‘....;..-.s... l lloal Estate A client wiehee to rent. 0" poi-en“. email houee. cen- trally located. ‘ For Sale Deeirable residence In Summer-ride. Hardwood Moore throughout with ell oonveniencee. A bargain for someone. ‘ " Bountiful y-egpidgnttol niviiln Ghirl, .098". "4 .0- mtumtihn. flvtlti ‘ittlvrtt- iencyd" ' ' .1," " Farm property 1V; rnilu from Cardigan, aorel, 85 cleared. excellent‘ house and harne, cement floors. Will eeliat half actual value an owner leaving Province. _ “l; have other Proilenl" for eale on our lists u-hlch intending purchasers rhovld look over. Easy‘ term: can be arranged on any of the above properties. EAiTi-Iiill SECURITIES -‘ DMPANY, 1.11). I New Bank of Nova Scotia Building, ' Charlottetown, P. E. l. W. H. V. DUNBAR a Manager @@@@)@@@ .-.. HE iiiiliililiiiliiii llliiiiilliil per your (In lhreler In»: tun-ea mm one. eer u... u- edvenee) Jim...» ‘1-50 advance). lulled In Claude and United hiatu- lleeretery. Lleut- (Jel- ll. Bllter and HIIIIQI: d. It. liar-eel! ' cairmnrteeei llurltl-e Stationers, Grafton 8t. Caner t Ca. Qlrrel lil- A. llmwn, lineup Vendor llullrnly llbtlllllll t Strplrll Duffy. Illrlnerid It. Pneldenl. w. Cheater s. ileum Vice-President. .r.' a; Bur-Q"; lleitreel Be reqe thing-u New yeflt MRI-ooh...- ~ Chloe‘; Representative-IQ- J. Pe oponnuth only t» emu-we here the lollovrlul agent: u. A. Meelfilneel. D. n. 0 »Aroerlute Editor, . C. MQIIII rank It. Ierthnu wer ID. If. Currie.’ P. '1'. blur-Ilia Prince It. Gunnery J. l". Dulyflfiueen lit. W. O~ Wrlllfl» Kret Street Wen R. Tho-er “filer, 135 Ell Ave. bVn. Dalllel, Spring I'rrrk,l’arl HOSPITAL CAMPAIGN The volunteer canvassers engag- ~d in raising funds for the P. E. bi- ind Hospital huve mot with un- suai success in the city having ecurud pledges amounting in nund numbers to $46,500. The ob- active is $67,000 so that the caul- ulgu committee hus only anoth- r 8211.500 tn soc-urn in ordcrdn ain iht-ir snri. .~\s the greht hulk oi the scrlptions ulrcudy promised suh~ ‘ uro mm the city and Sourin, practic- and MONDAY DEC. 10,1923 of specially ....\.r.;; wealth grow in favor and that largo in- loiuus may yet be drawn upon for a lurgor contribution to tiho national revenue than they ure nu. present. ‘it is itnfortunate that at this stage of the European crisis thero should be uncertainty and division in the lliother oi Parliaments, ai-v wnys hitherto s stabilizing infill- t-ttce not only in Europe but In thc world. Yet. crises in England have always rlghted themselves and Wu may _hope that, out of what now .ltut thc idea uxtrettie lllilll l mccmcromniwl. can...“ i What flow of yours B" Ian.‘ Berton. “.0. sromAoH rnouace - ul-oER. You have heard some acquaintances of yours talk about their ‘stomach troubles. _ Your‘ stomach doesn't. fool any mo good, and tho pmsibility of an ulcer comes up in your mind- Now. what is an ulcer 0! llw staunch? - , Just exactly the same thins R5 an ulcer anywhere else, in or -on rm. body. Tho tissues are actuady Lestroyed or die. leaving a round bole or ulcer. The first thought in your mind. then, is that just as an ulcer heals up anywhere else in the body, why shouldn't it heal up in the stomach? And so it would it‘ you didn't. have to eat. Not that tho food irritates and keeps it from healing, but because your stomach juice in tiigrstlng the. iood gets into the ulcer and keeps; it ruw and sore. The first. inch or! two oi‘ the small intestine may likewise have an ulcer due to the 6211118 Cililbf-l. Perhaps you have got the notion that you have an ulcer of the sto- mach. and are worrying about it. You have no distress whatever in the stouiach. und yet an hour or so aiier you cut you feel a sort of ThelPublio