a i i LIT - “films-ewe... my did Ellen refuse lo m"? 53°17’; on deaf. and when he - a 193d her l0 m hg wsBW ‘go llindr mun- use f" h“ “m”? _,.. rn rns e ' RAIN harvest is as- 3,15 311s season, lor which a me quantity oi BINDER TWINE" ' b ulred. We have W9- $602? in stock 2 OAR- LOADS of the celebrated 11mph LEAF" brand manu- lectured by the BRANTFORD coauaos 00.. LTD- M!" 1|. cannon. every ha" I11"- mteed 55o iect to the pound “flange and small siseballs. ‘w. sell at rscroav uric“ which is much lower this year- Briy from BARTER 8r B0 . Limited " Professional Bards fsrsrvnnr s LOWTHER 1 J. u. srawsm. K. c. \ N. W. LOWTYIER BABRISTERS. SOLICITORS, ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN. ,.____________.__..__.._- MARK R. McGUIGAN | B. . I BAltltlSTl-lii, SOLICYIOR, ETO. nrolvav T0 LOAN Cameron Block. Charlottetown, PJLI. BELL & MATHIESON Ill-Bell, Barrister & Solleltors Money to Loan Charlottetown and Montague McLEOD & BENTLEY ' J. A. BENTLEY _ W. E. BENTLEY, K. O- . Barrister and Attorney-at-Law , Olfice: 180 “lehmond Street MONEY TO LOAN Charlottetown. P. Ii. I. MQDONALD & lVicPHEE B. A. as. McDONALIJ. a. r. Moll!!! Barristers. Attorneys, Ete. any 111m, she thought a subscription to the 01'- ms told him she had a D. L. Muthieson, LL. B. Princess Beatrice ' Scws Own Treusscau __i_- GIVES U? PLEASURE! AND BYOB-TB Al IOONOMIICM BBlDI-‘IO-Bl. ‘iri. '\[.. DIP!‘ SIAMBTIBSS _ IONTAINEBLEAU, France, Aug. flop-Princess Beatriee, whose fath- erlosthlslchaskingofdpain last. April, has broken the tradition of royalty by working on her own trousseau ior her "economy" ma:- Antoine oi Bourbon-Orleans. As further indication o! Bour- bon retrenchment, the eldest daughter‘ of exiled King Alfonso will live in modest student quarters in Bwitwrland, cooking and keep- ing house like many other brides until Don Alvaro completes his en- gineering studies. flhe trousseau on which she is at royal fingers because her exper- work, occasionally pricking her ience has been vigorous outdoor sports rather than sewing, includ- es costumes and underthings o! many colors; It was far from com- plete. The princess chose peach- ’ Chinese silk for her most intimate apparel, but there are garments of golden yellow, Nile green, blue-green and ilery orange, which only a striking brunette of her type could wear. usually strenuous tennis program, The princess has abandoned her her long walks and motor parties, to give most o! her time to sewing. It is said that she quickly became so proilcit that she may be an expert dreasmaker before Decem- ber. trusted to a small firm which she chose because one ol- her former ladles-in-waiting, who was forced to 11nd employment after the flight oi the royal family from Spain, is employed there as a seamstress. It will‘ be very simple, in white silk material much like the “angel skin" silks oi last year. Princess Maria Christina, her young sister who is some day ex- pecting to marry Prince Alvards brother, hes aided in embroidering table and bed linen, but Beatrice has done most of the work. The wedding ceremony will be simple, contrasted with the elab- orate proceedings which would have been necessary had Alfonso re- mained on the throne at Madrid. Princess Beatrice told the corres- pondent thst she was happy to avoid elaborate Jay at the wed- love match. The princess will take a "dot" of about $88,000 to her young husband. When Alfonso was over thrown he naturally lost a great part of his income, but he is still far irons pocr- The princess, however, is an waxtremely practical person and has erqressed- the hope that wedding presents will be "something use- iul." It was believed she would ap- preciate the plan of agroup o! Spanish women, once members of the aristocracy in Madrid, but now living in a convent, to present her with 100,000 pesetas (about $10,000) in gold coins rather than buy some exp ‘ v but useless gift. Prince Alvaro has gone back to Switzerland, where he has more than a year of school to complete. Then he will look for a job. "I will work," he said, before he left. "And we will be very happy, too. I will go wherever the best op- portunity exists, maybe to South z nuounv T0 LOAN ,, , , - Riley Building m'm“- - 1 413|.g.gq.1||m.hu, The couple will live next year in two rooms and a kitchenette in McLURE eMacKlNNon Montreaux, Switzerland. smvss FOXES AND was Rflbresenting Robson's BAY 00., of wNDON. ENGT lice 112 Kent St. _.GEORGE J. ARMSTRONG > ARCHITECT ' 14s .........s:.