_ I ti‘ The new reading lamp i_s wonderful, 'Mary, and it will cost us g3 moms to use it” i Better light means bet- ter sight and a more comfortable, attractive home. So turn on your lights. The Extra Elec- tricity you are entitled to helps pay the- coat. Tonight, turn on your lights and see for your- self what better light means in comfort, con- venience, an d better seeing. $5800 Saved by the y‘ New Low Rates If the electricity used in the first 4 months the new rates were in effect had been billed at the average rate in effect in the same period of 1934, it is estimated that our customers would have paid $5800, more ‘for it, What penny in your budget buys so ‘ much as the penny you spend for electricity? Use Extra ELECTRICITY at No Extra Cost 7.. MARITIME ELECTRIC l l 3 an order to -tbe distribution of Graded and Reg- ; , " 11m“, c, Breeders Association, ting with on Federal L veetock Branciideairea to , Farmer; of tile above classifi- 1 ~‘ unusual- umcllleofltaulashouldc - .1 delay wlitl leaior Livestock Fieold- ' a steadily failing consumption of I , Charlottetown, P. E. I. ,W. C, TQYU. Notes ~ "u" mu w. wusm If I were sent to represent A portion of s nation I would not coat, on this or that, In the hails of legislation: In aimless talk and bother, Nor hitter away a precious day On this and that and the other. Whether the food a deg consumes Wouldn't make a. porker fatter Of no import or matter- Whethareach day a man should NI»! - For our welfare, or shouldn't Now I do not say men do this way; I lneroly say I wouldn't! Nol Were I sent to represent, A state, or town. or county, Id do some good and all I could To earn the people's bounty, Instead of a dog or a fattening hot. I'd ta‘k about men's drinkingi And, with words of fire, I would inspire The stolid and unthinking. And the time that I might waste (I don't say men do waste it) ."d spend in pleading for my cause, And with tongue and pen I'd haste it. Through all the land, 'till a mighty band loll? with laws and legislation, Should cleanse the stain and cut the chain That binds our hclples nation. And little need would there be then, . When that bright sun had risen, ' Of asylum wings or building sites- Oi county or stale prison. The need is made by the liquor tndei Oh ye wise, sagg law-maker, ‘Tis the friend you smile upon that makes. - Our madmen and law-breakers. BREWERS WANT BOYS- CAN THEY HAVE YOURS? They want to capture the youth and make drunkards of them to fill the coffers of t-hc brewers. Road carefully the following extracts:- “We must have sufficient faith to keep on advertising . . . e contin- ual and never ceasing pressure and persuasion is ‘iai not only to preserve old and regular custom- ers but to capture the younger generation growing upf-"Brewerr Guardian," June, 1928. "It is not ac much a question as to whether existing beer drinkers our be made to drink more beer. but as to whether their sons and daughters will take customarily to this beversgeP-“Brewel-s‘ Journal." Sir Edgar Benders, Director of the Brewers’ Society, made the following declaration before the Birmingham and Midland Counties Wholesale Brewers’ Association on June 15th, 1933. and it becomes the Brewers’ manifesto: "I am not saying that the pres- ent drinker should drink more, but rather that we want new custom- ers. We want to get the beer drink- ing habit instilled into thousands. almost millions, of young men who do not know the taste of .beer. These young men if they start with what beer they can afford today, as they grow up they wi‘i afford better beers to the great advan- tage of the brewing industry." "The chief customers of the pub- lie-house are the elderly and mid- die aged men. Unless you can at- tract the younger generation to take the place of the older men, there is no doubt we shall have to face beer." "If we can once attract a new class of customer we shall see the brewery trade turn round