JOHN P- IS ENTHUSEI} - OVERRESULIY “Before I had finished my first bottle of Tanlac I was beghming to feel ifllQ. and was praising it so highly that I guess everybody in my family was using it." declared John . Murray, well-known wheel- wrlght of 940 Prince Street, Truro. N llionctoihotit’ In Corkum Case Given Freedom "HALIFAX, N. 8., Nov. 7.—Ern- - - est Eseery. amines in Moncwn Friday as a suspect in the fatal shooting here on Tuesday last of ' Leslie A. Corkum Spring garden - road Grocer. was given his liberty Saturday night ‘following an ex- amination which convinced the l_ police that he had no connec- , tho with the crime. "Essery said he W85 a carpenter by trade and - gltia satisfactory account of his , recent. movements. ‘ The body of the dead man, who , passed away from his wounds Fri- "7 dayevenlng. will be taken to his home at Chester N. -S. for buriel. St. John Woman Dies From Effects 0f Cocaine Poison .\lON'l“Rl*).~\ L, ‘ “I hadn't been feeling Just right for a long thus-wasn't down-right sick. but getting so I'd be just about all tagged out ‘after a big day's work. My stomach began to go back on me too. and I was bothered with constipation all the time. My food soured on my stomach and l was badly distressed with gas. “l was in an awfully run-down condition when a friend of mine who was inkling Tanlac for the backache told me all about it and l stunted inking it. I can say it has built me right up. l can do the big- best day's work and still feel fresh at quitting time. My stomach ‘is pentectly sound, I have a fine ap- petite and am simply in fl-ne shape all around. l am glad to recommend 'l‘an1ac to anybody looking for a stomach medicine.” 'l‘unluc is sold ll_\ Illl hood drug‘ g-lsts. j —-—i-—_ oQa>---_---. Three Ohio River Steamers Are Burned At Dock CINCINNATI, Ohio. Nov. 7.— Three Ohio River steamers, ’ the island Queen zindaMorning Star. owned by the (Joney Island "Com- pany which operates inn-summer run-sort l2 miles above Cincinnati and the Tucomu, a. passenger and frioght steamer, and t\vo uthirrf boats, the property of the Concy lsluuil and Green line companies, were destroyed by fire yesterday. A ‘fourth bout. the Chris Greene, employed in tow boat service, caught fire and was badly damag- ed. The totui loss was estimated to be between $250,000 and $300,- 000. Firemen say that a barrel of tar used in making repairs on the Morning Star boiled over and caused the fire. Cattle Agreement \ I Is Satisfactory sull- Important Fool: Noto- "Put one on- ‘tho pain isgoai‘ armour . ‘ Hun-lee? COINS “HOUSES I AID IUNIONS ._ Every Reader is He Buys What He Reads About He Doesn’i__ Buy What He Hasnl Read About ' .0 When he sees in a. store what he has been reading about, it is fami- liar, friendly-he is half sold already. That is “consumer acceptance.” The clerk likes to sell advertised goods-theyre easier to sell. No costly waste of time and sales effort telling the consumer about them. Theclerk knows that it is the advertised goods that move-and keep moving. He is eager tobuy and handle advertised goods. With its daily-average circulation of 10,000-about 50,000 daily reader-buyer power-The Charlottetown Guardian is the’ one outstand- ing creator of “consumer acceptance” in Prince Edward Island. Ninety- seven per cent of its circulation is concentrated in this rich and compact radius embracing a population of 88,600 persons. ' The Charlottetown Guardians Advertising Service is the most modern, practical and efiicient in its area. Through its intimate, friend- ly contact with consumersfloacked by the known influence and power of the Charlottetown Guardian as a news medium, it establishes that “com- munity of interest” that nowadays is so essential totheinitiation of suc- cessful sales campaigns. A I I Market, Merchandising, Medium-the “three"‘M’s” of mercantile success-you have them here, eiiiciently and economically under one roof. ' ' "rue CHARLOTTETOWN» GUARDIAN FIRST the Province Nov. 