MAxnis QF K MERCHANT r 0r weakness? Which way are you growing—in strength Charlottetown Guardian llorninl Guardian, Founded 1 ilNllliN ill-ANS‘ ill liiiilliN 1 lBNiiNENl (Canadian Press) LONDON. Oct. 20. —'L0ndun awoke today to find emblazoned on the front pages of its newspapers texts of momentous decisions rc- achled at Locarno which vliirtually make further wars In Europe im- possible. Engagements Ibetween Franco and Poland, and Czecho Slovakia provide that if (‘rcmnany should go vback on hlEir peaceful promises and have recourse in arms ziguinst either oi’ these three coltntrie-s t-hey sha-ll l-rlumelliateiy lgo to [Nile aid of one another. ’l‘he treaty of mutual guarantwc between Germany, France and Bol- gluim astiiilllates that Germany ulust never invade the soil of lfrunce or Blalglum or atllempg, lo create wair In tho zienrilitarize-tl llhinrinnd zone, "while an their pant .l‘runc.'e and Blelgluim engage nevier to vio- late (ienmanys western ‘idea/bier.- lf either one of theslw countries! should violate the compact it would; .bo the duty of Great Britain and‘ Italy to lend aid to the aiggricv- ed party. - lAlrbitratlon of all disputies ls nec- essary. None- of tho a-greements en- tered upon ou-tlnws war. lit is clear- ly stated that In some circumstan- ces wair ls Ilrgitimatc but the trea- ties see-k tto prevent warlike condi- tions from arising. B a n s Alcoholic Li- quors At Civic Banquets (Canadian Press) Warsaw. Out. fro-true city l1 ‘by-a vote of 40 to fill has resolvled to ban. all alwbollc iliq- uora at civic banquets. Great Britain To _ Celebrate Nov‘. 11 (Canadian Press) LONDON. ‘Oct. Zlt-‘Armistico llay cell-lyratlons in Great Britain. INov 11. will be similar in those of last your. 0 .___i4 0->_.....__ QQ-O-Q-Q-Q'Q-QQQQ§OQQ fi-Q-O-QQ-O-O-OQ (londcuscrl Specials llATE.—ic per word, not c1101! insertion in this column. O§O+§O44 *WANTED--OLD WALNUT sen- ° Mrs. _ Duncan. 5606. room furniture. Box 111. ‘MAID WANTED FOi-‘t GENERAL housework. A1101! 151 1511510“- ' - 5611-2111121. sron SALE-BABY'S CARRIAGE and kitchen range. ADI>1Y 111 1'5 Granville St. 561701-11 wou WANT THE sear TEA AT a. moderate price, then ask 101' d-laszardul Brahniln. 5610-10-21M 2i. "rwo soAnnsns CAN as Ac- commodated in private funzlly» Central location. A0111)’ 111111111 tan. 5403-10-15tst3i. ‘JOB’ PRINTING 9F EVERY description, cheaply and exiled" tiously executed. ‘tlilnrdiull Central Job Printery. Phono 133- ~vou WANT 000D. ENVEWPES Prices 50 for 20c, 150 for 35c. 250 for 55c, 500 for $1.00, 1.000 1111” $1.05, Ifostpald, Guardian Office. was eAuusomz sAusAczs- Medabtresh every day. Saunders- . ewsom ti’: Co.. Market Build- fng. 2014 -'1-23-6m0l. "mum-av wAm-so - uvE chickens and hens. 50901111 ‘priced to ‘crate Mttened stock. F. J. llio man. Charlottetown. 5599-10-21.“ ___________._.._._.__-_--- 'WANTID.—FIW GRADE JER- soy. Ayrshire ord-Iolsteln grade cows. duo to freshen between now and February. W. A.1V11lt¢'-11- Hopeton. ‘ 8558-1019411 uaputrrnv ._ plan ,1.‘ P1110119 paid for Live an _ ed Ohiclr- om and Iowl. beoiel prices on onto httoncd stock-Conrad l _ whole. Two Cont! Bil‘! Hearty Reccptiol trict. The enthusiastic. ovation accord- ed llou. J. A. McDonald Monday night at Cardigan spoke volumes for the popularity of the Kings County Conservative candidate in ills home district .lt w'as in fact. judging by the zlpplause, a Conser- vative meeting all the way through. A good hearing was given all the speakers, who were: lion. J, A. Mc- Donald. llicssrs. .i. J. Johnston, lion Dr. MCMlllilll. hlessrs. i), A, ille- K-uilon, ll, ii. hlcFwi-n and .\lark .