s l F . -».-¢a+-a; . _.,_,_ on ."‘ 0 Ii f’ llbr. Ron: Sn, Montana. ftlnn writing you to‘ tell you tbs; .WIJ I47‘.- lo." -mil-oi-fiaus". Thii podlclno rclicrod mo mined 1.1m? laphnpnnfaverhaiaigwoll. ~ Ill a terrible attfferor from I'm-Jud suffered for years; d nothing T took did mcanygood. ' road aibout “l-‘ruit-a-tlvcs" and them. After taking a few hoxca, , “is woaninj/ul medirina made/ram Qtuiljuirrr. I am Imiv t-nti.~.~l_\' well" " Madame‘ RUSINA FOISIZ. - . a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. f‘ lil dealers or srnd poslpaid by Frnit-n-tives Limited, Ottawa. _ i ._-¢. 15:1 it A ‘Slecurityi. , to Yield Seven . g ‘A Iller Cent ‘ ,i -.".I k THE 6112- per re t“ FirstMorlgageSink- ing Flllid- Gold Bonds of the Nova Scotit Un- derwear Company are offered at 93.80 per . cent and accrued in- terest to yield SEVEN PER CENT. , ‘lite company has ’ been operating forover forty years. Average net earnings are two andahalfiimes amount ‘ required to pay bond interest. '_ , Now offered for cat-h l nr- through our Partial Payfnetit Plan. J. Rowr/mn Parou I30 Great George St. Charlottetown REPRESENTIMT _ .1 c. MACKINTOSII & c0 Established i878 m to 17s Ho] is Street A Halifax N. S. Memlicrs ‘of the Mon. treal Stock Exchange and » l - if‘ t a-oo-oo o- -¢...-.<~o>o4o-44Q0 Ilailyrielections g Guardian Readers Furniahod by W. l_ Loulon. common atyzsstucs. , Deprived of teeth I cannot chew. and so l] live on liquid glue. and boneless soup and oatmeal mush, and varieties of slush. Straps?» longlllgs titrough my bosom flit. as in the dining-room I sit. My neighbors call for steaks and chops. while l refresh myself with slaps: niua mien and women all around have molars firm‘ and strolls M14, spuuld; they know no spasms wheln they eat large slabs of beef and bthar meat; their laughter fills the dining-room vmiie loaves and‘ firl. gs they consume; and Isl: In a. shuttled 4113.643 and pcur cheap grued my face. And once Lhad such ‘teeth as theirs; tmd I could bite llungs from Lmlflllfil and no that tboon -I guvc no lteed; all thought; f aly I used to fcmi. and never va a word of thanks for my long fangs, In gleaming ranks. "We "never prize ‘Du-me Nature's gifts fiatil rewiring hands she lifts and takes some precious boon away. nd lhci! we cry alackaday! The gents-L's working hard and WelL t0 make me teeth o! tortoises-hell, he Says helll have chem in my moutlh before Lho wild geese travel south until which time I'll have lo spll into my works nil kinds of mush. SMILES Thori- urn smiles that make us Ill-WY. There are smiley that ntalre us blue, There are smiles that sicsl away ‘thogurdropia A» , o sunbeam: atoai away the 1 dew {Chore are smllés 111st. have. u tend- or meaning QED-Ibo an of logo ohm can ‘ ' aee~ ' -"' but u» smiles um an my heart ' h llllfliliie A first nuittionuow liilill __- ,al High School in Charlottetown, the following ed- - itorial appears in the current issue of the Farmers‘, , [reflect not only the opinion of the Farmers’ Guide, -tion in P. E. , vince of Alberta. ' distinct need for Agricultural instruction in certain having acquired it, we are fully convinced that we ' indigestible. This is for the most part just a notion. "a moumv, NOVEMBER, 1s, 1930. "I AGRICULTURAL PIDUCATION. Apropos of the opening today of the Agricultur Guide. The letterreferred to islreproduced from the ‘Guide in this issue of the Guardian. Both editorial and letter speak for themselves and, we feel sure, which is su sed to speak for the agricultural in- terests of t e Maritime provinces, but of the great majority of farmers in