- » -ef; . :~‘~ - is sw- . .N - ., _ _ ‘.»‘ .__ _ A ...sg-_ . "~f‘» llié 1,* "r"\'v-_'v' -5. r;.‘_>.- -;_ _,- . sf* »».__»_-__ , _'__ _ _ \ ' ~--_-ff ~_.\~.=.-;.,\_~-fr.-1--f .-. »~ f - t, ...T f v »-~ __ ._ ~ . _ _ .. .. _ , . 'f-~ ' -”‘ '* " ’ . ~‘ r- ~ - ,_ _. ,,_,5,,__ _ -+1* - 4' . ~- we ~ --.t -.e .Q-.tw . 1-1,.,- ,.»-;~ . V _ _ _ - - 1 . , =‘ #.3-~ ~ ,, --, ~.\~\-- - _r ,_ - ____,___ _ _ __,___4,__, ___,__,___{____ _ __.,__ ,___ ___ (__, _ I .4 . . I ` , t., ' . / fi-» _.__-. gy? J.; 3, oscar B - _ - - - - - --I ER 28-1916 _ _ _ _ 'rm-: cnruztorrsrows GUARDIAN P.A.cr:_¢-rvrrvc _jf- _ _ _ _ _ _c_ _ Yoon Famous can boy anytnins you can give. Mvlfe an aopoinnnent today. The Cook’s Studi New DesP'isav .seek O Prepare for Christmas Hyoi;can'tgetb ck) th l home for Christmas a nleaw phdlgl Kfaph will come nearest to taking i‘3‘..?f¢i.‘Z§§E'"rl‘ ‘Z{‘."“1l’l‘i.°’o§° 8 C8 . appointment today at a e e The Bayer Studio lull'-" f.mFl'lll. A. ls. iron, soar. Good Photography Moderate Prices. Porlonal attention to Am- ateur Photography. 107 Queen St. Phone 68-J. ' - Professional Cards Dr. J. E. BLANCHARD oaNris'r PARLORS-125 Queen Street, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Phone 275-J. ' , 3482-12-19M1mo. _ S. S. Hessian LAWYER Montague. P. I. L Money te Lola _ ills-I-liltt. - ‘»_A~“B|~llll, K_c¢, Donald Mcklnnun HOLIAN ‘ MOK|NNON plarristerl, .. itterneys-ai~Law loyal Bank Bldg-. Charlottetown. - _ IIOIIION I DUFFY ` lerrletsrs and Attorneys Solicitors tor Royal Bank ot Canuh "UNIV To LOAN Money to`Loan Money to loan at re`a"sonsrble"rates of interest on good improved farms or city' property. Applications will receive prompt attention. H. J. PALMER, Bank of\Nova Scotia Chambers. 8289-11-§7M1Mo. Mcl.EOD & BENTLEY l W. E. Bentley, K. C. Bsrristers and Attorneys-at-Law Money - to Loan. Office-Bank of N. 8. Chambers, Charlottetown. P. lil. I. .. .. “"“"““' wsnsurrron a susw Barrstlrl, Attorneys, Notary Pub lio, Etc., Bolloitorl for Canada Bank ers Association. ,Bank of Montreal, Cascada, Permanent lfortgsge Corpor- \ _ onions--ora -annum omoe, m vrss Block, Carlottetown. P. I. i. J. D. Stewart Barrister, Solicitor and Notary Public Ofiice NEWSON BLOCK Charlottetown Branch Office Georgetown Money to Loan on Real Estate ms-io-isilu. llZlH¥si.m1':r " " ' EW ~ Established 1854 -Joseph U ¢ .. . -. - Rmv . 18-20-22 West 20th Oldest in Trade Branch 'Houses in Shipments Solicitod WIIZWYWW * l I Comfortable ? ` We have what yiu f-ed to b. warm Moccasins Felt_ moms Fell Socks Knit Sucks ' » Over-_~, hoes Leggins Heavy Rub- ers ` Sheep--skinf oot sand Moc aslns. W0' /0IEIIf'¢\\\\\Y/I/llIIlIlA\ J “WW ° U5 e' O s fb i ax\\\ 'Q §\\='/////ll/Awt Sv S 5 *-4 D3 £.&\\W \_@' Let us show you ny different rigs ley & Cas fA‘\\\\\\\\YIIZs\\\\\\€\_\l - - or ' ' ' L_: CHAFiLOTIETC\.'.' N MAR KETS .36-40 35-36 43-45 40-45 12-15 15-18 16-18 22-25 Butter (fresh) lb . _ . . . . . . . . .. Butter (tub) gutterdmreamery prints) .. .. ggs, oz. |Fowl, lb 'Chlckens.l1> .. . .. . .. Ducks, ib Turkeys, lb .. .. 'Beef (lb) retail 15-20 ,Beef (wholesale) dressed .07-.10' lBeef (live weight) .. .05-.07 Lambs (live) . . . . .. .. .0815-.09 Pork, (selects) wholesale 15-151/4 Hay (ton) . . . . . . .. $12.00 Straw (ton) .. 