a v éstcnuonrtaisraiim ‘i-Arsenault, consists of a ' with all ’ ';':r .. 3:1 IIv=‘r:_ AUGUST 24. 1933 ‘l WEEK-Ellll SPECIALS Robin Hood Flour, 98 lb. lbs. ............. 28c Shortening, 3 lbs. 23o Surprise Soap, l0 bars 43o P. b G. or Pearl, l0 bars 88o Old Dutch Cleanser, 3 for 29c ButterBcuns, Slbs. 25o cream of Tartar, per lb. .; 21c Milk, scans (largo) 39c Lime or Grape Juice, per . bottle (largo) 23o ’.l‘oilet Paper, 8 rolls 25c Baking Soda, bulk, 3 lbs. 21c McCreadys Pickles, 35 mi. 81c corn, 3 cans 25c Bananas, per doz. Raisins, 2 lbs. ALBERT KAYS East Corner Richmond and - Pownal Streets Phone 1383. ilo llot lleglect uYour Eyes An examination might be oi great benefit to you. E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRISTS South Side queen Square , TENDERS The Misses Robertson of Sum- mcrslde offer for sale by tender their valuable property on Poplar Avenue. This property which was formerly occupied by Mr. Justice large hens?‘ conveniences, a large orchard, and a lot containing one acre of land. Tenders will be received at the office of F. E. Dolron, Solicitor, Snmme ' , up to noon on August 31st, instant. The highest or any tender not necessare lly accepted. ' . IFIUIERNIB $ S ‘Red Cross fine Freight and Passengers Leave Leave Montreal Ch'Town 6.5. Nerlsss Aug. 26 Aug. 28 CARVELL BROS - LTD. Charlottetown Agents NOTICE S. S. “Harland" this week will be on East River service on Thursday, the 24th, and Victoria Friday, the 25th. Other services unchanged. hi» 0h’town s. s. 0o. Limited sn-———-———"""_ ltrofcssional Cards -' Stewart & Eowther . I. D. STEWART. K. O. wrrnm T N. W. L0 ,UARBISTERS. SOLICITORS. ITO ', 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN McLEOD 8. BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY i W. l. BENTLEY, I. 0. { Bawinter and Attorney-st-hw 1 MONEY TO LOAN Oflice: 180 Richmond treet MARK R. McGUlGAN. museums. scrim-on. erc. v MONEY r0 1.01m 5 Usmeron Block. Chsrlottetewndflll. A. MacDonald, K.0. BABBIBTI-‘B. BOLIOITOB. be. Riley Building Charlottetown. P. B. Island. , lloney to Loan and Collect-torn , given the very best attention- llc-l-o-lrnonth. H. F. MacPHEE, c. A. BABBISTEB, SOLICITOB ' NOTARY, (be. Iiley Building, cnurntutdwn ~i BELL ‘a. MATHIESON _ B. It. Bell D. L. Msthlcson, L-L-D- Barristers A Solicitors ' Money to Loan A HIM-Ht IIIVICI OP Tltl CANADIAN IIIDICAL ASSOCIATION AND LII’! n INIURANCI COMPANIII IN CANADA FATIGUE failure to secure adequate rest. a limited reserve beyond which it is injurious in go if trouble is to be avoided. ‘This margin of safety var-lee with each individual. It is well-known that what one person can accomplish with ease is apt to cause physical discomfort in sh- other. One individual is able to carry 0n with but little rest or Bleep for a period without obvious ill effect on either appearance or eff“ _,, while mother so depriv- ed shows the characteristic drawn and ‘tired look, and approaches the days’ work mentally dulled and physically fatigued. Apart from the lowering od the accepted standards of efficiency, it is also well-established that many injuries and accidents are directly attributable t0 fatigue, In foflngy‘ days, when industries were less carefully supervised and the in- dustrial worker lacked ths gum- snee of the plant physician, it was noteworthy that the majority of accidents occurred at s. time or day when fatigue was at a mini- mum. A brief rest from a monot- onous task and the removal of con- ditions which contributed to feti- gue resulted in s marked reduction in the number of accidents. Accidents due to fatigue are, however, not confined co thn work- shop or factory. The