roo nlnlv onus- dread wicteri) weather for the tor- ttlrc it brings from sore laces, chapped hands. frostbite and cold-sow! \\'uh theiaiceliands andarms protected by Zanl- link. frost and cold winds simply cannot redden. rougnen and cbalo your |kin.\\’ash with '/.am Buk MedtcinalSoap and apply the Zam-Uuk balm alter drying There is nothing like this Zam-Bul treatm-nt for keeping the slain smooth strong and flexible. Couipivd excluuve ly of rich herbal essences. Zam-liul soothes and purifies the tissues and pre _ vents all roughness and soreness. \Vhere*tlte skin has already becom- chapped, hlistered and sore. Zam-liult because of its great antiseptic and fltllihj power is doubly valuable it takes awat the smarting irritation almost immed lately. kills dangerous disease germs ant‘ quickly heals with new healthy Shili. 'Zam-Bulr is thr- best remedy obtainablt for chapped. cracked hands. cold-sores frostbite. chilhlains. winter eczema lrnns, scaids, and all wounds ant ‘ itjuries. 60c. box, all chemists. You Can't Cut o a BOG SPAVIN or ' TIIOROUGIIPIN butyou can clean them off promptly with and yuu work the horse at the same time. D008 llfli bllsta or remove the hair. $2.50 per bottin, delivered. Will tell you more ll you write. 300K I R Free. W-F. Young, Inc, I41 Lyman-u Bldgflontroal PIPELESS FURNACES Make Your Coal Last You really can save coalwhen you have a Fawcett Pipeless Furnace, yet you'll have an abundan’ - supply of heat. Ask the Fawceti man nearest you He’ll solve out y l irst. year 0f peace to four bliliont heating problem.- ("Flt-era's aFawceff furnace, stone, healer or range for every need. SAMUEL KENNEDY Chanottetown, P. E. l. §O4+Or§-O-§§-O FA RMERS We are buying good, made PRESSED HAY “lam only number One quai- ilty. FEED OATS We want a few thousand bushels of good sound dry Black and White Oat; Don't bring inferior grades. We puy top prices fur best stcckfl. Feed the poorer grade of liay and Oats at home. .\iark- et the best and obtain best prices. It will pay you to do so. FLOUR & FEEDS We have a. lull supply on hand at lowest possible prices. CARTER &‘ 00., LTD. WHOLESALE‘ l RETAl-L i well 1 i i 4 3 o 2 0 0 i Q l 4 i O o i 3 i 2 e eoooooooo-ooo-po» eoo-eeooceeeeooeoeo» 000-0 Q-QO-Q-O-OQO-OO-OOQO-OOQOQOOQ-O‘ Education Ia the stopping atone to pro- grela and prosperity. You, an parents, know this and aend your children to ochooi that they may not be handicapped in future yearn. but do you know that about ooven out of every ten ochooh. children in this country-haw defective eyes? Do you know that defective aye! are frequently the eaulo of poor school work, oven though the child la naturally‘ bright? Have your child's eyes ex- umlnod- now and know whit their condition la-do ‘not Hi iliiliiiiliililiiil summit t‘. Chen-lee h. llelmre. Preside-l "time; Mull) uuumh-o 1M1) w...» no 4.30 we yrnr utnnllodl ll udvanre h Canal: all [lulled Ollie-n J. IL Ilene-ft. Editor and Publisher ll h. (fen-Hr. Alumna ltulr Rdllnr jf-aI \IIO|l\I'III) Ill ultumv FRIDAY, OCI‘. 5, 1923 marlottetown: uariume otationere. Grafton 8t. -arter A 00., Queen Street. .. Brown, Stamp vendor. .aiivvay Boultutail. Jephen Dulty, Richmond Street. Meme, uratton Street. BUOYANT FINANCE Liberal newspapers boast that iy $20.000,00il. The revenue is inch needed but it only hat Canada has purchased 'ut-h more goods, luxuries at that. Jan she did last year. it means lat because of the extravagance H1931]! 