=v:SnF5 C v. d e.- P ft c It k I G I l l F f I l l l. wga-e-na n“ -.~ 51,-, B.‘ ., _ Q... _.... w __.____.-_ 1 --.<- ,...._-..---- 1mm." FOUR_ $2.1 ». ..- _ y "1111; c1115 l_<_.'..~1.)'1'1_’.'i s“. 11.nov,“. .. -. t . TUWN (iAUKXALLJLZN The Charlottetown Guardian .-('II W l-‘DOOIII I. IPLIII ~ ~ I r | J. It unmet: I. J. l. ldltu and m“ ‘m; tum-to; J In. nuvwu. I J l bcrrelnrg Linn not l! A luilunnn U. I. 0- Auocinu mum- trullt Huber and U. B. (Juno Morning Ill l; Qlllllfvd 1H1) $5.00 per gun un Idilnrfl delivered to clly. $8.00 pct s“: (In tnhuurr) mulled to P. IS. lnlnll $5.00 per 1n: u» ‘dune-e: llnllra to lllllll and I). I. "rzrcnsoav, sovsmTzn 1a. 19:1 ,_________. - This Tells The Story of the connection be- ) prices and the F0 per rates on New Zealartd in the weekly Live Stock d by the Federal Depart- r example: . up to Sept. 23 show a gradually g n rlcet. \vi:h top prices on that itrc-nto and $3,‘; at Montreal. :1: week, Sept. 30 (the date oi tir-nt of the terms of the New w» i-xe read: "Lamb prices drop-- Toronto, closing a: $8.25 for Next week, Oct. 7: "Lamb price- cr-nts a! Toronto, good ewes and . fog at $8." The following week". Oct. 14, \. turther drop of 25 cents to 5,0 cents was “exgien . ed on the Toronto lamb market." Again on Gct. 21: "Toronto lambs were clown 25 cents. goodat $7.75 off cars or $7.50 of? tru“ " cent l'£'/lt.k\1'v.'l in t' . lamb hits..." ' l Market lit" nzc-nt at l) l l\ w. .. c»: that t-Tme. there has been a slightly firmer tt-rxlrric" but no ing comparable to tltc situation rig before the New Zealand trade tvrcs were announced. The latest report . ti, shows lamb markets “vari- h a ton price of $8 at Toronto and "lhfs represents a decline Al“! trnf. and orfelaflll a ' mg i. r; closely with the drop locally, shown. It i- irrp trtrtnt to note that our lamb pro-t dttr" were. anticipating an increase at thisi ' xt-‘Md of a decrease; and the only reason for "e adverse situation is the uncer-= n: from the King Government's . . 2 out 5o percent of the protection = zed by C11!‘ farmers under the old treaty. ‘ _> we repeat, didn’t the King Government ‘ leave uvs" enough alone, and renew the agree- nten: .\'<=-.v Zealand on the advantageous tcrrrs obtanncd by their Conservative predeces- lors.‘ Cabot And Bristol ' What is probablyr the actual spot in Bristol where john Vabot embarked for his voyage of discovery of the American continent in I497 is doomed to disappear through a scheme for the reconstruction of the city centre, by which the River Avon will be covered in with water gur- glens for two or three hundred feet. The river at present runs right into the heart of Bristol. and from time immcmorial the prows and yards of vessels have loomed above the tvaffic of street and pavement, to the- endless fascination of visitors. A new bridge will now carry an arterial road across the river beyond the gardens, and on the bridgehead will be set the namts 0i Bristol atl- venturcrs and Empire builders-names such as those of Thomas lay, John and Sebastain Cabot. {ohn (juy. Klartin Pring, Captain Jantes and _\":lliattt f'cnn. The shipping will still Cfimc l0 the city ducks, but the old deep and Picturesque penetration will have been stopped short. It is a case where progress in driving new roads ‘has been durable to compromise with the old landmarks. The One Sure Faith Cltri-tiattity is committed to the spreading bf a gospel of l we, and slattds or falls today on this point, lilC hr-v. Dr. llztrry lhncrsott l-‘tisuick asscrts. lle sags: “(Iltristianityt is comnziticth to the proclamati n of a gospel of love and to reliance on the strategy of love in the vvitmitzg 0f the world. In the thirteenth chapter of Iiirst Corinthians Paul evcn .'