Forutr 1 Thle oelurnn le eoen fer the g dleoueelen by eerreieoolente of eueetlene o! Internet. The Charlottetown Qtleldlelldeee not neeeeeertly enderoe tlll opinion olllreeeed by lb eon reeeondente Civic improvement Sit',-—We have beetuaccttstomed to hear the Eastern Metropolis =pokeu of as one of the prettiest, if not THE prettiest town on, P. E. l. but it seems tho inhabitants do not take as much pride in their town '15 might be expected, as evidenced by t-ho exposed nuisance which for several months past has adornod the cast cud of the Town Hall. If the "City Fathers" are too unob- uervant or too refined to attend to this matter, perhaps for dccettcyk sake the Women's institute will sec it is removed. As l understand one of their aims is to beautify the town, this certainly is not a bcnuLv spot, any moro than the rubbish heaps are. which year in and your out, with ovcr itmrcusing quanti- tiejs, decorate ull the out-lying siffillih of lhc town. I um Sir, t-tc. OBSERVER Capt Read and Mr. Fisher Sir.-—As o general rule men sign- ing their names to leiters in the ‘s are careful to make only slit-h iiiliilillellld as the): can buck up by ictuul lucid; and opinions lo he of any voluo must. come froth men cnnnummwll, F0ll out: uv Wednesday, December 12th t SIIMMERSIDE I110 WEST ‘December 13th and 14th SILVER rllx George B. Herzig,llev.iv¢rk Will n in" DURS- nppeurs to be a political chuos, or- ALFRED FRASER ‘my m“ who]? of Qwmn’ hurtling or gnawing pain which who. it‘ not experts, should at least gradually disappears. We Want . _ 4 -2:.-.;_._,_,______‘ ‘.12 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK $0 _-_-- ngprngnflnq i- C. M. LAMPSON & CO. 64 Queen Street E. C. 4 London, England Public Auction Sales of Raw Furs {ingfii (‘tiuntics have to be hcurd mm. Tho good work done by the ilospltol has commended it to the icurty support of the people of harlottetown and wo fool ussurcd hat tho 11001110 in tho other parts if the province yet to be hoard from will he equally anxious to how their appreciation by sub- tzintiui contributions to tho cum- pulgti fund. - anmsi-t Pounce l dcr and [iormnncnt stability shall collie. ' ?——<0-¢-———~ - LORD DERBY AND FRANCE. Tho view in this country. l-iuys tho Ottawa Joumui. that tho llrii- lsh overnment is overwhelmingly hostile to France is hardly support- e11 by tho iuctn. Thus Lord lh-rby. formerly British Ambassador to lFrunce. and now Minister of Wur in the Baldwin Cabinet, is reported by The Times: The political situation in“ Great ilrltain looks, at this distance at least, like a boneless tangle. While one or two things are clearly evi- @>@©@©@@cic - =-'-‘=‘==~‘-**"" “m -~»—....¢... secmsyery remote. dent, the prospect of a definite aet- tiement or even of a stable govern- Bald - whfs protection policy has bccnde- l-finiteliy turned down for the DT8~ ~"He said that the French were [not entirely responsible for the trouble that now existed on the Continent, and he was not one oi those who condemned, as being so insane us some people said the in- vasion of the Ruhr. He thought it. nuts a mistake from the point oi Perhaps ii/coutitiuca until your next meal and you are attrprised to lind that the food relieves the pain l-ntirely. Then an hour or scatter the meal the some old pain comes buck. The saute time after each mcnl. tlmmetiiziuly you take tho tild-rushioitod rwmedy, sumo baking audu, in wutcr and you gut roliof in a icw dillllllitlvl. Now, if you haven't got this sort of pnili you haven't an ulcer. Flvcn Ii‘ you hitvr- this kind 0i n puiu, you may nut have uict-r. lint romotttlx-r, an ulct-r will chime this type of pain every tintc. Ulcers are not uncommon. but many of them are