Shoes . Be wise. Don't buy shoes for the school bOY °' 9m "M" you see GOFF'S. while and no matter whether your purse is fat or lean Y" i _i d‘ - hin wvrtl , Our stock is complete and comlllls" New‘ g h t.‘ can have good boots for your children. I We have a good boot for boyl. Ill" l l° 5 a‘ """ "fig ii We have a qood boot for sirls. ell" 9 t° 105‘ “" a ' We have a good boot for qirli. Ill" 11 ‘° 2 at t from On the more expensive lines we are allowml 10% to 25% discount. We have cheaPeR lines but can't recommilld ‘mm’ Hose Ill ‘u u I w | Just received a big lot of Womens 0° $1.00 n“ usual colors .. 85c- Ltd