tired motoring not only jeopardizes his own life but abo the lives of other motor- ists and those cf the people on" the road. ' ‘ city for physicial activity is lemon- ed. This is Nature's reminder that, with age, we tire more readily-as a result of physical effort. The hill that once was climbed with ease is now approached with dif- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Exhibition Week Brings An Amazing ffPiREBREll fuvrsrncr For the month of July, the tots] number of pedigree certificates reg- istered by the Canadian National Records and approved by the Do. minim Minister 0f Agriculture, " Rev. ‘Wm. McCabe of Sturgeon. With increase in years, the caps- " “though than u‘ may com ‘was 4,414 l8 flflllnet 4,206 for the "mun: "Mo" to m°"1den°y',month of June, and 4,701 in the there is none more potent than the ?cmmp°ndln8 July o‘ last year‘ failure of individuals to live wrui- 111” ‘my "g“"“m°“” ‘“°'"d°d a“ mu,’ mundane‘ or namnn “m. ihorses; 2,241 cattle; 677 sheep; 544 o- » »-1~»~~u o» - w- » #2:. Th, human body ‘mud! only i. were Belgian draft; 69 Clydesdale; certain ‘mount d “bu”. n my! 3 French Canadian; 2, Hackney; “m,” m, you may ‘o. bu, m-zzr Percheron; 14 Standard-bred; further," Unlsgg y”; jg obtalnad 17 Wvwllshbread. The cattle com- and the products of fatigue m m, Pfiltd 128 Aberdeen Ansus: ass of, there n danger ahead. There is ‘Wlhim " 3mm Swiss: n1 IFrencb Canadian; 93 Guernsey; 241 Hereford; 384 Jersey; 40 nod [Posl and 551 Shorthom. o: the sheep 27 were Cheviot; 22 Cots. wold; 18 Dorset Horn; 60 Hamp- shire; 4i Leicester; 23 Lincoln; 109 Oxford Down: l Rambouillet; 74 Shropshire: 24o Southdown, and s7 Suffolk. Swine were represented by 45 Berkshire; 23 Chester White; 1 Pu?" Jersey; 2 Hampshire; 13 Poland China; 59 Tamworth; and I 400 Yorkshire. Dogs and foxes were of all breeds, while the 21 goat; included l3 Saanen; 1 Nubian and 7 TOEEBHburg. The total registrg- tions approved this year to dag, (Jilly) lS 37,749.—Rflgistrgt.jon Db vision, Dominion Live stock Branch. Ill MEMORIAM GEORGE C. MCKEEMAN On Wednesday, July 5th, there passed sway at his home in Gas- pereaux after an illness of more than a year, Geo. C. McKeeman. Deceased was stricken with a. par- alytic stroke on June 16 of lest year and despite all possible loving cars and medical attention, he failed to rally. During his illness, which was borne with christian fortitude and resignation he was frequently visited by his pastor, Mr. McKeeman was a. son of the late Jessie Charles and Daniel Mc- Keeman and was born at Murray Harbor North in 1873. During his early manhood he was employed in his father's lobster cunning es- ficulty and the ascent causes short- ness of breath. Over-fatigue should naturally lead to an investigation into its causes. » A periodic health examination will determine what is normal for age and what the beginning of dis- ease. Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical Association, 184 College Street, Toronto, will be answered person- ally by letter. "WHITE" AND "BLACK" ALKALI While the amount of alkali pre- sent is undoubtedly s factor grave- ly affecting the prpductiveness of asoil and the possibility of its pro- riwble reclamation the nature of r » alkali is a matter of still great- er importaxwc. says the Dominion Chemist. Two classes of alkali are generally recognized. ‘white" and “black". They are so called from the appearance of their respective incrustatfons and differ as regards their poisonous action on vegetable life and also as to their response to simple remedial measures. White alkali consists chiefly of the sulphate and chloride of sod- ium (Olaubers