very small and heal up themselves. While surgery has been of help in severe cases, nevertheless the simple treatment of rest, soft foodie. and the old fashioned baking soda. is curing s great many of the discs. , So if you have trouble with your stomach, kecp a record of the food you eat, just where the puin is lo (rated. just how soon after ell-till! the pain comes on, and whether it comes on regularly after each meal} and so forth, whether or not food relieves the pain, and if baking soda liilVt‘ sumo personal experience or tuuwlutlge oi the stihject théy‘ un dcrtalkc f0 nettle ‘by their unsup- ported assertion. but. “there are nu-epliflna to every rule," and in this (‘llr-‘f! Mr. C. idulrnll Fisher in dbi- cxccption, as provon by his lot.- u-r of tho 5th. .-\ iishrrmzut might. know some- hiitg about it. if ho huppontltl to ‘W flailing hi-tvrorn ‘the (lance, but tn 111' fnlr to till. Mr. Fishcr is not t fishcnbut a buyr-r of lobstcm nitri- hcy urn in tho rims, and in consid- t‘l'l*i1 an cxpcrt in his own purliru Iur liuv m’ businosu, but I have nuv- er hoard that he has shown any ‘parked ability an n navigator, and, o he frank with you. while he has ‘roost-d with us several tlmm, and i have seen him on the bridge, i not-er till today knew he posed as ill authority on matters nautical, ind it was only on his lust trip over hat i had occasion to mention t0 him that i ‘thought he was a very poor sailor. for while he was up ‘m the (locking bridge with me link- ing her up at Borden, he allowed his cup to blow overboard, a very unsearnanllke thing to do. I ii’ he wits n navigator, instead oi 1n agent, and if he had uny responec. 1,000 Good Silver Fox Furs Furs in on These Dales to Bring‘ Your W. DHESTER ‘S. MoLURE the Above Places WE WILL llllY. Charlottetown ibllity in connection with tho safety, i f tti v ew o g8 Hi.’ of the ship, and the comfort of thol remratmns’ but also helps it. if there seems to be '~ . '1. A. MeDONALD 1.9-. McPilli I. A. v . g sent. Asqulthhnd Lipyd Gcorgo, - tho latter fresh from his triumph- ll the etepping atone to pro- qreee Ind prosperity. You. as _ perente, know tme and eend your children to school tnat tnly may not be handicapped in future yeare. But do you know that about seven out oi_ every ten school- children ln this country have defective eyer? Do you know that defective eyee are frequently the caure of poor school work, even though the child ll naturally bright? Have your child's eyee ex- amined now and know what their oondltlon le--do queer. G. F. Hutcheson Ootomet III : Professional (lords C. C. Archibald lllrudnnte el N. V. Port Graduate Dlrlleel lirlool end llorptlal rum.‘ meme te mv. has, mes. ‘ and ‘Throat Illlee Boyer Branding, Great flrerllf "701 , Telephone SRO-J. Dlllee llllllll—. le 11e- h. 1 to b ituiiirifiTfiFrTiilfi , B. A. ~ MIIIUTER, IOLIOfTOR, ETC. Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P. E. inland Palmer & Palmer H. J. PALMER, K c. vlerrleter, Etc. Money to Loon of um emu. lulldlng Charlottetown, P. E. 1. ‘ ‘Ilanlk B.A "rlerrlnrern, Anereryi. rm. a . a 1g» , llle; Infill-r ' fidflflletevm mrlanvurlu x-mavins- to»... or r ¢ ‘ BA -ll I illll. ‘I011 . I'll! " “or roovr 3311505. 9" nun mootrwmn co. ll! t - 90MB, ll l. vnnt tour in the Unified States and i Canada. have been signnily defeat- ed. ‘The demand of Labor for a cap -ltnl levy. that‘ is. a. special tax on tlpitul exceeding five tilousntid pounds ($25,000) appears to have mot with such support that this levy will constitute an important question in any administration that may be constituted. ' Who shall be the next Premier? Baldwin has not s sufficient follow- Lug to enable him to form a gov- ernment. Asuuith ls definitely out of the running. Itumsny Macdon- aid, head of Ute Labor party, the second largest group, will be leader of tho official opposition, which in the circumstances, he no doubt pre- iom to tho premiership. possible that a new coalition may bo formed but, between whom? there are insuperuble barriers ho- tween tho dfierent groups. 