"ecu-ruse fled we“... §_;f~For 5 Years‘ 3 on can sum ly ‘his; led s "I wsi I sufferer for 5 ssrs with bscksc s," writes j Mrs. George A. ' or, of Cherry we , P.B.I. “A ' ' on; advised me to give Doddfi Kid- nsyPiilssn-isl. Idideosndsfm usl 4 hoses I am now thsnkful In lsynf nm completely relieved of my kidney trouble. I have ommend them to three others of my neighbors, who’ were afflicted es I was-and they, too, are relieved." 9'49 Budd's Kidney Pills “s... l Xmas Cards‘ PRINTED TO ORDER Your name printed on your Christmas greeting means the utmost in sincere wishes. Phone ‘I33 Today The Guardian Central Job‘ Printery Charlottetown Ability To See Comfortably The object of a modern eye service is to enable patients to see comfortably. Thst means seeing without strain on the eyes. And also the avoidance of msny bodily results of eye strain. That thought ducrves the consideration of all who are not eertsin of the condi- tion of their eyes. G. F. Hutclieson ‘rulRbvsi. Pscnmo co We are buying dressed fowl and chicken daily. -Pleasc Note- Clean birds of all feathers. Dry pick chicken. Fowl may be scalded, If we have no agent in your district ship direct by express or truck. Royal Packing 0'0. J. D. JENKINS i Trlliassionai Bards McLEOD 8 BENTLEY ‘ w. e suntan, I. o. I. A. BINTI-IY, I. ONEY 0H4:- il0 Blchmcnl Street. " 5Alex. W. Matheson Iljlfllv soucnos. no. Isowtsfese oelleetlsss Olisezutllsbmsssltrsst. 3 seas sensu- The Central Guardian This eels-s ls nursed for new: of lofll interest but advertising of a hill, lsitore may be inserted sl 0 costs s word strictly pueblo is SOCIAL GATHERING - Miss Mary Duffy entertained at her home on Wednesday evening at a linen shower snd bridge in honor of Miss Mse Quinn. FUNERAL SERVICES-Jflie fu- neral of the late Mr. Arthur Whestlcy took place ‘rhursrhy si- ternoon from the residence of his brother, Mr. Wallace Wheatley, East Royalty, to Highfield Cem- etery, Services by Rev. Mr. Pale- thdrpe of Winslce assisted by Rev. Mr. Raymond of Charlottetown, were held at the house and grave. The poll bearers were Messrs. Henry Hurry, Russell Bell, Clif- ford Moore, Gordon Stetson, J0- seph Curley snd Victor MscWil- llama. CHAIN BRIDGES-The various ladies auxiliaries in connection with the Prince Edward Island Hospital started a chain of bridge parties during the pest few weeks to misc funds for the hospital. Last Tuesday, Mrs. J. E. R. Mc- Ewen and Mrs. Reuben Macdon- aid were joint hostesses at the, letters home. Friday night it was held st the home of Mrs. Louise Carruthers with Mrs. Bessie Wal- ler also as hostess. These parties will run until the chain is com- pletad. Miss Beulah MacLeod. RN, of Montague, left on return to New York Saturday morning. Protestant Orphanage Annual Collections Once again the lists are opened to receive contributions to the maintenance funds and it earnestly hoped the generous public will be even more generous this year as the need is so much greater. Donations are welcomed from anywhere snd suitably acknowledg- ed; let none feel they have been overioked; the future oi the work for these children depends largely on the succes of this collection; be “On The List" snd so numbered among their friends and benefac- tors. Quinfls Given First Taste 0f Meat in Diet CALLANDER. Ont. Nov. 3- Sixteen months old Sunday, the Dionne Quintuplets added meat to their diet for the first time. It's only a. small quantity of carefully selected and prepared veal liver served once s week but it marked the youngsters’ first move toward s. grown-up diet. The liver and Marie's develop- ment were highlights of the famous babies’ 17th month. Marie has pro- grassed remarkably mentally and physically in the past. four weeks, Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe, their physi- clan, said today. Within a few months Marie, who was the smallest of the five when they were born May 28, 1934, and has lagged