l > '.-/\/,'§. , ____ /TR-§. r sens-nub‘; i~__,¢5.,_-¢,q| -¢ saws-u‘ \ ~ ...,_... - _,_ arms... one-st» ""r'"-" "i PAGE TWO amswasm7orma?w aeswrsm:sas maamsam SLAUGHTER SALE OF JEWELRY NOW ON l “U, sf . “m. I Gents Wrist Watches From $5.00 to $40.00 25% DISCOUNT- § efifismissm C. W. PATTERSON wssaiwmiwmasasasmmrsmasmaasuelarmiasiswmsag RADIO BATTERIES RECHARGED RIGHT iV. C. Smallwood Radio Service 122 North River Road 7l7-ll—24-tst-tf, Fox Ranch Equipment FOR SALE Thirty-fl"! (‘@1190 Pens, and Fox Iluusfl at rock bottom prices, Apply l0 c. L. MaeKAY, Charlottetown, P. E. Island. GTGZ-II-ZG-stt-fii. s Professional Cards .i____________ Stewart & Lowther J. n. STEWART. K. c. N. W. LOWTIIER BARRlsTERS. souclrons, ETC 84 Great George street MONEY TO LOAN McLEOD & BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Barrister and Altorney-at-Luw MONEY TO LOAN Office: I80 Richmond Street >____________,____________ Prohibition Commission Chas. ll. Black, Chairman, (fharinltcinivn. I35. B. McDonald, View St, Pfllcfg John Simpson, ilamilton. Send all information regarding infractions of PROIIIBITION .101‘ the above or to “Inspector J. Fripps, R, C, M, P" ~ >_.___~.___, ii. A. MacDonald, lt-.0. BARRISTEII. SOLICITOR. &¢. Riley Building Charlottetown, P. E. Island. Money to Loan and Collections given the very best attention. STZi-Z-G-lmonth. BELL 8. MATHIESON Y. R. Bell D. L. “ thleson. LLJ). Barristers & Solicitors Money to Loan (fharlnttetowrl and Montague ‘it. F MacPllEE, BJl. BARRISTEE. SOLICITOR NOTARY. data wit? l-il-llliiilllt- Charlottetown. 576-2-8-1 ‘nlonth. ____________________ MARK R. McGUIGAN B. A. BARRIYTER, SOLICITOR. ETC. iilfiNliY TO LOAN Cameron Block. Charlottetown, PL], J. W. MncNAUGHT ll. .»\., l.l.. B. Iarrister. Solicitor, ‘o, Money to Loan Kcnslngfon Periodic- Eyc Examinations Don't wear your glasses for tlvo or ten years, as some do. without re-examlnation. for in that time Arc vitally important, the: one's eyes are good or otherwise. serious changes whe- may take place, which if not discovered, may work per- manent lniury to the mos! precious sensc you possess Guard your eyes. 0. F. illiT0liE80li OPTOMETBIST nsinisuinosizsi A Romance of Today By Joanna Cannan "Well, for my part, I don't see much use in littlcunderstandlngs," said John Gilmour. “Geoffrey's eu- tirely dependent on me. From next nlduy he'll be drawing a junior clerk's wage and that's all there is to it. It'll be some years before he can think seriously about girls. Still, no doubt Pat'll wait for him. I dure- say they've got one of your little understandings already, for what it is worth." He was wrong, “Well, you're oil this afternoon, I suppose, Pat," Geoffrey was saying. “I wonder how you'll get on in the tournament?" “Without, setting up to be Old Moore, I can pretty well tell you that now, Geoff," said Patricia. “Peggy Reed is playing. I watched her at Wimbledon. It would be just my luck to draw her in the first round." "Oh, I've seen her. Good lord. yes. You're not in her class, my poor old thing, nor anywhere near it. But, if you want to put up a show, Ill give you a tip. Hit as hard as you can and get up to the net and go nil out for ihcm. She stays on the baselineund she'll slow your game up if you let her. Anyhow, your rotten old back-hand will let you down." Patricia nodded. "I'll write at the week-end and let you know ivhat happened." A "Well. don't bother unless you do anything startling," said Geoffrey. Patricia looked across the river. "It wouldn't be a. bother,’ she said. "I rather like writing letters to people whom I . . . like. Don't you like getting letters, Geoffrey?" "If there's anything in them and provided they don't want answer- ing‘. I hate the sort of letter that says, ‘I um well and I hope this finds you as it leaves me.’ If you beat Peggy Reed you can send me a wire, Pat. If not, don't. Listen. there's the car!’ The ripple of tyres on raked grav- el and then a gong booming within the house. told them that the car had come round to the front door. "Dash lt," said Patricio. "I hate your going, Geoff. Next time I sec you, you'll be quite different-you'll read City Notes like Mr. Gilmour, and say what disgusting mis- management!" ‘ “Nonsensefl said Gcofirey. “Come on, Pat. I cant’ keep Father waiting while you sit there talking rot." They walked up the lawn togeth- er, and under the branches of the cedar to the front door. The chauf- feur touched his cap, grinned, and said that Mr. Geoffrey had a fine morning. Geoffrey waited for his father beside the car. Evelyn Gilmour came out of the front rioor, called “Tinker, Tinker," and said that she would hate to have an accident. She looked vary charming in a dress of the petunia. shade she most affected. Her grey hair was waved smoothly; she wore long diamond cur-rings, and u sim- ple crcscerlt brooch, also of dia- monds. Since Geofirey was nine months old, she had been outside his confidence; her refinement froze ‘rude lwncsty and instinctively you mocked a raw thing and served it up to her upon a silver dish. But she was pleasant and unselfish in simple matters-she ivould give up the corner seat; so that your musc- les might be rested, and the ripest pencil to iitlvate your palate, but she would not give up a jot of your admiration to turn comforter-and tired out. ‘bronw. (In THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN she was exceedingly easy to live with while life took an easy way. She adored Geoffrey, knowing very little more of him than that he was handsome, good-tempered, well- mannered, athletic, intelligent, and that he had had measles, whooping cough and mumps. "Good-bye, Geoff, darling," said Mrs. Gilmour, as she heard her husband coming through the hall. "I'm going to send you up some nectarines for your dessert in the evenings, so be sure to let me know if they arrive unbruised. Saunders packs so badly." "Thanks awfully, mother. I'll let you know." y “And be sure your landlady gives you a good dinner in the evening, darling. Three courses, besides the dessert. Don't let her get slack, check it at once. _ Good-bye, my dear." Mr. Gilmour got into the ear and Geoilrey followed him. "Good-bye, Mother. Cheerio, Pat." "Cheerio, Gcof, old thing." The car slid away down the drive. Geoffrey was reminded of a tre- mendous day, was it only five years ago? when he and his father had set ofl‘ likc this together for his public school. I-lelnshott. had been quite a new possession then, but he had always hated leaving it, the big cool house with its thick, pale car- pets, and fresh chintzcs, and the faint, elusive smell of lavender about it all. On that day, however, he had been fortified by agreeable anticipations: he was never an in- tellectual boy, but at his prepara- tory school he had been considered an extremely promising athlete, he had known that; and, nu sooner had the car turned out of the drive into the high road, than visions of the bright playing fields of Bar. ehester had excluded all other vis- ions from his mind. To-day the Prospect. was very different. No playing fields lay before him, but the offices of Gilmour and Legato, Limited, visualised as he had seen them sometimes on aftérnons of November with u pea-soup fog at; the dingy windows, a pale electric light above each bent head