~7'._\'S that lovc never fails. As a tuztttcr of llTIHl-llPIUlCIl fact love ccrtaf scents to fail! Uur main baffle- mz-txt lies in tin: fact Vthat while we pTfJCl-Tlill 2t gospel of lrivc, we livc in a worlzl that dr-pciri-"tttirtn ill will, coercive tyranny", or- g: ..t'd and bluntly viulcticc. Can we go mt llC- ucving; that lore m-vcr fails? In the first plrtcc, lovr; docs not fail in lllis settsc that man always has to conic lack to it \\'ll('11 he wtutts something spiritually cntistrtictivc done. Say your best about force and its functions. but thc limits of ivhat it can do arc stt antl inexorable. In the second place, lnvc docs not fail in this sense; it creates a standard of judgment bv which any ,, other principle of human relationship is cou- tlentitt-d as inferior." Voice From Alberta Thr- invasioit of the peoples’ rights by the . 22 m’ one cent a pound at Torontol ctiarter cents at Montreal; cor- ,' tax, license and control everyone and every- thing, in the most barefaced autocratic and ruth- less manner. The all-wise superman who is going to be the dictator of Alberta business, with supreme pvvvcr ovcr evcrybodyg employer ind entploycc, is—the Good Lord save u; alll-q conceitcd, halibake-d youngster whose sole bitsi- ness expcricncc has been gained as assistant preacher at the Aberhart Bible Institute. Al- berta, in fact. has become the laughing-stock - of the wide world. T'Then came the outrageous bill to muzzle the press of the province and plainly to impoSe an impossible tax by stealing costly advertising space, so as to flood the province with Social Credit propaganda, free of charge, and, inciden- tally, to drive many publications into bankruptcy. In other words, this audacious and mendacious measure, apparcntlj: fronted by men of Colossal ignorance, puts us back in the Middle Ages and on a level vvitlt present-day Russia, Italy and (brntany. Thcle my patience came to an abrupt end. I have lived ior three score Years and ten as a free man in irec countries, and that preci- ous ‘cultural ltcringe‘. to use an apt and popular Dottgfas phrase. I do not propose to surrender to .\lr. Aberharz or to any of his irresponsible and irrepressible amateur crew. "I have edited the Rcciecu since the day I founded it, some thirtv-old years ago. I have , (lone my duty honest ' fairly and fearlessly, l as l saw thing-u and as intelligently as I knew ‘ how. The ‘press-gag’ lav." has not received royal a nt up to date. It’ and when it does, I here- by serve notice on the legislative lunatic asylum in Edmonton. that, law o no law, they will turn the R ~ into a ':'..u_\- political propaganda I‘ I Editorial Notes Seems a‘l set :'~r a tine week-end of bargain shopping. U U U I Sir \‘\'. S. Gilbert of “H.315. Pinalore" fame born this date 1836. ' a u n x All here will join in congratulating Dr. David \\'. .\Iacl\'enzie, Royal Victoria Hospital, Mon- treal, on the additional distinction conferred upon him by being admitted an honorary ment- ber 0f the Royal Medical Society of London. This is the oldest medical organization in the Empire, instituted in r773. U U i U The Bennett social legislation, which the Lib- erals opposed toothand nail before last election is now considered so urgent and desirable that Prime Minister King is demanding instant ap- proval by the Provincial Governments. Of its favour today as -.\[r, King himself was op‘- poscd to it heretofore. 418$ The number of scallops taken in Tasmanian waters during the 1937 season was more than a million and a quarter greater than the total for the season last year. The total this year for the four months ended August 31 was 14,- 186.90 scallops. compared with 12,872,000 for the same period in 1036. The State is widely famed for its prnductiort of this rare delicacy. I! 19' l! II! The Lyons Government of Australia. now ed, is again in the saddle but with only a slim majority; of three in the Senate. Actually their majority; is four but out of that a President of Senate must be chosen. One of the surprises of the election was the tic-feat of Sir George Pearce, Minister of External Affairs who has repres- ented \\'cst Attstralia since the first Common- wealth Parliament in 1901. I I l i Here is a rvgtzlar Chittcsc puzzle. Germany has allied herself with japan sworn to oppose Communism at all costs — japan has invaded China to put an end to Communism there. but is stcrnly opposed by llarnn Yon Falkenhansen and his corps. of (icrttmrt military experts. Now who is who and what is vvhztt in China, and docs there by any other name tncnn the same thing? U U i I Tilt;- rccvimtttcullnlion that (icn. .