since. will equal her sisters in every way, the physician believes. - The bit of liver they are fed is only s. drop in the bu:ket,for the Dionne children who are distinS- uishing themselves as gourmsnds. They eat up all their spinach and everything else that comes along. Not infrequently they cry for more. Sometimes they get it. Mainly their diet consists of veg- etables prepared in several ways, fruit, bread end butter and milk- plenty of the latte; Dr. Defoe em- phasizes. It is the canned variety with corn syrup added. They get a. morning cocktail of cod liver oil and orange juice st- 630 ss an appetizer for their 7.30 breakfast of s cuddled egg, butter- ed bread, srrowroot snd a glass of milk. That holds them until 12.30 noon when their two nurses pile their tables with creamed vegetable soup, a half pint of creamed vegetables, fresh fruit or a. custard, buttered bread and morg milk. Once s. week the liver is substituted for the creamed vegetables. Three-thirty in the afternoon is cod liver oil and orange Juice time again snd st 8.30, just before bed- time, they are served porridge in milk, buttered bread snd another glass of milk. No one wakes in the night hungry. Thriving on that fare, three of the youngsters-Yvonne, Annette and Cecile, front runners in the Weight derby-ore attempting tn walk and occasionally manage s few steps. More often they are content, , like Mari, and Emilie to do their snkllng clinging to an adult finger. 1f the youngsters were acrobatic enough to stand on each others heads, they would reach higher than most ceilings-Ii 106i. l 1-4 inchu. Cecile snd Yvonne are both 201-2 inches tsli, Merle s hslf inch shorter. Annette 28 3-4 snd Emilie 28 1-2. The only chsnges from lsst France Budgets Many Millions T0 Her Defence By ROBERT B. PARKER. PARIS. Nov. 3—(A.P.)—1='ronce'e mighty armed forces will be given more money and more men in 1930. military budgets show. A highly mechanized army of nearly 700.000 men, a fighting ,s.lr force with 3.000 fest planes and s. most modern nsvy are prepared to follow the paths that France's dip- lomats blaze at Geneva. . More than 18.500.000.000 francs. which translates into $891,000,000, will be spent on the upkeep and improvement of the fighting ser- vices ncxt year, en increase of more than $130,000,000 over this year's! defence budgets. More Millions Combat Gss Additional millions of francs will g0 to assure the safety of 40,000,000 citizens in France and nearly 60,- 000,000 in the colonies and protec- torates from poison gas and bomb attacks from the air. , The French army will count ‘G05.- 032 men in active service next year, with an estimated reserve of near- ly 7,000,000. O.’ the standing army, 200,000 will be stationed abroad and the rest in France, with more than 100,000 on 24-hour watch in the stecl and concrete frontier fortifi- cations. And those fortifications arc to be extended and strengthened. speed. keynote of this year's army training, will be stressed again in 1936 with heavy increases in motorized equipment. Air Force on Watch Brigades oi’ shock troops, com- posed of professional soldiers, high- ly trained and lightning fast, will be expanded beyond the 100,000 that took the field this your. They form a covering force to stop holes in the frontier fortifications until general mobiliztaion can get under- way. General Victor Denain, air min- ister, expects to have more than 3.000 modern first-line fighting planes for service by the end of this year. Since last January 900 bombers. 