sslt and common salt), but may also contain notable quantities of chloride and sulphate of magnesium (bitter and Epsom suits). White alkali is, therefore, a general term and is used tc dcalfl- nate any or ell of the aforemen- tioned salhs. It is commonly s mix- ture of several or them. ’ Black alkali is characterized by the , of “ unsL ‘ (washing sods, sal soda), though ‘this compoun‘ is almost always associated with one or more of the chlorides and sulphates mentioned' in while alkali. Sodium carbon- ate is, as is well known, white, but from the feet that it sate upon and dissolves the decayed veget- able matter (humus) of the soil, the incrustation is tinged dark brown or black-hence the name. Water standlnl In male in will impregnated with the carbonate is invariably of e darker colour and much resembles a strong infusion of coffee. The nature and reclam- ation of alkali soils is dealt with in s publication which may be obtain- ed from the Dominion Department ‘of Agriculture (Publications Branch) free of charge. 'I‘hey'wcro training her in her duties as maid. On answering the phone the first day she brought no message but explsined-"Pws-rrft nobody, Joe's. man says. ‘Its s tablishment and upon his father's death assumed management of this enterprise until i917 when he movod with his family to Gaspar- eaux where he has been located’ until his death. He leaves to mourn their loss, his widow (nee Maria Jamieson), "four sons and four daughters: Daniel, of Boston, Mass; Lester, George and John at home; Mrs. Olive of Charlottetown, and Etta and Jessie at home; also the fol- lowing brothers: John, Fort Wil- liam, Ont; Samuel, North Ran- dolph, Mass; Donald, Piotou, N. S., and Ivan of Summerslde. A large number of mass cards, letters and telegrams of sympathy were re- celved from friends and relatives on the Island and abroad. His funeral took place on Friday morning-July 6th, to St, Paul's Church, Sturgeon, where a Mass of Requiem was sung by Rev. Father McCabe. A large concourse of people fol- lowed the remains to the church and cemetery. Following were the pail bearers: Plus Jamieson, John Hicken, Earle Llewellyn, James Steele, George White and James McNulty. May his soul rest in peace. South Australia RESEARCH AMONG ABORIGINES Every year sees fresh advances in anthropological work in South Australia, and gradually a compre- hensive body oi knowledge is being [accumulated relating to the Aus- tralian sborigino, who, because of ‘his low degree of cultural attain- ment, belong to one of the most interesting races of the world from the anthmwlbsioal 901M 0f view- For several years expeditions from the University of Adelaide and the South Australian Museum, aided by grants from a Rockefeller Ibun- daticn, have visited the interior, where the natives can be studied in their natural habitat, and spent several weeks in research work. Plans are being rfldde for this year’s lpsrty, which will beled by the pr:- ector of the Museum (Mr. Hale). it will include doctors, mental spec- iislsts, physiologists, ecologists and ethnolozists, and will make its headquarters in the Musgrsve Rsngts, several hundred miles west of Oodnsdsth. and close to the border oi Western Australia and long distance fram New Your and South Australia Several works use not. most-unreal W'- isttlrll.°tt‘l~liil.’t~ii.v.llf:_9.fi“fié .'.‘-!‘.