JULY 1, 1921 l PIIIIIIIIIM Biinas cutest on '32:’ 1135.0‘... will lliilk! you . llfiyéyvzkiwiii. plenty oi‘ r ML Tm” d IIIIIIIMIIISM \looyil for nll Rheumutic trouble. ouble aiiiiicélrlidlcrates the cause. Don't sufl ~ h "y the Isn't. u» 131,35" rut for IW° 9 ' atria is will power. Isawo ‘t for Cut jrroovi “r ,~ cnllffil is izpn s, ha; of this tortil- wo dollars. L rcmcdy at once. u... guru's treatment, love dullnts. IIIIIAISBII HABIT l .1 .=~ cw“ €Z.f".‘iii‘il§'.t°é It kills the ,._-,,,, fur Tobacco und drugs. PIICB, Three Imit of lilouvit fur amp‘ ,,,.,.,] how eu-y it w oilun it b0!- IIYSPEPSIA “d w how soon you will get over it. , out. to i-iit any i" ' ruilii will improve. Do ill torus , - ‘ e tl corn is gour. W5 um‘ tly to usc and is guaranteed t l] ii ' ' iilu . The iiliuvc ‘yirvtwffl Ioovit DtiiII m. l- . Vl‘ u good supply on huud Sold In Charlottetown at the Macs. II. I ‘MABON Eyes "signified Glasses Fitted Montague, P. E. I. Graduate In Optometry Toronto College ' Exclusive Test Room Con- nected with Drug Store ___‘ ' Professional Cards. k I. F. DIIIPBIY Isalnate a! Bolton Beleel ll, PIANO ‘TUNING i l ‘ I71 Grafton B!» i Charlottetown g iiark R.McGuigan.BA ‘ BARRIBTER. COLICITOR. Money to Loan Cameron Block Chlrlottetowl, P. E. Inland S. S. l HESSIAN larrlsteq, lolloltgr, Notary Public Eto. . MONEY TO LOAN Iontggug P. E. Illlnd McLean 8t McKinnon DONALD McKINNON Barrister Attorney at Law 0ffice—Royai Bank Buiidlnl Charlottetown, P. E. lsiund ‘ Morson & Dufly Barrister and Attornsy-et-Lavv MONEY T0 LOAN leiioltors for Royal Ilnk of Olnlll MacLeod 8n Bentley W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. J. A. BENTLEY larristera and Attorneys MONEY TO LOAN DiIIoe-Iank of N. I. Chambers G. S. INMAN, K. (l. Barrister and Attorneyat-Llw Reein Ne. 12 Cameron IIooIt VICTORIA ROW .._.__-—-s J. A. MacDONALD larrleter, Bolloltor, Eto. MONEY T0 LOAN Office-Riley Building Charlottetown Dr. C. G. Archibald Graduate on N. V. Poet Graduate Medical loiiooi and Hospital Preotloe limited to Eye, Ear, None and Throat Oifles layer Building. Great George ltroet, opposite Guardian Oflioe Teie hone 2M Oflioe Houn- te 12 a. III. 1 to 0 o sttenlth w! rgwir. Rrggjgngg; strong and pigs are transformed Into men of Price It got-s in the seat of lite umutic condition; get a_ box o. sin. One months trest- the itrt-otest remedy yet \itcr taking a few doses \ tnottth‘: treatment and Go to your drugitlet and ‘ you have Price, per box. one month s treatment, 00IlI FEMALE PlllS These are a reliable regulator for all female mpinints, i...- fcliifticd‘Iiiciltiffllillifllld. Tin-y ilfid b"! known horsemen in Kings m, DJIILIIIILI i Ciiiiiibiflltvtfy easy. A (ounly which is assurance for .1 -.,'MONTAGUE SATURDAY gfipheus Theatre speclg] progmu’, 0e Joyce in Cousin Kate, t...'A TEA WILL s: HELD a! 3L Milfilarets on Wednesday July 20th in old of St. Margaret's "' Church Building Fund, er 1 "JREMEMBER THE PIE 8C. "ill In $.1- Msrsarers hall on Fri- day July 1st. The best talent In -)e county will take part in the entertainment. ..“COMING $63.41.. Sum- merville race truck is becoming the center of attraction, where a nutu. bcr nf horses are training for the 00mins truer. July 9th. '1 hc itiick und races uie under the manage- ment of Mr. James B_ y|¢,\|i1ii,\n_ (Jim Ben) one of the most popular iicld of fast horses, and a good day's racing. TIIE- EASTERN GUARDIAN III‘BR"METOWN HALL -,mov- “15 Pictures Tuesday. July fifth ....'RESERVE TUESDAY, July 5 7°’ Mi; 1611 Pa"? and athletic sports i" Georgetown in old new church. ..“ATTENTION i8 DIRECTED to L. E. Pratt's advertisement re Julv sole which appears alscwhere in this issue. ----‘ MONTAGUE METHODIST CIRCUIT-For Sunday Jply 3rd Services ut Lower .vionTn”,_‘.'