0n the question oi protection the Conserv- ative party stands ulone; on tho question of freo trade tho Liberals and tho Labor party have some common groin-d, but on the capitol levy they ara hopelessly divided. it in remotely possible that Bulfi- wln, lending the largest group. may be called upon to form n govern- mout nnd that he may do so. invite defeat, and again appeal to the ountry. in fact, almost anything ‘a possible and nothing probable. vVo must await the culling affor- llament. ,' - I A feature of the content is the growing strength of the Labor Party. run party has“ yo: in ‘be reckoned with and under the sable and able leadership of Ramsay Mac- lonald no doubt -muoh of the extremism which hatfhitherto been objeotionibie will be modified. n. vDQ early etageuof the movement .here unquestionably was iloiehe- vim end an un-iiolerome commun- irtn. Those elements‘; largely due to the influence oi Ramsay Mac- ‘li. u‘ donald, have been considerably. modified. Their demanti for n. levy, look forward vi-mi hope to the fruit; on capital exceeding smooch: nope“ and vintage of the coming - - ,1. 43th., t-l pguqn- ' there was one point ol‘ view which he held, and that was that for thc first time the Germans recognized this ‘regularity’, then ace your flim- iiy physician. By your records you will be able to help him in getting the correct diagnosis oi your case. that they were a beaten nation. (Cheers) For the fiimt time they} had got the will to pay. l "He could not remember that Mr.‘ David Lloyd George, in his many. conferences at seaside towns, ever got very far towards getting either ‘mutual concessions or mutual good will. But he did believe. and spoke because he knew, that Mr. Baldwin, in his interview in France- witih M. Poincare three months ago, crested by s reciprocal expression of friendship and open. honest lthought a state and an atmosphere which boded well for the future sci.- l-lement of these dlfllcultleh." it might ‘be well if some of our ‘near profiermano in Canada would puy a little more attention tn what is sold about. France -by loaders 111KB Lord Derby and i‘. little less u» whnt ls said about her by inveter- ate Franccphohes like H. W. Man- ninghatu and A. G. Gardiner. hr - ._ DECEMBER PLOWING. ' -—-l- Plowing in thlslcouniry in the month of December is not a com- m0“ ‘itflwllclt. yet up to the present, fanners who have not worked them- selveo out of o job in that lino, are still plowing with not evcn u sus- picion or a threat of frost to pro vout them._ ‘rust-q ire those who fear ism. ‘the exceedingly mild weather and "N! "Ollflfiquent revival in plant llrn rnay have an injurious effect upon next Isnmmerh vegetation. ii. a inct that the fruit and blossom buds intended for duty next spring an} showing unusual symptoms of reviving activity “and no doubt many of those will‘ meet rm. disappoint: ment lathe near: future, or the win-l ler frost cennot. long be delayed, yet Nature hoe a wonderful haibit. of correcting her own apparent er- rora, if the omen! condrtion may‘, ~e culled an. error, and we may 40>?» - Notes By the Way “Under, the heading, “A Political Windfall," the Halifax Chronicle discusseojhe late Liberal defeat in that city. The Chronicle also mentions the defeat as a "misfor- lune" and n "blunder." A windfall is in, common parlance something brou-ghi. down by