amuse-skim» n-t-..~.._...._..--_.-- n today. WE'RE new We are pientifnlly supplied with all kinds of high grade Coal. Place your order now, either for immed- htc or future delivery. Our well known (foals comprises American Anthracite Nut Size. Scotch Anthracite Egg and Stove Size. Welsh Anthracite Nut and Stove Size. Dominion Household Coke For Furnaces. Old Sydney Screened lnverness Screened Springhill Screened Albion Nut Stove and Round. You cannot go wrong on any of above Cools, priced lnw considering quality. D0n‘t be deceived by the fellow who says his cheap Coal is Jest as good. Qrocial prices on ear Phone 178. w. o. onus s. co. load lots. 0o llot Neglect Your Eyes An examination might be oi . great benefit to you. 1 E. W. TAYLOR 1 J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRISTS Charlottetown and Aiberten BLUE BUS LINE haves “me Peter's Road ........... 7.45 AM. M. ll. Road .. ...... 8.00 “ Gaspereaux 8.10 “ Sturgeon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8.20 " Lower Mtg. Poole's Store 8.30 ~ Up. Mtg. Clements Oilice 8.45 “ New Perth . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.05 " Vemon River . . . . . . 9.20 " Cherry Valley , _ 9.35 " Pownal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9.45 " Arrives in Charlottetown 10.15 “ Returning. leaves Revers Hotel at 1.00 p. m. Daily Except Sunday, Kt its present price of 36 cents per- pound paekago, MORSWS BLUENOSE TEA is the boat tea value offered in Prince Edward Island l L- ,. ‘mtkivfir-Lw ._ THEfCI-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN HEAT THEOIIJES ARE BLASTED BY YALE PROFESSOR HEAR TS AFIRE By MARY CHRISTIE INHPALMET l1 All OAPTII Virginia Dale, before the mirror in her bedroom at. the Towers, was busily engaged in peeling from her iacs a green, adhesive mask of “complexion clay!’ Virginia was strangely lwppy. she had. two strings to her bow. new, and one oi them extremely "worth-while", too. That she was in love with Peter Armstrong, she didn't for a moment doubt. And Bent. 'I‘raymore's infatuation for her showed no signs of dimin- OEDOAGO. V%T. 3-(0. P.)- Evidence that the has been , can. Psychological Association Dr. lllorein Heiser of Yale. This is contrary to the generally accepted theory oi skin sensation, which holds that a person has on touch spots. Each of these spots is capable of feeling only hot transmits the sensation of heat and anything touching spaces be- tween the bot spots would not cause the feeling of warmth. In size these spots average about the area. of the head of a pin. about l5 cold spots and eight nine hots for each square inch of skin. m: more than 50 years the be- lief has been that these spots were Specialized sense organs which car- ried the impulses to the brain. These special “receptors” have been diasrammed in text books .but they have never been actually found. Under the customary theory the feeling of unrmth is due to the sc- tual raising of the temperature of the hot spots on the skin but Dr. Heiser found insertion of hypo- dermic needles under the skin for half second caused no actual rise in skin temperature though 59:153- tion of warmth was felt. He said his experiments indicate the pos- sibility of some othg organization of nerve receptors than hot, cold, pain and touch spots. ._.___________ llinlrd"! Llnjmrnt ants grsaao. ‘FOR SALE l Set Oa-rt Wheels good. 1 medium weight team Truck Wagon. sensation of| heat is not unused by heat slcnel ted to the Ameri- I t wl t the skin hot spots, cold, pain and; its own; kind oli sensation. For example thel Thrre are on the back of the hand ‘ or i 1 l Meantime. Belt wla useful for the nirthamnoe of her plans. Now, as aho tmpeeled the 811w clay mat from 0d her face. and ‘ y dubbed on eold cream to ease the martini. b9!’ $471185" were pleasurable ones. _ Peter Amati-cog was I rill-II man. He would be very rid: one day. How she would lovc to spend his money! Ho was well-born, too. Jinn! was a little snob at heart. o vort- table sccial-cllmber- She W" glad that Peter's ‘connections’ were oi the best- And he was handsome, too- She'd .ishing. He'd been awfully sombre in the way he'd "but-ted in" be- tween Peterr and the Page vii-ll. hat memorable day in the hoopl- all It was all the more [in that he didn't ‘scrap for Prudence. He'd told Vir- lginia, repeatedly. endable ywas the last creature in the world lhe would desire to marry! "I can't stick these bread-and- lbuttcr misses! She's the world's lprlze-bore!" he gmciousiy obser- lved to Jinny. sure that his words 'would have a welcome here. "And if Armstrong