=::..::.~"~ i i Prohibition Commission 1’ Chairman Ill. GEORGE s. BROWN . "flute, r. s. r. lllld all information [g fractions of PROIITBITION s91- Llllove or to m. J. Trainer, " "- Provlnlr pu lmmmiln» or to a. kiln‘: l. I’ sumnumilc. or to W. l. "W: Inspector for Queens, town. or .l. w. emu, s... . t“ ‘ h‘ K918i. Montq-ng, c! M- I-"mvscu o Co. LIMITED, l“ '4 Queen Street fl“- 5- 9- t. lngland P") c Auociion Sales m lAw was i ' : withoulrlgllagll l? Infant: r r " Izpflanm Wk ‘Sara- Represent“ p, "I rllehalfibglnc‘ ""' hi. a. s. \ Phone 806 m mrmonlnm PATRICK ERNEST QUINN Quinn, Auburn, which occurred very unexpectedly on August 10th, following an operation for ‘llonsilit- is, was a painful shook to a wide circle of Month. The deceased was the only son oi Mr. and rm. James Quinn, Auburn. Re was 21 year of ego- just on tho verge of manhood, and s life of much promise. He was c. young man as excellent character. and exemplary habits. He wss ve y intelligent. too, and possessed TAKE TWO-Ml‘... PATRICK .... musical and artistic ability of e. hish order. When the Auburn Dramatic Girls was organised last winter, he was one oi its leading eos with rmusual cleverness, ‘brisinfllty. and dramatic mu. s lover of games. he took In active where he was wont to go, Dart in athletics-in bssdrall and In fancy, still, we see hlsn p other manly sports. He was also‘ As he walked to and fro." His life was short: but his mind liam Kelly, Ildward Shes, Ambrose consnunity; and his passing will, and soul were uasullied by the Kelly, andnrthur Mccsrron. Num- therefore, b mourned by his as- stains oi earth. ‘Ilhis thousnt erom 1M0 Oards and other spiri- should allay the pitterness a grief. tual offerings, ‘I well as meshed Mush sympathy is extended to It is a greet nsolstlon-sorne- o1 sympathy were sent by kind prominent in the social life oi the socistss and companies. riageinDecember-toDonAlvas-o‘ frhe wedding dress will be en- ‘ ding which she described as s. true . The death oi Mk‘. Patrit finest _ handling . . Otto, Radio's foremost complete shielding‘ . . full your DeForest " Under $100 Encore ho Muwsymp "y- oars saw —99:50 iliarand oft trodden paths oi boy- rnenlbors, interpreting the psrts as- hood and youth that his absence Wednesday morning was well at- lllntd to him in the several per- will be most keenly felt: the pleasant summer was sung by the Rev. Father Crok- “Across fields his father and mother, and to his thing that his maple may well nuns; mg ‘m. "selves with sp- nmsrouuaenprssussrssymtuswcnmtnuuluoonpnmem " radio. DcForest Crosley chullcngfi 0011193145911 ° Consider what DeForest Croslcy offers: Exclusive Hetro- tonal Response tone . . cabinéts designed by the famous Karl creator . . super-heterodyne Multi-Mu and Pentode tubes . . extra speaker terminals . . dynamic speaker . . single dial control . .~ all radio models useable on either 25 or 60 cycle A.C. See Crosley dealer; only the QUALITY and VALUE of these new models. The Utmost in‘ Modern Radio FOR EVERY ‘PRICE NEED ‘$200 Up Prelude -8239.50 Musicale - 299.50 Belearuo -- 435.00 . . super-neutrodyne . . autodync . - . . Complete Range Tone Control 111E CEIARLUFPETOWN GUARDIAN ECAUSE there is a DeFor-cst Crosley model to suit the exact radio needs of everyone . . because DeForest Crosley offers the greatest VALUE . . more people are buying DeForest Crosley than any other radio. And no wonder, for DeForest Croslcy has all the features of other radios and many more, plus tone quality . . Hetrotonal Response . . that has made DeForest Croeley