'i'.—The pol» lcc are locking for three men winti-d hi" the locul coroner's court oflfic 1's in mum-ration with the tic-nth ill .lll'>. Lulu Strung, of St. John NU. who (lied lust. week at the Noire Dame Hospital from what is stated as cocaine poison- ing. For this purpose the inquest ‘that was to have opened Saturday was zidjournetlj that further en- quiry might be made. ‘Fact collected so far indicate that Mrs. Strung hail been seen Just prior to her death drinking beer with three. young men, as n sequel" to which she fell into a sleep that lastcr two days. She was subsequently" taken ill 11nd died. Analysis 0t‘ the contents oi the contents of her stomach slioiv- ed that death was duo to cocaine- poisoning. . lzll Heat Your House l lor Less Money fVET rid of dusty stoves. They mean ~3 work. ‘fhey eat up lucl. Using them costs you money year alter year. Let me put in n Gilsori Pinch-as "lurnncc and awn nil this unneces- sary worl; and waste. You don't nmil n bi’: collar. Thorn are nu pint-s. ‘uat an excavation will do. Every room in your house will be cuzily hentied with healthful. moist, worm air. The 1 (‘ilsun burns wal and wood. '1 h-- irhole job can be done in l.~_. than a day. You'll pay m.- lesa for n Gilson than uny cud-r hating system. You'll a Job that will give you old satisfaction. bc glad to tell you all features about. this fur- . e nnd give ynu n free ratlmlifl. Get. in touch with I ,1‘: .... I d “Illakes Many Warm Friends” Battleshiifs Keel Must Be Laid In 1922 LONDON Nov. 7.—Gres.t Bri< tnln must. decide definitely before the end 0f the year whether‘ or not she intends to build two battle ships vrhich-wcrc sanctioned by the “Iasliingtou Naval agreement. in the agreement it was stipulated that their keela must be lail in lilifl. Reports that the new govern- rnent might abandon plans for building the new ships cJuld not be verified. to-duy. Orders for their construction were issued recently. Lord Benity in n speech last. week de-clured his country would no! de- crease her naval strength below the number of ships stipulated in the Wbshington agreement. THE MARKETS SUMMEiR$lDE MARKET Dairy Button... . .. . 30 Eggs per doz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - -- Wnul, washed . . . . . . . . . .. . Wood. linwushed ~- Chlckens, per lb .. Hides . . . . , Hay Outs, per bushel . . . . Potatoes SOURIS MARKETS LONDON Nov. 7.-‘—Before ing from Southampton for home, Dr. Grisdaln, Canadian Federal Deputy ‘Minister of Agriculture, who took part in the negotiations regarding legislation necessary t0 remove the embargo against Can-I zullun shore cattle said that Angl0-i Canadian agreement would be pub- ‘ ‘lishetl in Great Britain in a. few 4, days. It was, he said, satisfactory ‘ITO both parties though from thelj iCnnndian point of view the Dom-ii 335i lnion did not get quite all that was! 'ggi'il(*Sl'l‘t-lil. ' 4 16; A TRIP mro SPACE. 20' y lillwnh a Peep at the Milky Way and its Fiery Spiral Nebula. as’, "Ifls i I i i i I 1 ‘If you could stand still and let the WOdld glide from under you the- 4 r . Butter . . - ~ - . . . . . . . . . ..28_most impressive characteristic ‘ofi - ' Eggs --32'spa.ce would be its emptiness, its: c, A, M||,|,|.;|g_ lllmtutoes 30 awful ‘black silence, of which man.