weren't as dull as ditch-water himself, he wouldn't '!o0k at her!" Virginia preiended to heartily concur in the latter sentiment. Her ‘cue’ was to make Bert think she didn't care s. lot for Peter. bill; hid only engaged herself to him (temporarily) for the purpose extracting money from him. "My scheme is-having brought about a definite engagement, and‘ had it publicly announced, to, make mysélf thcroughly obnoxious’! to the man! You kncw what o. little = beast 1 can be, when 1 want to,l Bert?" Bert nodded rather dublously. Jmny was too cute, altogether, and; he couldn't cntlrely trust her, and= her schemcs. She had siemed mighty keen on the Armstrong fellow, despite what she said to the contrary. "And then--? What next?" "Oh, men aren't angels of for- bearance," she cried lightly. "Pe- ter'l1 break it off. Tlten—y<>u mark my wcrdsl-therell be merry hell to pay. and all!" Bert had given a grudglng laugh of admiration. How clever Jimmy was! What nerve! "Dcnlt be too sure he'll brcak it off. Even though you have a. devil in you sometimes, you're a beauty 1 used Hamilton Gang Plow 1-6 Horse Power Engine 1-3 Home Power Engine 1-32 Volt Farm Lighting Plant. at a. Bargain. Batteries 2 years old. MoGOWANS LTD. KILMUIR 1738. ' AUCTION siuf S T A M P E R RESIDENCE AND FURNITURE I am instructed by the Executcrs of the Estate of the late Eva E. Stamper to sell by public auction on Thursday, 12th October instant, the dwelling house and premises, No. 252 Grafton Street. and the furniture and household effects therein. The sale of the dwelling house, kelvinator and kitchen range will take place on the premises at twelve o'clock noon. The sole of the furniture and household effects will also take place m‘ the Premises on the same day at 1.30 o'clock in the afternoon. The dwelling house may be in. Passengers from Georgetown may spected on application to Mcleod connect with Bus at George Pooie’s Store, Lower Montague, 8.30 a. m. Bus will stop on signal at point. my Delivery parcels minimum of 25 rents. i533. Professional Cards I. D. STEWABT, K. O. N. W. LOWTHEB IIAIIISTEBS. SOLICITORS, ITO 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN UloLEOD Jr BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. t. BENTLEY, K. O. Sprinter and Attorney-at-Iiaw MONEY T0 LOAN Oiflee: 180 Richmond Street FOR WELL DRILLING Communicate With The Trask Well Co. , VAUGHAN n. caodm 1 Local Representative Morley M. Bell's Law Office Snmmeroida or Phone 297. i419. Prohibition Commission Chas. n. Black. Chairman. Charlottetown. (as. ll. lfoDonalI. West lt. Peter! John Ilmpaou, Hamilton. carried at a Send all information regnrfllns attractions of IIDUPIIMN M?! fects may be inspected on em premises between the hours of dz Bentley, Solicitors. The furniture and household ef- l0 am. and 12 noon on the day oi sale. The furniture comprises valu- able antiques, mahogany, walnut, silverware and engravings, J. A. MCDONALD, Auctioneer. iO-d-dly Eye Comfort for eye workers is a matter of vital importance. From early morn to late at night we "crowd" our eyes n. lentlessly, from one lob to another. How long will they stand it? Are you new enloying that ef- floieney and comi t which olaht to be yours? OoIIIIt U if you are not: You have snnols to gain, and nothing to loos. In any oaae the knowledge gained from an examination, makes it well worth while. G. F. IIIITOIIESOII OPTOMITRIST any man would be proud “of, Jimmy!" (“Dear old simpleton!" thought she, amused). Aloud she said, with a shrug 0f her slim shoulders:- Oh, much dropping wears away a stone. And Peter isn't as crazy over me as you think- A clever woman. be she as lovely as Venus, can soon make a man loo/the her, if she wants to- .*.~::d then poor old Pcter'll have to stump up the ‘consolation money‘. I should think fifteen thousand dollars would ‘be the right. amount oi balm rm my broken heart, ha! ha!" "Fifteen thousand dollars?!’ Bart's near-set. eyes stared at her in amazement. "That's a sweet sum!" “Oh, I happen to know that. Pe- ter's last invention has brought of water him heaps oi‘ coin,” rejoined Vir- ginia alrily. "I've got in touch with the firm in town that handles it. o’ . supenntend his wardrobe, and lmske him go to the best tailor in New York, and order half o. dozen iguits, in lieu of the shabby Bl!- lments he so odien chose to weer. [Nothing like having a well-tailored lhirmund to drag around to moial functions! | How she would brag about his ,brains, too! l "ltfy husband, the famous inven- l r . - . . ” l A town-house she'd have. Better start now and study up on interior decoration. l And country cottage, for week- lends. Galve one quite a. ‘catdret.’ to have a little week-end place! She'd travel, tco. Oh, rather! iOf course Peter couldn't always {come with her, but then it was ra- ‘ther fashionable for a young mar- ried women to roam about alone . . Not that a pretty woman ever was alone! Good gracious no! ’.l‘hat was an exploded fallacy. Jinny wgan to see herself in Switzerland at "the winter Bports. with o. retlnue of gay young men teaching her how to ‘luge’ and ‘ski’ and skate . . - forming queues of partners for her at the evening dances! She visualized herself on board ship, the centre of an admiring throng! Down at Palm Beach, queeniug it over all thevother wo- men, a gorgeous figure in a bath- ing suit! _ Or at the best hotel in Oalro. setting off on camel-back for a moonlight glimpse of the world's great mystery, the Sphinx! Or on the beach at Honolulu. with the crooning of the waters of the South Pacific all about her, and s. handsome youth at her feet, singing a. love-song to the intrigu- lngmus-ic of his ukelelel Gently, swcetly, she would check the flood of his spoken adoration. "No. , ,.i-tcannot be. ..I lave my hirsband! We have met too late!" " (To Be Continued) Are Your Corns Sore? Remove Them Tonight ! Quick, safe relief comes from using Putnam's Com Extractor. If afflicted with corns, oolluses or sore footlurnps. use “Putnam's"—!t's re- liable and sure to shrivel up the corns so they drop right of!“ No pain, no soreness, but quick relief from sore corns comes to all who use Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor, 35c at all dealers. AMERICANS SAFE IN CllBA HAVANA, Oct. 9.-- (A.P.) -Four American officials of the Bethlehem It's selling to beat the band." "And ycu think the Judge will award you that amount of money?" Bert looked incredulous. “Uh-hal" Bhe nodded her blonds head. “Trust me for making eyes at him, and getting on his soft side!" Bert was meditative for a. mo- ment. Then he sagely observed:- “I wouldn't bank on that. Aw- fully pretty women seem to be get- ting frightfully snubbed in the courts, these days. Vamp!ng's out of date. Just take a glance at the papors——” But Jinny wash-t listening. How could the sisbjeot really Ln/terest. her, when at heart she hadn't the slightest intention of letting Peter go? No, not ever for fifty thous- and dollars! She wanted him! Her BACKACHES _ . have Quick. Inn "All! with Fruit-c-tion ayatan. ' be- wbatlnflerdirombachr-blesldno to kidney derangr t. l would bald GONEll Manganese Mines in Dai Quirl, Or- iente Province, ior whose safety fears were held, fled unharmed to Santiago today. They said they were forced to escape in order to protect their lives after threats were made by the striking mine workers. They found Santiago quiet except for one incident where soldiers fir- edintcthealr tcdlsperaeagroup! of students attempting to storm a garage and steal automobiles. Meanwhile the Cuban Capital buzzed with politics as rapidly mov- ing conferences continued. A con- sensus oi opinion in circles which are usually well informed predicts a change in the Go. ‘ makeup within the current week. ‘This pre- dicted change would aes President Ramon Grau San Martin stepping aside in favor of a President more favored by all factions, possibly Oar- los Mendieta, an outstanding oppos- ition leader. Reliable observers described the political situation as in l. "ltbh of expectation.” ' IEDBIIDIWIN BUFFALO, N. Y., Qt. 0—(C.P.) -Oolumbus Red Binia of the Arn- erlcan Baseball Association won the Little World Series (Oflltht by h‘ ng Buffalo's Intsrnationsl own seem ecu n ten d it. ed thus‘?! id ‘t lnlgb gain. l was continually a at niglls: and a weak stomach mad perfectly wretched. Now thanks to our ‘Fruit-muses’. I an: enloyiag l c spin." Frulf-a- fives . all drug stores ernefeel e nine muse. Din-prick hmdarhea ' league Bisons for their fifth series win against three losses. The heavy Oolumbll Bats belted ,out 13 hits against the llisons. Democratic Govern- ment And Monetary Problems The Bank of Nova Scdtia Monthly Review says: The truth of the savior that problems om be seen in perspective, only when we look back on them in retrospect, was never more evident than at present. Ilor in an I89 "h"!!! h" witnessed the Ifsatest war in his- fpgy, flag flute“ poliflfifl NW1!!