this province who have from its inception regarded the proposed Agricultural High School as “the right thing in the wrong place.” Following is the Farmers’ Guide’s editorial opinion: “An interesting article written by a leading P. E. I. farmer on the subject of Agricultural Educa- I. appears on another page. The ar- ticle is well and forcibly written. In advocating a number of rural school centres for Agricultural in- struction, he is following along the line of the Pro- A central Agricultural College serves only a relatively few but a number of smaller practical schools will serve practically everyone who wishes to take advantage of book fanning practic- ally applied- There is certainly aplace for the Ag- ricultural College but one such institution will serve the three ‘Maritime Provinces. There, is however, a rural centres distributed throughout the three pro- vinces. Since thére are not many who can go to the college, a great good will be accomplished by bringing schools to the farms.” v HIGH COST OF LIVING. \ Few of us ever stop to think how much we are guided by habit, yet it would perhaps not be too, much to say that habit, our own and others, gov- erns nine tenths of our living. We dressgtot necess- arily to suit ourselves but our neighbors; we eat three meals a day, each one prepared according to certain formulae, each made up of a certain llilfll- ber of courses of certain ingredients selected not necessarily because we preferred them in the first place but because we have acquired-the habit and.‘ cannot get alongwithout these particular ingred- ients. ' Quite frequently these habits are unnecessarily, expensive and while we complain of the high cost of " living we go on following our habit as if itwere the only way to live. With the great majority of us, fotfi example, dinner, whether at midday or in the ev-' ening, must consist largely of meat. A dinner without meat would be regarded by most of us as no dinner-l Yet, if we substituted cheese for the meat ration,l we would have more real food value- Fresh beef hasl pound for pound, not more than half the food value, of cheese and this is true of all other meats. Fish and; pork have each less nourishment than cheese. Aboutt the only roduct we eat which rivals cheese in food. value dis ried "beans, yet our Boston baked beans are.‘ usually reserved "for Saturday night and Sunday‘ morning. A scientist writing on food values has this to say on some of the food which we pass by very: lightly or because of habits acquired we know not" how: Cheese contains in tabloid form almost all that is needed for our bodily nourishment. Some find it If the cheese is well chewed and eatenwibh bread m- bread and butter, there should be no trouble for the most of us in digesting it. We are sometimes above and blind to our 0p- portunities. We send our fine products, such as Ched day, to foreign markets. The English are very glad toget our cheeses, not only for their cheapness, but‘ also for their delicious taste. The average Canadian citizens prefers to eat I70 pounds of expensive meat a year, besides fish and poultry in proportion-but only four pounds of cheese. Eat cheese in abundance, be thus well nour ished, and help to cut down the H- C. L. rowan AND ivnkrrxnss or otc-vronv. I - hronv‘ If we remember aright it was Mark Twain wh0_ gave his views on the power and the pitfalls of orat! ory in a story which ran somewhat as follows :— A much heralded missionary was advertised to give an address in the town hall and Mark went to hear him. Having a warm side towards the heathen he prepared