*“'°P°m"'"“* Jerome Hughes, St. Mary's Road;- New Coat AW FUR! have furs and fabrics as low. cuff. and on j SALE 0r i $1.95 SILK HOSE ’ 98c. and Mr‘. N. B. ‘Tlndale, B.Sc., eth- nologlst at the Museum, left for the interior to establish a base camp- and to carry out prelminory work before t-he arrival of the main party, which will travel by rail as far as Oodnadatta, and thence by motor lorry 11m ACHIEVEMENTS or A YOUNG AUSTRALIAN rrtorrzsson Next year Soutrh Australia will lose one of the most. brilliant mem- bers of the profeasorlal staff at the Adelaide University, for Professor W. K. Hancock, who has occupied the chair in modern history for the last six years, has accepted an appointment at Birmingham Uni- versity. Still in his early thirties, holes-sot Hancock has already made his mark abroad and his crit- Iioal analysis of Australia and Aus- Itralians in his recently published Ibook, "Australia," is said to have] lbeen one of the m,» leading m his Birmingham appointment. A Rhodes scholar from Victoria. a fel- low of All Souls College. Oxford ‘and the youngest professor an the British Enrpire at the time of his appointment to the Adelaide Uni- versity, Professor Hancock seems destined for s career unusually rich in achievement. l-lis passing to oth- er spheres of work recalls other noteworthy figures who have been associated with South Australia either by birth or long residence. Among them are Sir William Bragg and his son, Professor Bragg, win- ners of the Nobel Prize for their work in crystals and X-rays. Sir Douglas Mawson; Sir Hubert Wilk- ins, Sir Horace Lamb, one of the Empire's most famous engineers, and Mr. Alan Rowe. celebrated acheeologist. WOOL GOING U!‘ the June wool sales in Adela dc was The general range r! rrlws at l i5 to 20 per cent, above those ruling in March, and competition, besides being keener, was more general. America being represented for the [first time for year's. The best price for greasy wool was l6 l-4d. lb. SOWING THE SEED With a. continuance of the alter- nating shower and sunshine which characterised March. conditions for , lseeding are excellent over a great‘ Ipart of the wheat belt, and farm- ‘ers are taking advantage oi’ the weather to put the drills in their ‘paddocks. So eager was one young 'farmer near Quorn, in the north- [6171 wheat areas, that. he worked 'from ado a. m. tau midnight on the ‘last two days of his seeding. On ithe first night he had two hurri- cane lanterns on the front of the tractor which drew his 20 hoe drill, but for the last night he was aid- “ed by the moonlight. THE WORKLESS MAN'S GOOD FORTUNE We Upheld QUALITY While We Held Down PRICE bought these new coats. Goat clotlraheve also risen. We are not prophets but here s our guess; it will be along, long day before you find good as these at prices so ("[9018 . 1121:1211 Qussafirml Fortune has smiled on an Adel- aide unemployeu men in the last jortnight. Digging a. hole to plant s . tree near the Mt. Crawford camp} unemployed men in the MitJ ‘for YLofty Ranges. he unearthed a nug- jget of ‘£60. A few days later, when pros-f pecting near the some spot he un- . Emrzdemerzaythlf; mining: ounces or over’ starting one month l Fascinating attractions of Trans-Atlantic travel. risen greatly since we The styles are sponsored by Paris: wide rever collars, that make you look chesty, the 2 way boa. collar that tucks round your neck, the new wide-st-the-top sleeve, and the new deep Tweed Coats $8.95 Flu-red Goats $10.75 $13-95 $10.95 $I@-§O $35 up to $75 rlntletcwn R. 0. P Breeding A The international fame of Can-I adlan Record of Performance and; Registered poultry can be justly: attributed to the establishment of; high-producing lines of healthy’ vigorous birds under the supen: vision of the Dominion and Pro-r vinclal Departments of Agriculture! Consequently, the 1933-34 rules and,‘ regulations for R. O. P. poultry‘ which have just, been issued by the Live Stock