o! thin- ning hair, and the post-prandial silence only broken by the click of a. distant typewriter, the rustle of u. turned page and an occasionaldry, "Ahemi" Plflythne was over, over the long hours of lengthening shad- ows, blue skies, green swards, the thwack of a bat on a ball: over those last thundering charges with the twilight coming down over the elm trees and a mist between the goal posts, and the smell of trod- den turf; over the friendships, and the rivalries, and tho victories, and the cheers. anri the defeats that didn't matter, and the life and Joy and movement of it all. Inglorious of aim, devoid of possibility and future stretched before him, con- apparently quite pleasureless, the future stretched before him, con. fusing, laborious, dull. He glanced at his father's heavy profile and SllPDOSBd drearily that one day he himself woul dgrow to be as mature, apart. inhuman, as strange to the thoughts and the dreams o1 the sons he had engendered, a parent (To be Continued.) _______.____. Girls when they went out to swim Once dressed like Mother Hub- bard, Now they have a different whim, They dress more like her cup- board. She: "Rather striking, isn't she? Her father's a. very wealthy pawn. broker." He: "RCBUY! She's certainly Bot redeeming featuresT-Jrhe Humor. ist. his: Aronsi ller llesrl ‘first 0st Alter Isis: Iouseisorh Mrs. Henry writesi-"Lsst foil I heart, and each housework, I seemed to get dizzy and 1°91 ,1] Seeing that hlilbunfls were good for those troubles I tent and after taking the felt a. whole lot bcttcr. no return of the dizzy the heart." Iorsaltostsldrus-snlgonmlstorn;ptspaaiypy1yp_l|§nno~l“_ Hench, Muriel Lake, A125,, had bad pains around my morning, after doing n little HM?! Md Nerve Pm; for a box, Pills for s. few days I Since then I have had spells and pains around On Sale at Bargain Prices 2o T0 331-3 % orr ALL LINES EXCEPT F0llllTAlll PEllS . IlIAM0ll0 and OTIIER lllllGS 25% 0FF. ' W. c. T. u. Notes woltwillgot "Who does God's God's pay, However long may seem the day, Howevery weary be the way. He does not pay as others pay. In gold, or land, or raiment KEY. In goods that valfsh and decay: But God's high wisdom knows a Way} And that is sure. let come what may, who does God's work will get God's PHY- TEMPERANCE IN SUNDAY SCHOOLS Jean S. Murray We have an added responebllliv to the children of wduy. in the‘ we, the electorate of Oniflrlv. 118W created the condition in which our young peJpiG are placed. The place for legal consumption of liquor is 1n the home. The evil influences WiliCh attend the traffic meet the child on the very threshold of its life. The liquor trade knows that this is good business-that it ensures for them their future customers. The electorate of Ontario must stand condemned in the 118M017 the Master's words: "It L; impossible but that offences will come, but woe un- to h m through whom they come. It were better for him that a mill- stohe were hanged‘ about his neck, amine cast into the sea, than that he should oflend one of these little ones." You and I _may not be guilty 0g tns offence, But now that it 1S here what are we doing about it? Q111- young people are exposed to the thieves, and many of them have been stripped of their raim- cnts, many of them have been wounded and left half dead ulwll the road of life. Shall we be Pile“. Levite or the Good Sanlarltan? Or. better sill, slmll we so teach them o; the dangers mat, surround their path as to prevent them from fall- ing among the thieves. D0 we fife" emughw feel that money. time and energy are well spent in their be‘ half? Many of our County Superin- tendents are deplorlrlfl U“ lndifler‘ ence oi teachers, superintendents and even minsters. 