The simplest way to end a com is Blue-Jay. Stops the pain in- stantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in clear liquid and in thin plasters. The n 1a the same. if y. izvER Y , l WOMAN MARVEL??? - noucmi “h-Bhfl inamntl and tliorcua ly. lnaolnferlorimitatlorta. Send Jtamp for illustrated booklet ' THE MARVEL C ‘Q19 St. Paul Street West, Montreal Ho r ‘i i .‘§§O'§§§§'Qf§§§ Q0 QfiQ-OO-§OQ Binder Twine And Potato Baskets Two prime requirements of the Farmel We Sell tbe‘ Celebrated "Silver Leaf" Binder Twine. Guaranteed 550 feet to the pound and guaranteodto give perfect satisfaction. New and Old Style Balls. i500 Potato Baskets, strong and well made. Dcublebound and Strapped. (Ash and Maple.) Wholesale and Retail, lowest prices. CARTER & CO., LIMITED 1 A z i A uo-o-oooooo oo-oooqo-oo-o-o-o-oq Professional" Cards O%§§O-§-§-O§V§§§-§%Of§§-Q4§§O g Miss Eva I. Dyer and Electricity Eiectrilysie 287 Richmond Street Manage MacDonald a McPhec B. A. L, A. McDonald H. F. MoPhao I. A. larriatoro. Attorney. Eta. Money to Loan “Riley Building Qharolttetwm l. D. STEWART, K. (l. larrlltor and Solicitor, 84 Great George Strut éoficltora for tho Union Bank of Canada Dr. (l. C. Archibald "Graduate oi’ N. Y."Poat Graduate 1 ' Madlcal School and Hoaplhl Jraetloa limited to Eye, Ear, Noao ‘ and Throat Oflloa Bayer Building, Great George Itroat, Oppoolto Guardian Office Tel one ISO-J. urn-l toil a. m. 1 to 5 Palmer 8t Palmer H. J. PALMER, K. C. larrlotar, Ito. Money to Loan 5mg of No Iootla Iilllllllg but-um n,‘-P. a.- ‘l. 111PE.....R-..11°‘1l11ga1 “W? s; "I, , . lAlllllTElt. QOLIOITOR, ' Money to Loan Cameron llocit Olllflottalqwn, P. E. lllllil Miles Garrison B., ‘M. l'£'"|’.'li.'{..'"§2%“'°£'»f..3.sa.."°'"".'. , ‘fraahnant In ‘laiaotad Oaaaa -—-—-—-——-,-t-:-1-l1-—-———-- _ S. S. HEGBIAN guppy, aqiiolrr, iiotary Plllllo . u. ETO. #95190! l0 10y "that finite; erll election of 1023f W. Cheater $- hlelmro, Praline Mgr-ling Dull! l 14.50 net your J. ll. lliarnett, Editor all Publisher D. K. Currie. Aaaoclule lsdllor - founded I681) I530 per Year (delivered)- 1 " ‘l ll In l‘ " III‘ ' ll advance tl Illa-a WEDNESDAY, EYcPT. 12, 193‘! OUR OUTLOOK. A good deal of being placed, upon from this province. mun: ia-v of perversion the em aggravated. lt ls quii.- iz-uc that there has been an exodus this illllllllfil’: Ill rxudus; there always shall hi» lll exodus as long as our youn; men and young women have spirit and ambition r-nough , to better their condition in life wliethnr at The great majority of them remain nt home iomé or abroad. and make good; some must seek elsewhere for opportunities which are not available hero and, speak- ing generally, ninkc good. ihem go; we do not want to sco families separated, they also We do not want to s29 nor do uc want to. see them elbowing eacl: other here for standing room. Let us look this exodus question fairly and squarely in the face. On any one of our forms today our modern machinery does the work done same farm twenty or thirty or forty years B80 by a dozen hands. The majority of that dozen must find employment either on another farm or in another province. The fact that this tnajorlty has left the farm on the does not decrease the production of the farm; on the willful"? it increases it. We have abundant proof of this. For ex- amplc we had population in 1891 when, accord- ing to the census of that year it numbered 109,078. We have no definite figures to show the value .of our farm products at that time but in 1011, twenty years after the total value of our field crops was $9,099,300. in 1920, with a population reduced to a little over 16,000 our field crops ivere valum; Ht $18,530,400. This menus ihnt with a population reduced at the rate of o. thousand a year we more than-doubled the value, of our field crop, to soy nothing of the increased