\. D. UcRae be aslu-d to rc-umc- his position ass-organizer 0f the Conscrvzttivt: party was made at a special cxectttivt- mcctittg of tho Yc-rtltirt Conservative Association. Thr- ntt-(-tin;_r_ nvcr which Mr. (icorgr! .\ll.'m prrn-idt-l, voted to covnmmticare ‘with l\‘t. llou. R. ll. Pxnttctt to this effect. urg- ing the Cottst-rvativc tiarty lcntlvr to attempt to persuade Con. .\lCl‘l".C to talc-c over tltp post g-f orgrmizer he lttrlrl in Ibo I930 Dumittion Qltrc- tinns. >'F ll! ill i .\lr. l. Gin-s. Kl] .‘-l.l.../'\., Utitarin in- tends to ask thr- Provincial Ilnuse at its next ses- sion to pass legislation to enable "the slandered, libcllcil or vilified individual of ,1 racial group to take action in the courts tn bring the cul- prits to justice." llc Iiclicvcs such legislation vvottlrl go far toward curbing anti-Semitic pro- pr-gatida and acts of intimidation. The Pro- vincial ntcmbcr revealed also that the Cattarlian Abcrliztrt lirivvrnmcttt is still bcittg protested vigorously by the pres-s of Albcrftt. The fol- lowing cotuitivnt by the WlllOI‘ of T/Ir: Iiurm mid Randi lrrzi y, (itlgrtrv. is characteristic: “Since thasz- ‘experts’ arrived, gnvcrnnicttt in Alberta ll7l~i licr-tt rr-rlttccrl to the level nf comic opera. (lr is it trngtrilv? Th: province has been prnjgt-tt-tl into rt sea nf political turmoil. Lggpclmpltt has been [wassctl Ol)\'l0ll3l)' beyond provincial jtzrisilicfti-t, zmii promptly (lisallcwv- ed, class butt-cl hrs lit-cu farmed to white bolt. families liztvr‘ lwcPn v-lit. lJcccncv has dcprtrtctl. venom bus tztlw-rt lli place. and the whole totic of public liic lifts lit-mi swept into the gutter. Ncvcr during; 1b" liztlf century’ of my life in lbs"- \\'<-<t l"\" l vfitttt-sw-rl sticft .1 ilcnlorable F771":- Jc-wish Congress was making arrangements to go lit-fore the licdcrtil llottsc to ask Parliament ' to take action against anti-Fcttiitic activities in ‘Catiada. llc bad .-t tremendous amount of in- ‘ formation which at [ircsctit he was not at liberty to divulge, bc said. ‘ l? U U U i If flClll!)Cl‘I1(‘_\', “thc ltcst ntctltntl of govern- . nmnLavJJicbeLIuLhumau .mlnd.lias yet devised.” is t0 be prcscrvccl its supporters must not fall into the error of "regarding a majority as some- thing sacred in itself." Lord Twccdsmuir, Gov- ernor (lottcrnl of Czmzula. witrttcd at Mcblaslcr University, Hamilton. Addressing students and faculty Lord Tucmlstttttir said democracy was threatened mt many sides by other creeds which ltavc a common characteristic-Whey think of ‘JWlP- “M? '71‘ l’<"">l‘~‘ 5"“ flllllll l-"F ""lllll‘"l‘l" ‘the states as it itv-rhinv, uf men antl women as . . . . nit-Ht :1‘! dud l‘l~iu'~'ll"v HYPHIIIPM- lbs‘ ""1- ‘.1 itiass, and cru-‘i 11ml blur that most precious gmign of t‘ ~ qr nut-tit is cotllinvtl fllillmt ("I- thing. the individtrzilirv of the citizen." While I firvlv t» N-ilil: every iudit-iilzrl !1t1.'tltl(- to tmdcrstatirl and sup- port llll‘ $uci~| Credit philisoplty. “And all this in the name of humanit and l fnlilv .'tbll<t*rif t-vcry grOHP 110d be considered dvtnorracy' the best method of governtnent, it was also the most difficult, he said. demantlittg :1 high level of education, in- telligence and individual freedom, discipline and 1 gefigion! Arbitrary powers have been ta cn to public spirit course, Premier Campbell is as enthusiastic in ‘ that the preferential votes have been