0h. mill’ We realize the guilt of indifference and p,‘ condemnation. "Depart from me- Inggmugh g5 ye did it 110$ t0 U59 of the least of these ye dd it not to me.” I shall close with a quota- 111g mid the truth in rear-rd w =1- cohol and its former ignorant find‘ ings, negotiations and antagonisms having given place to an almost universal condemnation of the U56 of alcohol. XI-On the authority of S-r Andrew Clark, physician to the late Queen Victoria, "Alcohol is a. pois- on that kills in larger dosa and hall’ kills in smaller doses, and BASS vusA bu! um nous 5P5.‘ i tlon borrowed from one of our Sup- erintendents and may we each m" it as our slogan for the 00m 11B year, "Give me the thrill 0! the task, the joy of, the battle and strife of being of use and 1'11 55k no greater reward for this life." In the Sunday Schools of Ontario, time are 2ao that have rePOPWd Temperance Secretaries, and ihf-‘Ptl are 604 addresses on temperance "'1' ported, while 186 have a ten minute talk monthly. rm: RESPONSIBILITIES FOR. runner-manor: An essay written by s vubllc school boy of thirteen, twenty four yen-g 9,30 on “The Responsibilities for Intemperance." 1—Who and what is responsible for lntemperunce? II-Ou: responsibility for any- thing is not limited by our ability- Rather it is limited by whet- We might have known or been. lII—We make this statement be- cause our ignorance has been lam!- ly respons ble for intemperanee. _ rip-Is was but yesterday that if a man were hot he drflllk in 86$ cool and if cool he drank whet hot. V--Alcohol was considered a uni- versal eure-all for all diseases. Vii-The Bible says: "If the light that is in thee b: darkness, how great is that darkness," VII: Heretoforc we have looked to medical science and it either re- mained slant. or openly advocated the use of alcohol by prescription, precept and example. VIII: However, all this is now changed. We read in "The Hook“ that is always up to date, "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall mike you free." IX-Head "White Rib-Eon Tid- ings." can - --- on eight). . omen NBW WESTINGHOUSE , MODELS limp in price from $99.00 up including su s. Nine beautiful cabins! styles lo rhoou from. y ‘nil Elwjflfi I’ _ i sy iiiuiiiiiii t, u‘ e u i§.MMfl5l . c» ‘uilfjliuuiii ;| iliiil- M” E: , .Mg],,li,.i -'--I1 ‘uiiiliillliiii g‘ I: u "widifllfiilli M . i, i- . dzutfa... lilo-w X-Medlcal scenes is now eom-ishould be listed with other p0 I18; _ . ' _ - p 1].}! ' R d‘ ep du es for (ha ::::::iit.'¢:h:=::l Eda: zfigfoidledcrdldllszhl-ddidh.‘dTRE/t:tiilthoysiflifsfiiffltfmoaie adznfzetctw: ei-sotirrzctravdsofojmeriy lost. armies unis ITAYIOII sum: Owing to what we consider unfair competition We have decided to place our entire stock of oinuouo nines, wnrcliiis, 0LO0KS, JEWELRY, snviinwnnl: no. JEWELLER xlI~In. fact Russia has taken th-I step ln ordering ms removal of the Royal Eagles from whiskey mm”. to be replaced by the skull 511d erossboncs. XIII—Summing all this HP. m" ignorance is responsible. The teach" lng of medical science in the past has been responsible. ‘ But the hour has arrived when the teachings of both morality and DECEMBER 3, 1932 PRICES . CUT I REGARDLESS OF COST l Ladies’ Wrist Watches From sa.oo u ssooo 25% olscounr a 130 GREAT GEORGE STREET sconce are united to spread abroad lays down a 8N8! 8811?"