3O .bicb necessitated an increase ii ixation the Goveument ie lakinl "its much more out of the pocket if the people. And our taxes are beat-y. Wt re paying taxes now at the rate o .'t00.000,000 a. year, more then z niilion dollars day. more that $0,000 an hour! This is some tax. What are wi icing with it? Are we reducing uir national debt? Are we helping l) develop the natural resource. ii‘ our country? Are we encoui ging our manufactures? Are w: our expenditures‘ We are steadily in utting down iot a bit of it. reasing our expenditures. in Aug 1st this year we spent. a mliliol ioliars more than we did in Augus’ ast year. We are not reducing our rational debt, we are not reducing lLlf taxes, but increasing them. expenditure England cut her ‘rom ten billion dollars during tht ast year: she paid 0ft most of he! ndebtedness. funded her debt to be United States, reduced her L-ivil service to within ten per cent if her pre-war scale, .educed her national debt and she is paying $18 oer head for national defence as bmpared with $3 per head in Can- ida. . Australia balanced her budget ast year. New Zealand bad a sub ttantlai surplus last year and she cdticed her taxation from nineteen iounds per bead to eleven pounds. The United States is paying off ‘ter national debt. France, ruined ind trampled underfoot by war, hsr :ities destroyed and her landslaid waste. is able this year to balance ier budget after paying enormous sums for the restoration of her .owns and cities. For another year we are faced with a of taxes that tbouid never have been enforced ind which are paralyzing our in- instries, diverting capital from in- vestment. driving our people else- where, steadily increasing ‘the cost 1f living. All this in a country the natural resources of which are the greatest in the world in the greatest wheat growing country in the world, in a -ountry supplied from end to and with waterpower sufficient to drive ill the machinery in the continent. with millions of tons of coal avail- able for the digging, a country supplied with all that is necesa ry to make it one of the greatest coun- tries in the world! What'e the matter? The Govern- ment at. Ottawa, a government in- capable of sizing up the eituation, s government with no definite poi- icy, a government that declares one thing today and another tomor- row, thatpreaches one policy here and’ another there, a government that cannot function or will not. a govednmeut, in short, that boa thrown the monkey wrench into our industrial machinery and dam- aged it. Canada cannot long be held back; the people are awaken- retention t the tact that present ate;- ~~ W. .....___a.-r*r... m... be corresponding period last yearilwh’ Evident- THE GUARDtAN may be obtained from the lollowilll 19"“! l" P. T. fdurphy, Prince Street Grocery J. P. Duny, uueen atreet. w, C. Wright, Kent street West. R. ‘lnomaa white, 12o Elm Avenue. Wm. Daiziol bpring Park hood. John Kennedy, Longwortn Avenue. SEEKING COVER y There is a hurrying to and fTO lie revenue from Customs for tlieln the Libe.al Federal vineYilYd- 18:47. six months exceeded that toi-‘That there is a worm bft-‘Winfl is Some of those who have toiled during the heat of the day and had, been promised some- thing are becoming insistent. They declare that Conservatives still hold positions which faithful Lib rals would gladly accept, and if hey do not get possession now it 'ili soon be too late. And so the ewiidered masters of the vine- 'ard, in order to quell the incipi- nt rioting, have appointed axemen vitb power to scour the vine- 'ard and knock off the heads of ny officials who may be suspected if received their ap- oiutments otherwise than Liberal mac- axemen having the Two brougb ine. are on iuty in Prince County and-one in fbarlottotown. .lt. is understood hat their jurisdiction extends only o Federal Liberal officials suspec- ed of Conservative activitiesmot to lrovinciai Liberal officials still re- naining in office under the Con- tervative Government. The undertaking will no doubt IE an onerous one but the demand s imperative as. it is realized that t is now or never for Liberal as- iirants. The swinging of the axe viii be watched with interest. mom-i