7.00 Potatoes (bushel) ._ ._ 60-60 Turnips (bushel) .. . 20-20 gaps 'hvylhltg pus: . . . . . . 60-60 as ac us . . 68-68 Parsnlps (lb) .01% Buckwheat (bush.) 75-90 Wheat (bush.) $1.25 -1.50 suivimsnsmi |v|Am‘ -"L2 ‘0i\f;>‘ and speeches wasl highly appr;-:lated and enthusiastical-' ly applauded. G. _.°T0wN COUNClL.- The bi~an-l uual election of Town Councillors ini Georgetown took place on De'cember| 6th. Great excitement prevailed( among the voters for days previous and now that the time is drawing near' for their policy to go into effect, all are anxiously looking forward to great improvements in our town es- pecialfly in the lighting system.- G. EASTERN PERSONALS _gt_ ..*Mr_ and Mrs. Maurice- Donovan, left Georgetown Tuesday afternoon for a short trip to Picton, N. S. G. l . .*Mrs. Nelson Fairchild, and fam- ily, of Georgetown, have gone' to Bos- ton, on an' extended visit to her s-on, Mr. Joseph Faircha\ld_ -GG. . .'Miss Marcella Cherry, of George- town, who has been attending the Com- ,mercial College in Charlottetown, is spending her' vacation at her home _ here. -G. - thinking happ, jovial things, and _thus keep their smiles and pleasant pathways that they reflect to anxie- _ties, worries or blue devils. in this 'way' they use their muscles for :health and optimism. l Cheeriulnes-s and stoutness are* generally found together. Fat is probably the result of good diges- tion, because food eaten is readily changed by the processes of the body into living tissue. The flesh of your body may be' measured by the ahility of the digestive structures to get the full measure of worth out of the- food consumed. Those who suffer from “chronic dyr-pepsia" and -the various fonms of "indlgcstion" are generally extremely thin. '- The 'quantity-_of rations take-n into the body has comparatively little to do with the question. As a matter of fact, there are some thin people iwhoeat a great deall and some s-tout 'people who diet themselves to nl- mos|_ nothing. Jewish cooking is much more fat-producing than American cooking. l Fat people seem to be wel-l blan- ,keted from the wintry winds and cold air. Good for Lungs.\ Undoubtedly laughter - rcul, he-arty laughter, ri rib-tickling guff- aw- ls- even better than a yawn for emptying the lowest passages oi the lungs and bringing air into their in- most recesses. The man who laughs "tit to ki-ll" need have little fear of tuberculosis. I-ie clears out his lungs; he uses the fulfl extent of their passages for taking the oxygen into his blood and making it rich, full red, and thereby he keeps the body' fluids up to their full powers of doing their work of digesting food and carrying to various parts- of the body ma- terials for thc building up of new tissues. ._ _ The person who, all through liie, breathes -deeply in' the joy, merri- ment and happiness that goes on about hlru and is- randy for a hearty laugh when the occasion calls, shows a. complexion oi healthy sheen and lat. ln' fine, written large upon the in- nermost tablets of your anatomy is a record of every outburst of laugh- ter. Like a water meter' to register th ilow from the