value of our farm lands and our farm stock. ln 1900 the vzfluc of our dairy products was $118,402; in 1919 1| M“ "messed to $208,001, almost doubled in value notwithstanding a considerable drop in populafloy-L With these figures before us, sub. stantlal and incontrovertible evi- dence that the province greasing by leapg and there is no cause for whining about the exodus. The great 1111110111)’ 0f our sons and daught- ers who have left us have better- ed their condition; they are help- ing to build up other parts of our dominion and other countries and if in their absence we are doubl- ing our production every twenty Years we have nothing plain of. our maximum is pro- bounds, to com- There is of course a Yond which our safely gg, limit be- exodus cannot We cannot afford to have vacant farms; we cannot af- ford to have idle hands If jg true there are vacant farms u; present and lf conditions In the Province were propgrly adverflsed abroad these would vacant through not remain a season. We have never had any kind of organ- imum‘ °r mm‘? 1111)’ concerted ef- o" 1° secure llllmlxrants and "'15 1011B? is one of our greategg needs. We could accommodate many enterprising farmers and 1g he farmers in urea; 3mm“ knew what we have to offer them; if 1116? knew that there was an or. sanlzation here to advise and to 1101p them. our vacant farm; "W111 11°F 1W8 remain vacant. Among the men who leave us 111°" ".8 many who, u they has a" "P90111111"! to compare condl. tlons here with those elaewhere, would remain here. lt is no recently bee'n placed, and is still ada. the exodus production in By n curious years is abundant proof Dhasls we place upon any comwwho is wlllinS 1° ulaint the more the complain‘ is iuud as ions 88 110 would 11° mm‘ on outlook upon life us Edward island ls at least eqllfll in fertility and in fnrmin! 011W?‘ emphasis ha! tunltles to any other part of Can- The increase in all "will! the past thirty’ of this. 'l‘o the willing worker, to the man work as hard polled to work elsewhere, there is u good. comfortable. honorable there has always lnr-nliving on a Prince Edward 191111111 fumi, good educational facilities for his children, and us pleasant can be found anywhere clsc in the world. THE EDUCATION PROBLEM much ln the stabilizing We have heard past few years of the betterment As a mutter and general 01 0111' educational system. of fact there has been no chungr improve- There in tench- whntever, certainly no ment in many years past. has been u. betterment ers‘ salaries, due not to the effort bf governments but to the insistent demand of the public generally and lbe not surprising refusal of in the pro- salarics offered teachers to continue at the The salaries, still out of all proportion to those paid skill- fession them. ed and even unskilled labor, are better than they were some few years ago and this is a step in the right direction but only one step and that a short one. We are paying much cation; the yearly cost absorbs a for edu- very large proportion of our rev- enue but the cost if judiciously administered is the most profit- able expenditure we can make for the present and for the future. lt would be useless to compare the schools 0t‘ today with those of say, thirty or forty years ago. Then, as now, the school was part The environ- ment has changed but the school has not kept the It would be useless here of its environment. pace with change. to speculate on the causes which have separated tho school from its environment. There are many causes. There are many reasons why our whole educational system should be thoroughly into by a capable commission of qualified educatlonallsts. This is being done, at frequent inter- vals in other other countries. enquired provinces and in The best minds grappling with the whole question of education, nationally