000 pursuit planes snd 1200 observation planes have been built. With these and 41,136 oflloers and men, the air corps is ready for instant action at hundreds of bases. Twentyfour hour watches, instit- utcd by General Denain last spring, will be maintained at all airports, so that France's air armadas may fly the minute an enemy attacks. Frances nsvy, almost completely rebuilt save for its capital ships, since 1922. and counting more mod- em vesels than the three fleets which outrank it in size, will have 165,000 tons of new ships on the stocis in 1936. The "Dunkerque," 255004.01; pet- tleship, France's first in 20 years. will be ready next spring. A sister- ship, the "Strasbourz." will be launched late next year. The keel of a. 35.000 ton drzadncught, dc- signcd to ke:p pace with Mussolinfs building lyrogram, will be laid this year, with the keel for a second t0 follow as soon as the Washington Treaty expires. The navyls personnel next year will be 63,140, an increase of more than 4.000. Ccaaiguard batteries for the Channel and the North Sea. figure prominently in the navy‘s expensfs for 1936, for in Fmnoe the nsvy is charged with coast defence. New Government Goes To Nation In Old Country By GEORGE HAMBLETON Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Nov. 3—(C.P.l—Aficr four years, 31,000,000 British elec- tors again go to the polls. As in i931, the government flies the Na- tional flag; again, 0.; four years ago, it appeals in time of crisis, with the gcnezul election Nov. 14. Yct issues and figures have changed. Then Britain skirted the edge of financial disaster. The country was menaced with heavy budget deficits. Unemployment was mounting rapidly. Foreign investors were withdrawing funds. For a second time, Ramsey Mu- donald was in offlcc as the head of a Labor government. After an abortive effort, to stem the tide, Mr. Mscdonslrl resigned and formed a National government of l0. It comprised Conservatives under Stanley Baldwin; Liberals under Sir Herbert Samuel, but of his old Labor colleagues Mr. Mac- donald was only able to retain three: Philip (now Lord) Snowden, chan- cellor of the exchequer; Lord San- key, Lord Chancellor; J. H. ‘rhom- 55. EQCTEWTY 0T state for the Dom- inions. Mr. Macdonald could mus- ter but 1t supporters from 265 mil bor members in the House of Com- mons. On Tuesday, Oct m; 10.31;?“ month are gains of 1-2 inch for Yvonne snd 1-4 for Annette. The? are almost even now in the matter of teeth. All hsve eight but Emilie. she has seven, 11-1» vn.e1_<.~u.cr_-:rl>u~ WARDIA" DRIP} IN TODAY sf any Imperis! Oil sfstion or dealer's. and have your cu checked for cold wosrhsr. Bsftsry tested, all chsnjed, winter [ruse put in. snfi-Imn lor your rsdls- lot-the whole iob em be lions st one time snd in s very Iew minutes. Only Imperial [usrsnteed products us said v-products sold sf s Isir price, products you can depend upon. i "k i VERY statement made» here about the new winter grades oi Msrvelube is a statement of actual tact. They remain free-flowing when it is so cold that ordinary oils are es solid ss butler. ht sway below zero, Marvelube 10W flows districts where such cold weather is not experienced there is Msrvelubo 20W. Your car will sisrt 40% to 50% easier, with less weer and tear on your battery, ityouusethisoil... freely. And for . But it isn't only the fluidity of this oil in extreme cold that makes it ideal ‘for your car. It has extremely good body at high temperatures too-something ordinary oils have not. Msrvelube. IMPIRIRI. OII. LIMITED STATIONS 5ND DEALERS EVERYWHERE Msrvelube protects the bearing surfaces of your motor in s way no winter oil ever did before. . . . And it's s pure, clean, clear, golden-colored oil with gum and carbon-forming properties removed by s special process. time try the new osusos O National government appealed to the polls on a doctor's mandate to meet the crisis. 1t was returned with such a maiorlty as no British government had received before. At dissolution in i931 the line- up stood; Conservatives Labor Independents When the ne mOIis mct a week later. the state of parties was: National Government (554): Conservatives . Liberal Netonal I dependent . 