LPPRECIATED COMMENDATION The complimentary reference by lir. Charles A. Mullen, Cousuitmg- Paving Engineer and. Director of the Paving Department 0t the Mil- zcn, Hersey Company, to the street work in Charlottetown, as report- vd in yesterdays Guardian, is very iatisfactory and ls appreciated by our citizens. We have it on very good authority, that of visitors as well as of experts, that our city streets are the equal of any in Canada and superior to most of chem. They are an asset as well as an ornament to the city and the Viayors and Councillors who were instrumental in bringing them to so satisfactory a condition deserve the gratitude not only of the pre- sent but of future generations 1f citizens. The public ownership of the street making plant was the sub- ject of Mr. Mulielfs remarks and in his comments on the wisdom of such ownership our citizens will ai- so agree with him. Had the city not owned the plant and the work been done by contractors the mon- ey expended on the work would have gone elsewhere than to the citizens of Charlottetown and the quality of the work would very pro- bably have been less satisfactory. The City's ownership of ‘this plant, unfortunately, recalls the fact that we own fewer -pubiic utili- ties than we ought to own. There are several of them which We once owned, but which are now making good money for others. Hut this is "epiit milk." A few examples such as tho-t eet by the City. Coun- cil fn procuring its own etreet malt- ing plant would convince us that Public ownership of utilities pays. EDITORIAL NOTES The question is now being seri- ously asked whether it would have been better to have let "Bell fin- ielt hie wor " or let the storm do it. The storm did it in much lees time. will‘ earl or tflgl] 9° m. t Notes By The Way It was unfortutlato that, owing to the unprecedented weather of thin year and the lateneaa of the harvest. a great many farmers with their wives. daughters and sons, were prevented from coming to the Pro- vincial Exhibition. An opportunity to "make good" in this regard—to some extent at least-should be af- forded. it has been suggested that, when the harvest is ended. when all shall have been “safely ‘Zathcrrtl in," special arrangements should bc made. and special attractions sup- plied for the people of the country to come into the town and qnjoy a tiny of change, rest, recreation and fun, such as Exhibition Day 115113]. ly affords. This suggestion is with- out doubt, n good one. it ought to be adopted and carried out, either in connection with grand bargain days, band music, and other attrac- ‘ions, or in some other way. Mutual intercourse between the people of the country and the peg. aged. , From every point of view. it is desirable that townsmen and countrymen should live together in unity. To this end they must COXIXPl together, and come to know the ad-i vantages and disadvantages of each other’: surroundings and occupa-l tions. l-or are employed day after day in; business and affairs, with the grat-i lng noises of motor cars in his earsi and dusty streets and shabby; buildings before his eyes, there is a pleasure in the leafy woods, and, a music on the lonely shore, there] 1T6 hrightcr spirits and better‘ health in the pure air of the coun- try, and the grand landscapes — and in mingling with its people andl becoming acquainted with the con- ditions in which they work and live. In like manner the-farmers and their wives, their daughters,‘ anti sons, enjoy the change which} a visit to the city affords. For; those who rise with the sun to; milk the cows and bring the horses, from the pasture, who engage inl ihc work of the household while; the built of the cream separator, pervades the house, who follow thei plough, or barrow, or harvestenl day after day. there is a rare de-i light in the things seen about the: city, a thrill on the race course and; a charm in the music of the band.