- ticn, the most npid expansion of capitalism, the most sweeping ex- tension or maohin Jr the molt confident burst of speculation, the gravest and most endurlns depres- sion, and the widest extension of the franchise, it is impossible to conceive what will be regarded as having been the keynote of our generation, by the historian who surveys it from the standpoint of the year 2,000 AD. Yet there is no doubt that two generations hence, at the death oi an old century. and the birth of a new, the Porkmans. the Buckles, the Bryces, the Iferrems of that age will lock, as from a lighthouse, back upon the troubled years in which wenow live. and will suc- ceed in tracing a comparatively simple pattern of events, where everything inevitably seemed so complex, so bewildering, to our- selves. Without endeavouring, like Mr. H. G. Wells and Dr. Van Loon, to forestall the historians of seventy years hence (and without supposing for a moment that, in stressing a single feature oi this ago, we have selected its dominant characteris- tic), we may, perhaps, neverthelea, assist in clarifying our own im pressions, if we notice one feature which appears to-day with mon- otonous insistence in the political problems oi all countries. In the past, except for brief periods (as during the silver agitation in the United States forty years ago), the subject of monetary policy has a1- ways been relegated to academic- ians. Our own is the first genera- tion in which democracy has been confronted with monetary prob- lems. In former dentin-lea, when oar- rency questions came to the fore, they were settled by governments not yet dependent upon popular votes. They were sometimes settled in the selfish interests oi a ruling class. Sometimes an enlightened ruler was fortunate in finding s. woke or an Isaac Newton, whose rigorous logic led him to conclus- ions which were destined to benefit mankind. In any case, the public had little or no voice in. deciding what shouldbe done; and in this manner, too, the currencies of the nineteenth century were selected, not in response to the popular will. but in accordance with authoritat- ive opinion, Our own age thus inherited the gold standard. Democracy did not create, or oven welcome it. In a period of peace, and of rapid oom- mercial development, it had almost come to be regarded, before 1914, 8s one of the facts of nature. Men took it for granted without reas- oning about its character; and without in the least realizing what were the conditions upon which its working depended, or to how large an extent the world was indebted to the smooth working oi the gold standard for the maintenance and increase of its commerce. This generation of ours, which inherited the gold standard so ccmplacently, was destined twice to witness its breakdown-once in 1914, in the week when war began, and again in 1931. The first break- down was instantaneous and invol- untary. The second was gradual, and at least to some extent a mat- ter oi choice. Governments clung for a While to the gold standard, and in many cases. perhaps all (owing to the circumstances oi the .45 - F f‘ » -\.. . .7». _ . ' W :wrf_ ilhillclu: Jimmie Jingle Says: You’il say its flavor’s very fine You need it every time you dine. -—Stewart's Bread lpitching {q- m on” 10-2 victory. i QUIUBER 10. 1933 EXCELLENCE , FOR ' 5 YEARS “Urtstinted use of the best materials.’ For 65 years this principle has been followed by Pomnans in the manu- facture o! knitted wear. Today in an era of unsettled prices and uncertain values, Penmans quality is higher than over- a guarantee not only of honest value but of genuine economy as welL a HOSIERY UNDERWEAR OUTERWEAR depression, and the heavy burden that it laid upon the debtor class). their peoples suffered for it. The strain oi maintaining the gold standard under conditions of in- creasing diflieulty. the l-iock that followed its abandonment in 1981, and the relief that (at least in cer- tain cases) ensued subsequently, at once led men in the mass to think about currency phenomena as they had never done before: and when the problem of reconstructing a monetary standard came to be faced (as it was, for example, for a. few months before the World Economic Conference, and during its all too brief existence) democracy found itself. for the first time, confronted with perplexing monetary prob- lems. It must face these problems nowzfor we may be sure that no fresh international arrangement can be made for the conduct of the world's commerce, that does not obtain the acceptance of the peo- ples concerned. Such an issue brings with it one of the tests, perhaps the supreme test cf our age, For democracy came into being, as a method of government, at o. time when eco- nomic issues were essentially sim- ple, and at a. time when the world's economic life