and start the ascending scale." He referred to the decline of theatre going in the States, and said:- "That is what may happen un- Tess we do something to attract and secure the younger customer, who, in turn, will bzcomc the mainstay are taken to say to him that Eng- land's beer is the best and health- iest beverage he can consume, and Bar Generators and Electric Motors REPMBEII Armature Rewinding Prompt Service Work Guaranteed lillell... VI. Palmer h filer to protect an early -$ lean Club Policy. - ASSOCIATION And about a thousand useless things m8 youth. Was it such a failure? JESUS CHRISTS NATIONALITY J . STOPS COUGHS to bring before him all tfi gfiwiil and contentment that the ‘publlq. b01149 lmDerl-s in England, and to 931T! on this goodwill, wc shall oer- Wllly BB0 ‘the Trade’ on a declin- 81%;." ' r gar also statesz- - " "We shell see that the contin- Notmes uance of our advertising is contin- gent upon the fact that we get Dear Brother Scouts,—I hope all Editorial support in the 53mg Patrol Leaders and Seconds are on paper. In that way it ls wondu-flfl their toes andready for the P. L. how you can educate pubflo 0pm- Conferenoe, which takeaplace in ion generally without mung l; goo St. Paul's Pariah Hall on Satur- obvious that there is a publicity day. the 2nd of November at 2 0811x9115“! behind it all." p.m. This will bc the beat yet. Mr. Brewers admit: (s) Few people Giveaway o! Dominion H. Q- will in usa. mael- as know much be view" *0 "11 "I l" "wt 15:11}: o about beer. (c) Names of brewers, 1o Scouting. Come and hear a once househnld won“ l" new the Patrol Leaders Association and unknown in hosts o! American "bu"? m‘! Llmlllrih- MY- 9mm" ham“ (c) The" "e a mum“ away has some interesting moving adults in USA. who have never 9mm“ 9° 91°" “l seen a regpecmbk 1mm, on l b“, Those of us who have been at- fle o; been tending the Provincial Camp for Promblflon’ by the Brewers» own the last few years regret very and much the passing of Mr. Edward testimony’ u" flak a 50b" Byrne. our genial and efficient camp eaok. w. Byrne was always ready to give of his best for the comfort and pleasure o: others. His place will be hard to fill. We ex- tend our sincere sympathy to his eorrowing family. Several good friends of the Zion Wolf Cubs met at Zion Church last Monday night at 8 pm. and drove the Pack to the Protestant Or- phanage at Mt. Herbert where they had a meeting with the "Little Folks" there. A most enjoyable time was spent and the program was as follows: Grand Howl. Strawberry-Short cake yell. Stcry—Ben Williams. Chorus-Home on the Range. Skipping-John Sterne, Bill Thompson. Story-"How the Elephant got his Trunk." Miss’ M. Hicks. Balancing Exercise-Douglas Hill. Address-Rev. G. C. Webster. Presentation of Badges: Collectors Badge to Ben Williams by Mr. M. Ross. House Orderly Badge to Bill Thompson by Mr. C. Moore, Balloon game, by children and Cubs. Zulu Chief Game by children and “A million boys are needed." Have you heard the brewers’ cry?" Fflend. have you a boy to spare ~ "Was Jesus Christ an American?" asked a lad in a. Japencsc High School. “No,' was the reply. "Well, wasn't He an Anglo-Saxon or a European?" he queried, and again was answered, “No, He was an As- iatic." "Why, then," said he, "He is our Japanese Christ, tool-a world- Chrlst." And here is the word of a cultured Indian. "None but Christ ' is worthy to wear the diadem of India, and He shall have it." A Buddhist, reading the‘ Gospel of 5t. John for the first time, exclaimed: "O Christ, Thou art the only true Buddha!” Thus the mystic Oriental acclalms the Christ who appeals to the Westerner as the practical Redeemer. Christ is Himself Orien- tal, but we ourselves had forgot- ten the fact and claimed Him as our own, and often in the past we have taken Him to peoples of other races as though Hg were a. Euro- pean. We have to learn that there is‘ a Japenese Christ, an Indian Christ, a Chinese Christ, yes, and an African Christ, as well as a Cub” , European Christ. But He is one gm Sim“- and_the same chi-lot, too great, far ""- too great for any one civilization Cubs Ben Williams and Bm fully to understand Him. The full conception of the matchless won- der of the Person cf Jesus Christ will not be known until all the na- tions have made their discoveries of Him and have pooled their ro- sults.