‘ it is good to go to the country. iti is good to come to the town; it is good for the dwellers in town and country to come together and get together, now for a day in the country and again for a day in the town. Besides the benefits of social fore- gatherltlgn there are mutual Inter- ests in buelr-eat to be promoted by mutual intercourse. The teach- ing of Adam Smith has been proven to be unreliable in n-spect to some of the conditions which make for the wealth of every nation. But there is evidently truth in his re- mark that "the counttv supplies the town with the means of aub- stance and the materials of manu- facture; the town repays by send- ing back a part of the manufactur- ed produce to the inhabitants of the country. The town, in which there neither is nor can be any re- production of substances may very properly be said to gain its whole wealth and subsistence from the country. We must not, however, upon this account imagine that the gain of the town is the loss of the country. The gains of both are material and reciprocal, and the division of labor is in this. as in all other cases, advantageous to the different persons employed in the various occupations into which it is sub-divided. The inhabitants of the country purchase of the town a greater quantity of manufactur- ed goods, with the produce of a much smaller quantity of their qwn labor than they must have employ- ed had they attempted to prepare themselves. The town affords a market for the surplus produce of the country, or what is over and above the maintenance of the cul- tivators, and it these that t_be in- habitnnts of the country exchange it for something else which is in demand among them. . . . Among all the absurd speculations that have been propagated concerning the balance of trade, it has never been y: tended that either the country loses by its commerce with the town or the town by that with the country which maintains it." In short, the people of the coun- try and the people of the town should be as familiar friends and partners in business. They should promote their respective pleasures and interests by mingling together. Now that there an autos and rail- ways in addition to horses and car- riages, the means of doing this are nbhndant. Special ' -' go this and ahonld be provided by m. babitents of the country and in. bnbitante of the towns. in view pie of the town should be encour-I Thee-e are of such frequent oc- cureni-e. found in almost every itouselloid at one time or another that a point or two regarding them night be in order. A boil is uimpiy an inflamma- tion of the skin which occurs about the oil gland of a hair root. , You know what it looks likeJust ,a hard conical red lump wliii-h , nay pass away in three or four ‘days. or may turn yellow J! tue top, break down, and pour out pus about seven or eight days after .he lump first appears. And the cause? in former years it was thought that a boil was due to impure blood in the system which was try- ,ing to escape from the body in this gnanner. it is now felt that as so lrnany boils occur where there is friction or rubbing. as at the back of the neck, that an irritation of the hair is the first causc, and then infection follows from the hands. Thus a crop of boils ensue about the neck. When UOIlS occur in crops‘ in it that that pflfllllilfli‘ body ha»- in a low fe poor resistance 0r is state of health. The first thing to remember is zhat the skin in the vicinity of the boil should be kept clean, with a 200d soap and hot water. The boil ‘tnelf should be bathed.with hot horaclc solution-m teaspoonfui to the pint of water-and then cover- ed with gauze to prevent any fric- tion. No collar should be worn if the boil is on the neck. There