and internationally. No such enquiry has in the world are been made ln this province and the schools of today are practically the schools of half a century ago with per- haps added defccts as some improvements. enquiry into the whole system, corrections suggested where need- ed, the paring down 0t our over- loaded curriculum, a systematizeti course which would obviate the 1199911511)’ of driving prospective lawyers, well as Thorough farmers, preachers, doctors, mechanics, etc., through the same grooves in their prepar- 11101‘? lf81hil15~these and kindred matters might well be looked into and obviously necessary changes agreed upon. In any case an in- formed examinatlon of our whole educational system would give u new and much needed impetus to our school system. PATRIOTS CONUNDRUM. “$111119 K1118 sovernment, ac- wrdivs to the Guardian, tun morning. has been in office lees 1111111 1W0 Years and in that time has written the word “faiiure" across the whole dominion how is it that it has won the last three bye-elections?" Patriot Sept. 11. We give it up. ask one. And now let ua Bell government won three bye- electlona in 1922 and didn't have a lo! left to stand on after the gen- a $1 How was it that the~ lilBy_Tlia" Way‘ 11., ""4 or eo-oparation in mat_ ten ol Provincial, National and Imperial concern and importance is just now being borne in upon us. ln the world at lar5ev 118F110‘ ulerly ln Europe,.there,is dlsunlon and distress. The times are “out of joint, us members one of an- other, the (Provinces of this Can- ada of ours and the Domipions of our world-ivide Commonwealth must, therefore particularly at this juncture, stand together and 111111 together if the petmle 4111'!" e010)‘ prosperity and peace. “United we stand; divided we fall." ______a. In families and in communities, as well as in the larger groups which mnkc up our Dominion and our Empire the spirit of service’ each for all and all for each‘ should now prevail. ilt is pleasing to noto that the Maritime Board of ’l‘radc fnceting at Halifax this week recognizes l-he need for closer (SO-(JIIPHIUOH on the part of all the Maritime IPrnvinces, including the Provincial (lovcrnments, ‘Labor and VCapital, etc; and it is to be hoped that duo regard being had for. thc middle and W's-stern lProviuces, the efiorls of" the tmitcd Boards of Trade will be supported by the people at large and their govern- incnts. The stabilizing of businesa and industries, the Improvement of the situation in respect» to our farms and fisheries, the further develop- ment of our national resources, the reduction, in so far as expenditures in connection with them will per- sona. The Public Forum Thla column II OI." 1'1"‘ u‘. dlaeuaaion by WPNIWMQI“ 9| question: of lntaroot. The Charlottetown Guardlanllool not noeuaarii; ‘MONO "l. opinion axproaaod by lta oor- respondent; Report of British Cattle Quarantine Sir,—ln connection with the recent unsigned report of the quarantine on Canadian cattle we have received the following cable from the High ‘Commissioners mficc, London, England. "Yours of the seventh. British liliuistry of Agriculture say no bus ~ for statement which probab- |v was lllilllt‘ in connection with difficulty which arose ut Glasgow, wring to SllS]l(1(‘\t".l presence of l-‘uol and liloutli Disease there, as nxplilillcil in my cubic yesterday. .\u i-Imliurtzo was placwl on certain Irish cutllo which had arrived, 11ml, ronst-qutaiitly. upon the (Jan- uliun cattle». which .