“ 1:10 iii-m sin-n (nits ~40 knows about as much as the deep <> Ch“"““,""“'"' "1 m" ' Pork . . . . . . . .. . ~-l11/c|scu dish do of their ocean. As the iniy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _ . . . ..$1l'-l=;llll went sailing away its nlunots would close in oine by one until: itppitpenitly consumed by the solarl rays. Before you had passed. 32 through the orriblt of Neptune the} . sun would look no larger than an‘ znrc liigbt. Fa-inter and fainter, it would finally fade into a pitiful spark. ‘In ‘spite of your tensest. el- forts in ‘keep that g-llntlug point clear of lbs fellows. it would at last melt into the multitude of soft lights that mnke up the ‘Milky Way, nind henceforth, seek as you might, you could never distinguish your sun again. ‘Lost in the ‘Milky We)‘. ill would be as futile to try to find it as to ‘find n. icertnin grain of dust which you ihad Vlfillvfitl settling on t III Agent for UILSON lvfFO. 00., ..i MONTAGUE MARKETS A a AAAAA¢¢A ‘¢‘- ‘e *~4* v‘v¢‘vv“‘ ¢ GIVING P-ROPER CREDIT. ilutter times dts length, the stresses are considerable higher chain when ‘the ship is in smooth yvater; hence, Lu vilew of the fact that waves aresel- dom over 500 feet long, the maxi- mum nding moments whicbcome upon ship 900 ‘feet long are much lees than those which come upon one G00 feet long-Chicago New-s. girl back a pair of silk stockings. One of them contained candy, the other money. Next day the queen reccl-vcd from her little friend u let-i Once a Spy Hunter AUCTION SALE Sir Henry Curtis Bennett, emin- em lilllglish criminal lawyer, was The undersigned w-lll . sell b)‘ once n secret service expert. He is public auc“ on the premises of still on tzhe sunny side of 45 and the late Ronald Drake, 8t. Peters hos been a. barrister for not quite Harbour, neur 1m 40 Station on twenty years. A third asset in an . y , exigent profession belongs to Sir WEDNESDAY, NOV 15, 1922 Henry. He is tall rather than short; ---—-<-e>-<‘__ zmd-lnclinezl to stoutness, 78.1.18!‘ Commencing at 10 O'clock A. M- SAVE YOUR GAS_ than the reverse. His face ls full Shirp 11114 81111111112; the face one sees in 11 mllch cows, 10 young cattle. “n”: water has reached “wbofmo cathedral close. He is a facile 4 calves, 4 horses, 2 foals, 11 pigs, Outs Potatoes . Pork .. .. Hay Turnlps .. Two iPhi-ladelphions were talking of the fortunes of a third denizen of ‘that city when one onild: “His first lucky strike was in eggs. 1H6 rboughit 10,000 dozen at a low figure, put them lu cold stor- age and sold them at a proilt of more than 300 per cent. Thut was IMPROVING MILK’S QUALITY. -tb»e cornerstone of This great for- tune.” “Ah!" exclaimed the other. ter which read: “Iilsdum: Your ipresent made me, cry a great deul. My fat-her took toe money, my big brother ute the sweets and my mother is weuringi the silk stockings." MURRAY l-IARBORY ‘h . ',. St. ‘CIERIIOUIIG —— §0UTlIA3II"l‘0N--— IIANIIIUIHI‘ ...... .. Mlnnednna" Butter . . .. Eggs Pork Outs . . . . . . Potatoes A certain Glasgow milkmzm was '1 ~. ‘should be pnfilted on ‘the’ mm ' 8ft as linseed oil and vinfllr. I OHERIIOUll(i-—$0UTHAllIP'l‘0N Nov. H . Empress of Frunci-f Nov. 27. . Empress of ilritnin.‘ MON .Al.--IiIVEIIPO0Ii I7 "l)l‘C. l2 Montcalm 24. Dec. 22" Montclnrc Jan. 5 Victorian" . i0 .. . Montrose" MONTREAIr-(ILADIFJNV . l8. "Doc. 15.