all count- - lapaitrsc warfare and ficrman pro-Communism- ttores at m: YlAYl What could he more absurd than ' for Japan u: prezend to azzack me Hunting Government for being OummunLsI-Ac, when Chlang Kaz- ahek and 121s group broke away 110m the old Sun Yemen move-j trout precisely because the latter; we: sympathetic toward Russ an. Communism and they have been fighting the Oommumsttc armim ‘m. Chine eve: since-Montreal Szar. The Superior Court of Prussia has, decided that the Protzsant Cm- ft-eslonnl Church. of which the Rev Martin Niemoeiler is head no longer legally a part of the o. . In! German Evangelistlcal Churn. ‘The court. declares that the ofiicial church includes "only those mem- ber: and groups that recognize Zfze‘ church regime established by Chan- oelor Adolf Hitler. . . Niemoel- 1e: 5nd m; brave followers reex- nine only Jesus ChrBt. These not». Aryans have to be put. 1n the pmoe.—New York Post. The spirit of optimism long way W111i all of us. confidence in the future of the c t;:| of yum- residence, of WW PIPY-i mo: and of the nation is of vital! importance. There Ls no room for; the Joy-killers 1n business or-pubnc, life. A nation of pessimism can-i , not succeed 1n anything. This is thzl tme to lookiforward to what shall. 1a largely what we make 1t. and‘ that spirit will soon be ref ected 1n; daily life-Guelph Rfereury. An announcement of unusual; interest w Canadians was contained i 1n n. news dfspctch the other day I to the eflcct that. the richest un-l minded fields of Canadian h storical material are not. found in the Dom- lnlon but. 1n the vaults of the Hud- son's Bay House 1n London. There are to be found 1n these collections tons of unpublished accounts of "the Governor and Company of; Adventurer: of Ilngland Tracurtgl lnlo Hudson's Bay reiwhlns bask to 1670, when King Charles II granted the It 1s now an- nounced that for the first time those hlstonml records are to be made available to the pub. c.- Bnntford 1381106110!‘- Any houehold who ha at- tentpwd to negotiate me purchase ofnnhroustormessof porkchops for a lame family w1.1 understand the psychology of the thieves who bmke into a southwest side butcher shop a few nights ago. Passinz up the cash mgtster, they concentrat- ed on the refrigerator, stripping 1t o! some $400 worth of meats. No ptkers, these burglars, to fool with paltry cash! They played the game of crlme for higher steaks-Ch c- ago News. A further source of assistance (for an aerial survey flight. 1n Australia) ls available in the shape of a tea-m of fasb-rldmg camels. ‘These will be at the base 1n charge of the well known bushman, Bab Buck. Bob Buck, 1t will be remem- bered. found Iassetei-‘s body after his tragic failure to locate a sup- posecVgold reef 1n 1930. Buck w.Z1 have available six of the best cam- ‘ els. ‘Trained specially for fast. trans- port Jhese animals are capable of 50 miles a. day with ease and they would be able to carry any supplies or spares required. The camels would be gulded by Poilock daily towards the posltlon required. By this means help 1s assured 1n a moat positive manner. - Melbourne Angus. It looks u 1f the speed-up and stretchout are catching up with goats as well. as humans, a govern- ment report. having poinLed out that 2% more mohair was produced from 2% fewer goals 1n 1936 than 1n 1935. In reporting the figures, the editors of Textile World showed contmendable restraint n not heading their story. "Mohair from less Goats."--Bus1ness Week. Evidently seniimenl. docs not ex- i lend to all ancient things. but‘ c ample, a. LEGO-acre esmt: in New Jersey, once owned by Joszph Bonaparte, Napoleon's bsother, brought only $200 rat-cu‘. y at t: sher 11's sale, while the late Jchtif D. Rockcfsllers birthplace in Ncvv; l York State. changed hznds on pa ‘ mm; of a. tax arrears bill of S’: . —-G10be and L. 1. t ‘ i l The provlnus, and mac pa- tlcumiq KAA: 0.44mi t.,,< parties xrucmeuet-anott llflvlllfla.) , Let-elf» 0t‘ making ovcr a1 thou‘ sotnzagtt DOWCIS, 1410i] le-Ltiku l.) a Ciilhiill and dOmHlBul-DZ auvhotxty. ...v".t- i n tnelerss thzy have shown vtlllnguzs. , to discuss radtlcalloit oi HULLJIAA...) i arlslng out. of the passage of tim= t It‘. mum. be retitemacut-u 1.1a’. 