was very much less closely knit than it is at present. Democracy, whether conducted by referendum, or by means of repre- sentative government, was admir- ably designed to secure a plain an- swer, Yes or No, to the simple questions then facing the State. (It is true that, even in its early days. them were sceptics who questioned the possibility cf making wise, choices, merely by the counting of’ heads. But the simpler the issues, the more slowly these issues arose, the greater was the likelihood that the plain man would understand them in broad outline). Our difficulties today (typified in the monetary problems at present calling for solution), largely eon- sist in this“! that the ordinary vot- er. with the modest and quit, gen- eral education which ls all he has been able to secure, is now con- fronted with questions that are os- sentially of a scientific character. In particular, questions of credit and currency have become so com- plicaw and obscure (as a result of the countless inter-relations. which like so many threads binds us all together, in all countries, as members of one economic civilisa- tion), that in most countries there are only a few score people, per- haps not even as many, who can be said to have lmderstcod them fully. What is democracy to do? The questions at issue cannot be shelv- ed; they must be faced, and the need for rscins them is uremi- Wrong decisions, based on miscon- ception of the facts, or a superfic- ial understanding of their bearing ordinary voter, whose efforts to gain |deal of vitality, bofm-e mo‘; a living may be thwarted and Europe (as a rule by violence) brought tpnothlngbywrong mone- demoora‘ government has been tary policies. _ Refuge is not to be found, thoro- fon. in a refusal to make decis- ions. The longer choice is post- poned, the longer will the conse- quences of an existing situation be felt. Decisions must be made, and the real question is, flow shell they be made? The course to-bo taken is not obviouszindoed, there are several alternatives. ‘ , abroefllod in all the great coin-atrial out of the Rhino and the Alps Sometimes for sample) parliamentary 311;,‘ emment has been abolished. ll other ‘countries a parliament still exists, but only to Nllltor the de- crees of a dictatorship. But who- ther, in a given instance, the forms of parliamentary government exist or not. it is true that parliamentary One choice for demooracyis that government, as we know it, no of abdication. It is, in foot. re- markable that within the past twenty years democracy has van- ished from the face of a large part of the earth, where democratic in- stitutions existed. and in many cases seemed to posses a good longer function in those countries. In the world that was to be "made safe for dern ~y" in 191s. demo- cratic government is less secure than it has been for many gener- ations. Ease Pain, Headache in Fsw Minutes no, M muncynns worm Musr se oom: mun Me A SPLITTING HEADACHE eon’? womof. ear some ‘ Asvlam TABLETS AND you! MEADAN! wlu. as aoue serene you know it... LOOK WHAT IV’! DONE, P88 ... ASPIRIN sure slcroao rmcr AWFUL unsound: m A JIFFY... "even FELT errreR Q I KNEW rr woow! ASPIRIN is m: quieuesr sore Reuearvoa mu " KNOWN". ~4 J’ For Quick Rollo! Soy ASPIRIN-When You Buy Now comes Utldlillflll] ils neu if a said, gel discovered. Thoso results are due to a ectop- an Aspirin no to dissolve, or dis- integrate, n the amazing space oi two seconds after touchipg moisture. And hence to start “taking hold" of pain a few minutes after taking‘; ere. iifl discov b liih Talllot """° Th ill trot-i 1th l an. in?» P13 ninth starts to disin to almost instant- ly you swallow t. Ami thus is ready to w: work almost insfanll on u buy, thou g, be on o be sure et ASPIRIN'S Tilt]! relief, be n the form of a ems is on every tablet of Aspirin. . E. R. BROW lfirc, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance guard ag not substitutes. you ours ho name Bayer old: relief from headaches, rheumo ism. neuri- ' rolgia . the/aster! sole relief, . WHY ASPIRIN WORKS so rasr Drop an AlPirin , nun In n sill d water. Note that BE ‘ FOREittmIehesbot- tom. it has started w disintegrate. What ltdollntliis glass it don In W11 stomach. limes its fastectlon. IIADIIIIGAIIABA Doe: Not Harm the Heart ' at Lowest Rafe. upon one another, necessarily bring in their train unfortunate canoe-l quences; and these are not restricted j to governments or to financial in- stitutions, but are visited upon the 'A'gent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond Sh; Charlottetown i (as with the Dorms-g,