spigot, so the rushing torrents from deeply hidden glands- spleen, suprarepaii or near kidneys, sex glands, pituitary and others- of your inner textiles reveal themselves indelibiy in your mus- cles, e-yes, intestines and other living fabrics. Kindness, intense joy, happiness, wit, hilarlty, joillty, cheer and all thc- healthy emotions of one sort or another leave a sate, stamped im- press upon evcry iiber oi’ your being. The springs and fountain heads of laughter, as well as other emo- tions of joy. are in the various living glands. These iiesh textures, in iine, manufacture or check the' emotions according to the amount of their iiuids oured out iThe blood and s-kelter to every nook and cranny of the human parts. What Shakespeare Bald. Shakespeare noted the character- istice of mirth, that ever health- inducing state, when he‘ said: "From the crown of his head to the sole of his foot he-As all mirth; he has twice or thrice cut Cupid's bowstring and the little hangman dare' not shoot at him; he hath a heart as sound as s bell and his tongue is the dlapf per; for what his heart thinks- his tongue speaks." Laughter is an external expres- sion of joy; it is the most salutary of all od y . tatee both the body and the soul at the same time, promotes digestion, livens the vital power in every or- gan. lit is the cheapest 'luxury msn enjoys. it stln up the Blood, ex- pands the cheot, electrliles thai nerves, clears away the cobwehs from the brains and gives the whole sys- tem s shook to which the voltsio pile is-nothing. Nay, its delicious eiohvmy converts even team into the quintessence of merriment and ~l . e "1-l . 4'; ,» . »'§ .,_. , . lf. 1 I r l . » Wilma c 1““"" Qs Note we Worlol-Famed Artists °nN Cl b°lL't` THE world`s supreme coloraturzi soprano, l\/lnria Barrientos, sings her great triumph, the Mad Scene from “Lucia”; Lazaro, the new world- tenor, sings “Spirto Gcntil" from “La l*`u.vorita”-these Stars are only two of the brilliant array that makes this list the greatest :fuer announced. Among them Kathleen Parlow plays “The Last Rose ot Summer", Godowsky renders Liszt’s Rigoletto “Paraphrase", Oscar Sesgle sings “The Ninety and Nine., Vernon Stiles is introduced with “The Sunshine of Your Smile”,' Lucy Gates sings twocglloragura gems, and the Chicago Symphony Orchestra gives the “Prelude to Lohengrin" andthe “Procession” from “Parsifal”-constituting the most notable ollerings listed among the r New Records for January The popular part of this matchless list is led by Al Jolson, the peerless comedian, singing “Someone Else May Be There While I’m Gone" and Fannie Brice in her vaudeville is1pecialty}`,1 “If We Could Only Take I-Ier Word.” Besides, ,there are .wir/can such sparkling its as t ese Song-_Hits You Are ` Miss srarncruvis. rum- Me . Rm. A Reed Miller, tenor. I0-inch FLORA BELLA. Give Me All of You. 856. Naunette Flack, soprano, and Charles Harrison, tenor. Hearing Everywhere- ` svsnvsoov Lovss AN uusr-i A 2129 SONG. M. J. O’Co|_\nell, tenor, and |0_i,,Ch Knickerbocker Quariette. 55¢_ SONGS OF YESTERDAY. Knlcker. bocker Qnartem; A 2131 T';l§,,';,‘,’,‘§§§'?,§;§§ 'N YOUR EYES- A ma '“~‘iLY“"~l’0”l".fE|?”¢”lE.ll;"i='i1”