! “ti! 31m the white light Of knowledge duow- 5W1“ film” '5 “Wm” " .. ing the true nature and efleets of we’ “he” he says‘ H “m” be m‘ alcohol. ‘rims n. iespowbrlitv w: t "m" mm" “ ‘i’ “°°""°‘ "°' the ll uo rtrafl-lc is o. personal mut- Wldm! ‘t’ “h” i‘ m“ “t” a“ w}, “t; should no longer not only not, according to that he bath not.’ not us: it as a beverage but we L" "5 apply this prlnclph w m‘ n‘ should absolutely ‘refuse m use lt in spmib“ ‘ti’ If: ‘“:f“‘t‘,"°e’r:"°;'em l the medical or culinary arts of th F“ h? a c ’ 1 home_ ~ local option contest n B—. ii’ wt Please follow a little reasoning carefully. Paul, speaking of giving, Continued on page 13 3 s Si. Westinghouse WWI/Iconic FOUR NEW TYPES OF TUBES Z FIVE NEW CIRCUIT ADVANCEMENTS l NEW RESONANCEJUNED CABINETS RADIO wuss: no-ras annals nv YIIIOI RESULT Ne. 2—EQUALIZED TONE INTENSITY I48! VIII“ Full-Harmonic Radio reproduces entire musical register with equal intensity (diagram n left) retaining the high and low Intel formerly ion, upra- semed by shaded portion on chars on right. n" unis RESULT No. 4—-SUPPRESSION OP INTERFERENCE w»: sans nu. tunes hails sunow IIAIIG l ‘ sud: and extraneous noise (diagram on left) which wen reproduced by ordinary automatic volume control at the same volume as the station program (diagram RESULT No. 6—CORREC'I' SHADING OP TONE ‘i j i Ill! TIZILI Ill} THUR-I Full-Harmonic lone control permits correct ions shading (diagram on iafl) without sacrifice u! intermediate Iona values, as n: forum type tons control (diagram on right). Westinghouse s Full-Harmomc l2 Tubs Superheterodyns Modal X22 The ultimate in radio lnjuymlflll embody- ing Ills new Full-Harmonie principles; employing lbs nsw- a radiorruua and in- corporating such rad cal advances-nuts as Twin-Amplification, Dual-rungs Speaker, Dual-automatic Volume Control with static Tons Equslinrs, suppressor, Automatic Dusl-Iunad-rason- Nsw-ryos Tons Control. _ snea Cabinets, ale. The handsome, m- leggsd cabinet, will: full-ion doors, is in keeping wirh the superiority at tho rsesiver lnaif nd bears rha distinctive stamp of Canada's loading lumiturs cralls- man. Priis, complain with lubss aZ/nait rwda/ RESULT No. l-srwo WHOLE OCTAVES ADDED TO MUSICAL REPRODUCTION PULL-NARMONIC RADIO minim noun naval IlllbtllV PKUHO IIOIII NIINIII PIANO Atifl RESULT No. L-DOUBLE, UNDISTORTED VOLUME la warn uuslsvssns vou as e In" uusisroavro vow-l - loot‘ d‘ l md $:.'l-..*'.."n::"...‘.:'.'.";s.."?...1:.‘:3..wits-i. @:..:i:":: Skills-- iuli orchestration at original volume without distortion. RESULT No. S--ELIMINATION OP FADING | I y dlsllld station lfiiifilflii“i.iii"'<'ST.I...'i'Z.i..'L'°5ZL‘Z.. "K353i. ‘id-iii’ lemlrlr swell-II many of tbs best programs (Jillflll W film)‘ RESULT N . 7—NEW REALISM FROM pogo-names seamen In Iba new dual-null N" umlw, 7m‘ did‘ all W daghouso attendant distortion. i1’, Q," “M”, mo... n. addition. dull-loll‘ resonance chambers z-iu: ;:':.."i:'...':i; ::.i::.':.i::'..'£i:..:i.i:'.'.' obtainable - . o without anhsnelnq they purity ggaonin‘ to more than and fidelity of Ions. NOTE: comparisons nude which incorporated all the Idocnud {secures known so tho industry at that time! Westinghouse Full-Harmonie rarsivsrs circuit improvements . . . of w ‘ ‘ tubes . . . bolero. Whslhn you are thlniriul o! buyiss . axpsnenea the shrill and radio vslusi SHARPEN YOUR SENSE OF RADIO VALUES By Inspecting tha Westinghouse Full-Harmonic ‘l i..':'t':.':.".'..'::'.:":'..a"l::'"::.': as: . an and hear Full-Harmonie Radio st your naarsn _ _ ' ‘ of listening to sounds in the studio . . . leans tbs NB embody no lass than live new basic s new radio or not, by all means Wsstinshouss dollar's our favorite broadcast, lust s: is standards o! radio psslonnanea Iutsglslhenk l0"'l"uh hpsshsvnlms ll 39-99 Dealers T ll E ll A ll I Telephone 107 Bruce Stewart 0 SIIOP 169 Grafton St. 8i 00., Ltd. Distributors entire!) wit.