has been‘ much controv; ersy over the dancing or the mak- ing of two‘ cuts to form a cross in 'he boil. Many think that the boil should be allowed to open itself and discharge its contents. Many "feel that an lncininti too early causes a delay in the forma- tion of the boll. It is the custom now to allow the boll to go on to pus fonmntion anti then if the opening appears tno small and there is much pain, the natural opening is enlarged by an incision. An incision even before pits formation often relieves the ten- sion and pain. In every case the intestine is cleansed througlily by caiomei and epsom salts. Lap-_- SAYS MARRIAGE WAS FOR MONEY BROCKTON, Oct. 4.—Dr=claring that her husband, Meyer Resnick. had married her solely for the pur- pose of obtaining a sizable sum of money because of his father's will. Mrs. Hattie Rachel Resnick. a girl in her teens. appeared lwfore, Judge Chamberlain in the Probatei Court here today and asked for a legal separation. The Resnicks live in Plymouth. and when David Resnick, father of the llbelee, died there. about two years ugo, it was discovernl that a clause in his will gave his son, Meyer, several thousand dollars provided he should marry a girl of Jewish faith. "Only a few days after our mar- riage my husband plainly showed he had no affection for me," liirs. Resnick testified. "On the night of our wedding he invited a girl and then he left me in the room at the hotel while he took her home." "One night when we were out visiting, the men put their wives overshoes on for them. I asked Meyer to put mine on, and his an- swer was. "What's the mutter, are you a cripple?" Attorney Morton Collingwood counsel, for Mrs. Rcsnick. charact- erized the marriage as "a cold- blooded proposition" and asked for 82000 alimony. The Resnicks wcrc first married on June 15, 1922, by a justice of the peace in lloston, and a second marriage was per-for. mcrl in accordance with Jewish ri- tea in Plymouth, last January, Judge Chamberlain. after ordering the husband defaulted, took thi- case under advisement. coo-oo-oo-oo-ooo-oae-o-ovao-ao‘. i Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers vvvwO runs wonto Take this toy, my little one; Clasp it tight, as I have done! Datibie of the playful gods—— Tawdry, tanrnished, what's odds? the Tarnlshed? Tawdry? Nay; it is beautiful and true; Oh. kin-quite a splendid toy For an eager little boy! for you, Deviled with zems or beads of glues, ‘Pearls or tinsel. gold or brass; What's the odds-ah, what's the odds To a chiid—or to the gods ~ 0"" ‘I busted it to my breast; 0""! m? "P! to it i pressed; Bflllbie. out of Chaos hurled—— LOVE-ll’. tawdry. tear-stained world! ——Phllli) Hale. "I9 People mBY foregathcr, see each other. and have a good time togeth. er. Perhaps members of the ch". iottetown Board of Trade, the RB. of the fact that the attractions of - I t ll ercbanwat I | ,., ,, . Mien-ova»... .,, ' V " friend to go with us to the theatre, _ tltizens whose mindslilifferncnt parts of the body it isl - iii] n5 iiiii MUST Illllilllifliiil,‘ .//’ i lily Donliultm Nun's Scrvlt-vi l -‘/. Hi W xi LONDON, Oct. 4.~ .\lo.~=t pcnplv. we iuiagitie, when birds inn-rtR-ri- in any \\'n_v, with their t-onvvuil-n- cc, swoop LllPill il\\il_\' 41>‘ llIll'(\ll.<lll' cred trlfles. Tlicri- m nutnllli- 0x ceptions, llO\\'L'\'\'i‘. A puir of grunt i, ‘tits rteccntLv built in u lvih-i- lmv ‘l (not _nn uncommon ctr-nil illlll lliUlA owner promptly put n .~to1i lwi" letters llcitii: plncctl tin-ruin lintiHi) the young family was rt-nr- -i. "i'i---l ', Animal's Frivud l'l‘l'tll'll.\' ‘t mow-i, striking cxutuplr- ul‘ l'()il'-l4lt‘l'.lll'lll. Away tlowlt in (‘ormvnli \\'-.- urn told, stands n newly lulilt lllil“" ' ' awaiting complntitui, tits (l-Viuq‘ uleamvhilo. patictitly living rooms. "Not finished yct‘. .\.