\\‘\‘1‘\‘ being land- ed at thc saint: tlmc. The Embargo m lrish cuttlc has now been lift- ed and (‘tiuadinn cattle are also Ewing tn-utcil us usual. Difficulty -nn.:t xioct-ssurily uriuc whenever qlsplclflllzi cost-s occur and could mly be uvuhlotl if Irish cnttlc usually came to one port and (Jan- udiull to another." l am Sir, etc. Dominion Live Stock Branch. CURlOSITIES m WILL-MAKING To zittcmpt to truce the origin of will-making would bc n thank- less task, but it is known that the Patriarch ‘Jacob loft zhdocumcnt more or loss equivalent to the motlcrn will. Specimens have been found in Egyptian tombs which mit, of the rates of freight on the railways and stezuuships owned l1)‘. the people, the pronlullon 0f the‘ tourist trudc—nll these are objects‘ which the Maritime Board of 'l‘ruduj has in view. if these objects can) be promoted it wllrbe well for the‘ people of this part of ‘Canada, andf if they can be carried out it will? be well for the country at large.‘ ILOELSOII and justice kept in vieuq, and muintaiuctl, that which is good‘ for all Canada. 1f member? Slllffilh’, all the with it; and these Maritime ‘Pru- vint-cs should be plnlccd in u posi- tion lo prosper, ICanada us at Wllfllt-i will be illisllllllttéil. ‘But there should‘ be no attempt on the part of the‘ East to guin an advantage bvcrthc‘ West; nor should any furtiu-r (lib, vantage be given the lVctst ht lhel expense of the East. indccth; strict justice being uccordt-ti these Maritime Provinces will, erc lung, we submit receive xbsubsttmtiul reef‘ turn for their co-operation in the pin-chase, zievelopmcnt and protyl perily of the Western Pruviliccs. one But the spirit of co-operation should also be active in respect to matters of Imperial concern. Just now the Mother Country is beset by oxtruorrlinury diilltrfiltivs. As iii‘ the midst of the Great Win‘, (frail-k Britain now nccds thc \'D~(l])t'l‘ill|llll and assistance of those who live under the protection of the Brltzsh flag and enjoy the liberty und peace for which the British Empire stands towards the world. The million-s. of unemployed men and women, stranded as a rcstllt of the disruption of the world's ll'ililt",llll1.l the complications in which her Government is now involved, us a result of the recent lnsensate ac- tions ol‘ lFruncc, (lrecce and Italy call for the sympathy of her Daughter IDominions and their prac- tlcul support at this juncture. And if the sympathy which is Great Britain's due be rendered, tlierp can be no doubt that the Daughter Dominions will, in the surest and best way now open to them, ppg. mote their own interests. There can be no doubt that a system of mutual trade preferences would greatly ‘benefit all the members ol lllo British Commonwealth and contributed to the stabilization of commerce now so greatly to be de- sired by the world at large. BATTLES WITH SNAKE, FINALLY KILLS IT SHENANDOAlL-Micliacl J. Coles had the fight of his life with a snake. lie was strolling through the woods in Fritz Hollow, little giountaln when the reptile ntncked Ill. Coles dodged the first two plun- ges, hitting the snake each time with a heavy sapling walking stick. This seemed only to lash the snake into greater fury. For nearly thirty minutes Mr. Coles bottled with the reptile he- fore killed it. The snake mea- sured feet 2% inches. \<._\\_.\\,,, b o n us" ‘Hlfilvvp/"Ulls-fl ‘in 1. I n» ~ m! ll £1 for the Maritime Provinces is good 21m" "1 k11°w111g 1'13‘ Sh” “P1114 be . \\ members suffer! ivcrc drawn up two thousand years lit-fort- Christ, Among the oldest English wills; arc those of Alfred tho Great nrul \\'llllun1 the Conqueror, who bo- queztthetl his nowly-ucquirctl realm of England to his son Wllllum itufits. The pulm of revcngeful -|)il'il must be given to the mun who loft to his wife the large sum of $2,500 which, however. she could not make use of, but was to ht- oxpentletl uftci‘ her death, so llmt site might have the “satisfac- bitricd in a style most befitting my 0w." An example 0f humor, conscious or unconscious, is afforded by the will of nu old Scotchman whose son was a doctor. "l bequeath," lic wrote, “my two worst watches to my son. for l know that lic will ilisscct them." w Full of grim humor was the will of a French lawyer, who left tcn thousand francs to a lunatic as- ylum as u mark 0f restitution tn those clients who had bet-n mad enough to engage his services. A 15W ab? of yours _' Baton. Ml)’ 2 i, An. Absolutely Reliabvpi Importantto Every om; f-f A THOUGHT ABOUT SLEEP ~ Wide anvass of Lydia E. PinkharrfsVeget A pound. 