himself beforehand with a dollar in_ small change. his intention being to contribute in proportion to the worthiness of the cause. The mis- sionary was eloquent and had not spoken long be- fore Mark regretted that he had not brought more than the paltry dollar; he should have given five any way, possibly ten, if he had it- The preacher kept pounding the facts home, Mark thought somewhat extravagantly, and he concluded thedollar was en- ough. Still the preacher pounded away at his sub- ject until Mark made up his mind that he would giver only seventy-five cents. The pounding continued from fourtltly to fifthly and sixthly and Mark with growing irritation mentally reduced his contribut- ion to fifty, twenty-five, ten cents and finally- he- made up his mind that he wouldn’t give a blind cent‘ And still the preacher expounded and pounded, with the result that when the collection plate came around Mark “ltfted" ten cents oil’ it in a furious attempt to get even with the preacher some how. One of the . » , w, Ar! 1M‘ mljqrtliat you jive m ma. ., t , ,. " a‘ ‘a. 5._7 1' claim after it. has delivered its message. l weaknesses of oratory is when it continues to dc- .“ “ma”, “hlimgbé 17b0, which they oanbo dammit, . w, ma, h,‘ H ,,°i,.h°..n.~ mo, when introducing (lac Was-Iona IIIIIQQQQQMIIIKQIPIIXATION,‘ i‘ -,,, "_" - flvIIwiaanuqataa-tinaoatmr ‘u’ “luau”, to ‘an the numb ‘than GL1. mm m-BAOIC ‘mum may - larlilon olln inmlioof flaetlnflrm- ‘l’ "w" w d“ """' "wmd of tho city "with-in the iaat fort- ‘mgTnN w!“ m“ ‘n mum ' ‘Ca/ll. mister m! ' pig-ht, "I ‘RAID POOR ENOUGH; onus autumn -I wnrrr THERE, BUT ‘In-mama 'I‘fl.liiY-. brawn‘ YOU." Wu lt this that dame‘ Henry Penprliuu to hi9 death! Why did he wander “no. and in all raaaonalbio likelihood drown himself! i1 he had‘ the ordinary comforts which this inltiitutllon is supposed to cive, AND SUFFI- CI-EI-NT 0F (XIMMION BUT WIIIOLF-SOME FOOD TO KEEP BODY AINII) SOUL ‘TOGETHER, mm ADIEVIATE THE unaw- IINOS 0F A‘N_ I (INSANE-FIE!) sromnir; would né have sought refuge or escape in the graveyard‘! And they claimed Lita-l. the body waig unidentified and unknown. Yet tho cloiihesmvem recognized by Fai- convvood oflicials, as .01’ their own bavalmd. AN-D HE WAS ‘FCDRMAILLY BURIED AS HENtRY PENPILAJSE. 'I'.bere W83 no limaquest, and why‘! He was hurried beneath the ground as uietly as possible. and why? To hide as far as dwststible the cui- liability of the <Beil Government from the peopiep,“ ; Another ex-lmmate of the Infirm- ary was tcceurtiy mot upon, ti: street. life was looldng 1m- , a small place where he.could -re~ sume his dormer cupation," ‘ire pairing shoes. Wfhllllp an inmate off the Infirmary 1a. bench had be provided; and his work would owice overpay tor hi0, board. AND SOMETHING T0 DAT. Ho too preferred anything to starvation, and decided to work WHERE L‘! RBDURN nu couLn GET son FOOD ‘PO EAT. The departmental heads of thelflove-mment were not slow to increase their own salaries v0 $2.000 each and their sessions-l itnriemnlties to $500 in addition, and on the plea. of poverty they take the body amdsorul sustaining bread and btuttcrxout of-hhq-mouths of these unfortunates." driving’ them to desertion and suicidu to escape starvation, affairs was un-imwn in the days of Consorvative- admdnis-tration. ‘t occurred once before‘ in Liberal days, wheuuPi-emlet- Fairqiuharscn was att- the bet-In, AS QUICK- LY as it was ybmught to his atten- tion ‘he remedial the evil The Grand Jury, presided over by a. member otf the late Liberal Govern- ment, protested against the meat Supply, and depend