<l~- n fricml in stirprisi- at tin- ,l-‘. “\\'cll, you sun," “'11s llli‘ 2lil.\\\"'l' you may sllllle at tlu- re-u -u. but we (runnot put tlu- stair .- ill , bc-t-zitlsc n Dill!‘ of wugtuils llil"i' . built a nos! just tin-re. and it. i» lull of young birds. \\'i> couldn't lune them tiisttlrllcii and so 1h»- Pi must stop work till tlu- !it.i-= t nncs have flown, llilll we will wait. llfllilil in lilZBiiHii HEATS 10 (or 15 ¢ 25 f 35¢ _ New Dominion BUNDS We urge those desiring t'o invest in the pewvloan either by cash subscription or exchange of Victory Bonds maturing to make application immediateiy- by wire or tele- phone at cur expense. and forward written ‘application form by first mail to Hyndman and Company, Limited 61 Queen Street, Charlottetown .. 11%’? L. ,, j.ie@@ Rt‘[\l‘t‘SCiil.'il.i\'t'S of Acmelins Jarvis and (o, Limited Telephone 67 or 333 Crown and Anchor PURE PREPARED PAINT Ready for use ,on interior or ex- terlor surfaces. Has a covering cap- acity of 400 sq. feet two coats pcr nation. forming when dry a tough resilient, protective fllm with a high gloss and good wearing quai- Itien. Innwu syucnfl" l ii The Rogers Hardware Co., Limited Charlottetown, P. E, I. [ii Hlllil (By Dominion Ncwvs Scrviccl IJ)\'DO.\', Oct. -l.---.-\ sum oi‘ fr-lltli) has llPPll rtu-oivcll by iii-- London Hospital to form a fzznil l») lu- ltuown HS ilic Jnnu-s i‘ - 'l‘rusi for rest-arches into i cl‘ tlw livnrt nn-l nrt- riI-s, spociai regard to iii-nit following rheumatism. Tho fund will pay ffll‘ zln- .»,.,» vlccs of fl tllnrtluglily fflllllWl llllil Wnpnhlc invcstignior ns Iii-nil oi‘ the ilvpnrtnit-tit, nnii \\'i._i u-tfruv tho oxpenslvc instrunn-nw. ' Mr. E. \\'. Morris isvi-ri-nirv nu" house governor oi‘ thi- ],,,,,-,,;,,,|, says that, ill connection with thus;- rescarches, cicctricnl win-s huvv been fixed in sticli n nmuncr thui the heart-bouts of tin» patients wit‘ be recorded on n ilrum in tho research department in another part of the building. This will render it nnecessury to disturb the patients. i , qg-gyo-o-oopqqoooqcvvvcovo-vooeyo. --—-—<0>__.__ HOW QUAKE HIT BROADWAY NEW YORK, Oct. L-The rec. ant earthquake in Jnpnn cost ir- vinR Berlin and Sam Harris $15.- 000 apiece. Berlin and llnrris arc joint owners of the new Music Box Revue, just opened on Broad- way. One of the big scenes counted as a costume-anrl-sccnic wailop was laid in Japan. it carried a Jap- anese love-strain lyric by norm. When news of tho earthquake went around the world, the rev“.- wnn rehearsing in New York. llnr. llniqnickiv substituted n plaintive W for-the‘ any one. But when it I 4.1118 lili- Producers HENRY roan suvs Quin. well known itirer, has ii (his village. ‘rip. HURLED uI-oidcnt nt ll o'c- 'li_illll Hebert, with the hor d . mnnd Berubefe an ‘Ham or Ed “"19"! occurred ortqthe‘ highway , v LOSS COMES NOT FROM "THE . FIRE ITSELF, BUT FROM THE LACK OF INSURANCE VOur fire insurance policies allow you to go ahead with your plllll, even if your businen or your plgflfi bum. dgvm Complete financial protection is accorded you. Don't put it off till the fire happerla. insure now, Hyndman 8t Co., Ltd. The Oldeat insurance Agency in P. E. I. SECURITY SERV|QE fi¢§+§-OO-OO-O-QOboo-bcesaaananaa-nn~au-eaiti ly out. but he escn ell-other ifllli" VILLA iN QUEBEC tee. The home wntzpso badil’ iflJli" -- ed u mm to m. shot today. ‘ti’ S.-\i.\'T PAULIN. Mnskinongg 00., Wlllon was smashed to Oct. 3.--H€i'll"y Ford, the occupants of the automobile otcllt automobile manutec- 9d llllhllfl- V purchased a villa hero. i‘ "WM several days last week in He is on n bunting --——<-O-}— -—-n OVER FENCE WHEN Hi1‘ BY, OAR ililbiUbfi-DSTON, Oct. 3. in an lock on Sunday owned by Dr. Fred ldmundeton. collided W the car 0 ll‘ of RA ‘l h: V‘ ot tit. Jacques. The Vi - ,. pieces. T" 7i Ieemaha-s-varrrae- -‘~ ‘ ‘“"-'""‘>-. -