\ic(‘rulgan, in". A. Allen eapably pre. sided. l-lcn. Mr. McDonald Pointing out the injurious effect on the Maritluic Provinces oi’ the Western Progressive and Liberal alliance, lion. Mr. lilcDouald said that through special railway rates. the western farmers were able to put their grain ou our own nlarkets at Halifax, Sydney and other lliuri-i time points, and to under null ash ilccuuse we have to pay maarly as much from the Island to Sydney as‘, they from the West. if by way 01‘ coulpeusatioxi wc could get some of our products to Central Canada at a special rate we should have no reason to coulplalil. This was wllut Mr. ltlciglltui and it was in this way that he [iro- posed to help us. Why did nut the King Govern- ment do the things they now pro- pose to do during their four ycnrs of power? was a question insisted on by Mr. ‘McDonald who [Jointed out that the National Policy had been the guide to both parties on tariff matters heretofore. Citing the present low duty against American eggs, ho took up Mr. Johnston's argument: “What is the use of talking about eggs bo- cause we are shipping them?” There might be something in that argument if we were to crunslder the island alone, but we must cou- sidor the markets of Canada as a Sydney, Halifax. St. John, Montreal Ottawa-all these polo‘ to which American eggs have been shipped. are our home market; While Amcrlcnn {irodueers ' can come over here and smash ollr houio uiurkct we can never get. over their tariff wall at any season. Compared with ur own markets, the fc\v eggs that we export are not worth speaking about; and it is our own market that is being affected by the dis- advantageous tariff. The same argumeiit holds with, respect to potatoes. The year wc] received the highest prices for po- tntoes—from $3.00 to $3.50 a bush- cl- it was not on the American luurkei. but very largely to Ontar- io. Even last spring the best murk- et we could gel was Western Can- ada. and we could have got at least trn cents a bushel more but for the competition against us of Ameri- can potatoes shipped in across the line nt low duty. » After emphasizing tile prime im- portance of’ the homc market. Mr. McDonald said: "Even supposing, at its worst. that there comes u time when the foreign lull-‘kets are. the only ours we have lcft. how can a duty such as pPOP°BCfI by ‘the Conservative party hurt us? Wouldn't We feel that we were more independent and more cqliai to our neighbors if we put up our taritff wall to the same height? Dealing with the proposed Reci- procity pact of 1911 he pointed out that this \vas not rcnlly a treaty. as it was subject to six months cancellation at any time. Would any reasonable person say that the Americans would not have acted ity passed or not? “We are not objecting to trade with the United States; but we have no control over their market Neither have these gentlemen com, trol over it. if they had, they would; have got It four years ago. Any-g ‘thing they uy now is not worth mom than It was four yearn ago- and what they uld (Our yeerl 110°; wn not worm anything. That is; the situation." (Applause). l Reviewing the Liberal trade lreag ty with France. he asked what! ' , ltr t. “up.” “ m.“ 86211103110 benefits had accrued to us. Wealthy‘ men who can afford to bring very GREAIEENTHIISIIISMSNUWN‘ l . n THE cnnlnll MEETING ———~—-Q€______ Hon. J. A. McDonald Vlas T e n d c r e d A ‘doubtcdly the Conservative policy <West italics. (fauatlialu hard wheat ‘manufactures and home markets. just as they did whether Reciproc- . The Pies Paper \ Covers Prince Edward Island Like The‘ Dew OHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1925 l 1 in His Home Dis- -_--—-4_s»_—,§-s ' expensive wines. and ladies who can afford to use very expensive perfumes may have benefited; but people using these articles can very wcll afford t0 pay u still’ duty. Our tariff bars huvo been let down for the very class which the Liberals h. condemn so roundly. the ultra-r “We are told that protection l es prices. That in pure theory, Pric- es have always been regulated, by supply and demand. if protection raises the price 0i‘ any article; un- will lake that into consilleiuitloil. But according to the law of supply and demand, whenever an article gr-ts to a point where. it Is profit- able to deal in it, you will always find lots of people with the capital. the brains and the enterprise. tn get into that business. 