upon It men of their own political complexion would not-do this without substan- tial reason, But the, compIna-tlop of incompettetm niow at the head or affairs, remse to be aroused from their pleasant dreams of big squar- tee and-despotic eaaefyand- insist upon maintaining "our institutions, one and all, an a..disg_race. a re i ‘While amldellghtedio wei— ISucb acontlltion c- ~ bio-trolled uliiamlnd thot. I018?" vouritinn would be drown. Bu: - m. old uyhu that "than; goes _ by favor" is no bet-tor onuataliiial innnyplaicathonlnoht popular - (f) department of the Government. __-_ smile on the faces 4,, a m,“ “mm m, M, w“, _ their pockets. mprcial truanciions, or a merchant. in his deallngu with a . customer, exacted a 01am of money, knowing- ly, in excess of what was ac-"uaiiy - due. ‘HE WOUIUD AT ONCE BE causal-m as A common rutarl ' His Que might ‘bg tho lees reprei.‘ _ hensible, lat mat-talus; stealing,“ the molmey for the benefit of c. dis- honest pemon. ‘But. a Government acts in the interests of Lhc general v public, who are ‘W501i laJ/ly h I 'es'., and do not wan: .0 be in pix i» ceivare rf stolen goods, A railway employee, and the salaries of rull~ way men are matter of common knowledge, was assessed in e\'- ceas or his actual income autlpay- ment demanded. He stated his l correct income to the tax oiflce. upon whirl. be was prepared to’ pay uhe regular rate, whether ,a lawful imposition or otherwise‘, but ‘they would not accept it, They wanted‘; like Shylock, not only tho “pound of flush." but with it the VY COATS, LAD shop at THE 6-00-01 rustic rottuu . ERS FANCY AND PLAIN, GLOVES, , BEDDING and MEN'S READY-TO-WEAR CLOTHING door is locked as per order, it re- “V86 011 mains locked, until the agent opens IB now-l d“, h , up at 7.80 next _ m ‘ma: suing by. the early train, which 18.10 stand alone. Nice tmtufunm, suor AT rlrous . Where quality is fitaintainédimd prices ‘leave a of pleased customers nd money in i The change in the weather makes JWARM _ CLOTHES A NECESSITY. For the finest * ~ FUR COATS, FUR MUFFS AND Burbs, Hull.‘ i IES’ READY-TO-WEAR, SWEAT. srocxmqs Patons Limited his way to the will: at awn morning; anyone remain outside in the m “lulu g the express, passing here about. 6.1!! 8 COUNTY flirnposed whom, life-blood and the spirit, comm. n, i ' u. m mum“ ma, p|ea8ure o, coolmgted, To return again to 1,3,“: g0 MN 1N T]; oollllnll l 69M 0|’ 9 his heels around th great ouwlflflk; 011, three ev i ' NOT NT m’ a dlIaauanlon by wan-was lam", a, either wind or ,1Ia!i|:m,'"i. BOND. And it was in this can not one or the weal-thylbut one or thl poorer and hard working ulna. out: of quoctlonl of Inha- olf. Tho Charlottetown Canadian don Mignon- Wednesday "an (Continued mm m“ , Only iiaat week. to be correct, on morning, a man who 5034030444 run i: not an imam instance, to 32mg"; ‘f; “n” In varied forma- the whole tax-puy- ""5"," lug pubidc, and their name is Ic- - gion, are in revolt at open discrim- ination ainid partizan flavouritiam, amongst which there is the un- closai income raves of those high up and in lfriemdlly relation to the Government, ST. [OUIS RAILWAY STATION ‘Slrz-Iu your issue of Nov. 2nd the footnot _to the article re the St. Louis ‘Railway ‘Station seems to have about it an air of finality as it were, almost as "much as to say we were getting treatment about good enough focus. or. at least as 300d as we deserve. Superintendent Grzr dy says so and so and it must he the case. You seem to forget. Sir ‘ that the resolution above your fool. note, was qyasaed at a meeting of the people dirwactiyfaffected; that