5 Unity in the new government did not endure. Introduction of tariffs was the dividing line. The government continued under the expedient of "agreement to dif- fer." Liberals, under the leadership of Bit Herbert Samuel, were frank- ly opposed; Liberals who followed Sir John Simon supported. Differ- ences over fiscal policy increased until, on the Ottawa. agreements. Sir Herbert Samuel and 28 Liberal supporters of the government cross- ed the floor of the House intoop- position. The Bimonite Liberals re- mained with the government. 1n June lest, Ramsay Mscdonald re- signed snd Mr. Baldwin; Conserv- ative leader, formed his third cab- inet, with Ramsay Macdonald as Lord President of the Council. It is this new government which now appeals to the electors. Since the lsst general election the Labor opposition has gained nine sests from Conservatives snd one scat from the Bsmuelite Lib- “'3 erals. Psrty strength in the House of Commons st dissolution stood: Government (512): Conservative Nstionsl Labor (Ramsey Mac- donsldb ) 14 Liberal Naticnsl (Sir John Burton's party) I0 Opposition (01). bor O1 party) . . . . . . Lloyd Groge group 4| IXIGTMlIClCIIi-S . . . . . . ll Vacancy 1 Tolal 615 J ame-s Walker is Back in New York (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) NEW YORK, Nov. l. Amid tumultuous and riotous scenes of welcome by the Broadway faithful. James J. Walker, strangely nervous and uncertain, came back from voluntary exile today to the town he deserted under fire three years o. The trip down the bay on the liner Manhattan, which brought Walker and his wife. the ‘ormcr Betty Compton of the stage, over from England was, s noisy triumph- sl procession that verged into hy- sterical mob scenes st the Chelsea piers. The few police on the pier were ' sdequete to hold the crowd. Bo terrific wss the ism around Wal- Zllwfnnd ship line ofllcials were required kerb stateroom on the Manhattan the: the combined efforts of police to extricate them and push them up s back companionway. The former Mayor and his wife narrowly escaped injury as they stepped from the gsngplank to the pier. so great was the pressure of the crowd behind them ‘hat the straining mus of seamen gave way and a score of men and women were hurled down the gsngwey steps to the pier floor. None, apparently. wss seriously hurt. Aboard the Manhattan. ‘Jvsiker ssid he had made no political ar- rangements, but lcft the door open to future public service Speaking seriously, and with emphatic nods of his head. Walker declared: "I don't want to say 1 wouldn't accept something if it turned up. I can't say whet I might do s yesr or five years from now. ‘Right now, though, all I want sre two seats on the aisle in New York. "I_hope to resume my prsctice of isw in ss quiet, peaceful snd re- munerative s wsy as I know. "It's just ‘Mister’ Walker from now on." Hrs. Walker. smart in a gray csrscul cost snd grsy hat with s red feather, deliberately kept in the $615100. u? FATHER —BY GEORGE MCMANUS Egéiffihrifi TO “i? T may OF r51"- THE background. "Iifis Jimmy's tiny." she said. want him to have all of it." Patterson Takes Office In Saskatchewan (C. l’. By Gun-duo's ipecisl Wirr] REGINA, Nov. l.—-Saskstchewan s new Cabinet was in the saddle in- night with inc reins of govcrnmcfli in the hands of Hon. W. J. Paw‘!- son, who succeeded l-lon. J. Ci. UM‘ diner in the Saskatchewan premier- ship. The new Cabinet was sworn in today by Lieutenant-Governor Mil"- roe at the Legislative Buildinflfi- Thus Mr. Gardiner was left free l0 leave for Ottawa and take iver his new duties as Federal Minister n! Agriculture. _ All member of Mr. Gordiners Cabinet were again given their wri- folios with the exception of M!‘ Patterson, who in addition m being Premier will also ‘Treasurer. ____i.______- TIME ENOUGH Hns sir Charles asked for you? hand yet?’ "Not yct. mother, but the knilh‘ is‘ still yo_un_g_l" “riislclif” rxinlnnos titties snd imprint 01""- ll. J. lllBllll OPIUIITIIIT Ollee Connected m"! DIQINR be Provincial