'l‘hat ls what. regulates prices. and not any fictit- ious protection. You will have en- ough competition always in keep things level in that respect." The speolker rcflerrcxl to the ex- portation oi‘ (fainadizln hard when! last your, “There was u tremendous dc- maud for flour in l-Jurepl- and the was taken into United Slates. Iillililifi KING l5‘ ENEMY ll iill nl MEN G. T. Employees Pen-l sion Claims Mishan- died, is Charge of Leader SUDBURY 0ut., Oct. 20.--Charg- es against the Liberal Party in general and Premier- MucKonzie King In particular were made by llt. lion. Arthur ‘Mfllglllill in the course of ills campaign speeches In Chaplean and Sudbury today. The Liberal Party in the [louse oppos- illliiili NINE IN iillllNl ll] illlNlN-INNS l (Canadian Press) LONDON, Act. 20.—'l1he article of the I/Jcair-no treaty which is of prime initmrtance to Canada artic- le 9 leaves to all the British Doln lnlons complete independence of action in connection with the terms of the treaty. ' The article reads: "The present treaty shall impose no obligation upon any of the British domininns. Or upon ‘India, unless the Govern- ment oi‘ any dominion, or lndla sig- nifies its acceptance there of." if a protective policy was adopted ed. said Mr. Meighen the plan of lhc Conservatives to consolidate the various roads which new com- prise the. (i. N. it. if the roads had come nndi-r lhe hununcr, it would have lncant curtain alnalguuiatlon. said Ellr. Meighcn. The Conserva- tivc leader also charged Premier King with Inishaludling of the tirand 'i‘ruuh employees’ pension claims when Mr. King was Minister of Labor. “it there is one class of workers more than another in this country that should not vote for Premier‘ King, it is the railway enlployee." .\lr. Mfllgllifil asserted that the Liberal leader had tried to prevent the forimiLull nf the (Tauudiuu Na- tiunal Railways as a national cuter 111181;. ‘lhc Liberals had opposed [ground in American mills, ~|rrie~l rmmzednliy Amcrlcaxi railroads. silippi-ti bylfllli-illiliilli “"118 1101 iAml-rican shippers and placed on lthe markets of‘ the world. They ‘protected their farmers by a duiy 0f 42 cents a bushel; but the .\m- orican miller was lakrn care of at lilo some time. if liu nluunf :l.ured thatwheat into flour for export he was given u rebate of 99 percent of that duty. Phe manufacture of that Canadian wheat lu .\ni¢,-rica:i factories gave in turn clupinyillellt to bag factorl-~s Jmrrel factories, etc. All this should have been done In Canada. There should have been a string of lnills grinding up that wheat; . the Canadian railways should linvo been carrying the ilour to tho sea-board. and it shmild have gone through our own ports. That is what would help in building up Canada, I think. (Applause), The advantage of manufacturing other ot our raw products was also cited. At [lresent the worst loss is the draln on our population. Our brightest young men and womcxi 0P8 501112.’ away with the raw mn- teriui‘ we export. With the loss of population there follows an lncreas lug burden on tho remaining tux- payers. “lf we cannot develop some llfllivy which will build u.p home then the outlook for this country is poor indeed. If Canada is ever soinz to take its place in the world we must develop a policy that will keep our raw products at home and have them manufactured info. finished articles. The policy pro- posed by Mr. Meighen is designed f0!