it was subscribed to by almost one hundred people present there; that ii was signed by the president and secretary ofvthe Fanmars; Institute and Club assembled there. on hc~ half of the meetng. The matter was put (‘alrly clear in this resolution. but there are iota more to be said In the matter. However. I will for the present confine myself to what Mr. Supt. Grady has been telling the Guardian. come our influential friend, Court cllior ‘Smtthfrom tiu Liberal m»; trade jidols to the ‘Protection. ranks. w. are not inclined to endorse the extmrnlty-of tariff exclusion . to‘ which he is inclined to resort, an?! we rather think ‘that the merchants and consumers in the city, as well as our "Filrfll friends, are none of then: so drastic ln their ideas of tarll! ail to wish a prohibitive fence being Iflucedoomund the city 1o, er: clude the (armors from trading within its precincts. Already the city bus suffered mulch loss of [TEIXIC AUTO nucom) BANK, ma... with FarmersPecords AND Account Book GIVEN AWAY rust to new subscribers and old subscribers retewiaj their subscriptions before end of current year. , 0nIy limited number available ind lit comers will have the preference. " ~ QOIVECIHPEQ» v IN DIVIDUQLB, llmimt 1\\h INSURANCE, B11118 lid INTI PAYABLE ' 11.1.75‘ and, our citizens. taxed in extra costs loivootrniry produce by tiie- unistakon belief that" farmers are ndthallowaditotnataii. apples. 90B- ioes, vegetables and otherproducta the same '11s Will Mr. Gradypolnt out where the aiamemnzuiations are in effect? field or Oleary’! Pit-st, he says the regulations are all other stations. BLANK COST ACCOUNT BREEDING, record of CALENDAR CASI-I RECEIVED INVENTORY, general INVENTORY, roaidanco , LIVE STOCK INFORMATION . ‘““’°"°“' “m” MILK, BUTTER. m cam t Most decidedly ls‘ if. Tdgllliih, from door no door. As .a xmult not; neither is it Port. Hill or taveu- CA5}; PAM) QQT‘, , ACCOUNTS ‘many darmora have sold" at. their £2533; 271,153 gizgzgaaigaillfi CATTLE, coat of $11.15 lid WI‘ l Mama statiom. and our merchants when u, n, so _ o" m,” ‘he ,_ cnrrua. Bold » ' h“, m, u“, m,“ which w,“ ,»,,,,,,,g fiflff h, 11mm“, ",0 m: coxcnnru PROPORTIONB oars, coat of . - » have been diverted into their es- pnouch and by-word to the Pm‘ qapll-ahmenu it these goods wen vme‘ {disposed of in the city. ISO limited - [Biliaidou is the soLIy cxprcsslve er products now coming to the city French ifor a love-letter, Bill cllthtlt ‘householders, Itave difficulty Due is 411s harsher Expression ot‘ in securing their winter supply, i the Bell Government in sending competition with 1h!‘ many bvyrlrs those countless tokens of their ai~ dlvfil-rllli; 111B 80GB. T0 "Ill-il- lllifi faction and esteem u, the country timber by a civic "wise, as no» which whey deceived. requiring poaoid by Councillor lSmith would titotn to dip (Leeply Into their pock- iIIOPQB-SB llifiafilfllo W!’ IP84? Wm! eta for-fundawlth which to tnee’. U16 WNW?!‘- is the quantity of potatoes and 0th another until we gel rcdress. First. and ho must certainly know it. . Now, Sir. I.don't want to weary you or the readers of this letter. but I am going to stale the case av it exists and as I can prove. and we are going to continue to keep it before the public in one way or beginning at 4,110 In; m., tho ugcnt rrfl-nq-z CORN, cost of ' ' ~ CORN, sold or fed DAIIRY HERD, cost of EQUIPMENT ACCOUNT EXPENSE ACCOUNT, household FARM LABOR. record of GENDRAIJ INFORMATION G-DSTNPIONHXHILI r those mnovcup EXPENDITURES, and DECREAJSEIJ ‘riixivrtofq up- on the promise of WlllClTfliE)‘ were line of