."-'11 u. m. Sturgeon 2_.30 p. m., Montague 7 P- m. Mr. Garth Toornbs is the liFf/ichcr lfor "nultiing and. night 4nd Prof. K. Creed for afternoon. -—-—--<e->-———— THE BUTT END By Gene Morgan Now don‘t get scared when trouble cauics, and tncets you on the wuy. And clouds gel sort of mixed u bit, with sunshine every day THE CHARLOWWIITOWN GUARDIAN ‘that led hlm.tu sympathize with Turkey. The fact was that Russia coveted Constantinople and t.he_ Turkish access to the ocean.| France prohaibiy had no love for‘; the Moslem nation. but she es- poused its cause against Russia,I and the real Issue was whether‘ France or Russia should have par- mamountinfluence in the East. tlons concerning “the balance of power" drew ‘England into the quarrel. together .wlt'h Sardinia, these nutionis siding-with France. TIhe Allies made the known as the iCrimea the seat of war, landing their forces there in September, 1854. This petilnsttld juts into the Black sea‘ from ‘one of the Russian provinces on the north side of that sen. It is rude- ly rhumibold In shape. has an urea of nearly 10.000 square miles and is very ‘mountainous. Prince Edward Island sent no Before hostilities begun considertr‘ petiint-iulu ' ‘ . .1 are a victim to this most dreadful com- lgfiioyinl get a box of Muovii. for Dyspewin, You will your whole genrrul t take any substitute. n“ W- boit, Two dollars, one montire treat- i Mm,“ Corn Pencil ls something entirely new. ust rub the pcncil on (he corn. and in a Irw It doc-l not iiurt Price pier pencil, fifty cents; tinns nte made by the Inilti-d, Ivionttsnl, Qurbrc. m] an» i‘ irunicrtl. One Druggist In evrry appoints-cl n! our special agent. In Summersldo at Gourlids. Ltd. ETO. - u 2 the Cabinet. IIIOITOW . St. Miners Reach-Nd Definite Agreement IIONDON. June 28—No Annual Picnic The ‘Smoke - vQb-OG-Q l ~'I'&.B A B! n10‘! rfi ed Wirginigcl THE REXALL STORE Rinenrou _ 10s CREAM and SODA WATER Berved From Our 'New Liquid Fountain ~\ ALL FLAVORS ‘ Cool and refreshing dcfltiite agreement had been reached when the adjournment of the conference between the cowl mine ziwtiors and miners with Premier LIoyil-Goorge took place at midnight. mier refused to pledge the uni ~ of £l0,000,000 withdrawn recently; until he consulted the tuemhcrs oi’ This he will do lo- Thc Pre- Petefs Parish tizirisiiioners 0f Si. Peter's ~ parish will hold their aunuui picnic on the beautiful Church Ion Saturday, the 9th, July. Should Saturday prove picnic will take pnicc on Monday, the 11th, July. or the first fine day following. grounds. unfavorable the The biggest end of trouble. is the end that gets your eye But the smaller end's the other. end. that ends it bye and bye Just catch u hold to biggest end, the end that hits you first And then you'll find the butt end is the c111] that hurts you WOTBI. But if you try to dodge the end, the butt end of the stick 'l"wlll quick reverse the other end. the cud that does the trick The butt end keeps you busy, and gives you lots to do But t-lie sharp end is the other end the end that runs you through No dodger ever made his ttiurlt, cxccpt ‘iwas on the ground l<‘0r lroublc's bound to throw you in the first or second round. But if you come to grips ut once, and grab the biggest end You'll tind the stuali end spindle, and n bit inclined’ to bend. Then catch thzit end and bend and let t‘he butt end leadiiie way And then play hoop and roll it, till you roii It far away. am,0i .er sedlu OarIahsS the stpak if every body's troubles had butt end handled first Then cirerybodyhi troubips at the ' butt end would be worst T'ls the butt end in the distance that scares both you and me, And the dodging brings the Judg- ment, and the lawyer gets the fee. (iii-i- Distinguished