‘ that purpose; the policy which these people propose will have ex- rwtiy the opposite effect." Dealing with railway transporta- 11011 llroblelna Mr. McDonald said tho argument had been advanced. "Why did not the Canadian Gov- ernment do with the railways ns the United States Government did’! They took their railways over dur- ug the war. and when they had no further use for them, threw them back on private ownership,- nnd let them go bankrupt." But our difficulty was of a different nature. The Canadian Government had guaranteed all the bonds, whereas lonsolidzltion. knowing that if cun- cffecteil. the roads would go under llle. hammer. "You know who would have bought them." added .\’lr. hlcighen, "Yet .\1r. King and his propngandists now accuse me of favoring amalga- mation cl’ the C. N. R. with the‘ f‘. l‘ ll. 'f‘hat is the goal l um try- ing to avoid. it ltnybody ever favor- ed amalgamation it was the Liber- al Party, both in years gone by and new. in the last‘ slessiou all the speeches favoring amalgamation came from the Liberal benches." The restoration of pension rights to (lrilnrl Trunk employees could to producopthe traffic which would ‘bring the National roads back to solvency. - Discussing immigration and the tariff Mr. Melghen said thug, the question 0f tariff was today u thou- sand times more important than Se nate reform. The greatest, prosper- ity lnCanuda had been under the national policy of Sir John A. Muc- donnld. “the integrity of which was maintained by Sir Wilfrid Laurier.‘ "From the rise of Macdonald to this hour the Conservative Party has stood on the rock of protection’ added Mr. hlelghen. He found the changed policy dating from the Progressive movement of 1919 and its silbsequent domination of the Liberal Party, was tn blame for re- duced prosperity in Canada and trade unrest, In his pcroratlnn Mr. Melgheu reviewed the history of Canada's rosperflwit 1V1‘. Sweeping V i c t o ry For Conservatives Forecast OTTAWA, Ont.. Oct.‘ 20-—<Prs- dieting a sweeping victory for the Conservative party throughout Canada. which will result in "Mr. feller Foundation," Hon G. Howard Ferguson, Premier of‘ Ontario. spoke at a meeting held Saturday evening, at Merrickvllle in support of ‘the Federal candidature of A. C.' Cnsselmau, ‘in Grenville and Dundas. Lloyd George Asks That Prohibition Be Tested (Canadian Press) LONDON, Oct. 20.~—.‘E1ormer Pre- mier David ‘Lloyd George speaking at t-hle City Temple last night dc- ulalrcll prohibition was an experi- ment Great Britain should inves- tigate. Last year Great Britain spent £'318,0ll0,000 on dlcoholilc liquors. Big Day For N. Y. Criminals (Canadian Pleas) NEW YORK, Oct. 20.-1'P0lice who had been rprldvlug themselves on the Ibreaking up of two crlim-irrnl gangs hcstirred themselves today as the -result of an extraordinary day of cirlme in" the metropolis. While the District Attorney was obtaining one conviction by trial trade since Confederation. “Give the Conservative Party a majority In this election and we w! Rive you prosperity again." and five pix-as of ‘guilty bandits Iburglalrs and yeggs mostly young ‘men took over $100,000 Iron) pock- lets of New Yorkers. 00ES $500.00 I l -i |N_li_.i_F have been effected ten years earlier if Mr. King had done the right thing. Mr. Alclghcu claimed. The original negotiations were presid- cd uver by Mr. King when he was Minister of Labor, in 1010 and set- tlcuicnt of the strike. was effected on a promise from C. M. Hayes oi the Railway to Mr. King that the strikers would be reinstated within 90 days. This promise was put into writing but Mr. King had kept the letter. withholding it from the files of tho Labor Department for lcn years. said Mr. Melghen. it was on- In Your Mind an tal Vote That W Edward Island o Would Have Net O What Will Your Feelings be Like if You Find You Have Been Carrying Around Only You Neglected to Have it Regis- ly in 1921 when with the question of the men's pension rights hing; lug on the validity of Mr. Hayes" promise Mr. King suddenly produc-l, such a promise had been made.