50,000. Women kiwi For some time a circular haa been 0f course we enclosed with each bottle of our med- cine does benefl icine bearing this uestion: “ Have of women who tie ou received bene t. from taking two out of 100 n“ ydia E.’ Plnkhambi Vegetable Com- moat astonishing Pound? _ ll only 09g Replies, to date, have been re- _ at a m icine .- 111m ceived from over 50,000 women on- tam definite ailme “"911 for swering that question. —_one that is made . n“ 98 per cent of which my gm“ pmceusi “E11 team)“ YES. That moans that; o8 out r131"; comluuuuoummmiit in of every 100 women who take “Llod 91118. can unpmralmth the medicine for the ailments 3. "m" 111111111! l» tea for which it; is recommended tmm- P are benefited by ‘it. This is a most remarkable record of efficiency. We doubt if any other medicine in the world equals it. Think of it-only two women out of 100 received no benefit-W auc- ccsses out of a possible 100. Did you ever hear anything like it? ciency h We must_ admit that we, ourselves, almost e2: galiiefguff,’ 5:, e b, are astonished. -leoding,al others. wuflf Such evidence should induce every w ' any ailment peculiar to her sex to try L aig'i§'."i§|§'ff,f§f,tnu table Compound mid see it‘ she can't e one of’ um g’ Lydia E. Plukbam llledlcbio 00., Cobonr , Ontario. 99F9O§V§O0O§§Q f§i§+§ffffOfffffff9§§§fi§§0oqog§i ' A fried of mine was the fault]??- of much teasing because the noise of a trolley car passing 111s" “m” never even wnkened bin}. b“! m” "lit-iv" “drip" of u leaking WM" lup kept him wide awake. Now‘ how to explain it. I _ ‘Simple enough when in" 1111111‘ “l lt. The trolley carwtis tho usu- ui every day occurrtnce and dill not therefore interfere Willi his mintl or thoughts. But the drip of tho lop was un- usual. ll made him think. it, as il- werc, excited his brain. iTlm cause then of lhc wakeful- ness oi‘ many people is din- to thc fact that they allow their bruins in work ,or soiinetliing unusual docs it for them. _ Thus any exciting til-w m‘ 111*'-"-“' ure, 1s hn emcny of tslecp as ill" brain is then lcnscll with blood. Remember the brain is not ll muscular organ and iii-ponds upon the movements of the body to change the blood frequclitly throughout the day. _ inc. f rmer article l lllt‘lll.l0ll0ll variousother factors tlmt t-zitcn-d into the best imetliotls of inducing sleep. You remenrbei" it was to um- tilutc the rom, take at litlc litilll t‘-\" crcitse before retiring, pt-rlmplf. 11 little warm milk or broth, b11111 bed clothing, hard inatircss, warm fcet if possible, and no drill-KB- So just as you should not tuku mental problems to bed Willi 3'0"- or allow your thought to recur to the exciting play or game of bridge- neither should you allow your thoughts to dwell on any unusual noise. Your brain must gi-t its rust. Your brain gels its rcsi b)’ “hwll and sleep only. rDnrixig slot-p I10 further fatigue products nrc being imimifactured in your brain and Sc the ‘products already uuanufuctur- ed are wel sivcl" 9111, by the blood. laying ilown is hclpful| to the muscles of the hotly as fh- tigue products are thus YPlll0\'G(l,I but sleep, total loss of conscious-l tics-s is xiecessalry to rcliwnsli flit-f hruin . 6 31113:: I10 bu" vé _ You see, we have improving end refinin for over 50 years unti and so well adapted u; ,“°l>¢rf . tlfntgi; actually has gheill’: . e out of e e take it. very 1010mm _m reliabilit an mug‘ ‘ fflm y and rec “Be Prepared” is the Boy Scouts motto, and a ‘good,’ one it is for all of us. Are you pie.