—Rev. R. A. J. Cusden. BE 0F GOOD CHEER. In the story used as a basis of our Topic this month there is re- Thompson are to be congratulated on winning their first Proficiency Badge. We are sorry to report that three of our Cubs are on the Sick list, namely: Keith Carson, Archie Mac- Kinnon and Errlest Vail. we hope they will soon be able to hunt with us in the Jungle again. of the public-house. Unless steps- vealed another side of this episode -the result of belief. The bfesing to ourselves from believing God sustains and aids us but should go much further and reach others. We have first the message of the angel to Paul that cheered his heart and made him strong in the midst of the gravest danger. We also see Paul as a min- istering angel to those hungry. weary. discouraged seamen. to the distraught soldiers, to the officers o: the ship, His message was for each. They-had wilfully left the haven and encountered storms. They had lost all but life itself. They had done a'l they could to repair the damage and tried to save the ship and in the midst of the worst ex- perience we hear Paul say “Come and take food. God will take care of us and we ALL be brouam 587e- ly to land." Did ever message seem so unreal? The nations are all but, shipwreck- ed but it remains for us to say "All is well." "Be of good cheer I believe and. God has said “I will not fail thee nor forsake thee" has given for our encouragzment Isa. 41:10. Josh l, 1-10, Ps. 23. We we‘com: back Mr. Murdock yRoss of our Group Committee. Mr. and Mrs. Ross have been visiting thelndaughter in Vancouver, B. C. Last Friday night Akela and Cubs Albert Douglas and John Swirls motored to Borden and at- tended a Cub meeting there. They found the Borden Cubs very friend- ly and a very social time was held with Leaders and Cubs. Cub Derrell MoQuarrle of the Baptist Pact, Charlottetown, has bcen transferred to the Zion Pact and will be officially welcomed at their next meeting. The Cub Leaders Course being held in Charlottetown under Mr. Grcenaway is proving very success- ful. The attendance is good and the work most interesting. Those of us who are taking the Course are having our eyes opened. There is more in Cubbing than we dream- cd of. Mr. Greenaway has the art of making instruction ‘feasy w take." The following is a list of those taking the Course: Mr. .l. J. Morris, Prov. Com. Mr. n. C. ‘I THE I CHARLUFFPTTUWN GUARDIAN WHAT TO DO AIOIIT I s o e| I Acid Indigestion awavmr asurvsenil 41'» '__" __ cause ma raw remorse 1' ~.. A ~ , l.-j,~.:, l r-FT-‘fi/g" *1’ (‘ill ‘ I. DL- I‘L“... v i y‘ '/1\ h‘. mt f ' I w»- --»—*» “Mgr _ . "17 . DALON. ar "z roa 1 ~ Ufllllll CRIAI. Yllrnaad . . "Jeanna Fagin] leaelee .........lfor'llc lit * l 1a rouuoanou casau. Aserfifl $°= Cl- ‘ 5 Ifi, sum p-euflwmrnmnium so: goc a i WI) . ~l In: will“? ?l...-......-.--.’....l'.'§imm m gglép §gi§él%lLE-Ki§~E-r~§:nrgo= ' ' Facial —-—~ 0 M... people who am they i... "l.:l§?n";all§l§'llill;'§...-..s=m1u so PM?» rework-sum- __m§s "well stomachs" or "in cation." m ctaansmc expanses-pm 5°‘ §f,},‘{.j.,'é,t"§";:,~--~---—-,— rwc doctors say. euiler in really from chum .................... ' Ifcrfle 2:: vAumur-m aRE;'"-*“--—2= gang“ nothing more serious than ucldefonr- 35¢ Tamil! POWDER ........._..2for 85c 5o, wgv ..... ..... r1553’. fldl- And "l". “m” 11.11"!‘ w‘ l. DUBTINC rownaa. ‘Wltbalarsa u. rstcun rowoca mm, Siélllyéallcgléelileygelgiailvlv, ul v ‘ owder PaIM-mmmssm-Jtorloe Loo pus-mug powpgg 2|" m, o agnesla m s. ll " , W5,‘ . acts to almost immediately neutralize PAR my.