famous. Study the features of the five models illustrated . . note the extraordinary values . . they are typical of the entire Symphonic Series. Then you will realize that only DeForest Crqsley can give you such overwhelming VALUE. You do not need to accept less. What is VALUE in Radio? Tone quality . . cabinet beauty . . ability get distant stations, then separate them with knife-edge precrsron . . smoothness of these are the standards upon which to judge a n them all. cabinet then willyou $100 - $200 Rlmpnd -4129.50 Rondo y — 139.50 Carol — 179.50 Operas; - 199.50 You do notnwaiia wept low. flzan DsFonss-r Cnostev namafla u/fiafwu/z radio $13950 appreciate ifiiljllj; Militia. e BiubeSu meurm- wt’ M!’ Modfl‘ dyne wig: Hetro- ,|?\~e E-mheSuper-betcro- rcnsl Response. dynewilh unequall- filnifh performance ‘i’ ,_. .cd performance at beautiful cab- ;$ _ i, 1 its price. Hetrotonal lnet, builr of fine l. Y ‘fi Response and other walrus and maple. 13', ‘ i _ bi set features. . ‘fir’ ' of walnut _ . and quilted maple. ads-six tubes, in- cludingPemnde and Mnlti-rnu — Com- 6413b: Super-Heferod giving and Mummu ml,“ piers Range Tone g-mhe performance use of __3_mbe dn“k_ Control —- Hetro- Pggmdg m]! 3nd Aumdyne. Ex- ‘Pedal Dc (“mm moi Rezpznge- dusive DeForest m: __1,,,,,,_;;,,1 abhn met o c once i - g - “m! matched walnut. ‘slrllaalnclyards Multi-mu tubes, d mpomd L l-leuocoosi 0011191" Ran e Tone Control, extra s feature. Quilted maple will; Pm- els, brilliant wnh crossfire. con- tribute ro its mmpellmg beauty. iiisraui snid- Autodyss terminals-every newest The RHAPSODY The . UTTLE SYMPHONY witb kodync Super - Hctcrodyne power -— Pcntode PAGE ELEVEN l I $129" D: Fonrsr INDU A PRODUCT OF CONSOLIDATED STRIES CROSLEY Completely Built of Cana DEFOREST CROSLEY LTD, 92 Union Street, St. John, N. B: It ls in the home, and in the fam- in the months and years to com!- The funeral to Fort Augustus on tended. A High Mass of Rcllillm en. The funeral service by the choir was impressively rendered- ‘rhe pail bearers were Messrs. Jos- eph Simpson, Damien Lynn, Wil- clian Materials by Canadian Labour ISLAND RADIO CO., Great George Charlottetown, P. E. l. i.‘ rm Gnlardian joins m sympathy with the eorrowins norm-s. the fasnily membe a and» » other rela- uvgg; sand w; hope that God will tives; and We hope that 00d Wm iently their sore bereavement 0nd loss. May his soul rest in WI"- _______.i_._. AIRWAYS some. Am. so (U. PJ-Genrl —Northern New England's uncer- tain weather showed its hand quickly to the new Boston-Halifax line of Pan American Airways. ‘lwodaysaiisrthestsrtofthe service the northbound plane was forced down on the Wells river by poor visibility. TOKIO, Aug. 2i. (U-PJ-In view oi the increasing popularity 01 glider-g among air-minded sports- men ln this country, the Japan Glider Association in Tokia, has de- cided to give a series of lectures on ‘the manipulation of the light, mot- ;orless planes. The speakers will in- ‘elude one hnicisn, who will lec- iture in weather conditions for pil- ots, a speaker on the methods of taking 01!, and one whose subicct will be the handling of a .1155. lliAllnn Carney, University‘ or Mil- mld air. BOSTON, Aug. 21. _ (UPJ-New England has 105 landing fields and eight seaplane bases, a survey by the Boston Chamber of Commerce showed. Massachusetts, with 42, has the most landing fields. Connecticut has l8, Maine 13, Rhoda Island and New Hampshire each ll, and Ver- ‘mont l0. I WORKS WAY AROUND WORLD VZWNON, Tex. Aug 20 (U- 91-’ souri student, has returned homl after working his way mtirel! around the world as n nCW-“fTY-‘l reporter. The trip required a year and oarney and his JWmPifi-Q" Sutton Christian. were held as siowaways for a time in French Stmalllilnd. Christian remained in Shanghai to work on the China Press. Teacher: "Johnny. Whal- ll “w” WT. ' Johnny: "Please, m'm velocity 4 whet you let go of a wasp with." krse:n--rté-...-5=-rr_m as 4.x. .-. = a ‘.24 sesrQr-é ‘ ? f" “‘u“'su ‘if m"'|_J1n-ks."'u| :r_' ‘ .1 '4