111., would not have agreed lu 186i t.) anyih m; but a Federal union and they wut not conslder aziytluttg 0.5. now. They will TCSl-ab bflAlllllOll C21- cmnchmeizts, abcit IRMA)’ to lLs.eu to uomlnlon suggestions designed for the good 0t all. They are pre- pareu to stand loyally by the imm- lnlott 1n matters they ltaxe coitficl- ed b0 its care and 1t. is not easy to credit that they conceive their tutu"- ests as superior to those o! the Dominion. On the other hana. they will never allow that an interest of the Dominion can be superior to thelr-lnteresta. Each authority is supreme 1n its own alloted field.- Bt. John Telegraph Journal. Strange to learn that Dzan ("Gloomy") Inge has written a limerick and equally strange to find 1t n good one. ‘There was an .0141 man of lmnrtnum who kcvpt hwo hlwk iheetp 1n hla room. "They y remind me,’ he said, ‘of txwn friends 5 who N‘: dead’. But he would never l he'll us of whomP-Toronto 35m», In: your; lrnnulcnll who dc- clnred ln Reglnn Police Court that thev preferred 1m to jobs on farms were sentenced m two weeks’ hard labor and taken or! the relief r0111. An they were healthy rrflosra tne punshnwnt seems fitting. Why should the farmer have to work and pay taxes to keep men who wish to be, with assurance that. the future 1 all industry when i’. dominates ou:, _. .t‘c:1 Products that the soil of his (IE-DUCK C-Q‘ til-All‘ 111.0 k|-;Cll& 01A l PUBLIC FOR UM Pnorecrbzo out cum: APPEAL "r0 scout-sun: Sun-In the early days the foun- ders of our Island gave little heed. o; none at all. to the Preservation of wild life. Even 1f they thought of that duty. undoubtedly, they feit that the game would always last. and that they had no time for such sentimental side 1551105. They were coping vrithtroubles o! many kinds, and it 1s not lb be wondered a: that previous to we year 1906 the enforcement of game i: s was generally considered to‘ be thg duty of the police officers and constables. none of whom ever troubled Lnetnselves 1n the rr Aer. izle conservation o! the ' tread-seed eating and _:r.g bit-ts was total- In the Leeslative Assembly of 1906 a new Game Act, which m- clttded the protection of useful birds. was passed. and the Prince Edward Island Fish and Game on Ascciatlon was incor- .and its members being sh and game guardians pay to enforce is provis- o . We have an excellent protective law. which would acoomplfshmuch v good pro rly enforced. but bitter . 1 e has proved that lam ‘ they are supported by intelligent, sympath- etic public opinion, and thLs is “that the Fish and Game Associ- i atlon have been. and are striv g i to cultivate behalf of the birds. In the constant struggle going or; between the insect hosts and the vegetable kingdom, 1t is es.- sential that the farmer shottid carefully husband all the forces which will assist him to subdue the antagonists. who threaten to destroy his crops. and the best allies he can possibly have are the birds. which Nature has especially provided and equipped for that purpose. The preservation of animal and plant llfe. and of the general beauty of Nature Ls one of the foremost duties of. the men and women of today. It 1s an unpera- tive duty. because 1t must be per- formed at once, for otherwise "ft , will be toolate. We no longer destroy g-rcat works of art; they are treasured and regarded as of priceless value, but we have yet to attain the state of cfvlllutlon where the de- struction of a glorfous work of Nature whether 1t be a forest 01" a species of mammal, fish or bird, 1s regarded with equal abhorrence. In order that the people may understand and judge