Islanders Reminiscences By Frederick W. Webber, M. A. Journalist, Publlcast, Etc. - Returning to duo's native land after ‘a long absence is an expe- rience that has figured of-ten itI poem and story. To me, returning into Prince Edward island in the iezurly aiutumti of 1854, It meant ‘little more than the pleasure of change that is upt to affect the youthful mind. There are ‘no thrills in my remembrance of it. other than in my recollections of the sea voyage on the American schooner Eglantine. Always the sen had a churm for me. This’ particular trip was in no respect eventful, but it is a memory that revives pleasantly whenever l hap pen to see ‘on of our down-cost ischoouers gliding along Iii the 0f~ “ring under full sail. 1 have no rementbritnce of my first trip-from Chiirlottetowu to Boston, but my five subsequent migrations in 0'1": you gm, fry |g 0 direction or the other, not iuciiz~ ding a visit to the fsiuud ilI 1871. FOR ‘ALE were made on American sciioouers, good second hand Bode lti those days the only steamboat pmmgiph w||| [gll > service the lslano hail was that of rgaggngblg i the mail-carrying boat which made _ H. J. MABON ‘ Optometrist and Prescription Drugglst Mourncue, P. s. I. four trips a week from Charlotte- trwn, alternately to Plctou, N.S., nnd to Shedlnc, N. B., otherwise known as Point du Cherie. Island merchants imported a large propor~ tlon of their goods from Boston, 0-0000-0000000000-000000000 Eye-Glasses From $2.00 to $10.00 From East Point to Cape Bear is s big territory, yet right across this space Parkman Supplies the Big Majority 0i Eye-Glasses and there was consequently a pro- fitnible carrying "trade for the Am erlnan schooners which generally _ outnumbered other craft in Char‘ lottetown harbor. ‘They carried also s. considerable number of .pas~ sengers, for they offered much lower rates than were represented In t-he combined steamboat and railway fares. Furthermore, many of the travelers between Charlot- tetown and Boston really enjoyed the windjammlng trip across Nort-b umberiand Strait, through the Gut of Canso, along the coast of Nova Scotia and across the Bay of Fundy. At the time of my return to Char- lottetown the Crimean Wa/r was about to begin. There had been trouble brewing between France and Russia for some time. it began in Issues arising from the possession by Turkey 0f DIME! sacred In the histotiy of Christian- “ IInSunMi-ity ti: Hiiliiflliit. m Sitwg because PAR! “fiurfiiszhmsgiigfgkifcfpr: & gefihenlqggg-glhssmi Christian communities within Its dl l , d the many III. J. Palmer, K50. H. L Palmer ABLE?“ a‘ hotgiigyfig jdliii-Isticiinon piilgrimtpotiittracted I0 Barristers. do. Gm AT places they considered holy. This Ianit cog. m?‘ aegis. Iulillng (attendance courses.) m, ,,,,,,,,e,, 1,, Rum, bu, N“... f I - . "1'1'377*"‘°'" in Mutant .:.:.f::"::;..;r: Cali and see for urseii J A MOEMIIGII IIII ur-ro-ns or ' i, , ,, “mum e cirs;roniA P" EILPARIIIIAN" rice-cw IYI IPIIIIAI-IIT ', . - II IISE POI OVER 3° IEARS Olsa-iovc in onnss It. UAW"! mum" “ET” ssssates » i T T L IP15" - eeneaflensaelsleleaelen -.-. ' men ltito the Crimean War, which now appears struinge to‘ tne be cause, with a decreased ', r ‘ tlon, the Island was represented in both the Boer Whr untl the recent grout struggle. We—l get buck to that pronoun because, without sacrifi- cing any of my acquired American- ism, I was a loyal boy subject of Queen Victoria so long as my home hud to be within her empire—we. boys and men were fully In sympa- thy with the Allies and watched eagcnly for the fall of Seibastnpcl, or Seviistttpol as they spell it now, and I remember wltlh what vim we sung "Cheer, hays cheer! Sebnstu- pol is taken!" when the long siege