- pared to face a disastrous fire? “It is better to be surf: than sorry.” ~ _ Hyndman Co Ltdafi The Oldest Insuranci: ‘Agency m A P. E. I. i l l \Vl‘ll(‘l‘, lcft n last mcmcnio of his‘ syniclsm in the ‘following: "i have no available properly: I owi- u great tlcal; the rust I glvc to ihc poor." ' The wills oi‘ ltoyulty nrc kopl scaled, but all othcrs are (apt-n for inspocilon on puytncnt of u fcc. Security Service t i $§-&4§-b-O“““ i i‘ thousand pounds each was thc leg- ucy left by a testutor to his l1ospit-' ul nurse and cook, for their rc- specllvc kinduesscs in driving u pink monkey from the foot of his licd and taking scarlet suukcs on‘. of his soup. it is in thc archives of Snmcr- sec llousc that all wills filled for probate nr kept, and therc arc to be found many famous and cm"- ions tcstniticntnry documents. On»: is the protralt 0i‘ a pretty girl, oz. which u soldier had written, “l lcuvc all to her." Aontlicihls writt- en in shorthand, and dated 1700. nearly a hundred yours bcftirc Pitmati invented the famous syst- em of clpliter-writlng which hours his name. The ttistafoi‘ had attached thc key to cnublc his queer will to be ticciphoreil. A strange record is the leg of u bed, in which a will was conceal- ed, and to settlo a dispute this cumbersome container was filed along with tho document. Napoleon's inst disposition was characteristic of his hatred for GREAT orronrunnv run units The Prim Lady Shopping Bag Waterproof, Big, Roomy and Handsomely Lined The Guardian announces an exceptionally good oifem its readers. The Prim Lady Shopping Bag, retailing at $1.50 ill be given with every NEW or RENEWAL Supscription iiThe Guardian for an additional Englandfi“! dlc prematurely, tis- susslunted by tho English oli- garchy." He. beqpeathcd ten thous- and francs to Cuntillon, who attempted to kill the Duke of Wellington. The great Russian novelist, Tolstoi, wrote his will on the stump of a tree. “Bury me where l die," he wrote. Rabelnls, the French satirical 5§§4+O§§§fQ'§Q( O-O-QI-QO-O-O-O-O: Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers I MY NEEDS Daylight to do the tasks my life has set, Darkness to soothe my soul when day is past: 11111101‘ 10 Duy to life my certnln debt, Courage to face the wuy alone n! last Kind hands to lend me throgli the ways of love, Vision. to see the duty that nigh: Faith that ls broad to think of things above, Friendship. to closp my ieyellds when l die. )1 Vigor to stand the daily round’: long test. Keenness of mind to meet anothers views, Leisure to be with those l lovelhe best, ' Freedom to live with choose. s°m1w 1° 1161b me feel another! woe, ‘Patience to nmlla chasthiing rod; Mommies to cheer me Nature as l beneath the whereader infinite to Bl: Yalloy, Alberta, _ sgtqlqugz l so. Wisdom to leave the God! .11 60 CENTS This is, the greatest opportunity ever offered t0 the l?! readers of The Guardian. Your NEW or RENEWAL Subscription and 60 CENTS W1 secure for you this BEAUTIFUL PRIM LADY SHOPPING BAG It is carefully made —_ strong and durable, of lilih Blade’ waterproof ART LEATHER and handsomely lined with flowered, cretonne. The handles are exceptionally strong and Will sup- port any reasonable strain. The open mouth top is kept secure- 1Y closed by a broad strap and clasp. The entire BAG reflects ., » taste and is ideal for SHOPPING or as an OVERNIGHT Subscription Department, THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN, Charlottetown. Dear Sits-Enclosed please find $. . . . . . . . for my New-Renewal-Subscription to the Charlottetown Guardian and also additional 60 cents which entitles me to the $1.50 Prim Lady Shopping Bag. - ‘as-s.asap-anona-oaouaa-asaaaa-II" ADDRESS YourSubscription Expired The (lharlottetown Guardian, I Subscription Dcpartmflfi r ti‘. i team, l