‘ Milk o‘ B" t9“. ‘dud "v “=- 5...” ~. M»- ...."‘".... Thea-fl- ycur e. ou a new Poole I _ person! 80c T" " _ Try ml. lust once. Take either the “fly; We,“ "'“ IICIJ) l lpS I 0 88113813 ' Tablets. B_ut watch out that you get. so; the Genuine PLIILLIPS Milk of '. Magnesia. Made in Canada. 8| sue Rncfl use nv TAILIT roam "PW cling: Nllksfeiiifiqlfi For Tnnallliila and Lilac‘: iivimwhae. Each tiny n‘ ‘h “m, a, Simple Sen ‘lhroee "M" °"'“;'~;"“~=~'-=-°““' '."""" . 4w. 4 - o or figwfipgrglg}; Tooilhvlr SUNDRIES A1. "2 FOR 1,, 2 506 Z 25C agnesla. a - PHILLIP ‘ ‘rugg- Zggmm ‘Mvyfimggxuu 311.01g: SUNDRIES AT “2 FOR l" w. w - ' 2'” loo wldd'sbylliiuoiieegyring?xi tzi-‘zloo ‘$22 IN€§l!:p|gl’lly?lll°:‘glEa:!h 2g: 2g: i (Zfiilalscuntaiu; SyIringePu.......-..'..'.»22i;:r 2.? 5,; Ny¢QQQ L,“ pmcgy, 3 “"5: g, vlyalov-ganllrv a---~--.- 1R4 ¢ 5c Nycesilluhher Erasers Zforfic NYAL aim gist mdafirBTooih Brush. ,2 35c Dressing Combs 2 fol-Bic __-__i_ ‘mum P a r _ 1m Twl , rush llo do: both for. 5c 2s: hlcn s Combs 2101-16:- m M E M o n l. M °" " “a*.".‘..':':l:;$"'°"""’ .. :2: 537.551 are" mum, _..........--..a.e--u--fl m or e Add Mensch r~—v- . -- ‘gm NYAD BROMIDE} first. ' "YM- ‘m "m" "mm" u. a. Health Soap QUININE LAXACOLD l There passed peaoef ' m’ . i ms eternal mt on 00313‘ ill-lay“: Q _ a h TABLETS TABLETS Mme 01 his dlllshter, Mrs. Gilbert ‘NYSIS, 3911mm‘. loyalist, Mr. Henry Nel- Almond-m] son, at the advanced age of w. c“ m5“. Mr. Nelson, who was a resident c“ of Charlottetown for‘ ms grgltgr '"'" pm or mt no. had been mo»; "“":.,','.': with his daughter for the late years Ive-ii w! of his life, and until m; last illness "°" W“ hale and hearty. end although 211136 8t the ripe age of 88, retained all ' ‘ ‘ his faculties until the end. c Thh-“qf-‘iyo mI-Ie leaves to mourn his passing NYAL Simvin- CORN , NYAL rec daughters, via: Mr. Gilbert . ' Isentner. loyalist; Mrs. laBen Wil- Iil.“"A‘H°d Special: REMOVER R BAS E lams, North Riv z a m. Geo. ". . ' """' ‘ Williams, chspffnsiii, .l.‘ wife, ";;~*,,<»"- 53:131.... lama: Annie Plennel, and one son Wii- 1N3." aft-l Ulorilie 5" 1:" |;,,,,,.,,,} .11=m. having predeceased him. u, “m, Z...- ssm... ’ eiiivb-ili’ rm His funeral was held from the 1...... m: p0,", an, MacLean Funeral Home on Mon- a!" 50¢ 7"""" 1.1a ow day. Oct. 21st, and was very largely Yum... a 2 attended. The services at the Fun- - T-ml-"l- gfliélteglgloiilr]: all] ggravcnweretccn; ""3818 “m” 250. . . XICCH an ‘ll '" . . . l . . _ maec“gllfibwggsie‘kvem Mean kit's-on _ FIRST AID SUPPLIES . l NABV SPECIRL$ v L" Good; mm “thick; B“ an“: IIAlLII-pllpllflniinn ..._.:z (M151.- f: llnl-yuualrsyrup dfillélfl scrim"; Hurry Younker: John s‘ ‘m’ “In: laiidfillzlliaéniniw.al..g {or ‘Jlr Ilahr ‘Jlhlllle-lf‘ ‘fir: Matheson; William Parrish. 251-25; lflr (ilulellandilllell no’. nnlatfirzlnil: .:'.",I"',',",",'*',§,-:"‘z;--—-—-i",“;':2§ —_~-_-_;~— g" A’, h ‘ h I l. d- 3”." m ‘L-ar _\'n '1 |_ ml r |r-. Mm n. c‘ Parent. m‘ Cwmn liebtlla is: “$1.53. | fir‘: 1lu.__..._».s$l-n§ "la lllflrlvltend<Nlnvlen _....._..:unrlnc - 210150: <o . w Miss Jean R055’ 5th chmowm 1 r Adhesive /= M15254; ydn. _.....21‘nr 20c Ill: Numingslhviilp fo& M155 Ruth Duffy. 6th Chtown. Miss Hennessey 6th Chlown. D Miss Mary Arsenault, 1st Clrtown, Miss Madelln Clarkin, 1st I H , Chtown. Mrs. A. Affleck, 4th Clltown. Mrs. n. Jenkins, 4m clrtown. Mrs. W. Warren, 7th Ch'town. M11- Jas- F-"laos. 7th Ch'towrl. Mrs. Roy Cudmore. 8th Ch'town. Mrs. A. Ayer. 8th Ohlown. Mr. Ira Stewart, 9th Chtown. Mr. W. Warren, 7th Clftown. This course will be put on in Bummerslde next week. We hope that a large number of those in- terssted in the great game of Scouting for Boys will take advan- tage oi the opportunity. lillPTllliEll? Kurt your rupture troubles with our advanced method. No elastic. no ira- atrana. no steel. Llshi. Guaran- im-d. lnexpenaiar. Write for informa- lion. HMITII MANUFACTURING COMPANY Dept. ii Preston, Ont. Established l!” Be of good cheer. "What total abstalner 6V9!