of that Russian srtoiighoid ended and Russia, facing the danger that Austria might join the’ Allies, gave up the struggle, hostilites endlut: iIL December, 1855, and the Treaty of Paris being signed alhout a year la- ter. Then, shortly after the close of the war, we welcomed as a visi- tor to Charlottetown ‘a sun of our neighboring province of Nova. Sco‘ lng its progress. ‘Sir William Fetiwick Williams, the ‘ "Hero of Kara," had withstood a long siege of ‘that place and on several occa- sions had inflicted severe blows upon the Russians by whom he was beleaguered. Even the Rus- hls bravery, Iii dispatches to his su- periors. Right here I must soy Prince Edward island always has been‘ progressive. Yet, ln ‘my boyhood, it had to step along n bit. more slowly than larger and more F RECKLES These Ugly Spots _ There's no longer the slig-htsst need of feeling ashamed of -you'r| I freckles. 11S 0thine—~doubic strength-is gitiirnntecd to remove these homely spots. Simply gc‘. an ounce of Othlnn- double strength-from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon siee that even the worst freckles havei begun to dlsupear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that ttiore tlmn an ounce is needed to complctey clear the sikln and gain a beautiful clear ccm~ lexion_ I Be sine to ask for the double strength Othlne as this is sold un- der guarantee of mono-v back if It fails tn remove freckles. tin who hud won distinction dur-' that _ l: Now lo tho Time to ‘Get Rid °I', i MOUNT ALLISON .1 LADIES’ COLLEGE .- MOUNT ALLISON I MOUNT ALLISON UNIVERSITY i I a iifltfllvivfilwmhiti-s PAGE ~ - ACADEMY Founded 1864. Session ilThis is the largest College in Canada. titre Intellectual Plquipmctit. and University clutcd with its. IiWld POSSIGSS e-An etiviahle almost continental scope I|0ur Art Musem is u fea-lu flulctidui‘ on application to OPENS SEPTEMBER 10 Residential‘ Ladies’ IIWE STAND I<‘()R—HIgh Ideals, Soul Cu]. IIWE GIVE COURSES lN—Music, Oratory, Household Science, Literature, ‘ Matriculation. Business Courses lure provided by the Academy asso- cotisider we statid without. ii peer. 1921-1922 OPENS SATU llMany Scholarships For information regu Degrees, Scholarship Fine Arts Illucomittg Students Accommodutiou- for repumuon o, earliest possible iioti re whore we Frcc ARTS, SCIENCE Annual Session 1921-22 lotions, Expenses, etc. SEND FOR CALENDAR SON IS JUSTLY FAMOUS~—should . Courses in “Offers, (renerai, Special, and Matriculation , Courses lending, to the College of Arts, En- _ ‘ 3R giiieerlug, Medicine, etc., Manual 'I‘raIning. II RDAV, SEPT. 24 and Prizes are offered. MQUNT ALL|$QN . l _ IYIIIIE COIIFHEH OI SIIHIY- COMMERCIAL COLLEGE l, s, Prizes, Affiliated Re- ' i- flOffers Courses iii Business, Shorthand ' i. and Typewritiug, Penmanship. etc. w Comfortable Residence, Strong Staff of t Experienced Teachers. wishing Residential which MOUNT ALLI- give IIA limited tiumber of positions available by i which students, either male or female, may t l' - assist themselves to pay expenses. i FIRST TERM BEGINS SEPTEMBER 1O ('8. AND TH EOLOGY Calendar Sent on Request i Sackville. N. B. . Rev. HAMILTON WIGLE, B.A.,“ D.D., Prin. Rev. B. 6. BORDEN J. M. PALMER, YM.A., LL D., Principal , M.A., 0.0., President Saokvliie, N. B. Sackviiie, N. B. populous provinces or states. Thut she ivus stepping became apparent to me as soon us I hud returned (‘ins hud been introduced for light lug; purposes. During my previous "csidencc in Charlottetown our lights were tnliow or wax candles, lamps for seul or ivhzile oil, and tilled product of the oil of turpen- tltie. Some little advance bad been made also in regard to steam power. A steam fcr-ry boat tilled ‘IIJBLWEGII Charlottetown auid