~ "Jun. 13 .......... .. Metngumn ST. JUII —(sIiA§(l0W VI‘ LIVER- P00]; "Dec. i ................................ .. Tunisian MONTREAL -- SOUTHAMPTON - ANTWEIIP Nov. ll "Dec. 9 biclltu Nov. 22 ......... .. iinncdoso ‘From Que cc Only. "From St. John, N. B. TWO DELIGHTFUL CRUISES TO WEST INDIES By B. B. Empress of Britain Jan. 20 and Feb. 20. 1923'. Apply to Docs! Agents or G. B. BURFEE, C. P. 8., Agent 40 King as, 8t. John. N. i1 Nov. Nov. . DRESSING FOR LEATHER. '. An effective leather dressing is made with one part. vinegar to two paras ‘linseed oll shaken vigor- ously in. a bottle. This dressing should lbe gently nabbed inf-o the leather with a rag. Then rub_ with a soft duster and finish the pdllshing"rpmcess with a channels leather. '» The treatment may be applied to . leather upholstery, s-uibcsses, . trunks, and bags of ill desocrip lions, Not only will it render ‘the ~ leather Iplllble. but it will mskg it ‘look like new. When the leather MARKETS 0 CHARLOTTETOWN Eggs . . - . . - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Butter . . . . . Oats Ilntntoe-s lluy ... Pork . Never lcuvti ii camp-lire, even for c. short ‘time, without (iueniching it with water ‘and thcn covering ll with enrth. Throw pipe pushes and cigar or cigarette stumps in the dust of the rouil an-il stump or pinch out the fire before leaving them. Don't throw pi-pe ashes and cigar or cig- urcttc stumips into brush, leaves or pine needles. lllll BURA EAlS, ITBHY SBllP Was Sore and Red. llair Fell 0st. lleatl llisfiallld, "Prom using the some brush and m“ -' m’ "winnings _ tron t . f! ' it caused my scalp to beitohy. My scslpwu ' sore and red, and the dandruff scaled offend could be seen on m , clothing. My hairf l ' on! lly and my head was dl . This ouble flier. sign "01 fissi- white Ofjfllfl‘ Home asy- before '_appl,yln¢ win IMYMN. a‘ return-still! one 4o.- ed is Ill! mum lasted six mo s. Then l t for g h“ Qqmgll of Cancun Soap and Ointment. sin-wards bought more. and l only used two ashes of Bong ind Mo boggfl cl Olfltflllhl WEBB was h ." (Signed) Miss Fiancee Dams, Bulls. Qlwlm- , Use Cutlwra leap, planned: and Tllcwn fat oll toilet .1 country roam T-hen (lflltll-z inky notliingmvs- you Yviltllll lii- i-nr rounded by mii-i.i:t~ oi lights. ISoon they would llllllltrvh‘ you with this startling fur-i: universe of stars is arranged like ii mighty world. Hhe Milky Way encircles the skies very much as the equator does this earth, and since life is most abundant in the south so the stars gmw thickest about the Milky Wny. ‘Let the eye t-rnvel away toward the imaginary north and south poles, and not only do the stars th-in out, ibut entirely new forms of star li-fe moire their appearance. Through the telescope they are nothing more than illmy patcvheeof light; to the cameras aind spectro- scoipee of observatories they ‘be- come the most amazing and fright- ful spectacles of all neiture. They show themselves than 1.0.1119 stu- pendous Whirlpools of fire, incon- ceivable in magnitude, thousands of "light years" away (light trav- eling 185,000 “tn-lies a second) where whole systems of su-ns are Ibelng slowly evolved. We call them "spiral nebula," lbut to descnlibe them ‘we need the tongue of God himself. They seem to be measure- less caldrous, where his band stins cosmic dust until new suns riseend float of! in flaming bubbles. They are so untl-mk-aibiy gigantic there b no perceptible motion to them. Already the- comerol have recorded several hundred thousand ln every stage of ‘condensation, pre- senting an undeniable ‘challenge, perhaps an answer, to those ~wiho Wvoudl solve the irldd-le of the uni- verscm-didlaxweli Rory in lflhilcsgo Herald. ----a-o->i SHIPS AND WAVIS. I l l When the waves of the ocean are one-half the length ‘of tihe ship and one-twentieth of the length in height, the slices upon the ship dit- oelf is very little inoraued above ..,..,.;,i,. ,, ,- r... ‘that , .that in smooth water. But when Iths waves are of the same mm ‘as the ship or one and onewbslf‘ suspected of u-slng ‘the pump handle l-iliim‘ too much before starting lllll uiili hi.- milk dellvery. The lvwlliiltl‘ [lulu-r flit} us he was standing serv- ,ing customers in a busy side street 'l‘hc!a mun passing nudged him and whispered, "Look out; the sanitary inspector ls comin-g round the cor- ner." "Turning off the crank, he rushed for ihie cream barrel and, filling a. ‘h-uge can _from it, Opened the mllk cask and emptied i‘t ln. The "sanitary" did not come, but the ‘wife of the "hipster" got; n ‘splendid supply of rich creamy mllk that IIIONIlIIKr-‘ljmldflfl Taltler. HINTS FOR CAMPERS 1N THE FOREST. Be sure y0lll' mavch ‘.5 out it before. you throw it away. Pinch Build a smell camp-fire. Build it Iin the open. not aigoinist a tree or log or near brush. _ Scrape away the trash from all around it. ....ai.4-a-..... vuvo-vvvvvvuvvwov HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARHH 0R A COLD lsyucreamA lledlnllost-riln OpmMr 2023a Bightllp. a‘- akaaam. InstantIreIIef-no waiting. Your classed nostrils ope-n right. up: the alnlllfilagss of your head clear and you can breaths frsel No more hlwkllll. snuff1l1l8. b ins, head- ache, dryness. No struggling for th st niaht: your cont or emir- r disappears. - ~ ' (let a small bottle of Illly's Cream Balm from your dfllgllll now. Ap- ply a little of this lflflant. enu- septic, healing cream in your nos- trils. l-t penetrates through every "Tlhen the hens laiid it!"——iHarper‘e Magazine. RADIO ON TRAINS. Riaidiophone equipment has ‘been put on trains of itwo railroads in “I111! 43011111111’, says Popular rMech» anics Magazine, namely, the Lack- eWB-nflfl. amd the ICbioago, [Milwau- kee 3: lSt. iPaul. lBoih these com- panies have converted buffet oars into virtuuil receiving stations, Whafelfl U19 Passengers can don headipieces and listen to the vwri. (ms fbrosidcasting. The Qoachifls are surmounted by special mortals ‘fll-IIMIIB the length of the cairs,and are od different construction, tihe laaickawainma using six wires and the other road tWO, with the entire set being grounded through the axles to the rails. 4N ANGORA. iIn Angola, the capital of Na. tionalist Turkey, storks may ibe seen ‘everywhere. One pair 119513 on the top of the column reared-by , the Romans "in honor of Augustus; others on the roof of the Parlla. . ment building; UQVBI I| m“, their home on the - 1-1 1 t Boys are IMOIIBM up to let Itrbdam alone. Indeed, Anatolia lea ‘birds’ l0!’ Hi6 mgygp paimdise, e-hoot them or destroy their negig, “Kindness 0f Queen Goes Aetray I n-SZ? ' l Queen Illiena of Italy ll never so happy as when-she ll making (mu. drflh imm- Not longaio. ‘when on a short excursion with bar own children in hhe neighborhood other Piedmont home, she saw a little girl near a cotta s and v.1 talk- ing to er asked f she could new. " in-gl," was the id's answer. "Very yell," aid thenueen. air passe!» of the head. soothes the inflamed or. swollen mucous invin- brsnesnd relief comes Instantly. It's just line. Don't stay stalled- up with a cold or out) ostmh. w "make ma a pair of