the question of extermination bf our wild 111e, 1t is necessary to recall the near past. It 1s not necessary, how- ever. to go far into the details of history. Any man who reads the books which tell the story of the development of this country, and takes due note of the wild life features of the tale, will saywltn- out hesitation that when the peo- ple received the land. 1t. wascn- dnwed with a magnificent supply of valuable wild creatures. The pioneers and early settlers were too busy even to take due note of that fact, or to comment upon 1t, save in very fragmentary ways. Nevertheless the wild life abund- ance of the early days served. down to a. period that 1t touched the lives of people now llvlng. Any man over fifty-five or slxtv years of age, who when a boy had a tnste for hunting and fishing, will remember the flocks of wild birds that he saw. and which made upon hu mind many indel- ible impressions. Abundance 1s the word with which to describe the original fish and game that stcrkcd our country. The tendency to kill and cap- ture wild game of all kinds 0y u-Zinlasale ntethods 1s as old as the human race. The days of the club, t1 bow and arrow. and the flint lac‘: nun wcre contemporaneous with the divs of great abundance of name. In the carlv davs shat ptws vcrc PW and she‘. was scarce and dear; the poor man rarely lad a r1121 or ammunition. In- of attempting to live on ls" ltvntcd for the startle O"'l1 farm could produce. IFP-n fish and name were plen- ‘l l~~"2ve it was right for men "l a lmitwl rumber for sport Al" the table: but the old i~ 1s “its [YEW swept away bv an cs1 n! deswuctlcn. The atlvcnt of hreceh l"nd"r=, aulomatics and ‘ PKlTIID-CjlIPQ has rendered game scarce. The sportsman of tndav twist. no lnnqvr expect or demand the same rrnerous hunting and fl-‘Wn: prlvilwes that. was right filly Xrnrs two when game was ftffv limes as plentiful as it 1s now. and there were only one klllr." to fifty now 1n the field. A tru~ sportsman ls incapable 0f ialsim an unfair advantage or any wild creature; the best hung. , ct‘ and angler ls the man who: finds tho most gnme. kills the! least. and leaves no wounded. No sportsman can be a good citizen and also be a slaughterer of fish and game. beyond the limit of true sportsmanship. The use of automatlc and pump- guns Ls justly regarded as a relic of barbarlsm and anyone who uses them places himself beyond the pals of decent sportsmanship. V The eavme desire to klll all that the law allows often 1s manifest- ed 1n the man ln whom we natur- nllv expect to find a very differ- ent spirit. If a. majority of the sportsmen o! this province feel that so long M lbfle ls any gums nllve they must be allowed to slattghter 1t. then assuredly we soon shall have a gameless Island. I am now no- lng to ask both the sportsmen and the people who do no‘. lull wlld things lo awake and do ‘.h>lr plain dutv in nrotecllng and pre- serving the fish and game, whfcn bflonz partly to us but. chiefly tn :2 at 111s and Others’ expense. - acne who come after m, cantney .; . w», mm before We u» utopia-man future lwrkmn m‘ ' s tesiisi aw 1m v3 anti-ow- s tttiitwuu imvs THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY Ready for the crowds. . Judy with the kind of bargains that Henderson 8t Cudmore’s customers have come to expect Dollar Days... All over the store price tickets spell big savings. A great 97°81'31" 0f BIYBKlHB-u g Buy Dollar Days and Pocket tthe Savings. . . Fashion Craft Overcoats. A great showing of these fine Overcoats are offered Dollar Days at greatly reduced prices. MELTON OVERCOATS. A heavy all wool Overcoat in Browns, Blues Blacks, Raglan and Guards Models $16.50 value. A great special at — - — _ _ $12.95 i ARROW SHIRTS $1.29. Separate collar or attached styles. One of a kind. Regular value $2.00. Dollar Days — - — — - -, — $129 FINE SHIRTS 95c. Dark plain shades, button down collar. Regular $1.25. Dollar Days — — — — — — — — — — — — — —— —- HEATHER SOX 3 PAIRS $1.00. Days -— — — FANCY SOX 4 PAIRS $1.00. Go Dollar Days - FANCY SOX 3 PAIRS $1.00. Elastic Tops, All wool a real 50c value. 