South- ‘port, the lat-tor a small village on the cast side of the Hills/borough irlvcr and the western tcrtnintis of the main highway between Char- lottetown and the easterly end of ‘the Island. Stationary steam en» 'gities were not introduced until af- ter my return. The first one was fin a tanncry and the people were ‘disposed to regard its attached whistle as a nuisance. One noon. as rhe whistle was blowing, l ilrcai-tl an old fellow anathematlzinl it, sa/yltig after the exhaustion of his expletivcs, "l wouldn't care if ‘it didn't blow so long. but when it blows longer iiliun l cam hiold my breath I have to explode!" It was during this period of resi- sia“ Gene“! Milraviev "°m‘m°"ded dance in Chariottctmvti that thcrey ybegan what might be culled the iseif-tllrected ‘phase of my iaduccr tlon. ' That a boy only thirteen or fourteen years old should have picked up, rend and absorbed such writings as Plato's works.- Puleffl "Nivtural Theology" and his “Hie Itoric. -Dnubts Concerning Napo- leon." Byron's historical tragedies |nnd other equally solid literititirr lumps for burning camphetie. a reo-' is a mystery even to myself. i found the books Ill one of lhc out- politics in the tragedy of the ‘Wreck of the Fairy Queen," the American Car Foundry Aiucriciiiti Stneltltig and Refl- 1221/9, of-the-wuy bookcases belonging tu mull-carrying steamboat of the l» ii-ing Co. . . . . my grandfather. Watson Duchcmin. loud nit the time of the wreck. American Locomotives . Esq. What led me to rend them I which cost muuy lives. Mr. Le Atiocotida Copper . . . . . . . . . . .1160’; (I0 I10! IHIOW. ibut i rend them and Page signed ‘Iris poems "Jingliiig ffzittudiati Pacific IWHIIWBY ...1091/. "U they left their impress upon my Johnny.” They were rhythmic New York Central Railway ...69"/; H mind. For itisiancs, my lifelong and rich in good rpyms, but Cubztti Can Sugar .......99‘/g ‘ confidence that death is something The)’ ‘Vere "Oi P105915’ T014119“ i" Crucible Steel . .. ..58 not t0 be feared-mind I fear it less F9411 DOBITY- Ht‘ IHHI 01"’ W"- Interiiatlonai Poitier ----53"/s (IS miy life grows longer-Is (IIIC much younger than l. and of whom Mexicali Petroleum ......102v,, largely ‘to my reading of the "Apo- I "ever dream?“ "131 i"? W“ I" Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..675/s logy" of Socrates and the account IIPPUYIIB kllitlw" ill’ 1mm" i!" 0V" Southrn Pui-‘ific . . . . . . . .3731’; given by Plato i-n "The Crito" of AYIIQPIC-il- "8 made hi“ "m"? midi Studebaker Corporation . . . . V777“ the great philosophers last flay of ‘by ‘IPIEIYIBFIIIE “I18 P113"? mild" Jltiiteil Pairlflc . . . . . . . . . . . . H116 life. Foley's "Historic Doubts" revealed iuily t0 my young nt-itiil the illusory character of doubts STOCK QUOTATIONS Utiited States Steel Corpora- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48 iKeIly's Springfield Tire raised concerning the history of _ iX. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 314% the Chris-t, so that I spurned ai- HALIFAX‘ ‘mly lfitmmtanmm M. P. R. . . ...47 ways the m“ of readlng mfldpl furnished by Johnson & Ward p_ R_ S, _ , _ , , , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ , _ , __67 works, although somehow l ul- members of rhe Motitreai Stock‘ Wheat, July 1221/2; Sept., 120%; ways found ii difficult to keep hy- Exchmlg“) COPII 1111,‘! 62; 5PM. 62 7-8; Dec, He“ (m, M the ..Dm,b,h,g T1‘anla‘lk‘ll' Atchisoti . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..80€‘t. 60%; Oats July 36', SepL, 38% class in the school of religious thought. My other solid reading, came interesting through my habit of frequently reading to my blind Grandfather Walther, who was ivery apt to i-ntersperse the reading with reminiscences of events, peo- ple and places concerning which I read. ~ As a schoolboy I had as my first teacher, filter returning to (Yhzirlni- tetotvit, a mun tiamell John l.c Page, who conducted an excellent private school. He was a clever rhymestcvr and a natural humorist. l-le wrote poems on every current event tin which the Islanders were_| interested, from the comedies of mainly of history and travel, he Discount Sale We will commences. Cash Discount Sale from July 11th continuing two weeks. This will be a rare opportunity to secure good goods at lowest prices. " Doors open from 7 o'clock a. m. to 9.30 p.m. South Kings Supply Co. Murray River R JULY 5TH TUESDAY ssn-i$IIIA\\\\\\_I'-' 11¢%lllllnnta\\u\\\\\\%lla\\“an!'-vunm\\\\s\\\\\\*w1I'A\\\\\v:am PRATTKS” JULY SALE THE EVENT OF THE SUMMER WEDNESDAY 6TH STUDY BELOW SPECIALS CAREFULLY Q: THURSDAY ' 7TH MEN’S WEAR ‘MEN'S suits-A few i=0 $38.00 and 42.00 at i/z price. THINK OF IT. HALF PRICE- A beautiful let of new season's goods at 25 per cent off re- gular Iow cash price. from last season. Price $35.00, A Liquid Beautiiei For Your Home Glitterine cleans as it polishes, as it dis- infeicts. A cheese cloflh a second or so —-an'd old furniture becomes new, new furniture looks its best. -—aind it's marvellous for Motor Cars! Get it from your dealer. Make it Glow With Giiiterine FELT HATS STRAW HATS ed reasonably at $2.50 for 3 days DISHES A large stock of old Enq- lieh pro-war quality wheat butter dishes and sugar bowls at 20 per cent discount. GREY COTTONS for 10c, 11c, 12c and 16c per yard. Correlpondlngly low price on white cottons. King Colo Tea ....................... .. Indo Ceylon Tee, extra peclll Pratt's Special Tea. Regular 60o for 43c Extra quality Molasses for 75c per gal. 10c per lb. Best Orariuiated Sugar“ REMEMBER THESE ARE NOT DOLLAR DAY BARGAINS. THEY ARE GENUINE BARGAINS. COME AND SEE IF THIS IS NOT SO. EV- ERYTHING IN OUR LARGE AND WELL ASSORTED STOCK NOT MENTIONED ABOVE AT COST. NOTHING RESERVED C. E. PRATT id’ SON ‘MEN'S SHIRTS LESS 25 PER CENT A speoila line of Sport Shirts, fine quality 1"“ "rivwt 9"“ MEN’S FINE SHOES All lnvictua from last season priced $13-00 I0!‘ 57-59» 53'5"" of stock at from 20 per cent to 30 per cent discount. ....... .. 48o New stock less 25 per cent last year's stock '/2 price. V2 price. This season's stock lose I20 per cent. a oAvs outv 3 DAYS ON LY \ LADIES WEAR ' CQRSETS EXTRA SPECIAL The "ewe" 60mph" ‘wok we Ladies Fleet Foot Boots ‘ w" carried‘ A" l"! ‘snows at 12 inch top. Price $3.50 for $1.00 per pair: Ladies Stockings Just arrived at 24c per pair only. AN ASSORTMENT OF Ladies and Children's Middiee, House Dresses, Children's Drone- gs, Boys Wash Suits and also some web goods at y; price. LA DIES Voileo. Georgette and Silk from 20 per Reduction. JUST ARRIVEI) IN srocu an extra heavy Khaki Overall Suit same as sold iaet season for $8.00 per suit. Heavier than Peabody’: an garment for $1.90. SEE ‘THIS if you want a bargainl American stifle denim. d already low priced at 02-50 P" Other Ovealis as iow so $1.40 FOR 3 DAYS ONLY BOYS SUITS ALREADY GOOD VALUE LESB 25 PER CENT GROCERY SPECIALS at 35c Canned Pineapple, Canned Piicliartfe, for . Canned Pumpkins, best quality 12c per can. Excellent for pie making. ............. .. 19o per can price 40c for"... 29o better than salmon For Three Days‘ Only ST. PETERS BLOUSES GINGHAMS Fine Scotch Gingham: for 22 and 25c per yard. An ex- tra special 38 inch Drone gingham for 20c per syard. JUST SEE THIS HEAVY BLUE Denim worth iaet season 75o per yard for 25o. Can you beat it anywhere. MILLINERY Balance of this year's stock at V, price. A large assortment shapes from 25c to ‘$1.50. FOR 3 DAYS ONLY cent to half price of up to date