stoofinge and mud them to mo." " ' "I 6n y know how to knit stook- t ing -poiut. you cannot imoike ilt any| hotter. Ilf you ‘increase the size of the flame under a. boilingi-iouce- pun. the nutter will "bubble furious- ly, but the temperature, in elpite of appetnronccs, will remain the some." At sen-level water boils at 212. degrees Fahrenheit; it‘ greater ‘heat is applied it. will merely produce steam. The higher you go the; lower is th-e boiling-point. Explor- ers at great heights often find it‘ diifllcult 0o cook their food for ‘thiis reason. ' You cannot boil a potato on the, top of a. thigh mountain, simply the? cause you cannot make the water hot enough. At the top of Mount Everest furiously boiling water would not the hot enough to scald your linger. ‘On this shores of the] Dead Sen, which ‘lies 1,200 feet| lbelow sea-level, an egg can be Iboil- ed in two and a half 11111111168111 the summit of Ben Nevis. dt has ‘been calculated that lnthe aver-age house a pound'e worth of gas is wasted every year; pans sire left. incl-ling over fu-ll-flaimed burn- ers, though once w tor has ‘boiled a. tiny flame is sufll ent to keep it |iii the hottest temperature NEE?) L if "'_'T hinge character entirely am: days later.‘ the’ ‘woollen suit-nu steoklon arrived 1mm out! Bu», ’ hi“ W lint the little Basil Thompson. PEKOE . . And n». and...» t can be our: every day with King Roz-flick mellow speaker; but he can be very spnr-‘about 50 lions, ing oi‘ his words. ~ l About 10p but; 11595:, about 25 Llll the war he obtained a riuiiiiiis-iions loose hay, a ldt 0i’ straw, 5 slob ns lieutenant in the ILX \'.l'i.“,-.iii<-li but; llillzl, ‘l inairlne engine. His criminal practice hail L'l\'(1ll|.l".llllllIlL( mill, wagons and slsighfl. him n. peculiar knowledge of ilii- working “m1 driving harness, wuys and habits oi‘ thought iii llllilliillifié ‘ug zuncnino, manure spread- "lldvrllllrld from which most solos w. truck wagon, carts and wheels. ure recruited. And. it. was to thisgang plow, scufller,‘ single plow! knowfedge that the Government and barrows, bay rake, mower. had recourse when Curtis Bennett binder, drill seeder, cream separa- W" 11111161! l0 10111 the Ellibcial tors. farmers holler, gmplrin and a Branch at Scotland Yard under Sir lot of other 5mg mg numgroua to ention. Almost one of the first actions on SAiIiE POBITTVE. NO RESERVE returning to the Bar after the war, as this is to close an estate. was to apply for “sllk." iMany oVhis TERMS 0F 8.41410: All sums ov- friends thought that it was» a dan- er $16.00 eleven months credit on gerous step to surrender a junior approved joint notes only with 111' P11101108. which was -'by now firmly terest at 6 per cent. 5 par cent. dim Bfilflbllflhed. at so early a point inlcount will he allowed for cash. his career. But the result has justl-‘$15.00 and under not cub. fled the decision. 1f day is stormy flrdt flllo Ill! fol- Curtls Bennett remains todsy|lowing ltthigjgmg hour, . , what he was as an obscure junloh‘ i H. D. MoEWEN. Unbane in his manner and his meth- ,,’- Administrator ods, he can‘ hit _ out fearlessly on Bristol, Lot 40 - ' benalf of his client. When need ar- Nov. 2nd, i922. lees he has a placatory way with ’ ‘ ' juries and judges which makes thelon the ibsttar (ids of s "bad hat" human nature under the surface insuch as too om" confroutaflooioty both those public institutions look rom ths dock ‘ (giggle ‘unit-u? , cup olYTcam ' a—llllloxplelalbl| I frequently board. flirflvhhe . q "W ih own; l' sumnnnnuiqmnununuiinciiiuirqr