95c Dollar 3 pairs $1.00 9d weight_ smart patterns 35c value. 4 pairs $1.00 fine Cashmere. regular 50c.‘ Dollar Days - - — — — — — —.— — —- — — — 3 Pall’! 31-90 SWEATERS $1.85. an Wool Jumbo’. Crew neck style worth $2.50. Dollar Days $1.85 Extra quality Barrymore's and Tweeds Over-coats. A marvelous 3 day Special at — - - _sl9-5o Worth $25. Silverlones and Tweeds Over- - coats in great variety new models new patterns. worth up 8H5 to $20.‘ Sale Price — — —- a COAT SWEATERS $1.85. All Wool Jumbo stitch navy, black. worth $2.50. Dollar Day; _ - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ $1.85 COAT SWEATERS $2.50. Fine all wool V neck Coats. worth $3.00. DollarDays-------_-___-____.___ _ $250 BOYS’ SWEATERS HALF PRICE $1.25. Coal. at WORK SHIRTS 89c. Dollar Days DOESKIN WORK SHIRTS $1.15. Large full out style. All shades $1.50 value. yle in Jumbo and weaves. Reg. $2.50. Dollar Days — - - ’ - _ flno $1.25 69c Heavy Tweeds, Chambrays, Drills. Regular $1.25 _ Dollar Days — - — — — - — — _ _- 89c $1.15 down. Worth $5.00 Sale price — - - SPORTS JACKETS. Suede fln- ish, the greatest jacket bargain 1n STANFIELDS medium weight: combinations. Reg. $2.25 $1 ' Sale Days——---— n . STANFIELDS BLUE LABEL Underwear. Worth $2.25. $1 - Dollar‘ Days - - - - n lllEN’S PYVJAMAS $1.50. Fine quality Broad: $2.00. Dollar Days - - _ _ . - PYJAHAS $1.50. Flanneleflc in good patterns. $2.00. Dollar Days FLEECE COMBINATIONS $1.25. Days _ _. _. FLEECE SHIRTS AND DRAWER weight. BIEWS CAPS HALF $1.50. Dollar Days SPURT BACK JACKETS Dollar Days - - LEATHER COATS No. I Horse Hide full belted de- tachable fur collar coats. 7 Worth $14.50 D. Days n 5 Dollar Days -— - PRICE 75c. OVERALLS $1.11; Heavy denim in blues and blackg woflh Days - - DUNGAREE $1.19. Laced back s1 Dollar Days scorn‘ ‘BACK JACKETS Dollar Days MEWS TIES 50c. Days STANFIELD GOLD Dollar Days — Regular $1.00 neckwear. $2.50. A few odd ones. All wool worth up to $22. A real saving Dollar Day Special -- - lolh. nice patterns, worth i _ _ _ “ — -- —— $1.50 All sizes. Regular Sold always at $1.50. Doltm- $1.25 S $1.25 Suit. Mottled shade In a good $1.25 Good shades. One ‘of a kind. Regular ‘ 75c $4.50 $2.50 IWORSTED SUITS All wool worsted regular price ‘l5. LABEL $1.39. Shirts and drawers worth $1.75. l WOEK SHIRTS 69c. A mixed lot broken sizes; Worth $1.00. Dollar ays __ yle best Dungaree in Town worth $1.50. $4.19. All wool Melton jackets, worth 5 dozen 0n sale Dollar $1.50. Dollar —— —- $1.19 $1.19 $5.00. $4.19 50c - - - $1.39 llYDE PARK 81 FASHION CR AFT SUITS. Your chance to pick the finest suit ln our store at greatly reduced prices. A REAL BARGAIN. SEE THEM. The wlld things of thla earth l-re not ours 0o do with as we please: they have been given to us 1n trust, and we must account. tor them to future generations. W111 the young men of the pro- vince show their. luterest ln pro- tectlng our- fish and name. by their cooperation? 111a Flah and Game Association for mnnv years ha; cart-led on the work with little or no support. but ln many cues unjust opposition from them. A; reolonlng belnga 1r. lo our duty to heed the lessons of history Incl not rush blindly on untll we‘ ren- der our Island destitute ot- f1|h and lame. Let ua n11 slrlve to. 0113b nine, that they may have it but a tutu of 10's legitimate pursuit. that hu made llfe so 1n- tereellnl to the sportsmen of to- day. I nfn, Sir, etc. i ALBERT Ii. MORRISON, Game Inlpectnr. ()l'?( l". tittinntsutianunrton: . ‘or Vitalit] alwaljf ul BRAHMIN PF. 1401+: '1‘ F. BAD BLLRMISI FLOODS ‘monsoon-mood; durlnr l“ m- peuon thln yrtl’ “W4 widespread dump 1n Bunni- N’ days the railway urvlces 0n ll" Rangoon-Mandalay and Pr!!!‘ Moulmeln Dues was intarrufim- y.-