the wind. Thus a fallen tree is spoken of as a wind- fuli. The Solid Sixteen may be con- sidered us fairly represented by that number of Liberal representa- tives planted in various parts of Nova Sootla. Two of them stood very conspicuously in Halifax. The wind blew pretty hard in ‘Halifax on Wednesday last and the Red- mond tree fail, and great was the crash thereof. The inll was the more remarkable from the fact that in addition to nil the local help that cottid ho rallied, twenty Liberal glunta tall and strong hnd been brought from distant parts to prop nnd brace it up. Just why thle occurrence ehouid be called a misfortune or a blunder The Chronicle does not lay. Of course, the other trees are now somewhat more exposed than they (Continued on Pore Rl Eeeeeo-‘eooeee Dally gnclections Readers ritzy} nous: AWAITB voun ‘ comma. r The llflllflo Bwulls your coming as __tho. YBBI‘ . Waits for the first faint token of the "spring, itf longs to acho with the rouge you sing, To hark your laughter ringlngioud and clear: Prom no dim, windows as the day draws near tit watches with expectancy to fling The old door wide n eight of you and bring ~ Toyou a welcome eweat end full of cheer. ‘ You whlrneredhnce none loved nor hnderltood, That few cared where You went or whence you came, ' Yet‘ you were wrong. your feet upon ‘the etnir . Seem a carers to each worn step of story to tell. and this puts me in passengers, while crm-zsing on anyl ‘if the dirty nights of the Fail. hei would no doubt have u different, nind ot‘ one of the best, or lshotilti any the best rebukes, l ever got. i was_ mate with the late Angus Brown, in the “Earl Grey," on the, flcorgctown-Pitatou route at t-he time; the ice was heavy and tho going bud, and there was u. lead if wuter making in close 1.0 Cupc Bear. . After taking several hear gs.‘ and deciding in my own mind ttat we might squeeze through, I said to him: "Ir l was in charge l would tiy and get through that lend in by Cape Bear." He looked at me fol‘ amoment or two, and replied: “Yes. ii'l was MATE l would try and Rel through there myself." That was all that was said. it was enough. Possibly if I was Mr. Fisher. and did not. know enough to realize tho danger of after-night navigation. in the late Fall, after the buoys are up, and the snow storms and vapor (which is worse than fog) is upon us, l might agree wiuh both he and "Traveller" and say: “There is no danger," for is it not human nature to see a thing done by an expert. without tiny apparent cfiort or worry, and then jump nt the con - cluslon that it is oasy as rolling oiT a. log? Hut. npurt from this, which is only 3 difference of opinion between Mr. Fisher an myself on a mutter of navigation, he has mnde some other very embarrassing assertions. wherein he ilnlly contradicts him- sell in the some sentence. ltrovinif. thnt the either (loco not know what he is writing about or is allowing his zeal for better service to got the heme,- (yf min reason. when he says: ‘ii undcratxintl the train nV- m-ngos gutting in one hour lzitc ouch evening nt Citn-rltittl-town. making the journey front Snckviilv to Charlottetown take from seven and u half to eight hours for thr n0 miles." _ l am not. going to question his understanding of tho train uvcrng- ing one hour lain, ultihoitgh l um will on good authority thut this is grontiy exaggerated. ‘but. hm simply going to prove his statement lo so contradictory that it is worthless. by merely stating n fact to start With,'i1hd then applying his own figures. -» Tho time tmhle aaye the leaves Sockvllle at 1.05 p.m. cannot leave before that, and also that it is due to arrive at Chariot- tetown st 6.20 p.m. Now. 1.05 from 6.20 