Commissioner as- sume an import. of more than or- dinary significance. Although no changes have been made from the previous year, the opportunity is once more given to the individual to learn more about. poultry breed- ing. to build up his own flock. and 9,0 benefit through the sale of breeding stock and hatching eggs. Attention is called to the fact that application for entry for R. O. P. certificates, which should be ad- dressed to the Poultry Division, Live Stock Branch, Dominion De- psrtrment of Agriculture. Ottawa, must be received one month in ad- vance of the date on which it is intended to commence the records, and that no entries will be accept- ed after November 30. R. O. P. certificates may be granted for all birds, not otherwise disqualified, est since December, 193i. It was PAGE Your FIVE Show oi The Black Brown C reen Rust Oxford Tweed a Grants! Fears! Persian Kolinskr’ Genet Squirre Wolf ffinbie F-rcirch Beaver, S A l. E Special Rafi. .31 PYJAMAS $1.50 iwia ' PZEPI REVEISTOIUI MAYOR llllUril-I f BIYllNEi) 'l() i-RPYND The firm old l‘ u ' flan-e. \\':.~t 01 Pr‘ Y’ ;‘ burned to '1: $12,481,000 in July, 1932, so that the increase ls 48 pcr cent. Exports to the United States reached their‘ lowest point in April when the total was $B,382.000. This 1mm’ S“ "L i” was followed by srassmooo in May, Amer‘, “If, ,1.’ and $14,841,000 in June, l 'v,(_,_ol,u,n pmlm. . The increase in the rxport 0f 01-‘ ectric energy was from $160000 tn‘ $226,000, but the gmins were Along almost, the whole lint- of Cnnndas exports. The largest vccrc 1n wood,’ __ V woodpulp, shinglcs planks and‘ BM», ,,,n,.$5,,._,;,,.v.- - -- boards, nickel, asbestos, rnw lridcs, ‘m; ,1 dpygsprtv u 1 grains, fish. furs, rnw wool, and Dnrcvrl uwhiivn i. acids. dnncv 11k.» u run" SHIN-fl the drawrvnvr rot-n: t . z hv the Hmi. film. ' Inlon l’ ‘ - _ _ _ Zzzn/l-qzdzwlpeeda/zdfedvzdcr Between SAINT JOHN and BOSWN Qn the magnificent new liner SA|NT JQHN Sailing Mondays, Wednesdays and Saturdays at 7:50 pm. (A STIY) from Reid's Pr. Wharf, Saint john. Train connections at Saint luhn (tom i."- quugg and 301d woyth which lay 200 eggs in 365 consec- , utive days, provided that at least. half the number of eggs laid dur- ing official inspections weigh two ‘while m“, 1,, Homing w justify g; after each bird's record commences, nu)“ om“, hope to 10110,, 1n the‘ and in no case later than January‘ .’ tetepe of the lucky finder. Sim- 1- vilor ‘rich pockets have been found ‘on “Wm; mun-m, 1,, m, m, rotary-runes PER. cram‘ lofty Ranges, but, zuntunslnslv. they have proved to be of small ex- .te'nt. to r" r_v and settle down. ‘ s .1 Senior: llumph! You'd bet- I that country. The lter remain single, and settle up. _ [vsluerfst $173439“) W“ thq Nib-l INCREASE IN EXPORTS T0 UNITED STATES Reported industrial recoveries in Smith Junior: Father. I'm coins u" “"1"” SW" “PM” t° h“? exports to influenced Canadian July export terior points in New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Nm .1 5mm. 1 Due Boston 10:30 next morning. Sailing from Boston. Fuurllis, Tum- 1 days, and Fridays at 5 pm. (D.S.T.); due Saint john 9:30 .1 m mxt dry. I o: if ONE“ WAY Tali/z 471m Dmrmr. S1 Infil. yo. (fuhlin-ni wit. “mm lnguiflfli. | Shipboard entertainment, Al Donshueis famous Bermudiana Orchestra, deck games, dancing. De- licious meals. hiodcrn staterooms and suites tic luxc. Elizabethan Tap Room. Automobiles, accompanied by passenger-s, for as little as $750. $12.00 round trip lEASTER Ab» n m nrr/r n 11s.." STEAMSHlP h‘ O LINES For intormsrion and reservations apply st Ticket Office, Reid's Pr. Wharf, Ssinrjohn, or any Canadian Natl Rys. coupon ticket om. c.