- tered at The Guardian Office? Every reader of the Guardian or fore estimates up to 9 o'clock Sat- ed Mr. Hayes» 18m“. to prove thaflhose ‘Wléllllllg to become readers llfdfly night Oct. 24th. readers les- have an equal chance of sharing lntima The loss of 22 mouths’ pay to the reinstated mcn, all the controversy and bad feeling which the subsc- qucut pension negtnialiolis aroused. sion investigating the claims, might of the labor party where it produc l not, been taken back. Mr. King had; belonged. and kept it after he be. came a private citizen, which he‘ had no right to do. “And? added ‘Mr. Melghen “this is the man who. poses as s. friend of tho rallwayi employees." During this campaign said Mr; Meighen. whatever he said was contorted or the opposite presented. United Stereo Government had no responsibility whatever. Mr. McDonald then look up the as his view. Charges that he was} agnndn’ to unlalgumato the two» Conservative leadcr‘s statement re Qangdlgs fuflwnys‘ hm! bee“ made.‘ Maritime Rights; also the freight (Continued on page six) The Liberal Party bud done more since consolidation of the National- Rallways was first begun. than] Guardian Election Contest Close: by Request SATURDAY. OCTOBER 24th AT 9 O’C\.0CK P. M. INSTEAD 0F THURSDAY, OCTOBER 22nd. postmarked Oct. 24th will be accepted. i ~ tesration of the national system and let the roads drift into the‘ hands ‘Yo! the only likely purchus-N er Iu Canada today." l "The roads would have come uni... der the hammer." and the credit‘ of Canada would have been ruined l. in the process." I it was the present government's. policy of “loading down the system‘ with debt for UIIHBCCSSIIy luxuriesl and starving the roads through its interference with business in Can- ada" which would run the national roads into amalgamation or bank-T /ruptcy.Butboth couldbeavolded O00OOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOQOC the expense oi’ the Royal Coinnlls-‘prmce Ellvyard “land on Thursday’ have been averted if lifr. King had‘ taken the letter from the recordslto earn a little exilra cash? ed Mr. l-luyes‘ letter when, at thelyour estimate registered. 1w that expiry of the ninety-day period, 142[Y°11 W111 MW? l1 0111111118 01 91111-11118 of tho striking railroad men hndi111 the many vrizcs offered? anybody else to work for the dIsln-l,’ the $1000.00 to be given in cash ‘prizes for the correct and nearest correct estimates sent Iin with a nlew or Il‘('ll(*\\'ll1 stibscriptlon on the total vote than will bl.- polled 0n Oct. 291th. Who would turn aside n chance ‘Are you going to-beiglad you had Or are you izoing to he- so when you learn the total vote po- led -was very close to what you bed in mind 1t would he‘! lit nets with yourself wfhethor you will the a cash prize winner or a disappointed render for not lhav- ing had your estimate registered. Owing to the weather conditions STIR Y0liR 0R POSSESSION Estimate on The T0- ill be Polled on Prince n Oct. 29th. That ted You A Cash Prize, tee will lbe accepted and all mail matter lpost marked Saturday. will be counted in the competition, This -d0es not mean that you have this anuoh longer to put off sending in your estimate. the other fellow may send in. ibis estimate Just ahead of you. in which case hie will have gained the preference. isome reader of the Guardian is swing to made happy on Oct. 29th. and 98 others will have work- ed out a little bonus of their own from 6250.00 ldown 1b fifty cents. lSsnd in your renewal ‘subscrip- tions