leaves 5.16, as the running time between these two points. Mr. ~Fhhcr sue he bunderrtsnds she averages one hour iota each even- ing at Charlottetown." Well, that ls‘ not a complicated piece of arith- metic, since l have taken "Travel- ler's" advice and brushed up on it, and 1 find that 5.15 and 1.00 make nix hours and fifteen minutes, in- etoadof seven and a half or eight hours: and this, mind you. allow- tho fttllhoor he claims the train _ ate of en iverege, the truth of grhioh is questioned by others. What 500d door it do to misre- eot the length of time it taken he train to come from Sackviile i train it wood, ,- And uaourh you ere me not, still ' It all‘ em o, ‘n’; _ (Mk M rf M | a suggestion ‘for you. Why not give your wife, moth- er, or sister one of our lovely “Vianity” Dressers or Dressing Tables with adjustable mirrors? They cost from $25.00 to $85.00. ‘A good idea! How about might just as well ask for the moon. for so long us‘ the Government of Canada have to pny the bills, every tax-pnycr is entitled to some cou- sidorntion. .The Hon. A. B. Copil. M.P., or Fred McGee, M.P.P.. of Port Elgin, are lust as liable to be returning from Montreal or Boston as is Mr. Fisher. and much more liable to he in Snckvlllle over night, and [would like to ark, howdo you think they would take ii. to be told they would have to remain in Slckviile till the afternoon with a train leaving for Tormentine, just because a iow islanders were in such a hurry to net home that they could not atop long enough to let them off‘! The above suggestion h enough to set every mtrmber in New Bruns- wick aalnrt ouch a service, but let us get handler borne and we find the same "eelfleh ieelln in his Blllfliteetion to Trim lngxptesn rom Boston ta Charlottetown wini- out stop. except the Emerald Junc- tion Transfer‘ ond hove nil the mllle and periengera taken direct do Charlottetown. to bolster re- vrhen everyone in _ the actual time turned by looel trflii." Surely the edvooeteaof, this through expree! .. " g Furniture Headquarters stop, nnd in my humble opinlomhe lpussoivigi-rs for those places, for if 111101! urn thcy will ‘be a long time _oxt:e'lle-nt advice given t‘hc people t nub wt Carpets, Linens, Toys will just compare the twp lrlill-lllll service given. any, ui not Ye“ the “Earl Grey" woe 0n ll"? "m between Plctou ond oeorsflitwll- and the ltorry service during llll ordinary winter. in the oi u 9095mm“; from IBos, m} din P1010" “y - ‘panuond the M“ m. l ‘ ‘M? ‘P ‘W? Q W! ‘ _ _ rp-om . ‘A h l.& W" ally got into tows-loos! 1 lt-"i" but if they h‘ togot "l"; on e. "ulster il-ll°>'"°“ ' ‘ '; cry ill‘ W 1 trni!» waiting for it, if l judge ‘the temper of the Island people correctly. is thh-t method oi getting improv- cd net-vino in accordance with the of the Maritime Provinces to got together and work out some plan ‘that is going to heneilt the vinoee as a ‘whole? . Mr. Fisher feels that we ehoullh make a demand andthen gives al his reason for making the demmdfl a fallacy such as: “Because ae‘ tho- wlnter service is now, why Prince , Edward ‘island is going backward’! "We can nil remember when the ‘Earl Grey‘ was on vi-s George- town. etc." By the above statement he placer himself in tho Rip Van Winkle close. 'No, it ie worse than that, for he is norltotltieg in his sleep. but doliberatoiy misrepresenting the excellent winter service we have had for some years now, which. in many respects, la fer intend of~the eomrner service oi ten yen-r rgo so for as the people out of so-mmerelae and went of iilharlottelown go. _ :lt. wolid tale ~ lee to rhowith i- had‘ ~ r e‘ y 1 k"‘ p wpvgyogrv ~ he ril ' q veg five ltoure eiter e 1103mm‘ k..9::.:c:.':.fi...:_.,. ._..