inter-provincial and inner- Ii our lurm- Canadian trade. and anything which returned to power. not sell their produce in the city; pvithout fee Illlddicensc. We have. on illustration of the» cost of this kind of iihlnglio citizens in themat- Our ideas run‘ strongly along tlic" srs wanted any further eyeotwners will siimuiaae this should receive as to 11w hypocrisy "MW drcentioniomouragemenr vidmt the foreign practiced upon the-m at and before manufacturer comes to exploit our "18 ‘aw! IOMI-l 916M011. ‘they are now markets or the foreign tarmers at- Ler 0f milk vendors licenses. A fee , of $15 is charged which shuts out competition from many who would gladly supply milk at cheaper rams receiving them in daily menus, and with no grounds doubt as to their character and pressiveness, you add something like a Fire insurance Rlaka plaud with Mo! alua companion at mlnlmuim rltu. - llyndman 8t Co. Ltd 0-01‘ Quun M. Tho Oltlut inaurnnu Agln- uy in P; I. i. lnfilfl-lh teznpis to compote with our ow: for tarmers we very properly suggest im- that he" will not be permitted to do And when to this so without contributing to our rev- MIL- onues DION DOIaLARIS OVBRDRAFT AT pelled THE BAINIGS, which is not denied this principle to the extreme oftoll by the FBeII Government press. you tug our own farmers that they can giving’ a. monopoly to a lltnltcd few, as the result of which our con simmers are paying thousands of dol - lat-s in extra prices for milk, for the sake of the few paltry dollars which they receive in the form of milk vendors license fees, g. i as our home zit-en are com lto do. iBut we do not carry. C OATS, lold or fed ORCHARD and FRUIT MISOEIJIJAINEOUS PRODUCII POULTRY. llreadina record POULTRY and EGGS rujypmntm jfor FARM LNlifAial' REMIEDI, HOUSIIHOIID 8D TDMING zoos off duty, Ibo walling room In H ' ‘ con of ‘M m“ ¥lL°-"i'2;.?.:.'t'.‘.“: "a": s: ‘it? :31;- Iii .l.';‘i‘."‘;m...% __ . _ t . e u o ox t press. I presume, ltavo orders, to HOG-S, cost. of TRACTOR see that this door was locked when H063, acid WHEAT, coat of they passed throuzh- W119“ m“ uonsns, cost of, and sold wamr, I016! or m , Send your renewal at once and tsllf free copy' of i Farmers Record f AND Account Book , h’town fluardian Subscription _ Thai. (luff: meal. or surpass We protect our patron of all the local stoma or ch90 prices are always lowest have to travel in a circle an . Look at a few lample $4.85. 84.25 according f0 sl quality $3.25. Valentine Martina Worth $7.25 and $8.00. in numb cuss lower than the thpuauy other int year. EVERYBODY Knows for . The best boys boot we know. stock kip. No. i sole leather clump. Sale Men's Mono Grain leather. worth $1.25 ' for 85.60. Same with toe nap 85.75. $5290 and $6.00. __ _..__._.___. . _r__ : any prices quoietilby any Bont and Shoo dealer anYWM“ a so thoroughly that they do not have to make the round! p sales or mail order catalogues for THEY KNOW that 0i" uality-we enduavour to supply. Our patrons do no! d ‘nowhere. but they come direct hero. They hi0! W’ that when a drop in prices oucuratwo are prepared to meet it immediately. new prices. Whole Womaiffs best we know 0|‘. WWIf stock kip with No. i leather solo 333i ze. A cheupbr ' Aigoheaver gradu of sumo leather lvl I’ 1 . '- g _ Womuifs beat pebblo with 40ml,” shank No. 1 sole $3.95. Second Gull"? $3.50. , Mobil. Women's and Children's rubbara of every shape, all ctpriou ll 1W u" lowest mail ‘ordor catalogues. The Ilnea we are handling are tho-beat made and hava given wit" “mum” * . » ‘ t;orr BROS. THE FAMILY I667 lTOli , ,_ ,A.,___._.__._- ____ ...___._.__