today. you wil-l than have your paper paid up for one ytear and over and above a chance to ‘have llwle wish gratified. ISo do not let the other fellow beat you to it. put in your estimano and see if you sire not as good at tfigurlng thle polling force of lPrinca this Guardian has Ibsen requested to extend the closing hour. there- Edward Island a; the other fellow. Tbdsy is the day. How about, It? engagedto‘opeuorstealthypropqi§OQOOOCOCOOQQOIIHOOOOOOQOO: Let The Farmer Get a Decent Price For His Produce O BY W. R. Wo now use 80% of our 11 wheat we use 90%. if we shut l- some of our wheat production to Result-we could sell all our farm products at e Canadian i» price Instead of at a world price and put our farmers on the 0 same 111G515 enjoyed by our mechanics. The fact of having 20% to export or any percentage to export forces us to the low price for the whole of our output. have done to ours and if we protected industries, and lbrought our workers that have loft us. back, we could consume at home the other 20% of our farm products. MORSON. own farm products; excepting out U. S. farm products as they We imixbl. have to convert mixed farming. King's return’ not w WWW-I but ‘Iifelghexl Government when The S.‘ to his old tiosltiou with the ltocke- ‘S- 501151111199 “'08 P111- 1111- T116 "ext OFA MERCHANT . It is better ‘to have an open enemy than a friendlyfoe. Among the tlrlngs tiu- Llbcralfl say they did for Prince EtNWiAYIN ln- Iland and did not was the Inaugura- tlou of the ‘l’ictou-Cllarlottctown, steamship service. This. as evelry-l one knows, was inaugurated by tin-i Annual Subscription! Delivered Iii-IO By Mail, Canada and U. S.A. “JO Things The Liberals] BEHTIIH Ina Not Do y I Ill year the Liberals were in power, _ I ‘*- . and the owners of the Constance. Rt. Hon. Arthur Mel- "Dr. McDonald of New Giarsgow. N.l s. and Mr. w. N. McDonald of Syll-lghen Declares People ncy being Conservatives. their nor-l - ~ vices were no longer required. The! are Bfllllnd NatlQTlill Liberal government secured the S]; ' S. Evangeline of orthodox Liberal‘. Policy‘ build and the service has been conq , ‘tlnued since i (camwmn Pa") . ' - O'I"I‘.A\\'A. Oct. 20.-—ln response 11o a request for a statement on his ‘return from the Went to the East ltl. II i. i1 ll l Ilie-lrhen. ant from Answers To Guard- ........:‘.'.1.:..'ii.....:. “'11:. .. ..... ~ y Journal today: S "l am bat-k in Ontario after three ____ nun-ks ll. the West. I lcft for that Among me answnm received m -ll'i]l with hope ill the resullkbult l we Conundrum h, Th“ Guardian of found i-nthusntznn and (Hill-mutant on the 14th "What is the difference ‘"1’ ""'YI°"‘1 1113' "\x1"*"1‘""""_ m.“ l between a Link,“ Candidate and ,1‘!UiIlL"l)d(‘lL with complete confiden- 1- - 12:. .1122‘. ;::>...f;!:r;‘:".‘..l~=r...:i:;;..‘t: following: l " ‘ . '. . . ~ a whole llonnnnm with their vote for Lifierg‘cfiild(fd'atfiuvlzlfisgsidgiace 3 the. naviiollili policy." “The heart of which to s“ and a he“ wants a nin- 11 rust is isnund fo-r stability. ‘a nest m which to 39L» fair lnrltl ant strong gourrlllllellt . 2. E. 0.. Charlottetown. "Tirol 0'11"" 11°‘1-'1“‘*"- hen will find a nest, the Liberali won't." - i 3. Unsigned. “One is ready to‘ . . . lay and the other is ready to llc." 4. X. Z. "There is no difYcrence." , 5. “Disgusted.” Lot 1-1. “'l‘he. Lib- eral will cool the seat while the, S hen will warm the nest." 6. Mary Ann, Charlottetown. There was a large representation "The Liberal Candidate is laying of voters present last night at the for himself; the hen for prosperity. tioliticzil meeting held In Kellys 7. Tommy. Mulpeque. The Lib-‘ltlross. ' eral Candidates toil will be barren .