‘ amounted to anything?" aslm the ~ sneering ‘Wet". "Oh, just Abraham Lincoln, Thomas Edison, Admiral Peary, Johri D. Rockefeller, Robert . . E. Lee, Stonewall Jackson, Henry Ford, Whittier, Bryant, Bernardo, Booth, Nansen, Bernard" Shaw. Wilfred Grenfeli. Gandhi, Lindberg. Of course. this isn't the entire list, but then this is a small paper.” "Th4, voice." GREY WOLF. With Discovery of s 120 pound six-inch 0F shell in a passenger wichet on a wharf in Hamilton, Bermuda, caus- ed a commotion and the frightened bafllse master called the police. Two constables who made cautious investigation fund the shell was "dead" and removed it to head- quarters. They werg unable to ex- plain its presence in the carrier however. Suite ll, Peardon Building. RRINGING UP FATHE swYwl-lzs" secs‘ s up .l. Learn to Play TIiE GUITAR the La Sallc Method of Teaching and the beauti- ful i. Anrments furnished. you will have no more lonely evenings. You play a fnlrlillnr tun; on your first lesson. mstrumenta furnished La Sails teaches Hawaiian Guitar Tenor Guitar and yum, glcsdenta unable to attend the studio may take n correspond- ¢ Milne which also entitles them to free instruments. wi‘i“ f" ‘Wmlllete information. Our Bep-eecutstlve will call on you. LA SALLE COLLEGE OF MUSIC Syatemsilzed § . CHARGE show and the music, music critics have reservations as 11s QUEEN ‘STREET BOOKS-ART-MUSIC (Continued from Page ill_ have been several outstanding events, outside the Metropolitan, which are more important to the future of opera than anything that has transpired within. Two of ihem--"Four Saints in Three Acts" and "Porgy and Beef-erg defin- iteiy opera: the third was a Negro parable with poplar music-"Green Pastures." The folk opera “Porgy and Bess", a tale o1 Charleston Negroes, is from the story "Porgy." by Dorothy and DuBose lleyward, which ap- peared about nine years ago. The opera was suggested by George Gershwin and is the work of Key- ward and Gershwin. The term "Impressionist" was first used by the Press and Public in derision of Claude Monet who had ex ibited in 1874 a painting which called “Impression? The term clung to Monet and hi; friendg and followers and is now the ac- cepted nzme of a, school or mod. ern pafnting. The father of the Impressionis - was really Edouard Manet, born in i982. whose work was a revolt against “the sp‘cn curs of Rubem, the afectatlon of he Romanticlsts and the rigidity of the P‘ ' 1 and Acadzmic art." He it was who started the "plein air" school. the style of modern painting which has developed into "Impressionism." Others among the great Impres- sionists axe Paul Ceaanne, Edgar Dell-B. Paul Renoir, Alfred Slsiey, Pissarro. Guillaumin and Jonkind. Fine reproductions of the paint- ings of some of the Impressionists have been shown at the Harris Memorial Art Gallery during the past week. a The new Polk Opera "Porgy and Bees" seems to be causing a dis- turbance amongst critce in New York. The dramatic critics like the while the sponsoring one of on display in CONTESTS. With every 25c purchase you will receive a COUPON for a free CHANCE on one of the MANY HANDSOME PRIZES Drawing to take place Dec. 24, 193i! Ask for your Coupons, HEAD OF HILLSBOBDUGH ' SCHOOL Report for October: Grade VI-l, Vivian Blrt. Grade IV (a)-—l, Helen Brazel; 2, Aeneas Brazel; 8, Joseph Bambrizk. Grade IV (b)-—1, Gertrude Myers; 2, Catherine Douglas. Grade III-i, Marian Myers. Grade I (a)-1, Leslie Douglas; .1. Jean Douglas; 3, Mildred Brazel- Grade I (b)—l, Pearl Myers. Perfect attendance-Leslie Doug- las. Pearl were. Jean Douglas, Marian Myers, Gertrude Myers Catherine Douglas, Vivian Birt. Mary McAakill-Taacher. llae NlnnraPl for Dandruff ~ i%i o COMMENCING i FRIDAY, uovamaaa 1ST, 1e35, Miltonsr Old Spain are again their interesting the window.