\ir. Thomas Carralllici’ 111111 ill of results. while the hell's will be thew-hair and the meeting although productive. at timcs featured by heated ex- 8 . W. C.. Dunstaffnage. A changes between the different Lilberal Candidate is looking for a speakers was on the whole an 0r- place from which to take Bflillu-‘(lgrly "no, thing. the hen a nest in which toi‘ 'I‘ln-. following were the speakers 11111143 50111911111114. . 1111,1110 order lliflllPfl. Hon. J. E. 9- J- w- C» 13111151850080. A 14111- Sificlnir. Mr. Donald lllacKinnon. eral Candidate cnckles ever noth- Mn p, H, Jqypklup, Mr, J, A. Mes- imz. the hon cookies utter laying flu servey. ‘Mr. Murdock Kennedy and 9E1! ,Mr. A. J. McNovin. 1r J» W- C» 13111151311111189- W111. Just hetero the conclusion of the w" f“ the Gm113d1a“ 011199 119 W111 ‘meeting considerable interest was recoil"? 111-‘1 b°X'°1°11°<"°1M-e5- lcreated by a heated exchange of ‘WWW umestitms accusations andJa lfiew ' ?.l-t'.M.A.. 0- Larse FOX Shlpmen ‘m .... it. ll. Jenkins. For Norway ‘ One of the largest shipments‘Annpuncements! r n r .. . d r ‘ ' ‘ -' S... "Ff-Milli. "ill. ’"‘é.~..".....’.‘iIIf ComlngEvents, tow y 1. terd l ti - . lug" and“ 11001113’ tigins win 711N011) special curs. ‘The shipment. ‘which , was augulentcd ‘by another from‘ - 1 u _ Su-mlnersidc at Emerald. is con- Rates-ac‘ p" word each M" on signed for Bergen. Norway. The Charlottetown shipment (‘Ofliili-ilq‘ , C _ of 168 animals. which were sold to 1y B rm“ "Grand Entertainment at Kel- Hall on Thursday even- purties from Norway by local fox- mcn. After joining the consignment. from Summerside it will travel by the Canadian National Railway ex= press to St. John. thence by boat to New York. ‘from which port the animals will leave on the trans- ing, October 22nd at 8 o'clock. 5592-20-31 "Ilallow'en Dance Friday, Oct. 30. Bring your friends. Help the Orphanage. Watch further notices. ‘ 5583-10-20-21 Atlantic voyage for their rlcstina- _. _ £1011. Bergen. Norway- "Reserve Thursday. October W} 22nd. for concert and ‘basket soc- ial in (loruwnll Hell, City talent. Admission 25 cts. Ladies with bes- kets free. Proceeds ‘for piano fund. i 5554-10-20M3l. ‘filter-z ARE SuRELY fir: BROWN ocfbesn "The Auction sale at Alex. Stew art's corner Queen and Bsyfleld Streets will be continued Thurs- day, Oct. 22 at 1.0 o'clock. ' 5616-21-11 "Office o_f Dr. A. J. Lncouroicre. Dentist. Montague. will be closed until October 26th. 6557 10 19 mw ‘OFFICE OF DR. A. .i. Locour- slere. Dentist, Montague. will be closed until October 26th. 5557 i0 i0 mw "B18 clearance auction sale of 111F111. 810011. CF01). implements at William Maine's, Flat River. on Friday. October 23rd at 12 o'clock. 5598. "Come t0 Bean Supper in TORONTO. Oct. 2l-Muritim<-.,W'ins1oc flail. Tilceday, 27th. lf fresh west wind. fair. with unit-h stonny next night. 5608. the some temperature. Toronto. fair . . . . . . . . . . . .. 46-1-1 "Lantern Lecturog wlnglog Montreal. cloudy. . 44—~34 North. Wednesday. 21st; Winsioe Quebec. cloudy .. 42—-34,S0uth- Thursday 22nd; Prlncetown Charlottetown. fair 48—-39‘Roall. Friday 23rd; ‘f-iighfleld. Mon- Halifax, failr . . . . . . . . 50-40 day 26th. Oflcringg for budggg of Boston, clear .. . 68-40 United Church. 5 , New York. clear“ . . . . . . . . ._ 60-218 High tide this afternoon at 1.26 "Tenders for Laimibs. Tender‘ and tomorrow morning st 12.49. will be received by the gout-lg From AllQver Canada Indicate a Sweeping Victory for VOTE FOR SINCLAIR AND JENKINS. ilifiOfifilll-OQHDOOG a rBun sets this afternoon a: 5.1M Farmers institute until Friday and rises tomorrow morning at evening. October 83rd for the pub 27. - chase of 300 lamina and sheep more First quarter moon Saturday. or Isa. Jno, A. Mofuac. Sourfs. Oot. 24th. 2.14 p. m. “o; the Liberal Party. 1...... .....-_ .;_.....s=......st...<_.__.__..._ __-. ~.-='- »- a . a»... “h-‘m "mwiiqlfihlfi-vi vf-‘iF>.".--'~,,.;r.~en-»- an,