FIRST COME_ FUR NECK PIECES Large assortment To CLEAR at Greatly REDUCED PRICES 158 QUEEN STREET iiitiltittiitltlllliliIitliitiitlittitliltitllltttlllltliililttillilllitllllltlItltlillllIiilltlltlilllillllltiililltllilililtlllllllliitittiiliiilllltllilliiillltilliiiiililitiiilllllllilitllllii Iilllliill1t|l|l!titt!liilli% i SHARE OF CHARLOTTETOWN’S i5? Never before have such values been offered to the public. OUR DOLLAR DAY PRICES SPEAK FOR COME IN AND SEE OUR STOCK. G E T YOUR GREATEST -FIRST SERVED FO0T\ WEAR THEMSELVES. Have Your F U R S Repaired. Relined, Remodelled at Special Summer Prices Biiifcuiiiliki: NUPTf-ALS The Monctcn Daily Times June l6 says A prrltv Julie Wedding was solcmnized last evening at 6.30 at. the Tiicrcs Israel Synagogue, when Miss Suruh Julie, dluuhtei" of Solo- mon Jake. Wits unitrd m murriuge with Muurce Block, am o! Mi: and Mrs. Able Block. oi Charlottetown. Rabbi H Bi-tmsicm oiliznatcd. The bride who was given in mztr- riage by her father unis charmingly gowned in a Parisian creation of uocoded white iotin, the skirt failing into a long train. Her tulle vale was caught to the head. with a cap of lilies-of-the-iulley. She carried a white Bible adorned with rq.e_:_s_._s._t_re_a/i_n_s:l_“s of satin rib- 7 REGULAR SAILINGS DIRECT TO bon and lilies-oif-the-valley. Mrs. Joseph Atztis, the mwron of honor, tvas becomingly attired in a sheer blue gown with a lace train and wore a nmtching hat, she carried a bouquet, of yenow p.115. mun roses. The attending bridesmaids were Mis». Frudu Jirke, sister ol the bride, who wore un attractive (li.l'9.~.5 of flowered toilette. with matching bolero fashioned on princess lines. and Miss Sylvia Block of Charlotte- town. sister of the groom, who was gowned in a piincescpmodel cos- tume o; peri-winkle blue marquis- ettie, trimmed with pink lace. Tho bridesmaids wore pretty contrasting hats and carried dainty. old-fash- ioned nosegays. The m's mother was becom- in train She wore a block lace and boucle straw hat and her corsage was of roses. The synagogue was beautifully and fragranty decorated with spring flowers and fems, while the reoe tion hall was gaily festooned wi paper streamers and other decora- tions. The groom and his groomsmon, Joseph Attls. wore formal dress with boutonnieres of white car- nations. The ushers were Ben Attis, Jake Attis and Sam Sellck. After the ceremony, s. buffet lunch was enjoyed in the reception hall, after which dancing was en- JQWd until the early morning hours BOSTON R blg oomloruhlo llnor oollo from Hood's Point Wharf, Solnt John, It 7:30 P.7d. (A.T.)| oyovy Monlloy on! Snurdny. Duo Ionon follow- lng morning. Fora from Solnt John, $10 ono way; from Charlottetown, P. l. l.. to Bolton, $16.00. Roll oon- noctlon to Sllnt John from Ill lncorlor polntl. Sutorooml. $1.60 up. good Ior two pooplo. Eloollonl vnooll of rooconlblo prion. I ll S 'l‘ l1 R N srnsmsnir mums o lnlv any Cnnodlun Notional loll- wln Cannon! tlclm olllu. o! Rood‘! Point Whom lolm John. to the strains of music from a swing ‘orchestra. Earlier. songs had been tsung in Jewish by Kay Glustein, l New Waterford, N.S.. and Sam ‘Sherman, Sydney. Then the bride and groom danced a. bridal waltz to the strains of "I Love You T111101” During the reception a. toast to the King was and rcsvonde singing the Natonal Anhom. A toast to the bride and groom fol- lowed. by Ben Attis and by the groom. Toward midnight. the Mpg couple left on their honeymoon ‘be spent in motoring through the New England States. For travelling, the bride was attired in o lnort brown tailleur. with three- tartar Milli-h coat of fown polo . Ind brown accessories. ~ On their mtum they will iosldo in Charlottetown. when the groom is engaged in business. Amorng tlhe out-of-town guests at the mptitals were; MI‘. Abode Block, tho Misses Sylvia. and Ililillan Block, 0f Ohm!- IOWQWWB? M1‘. Ind Mrs. Kenneth Matting of Strawberry Growers at tho Agricultural Hall, Charlottetown, June 24th. 8.30 P. M.. for the purpose of considering means season's crop. Signed for marketing of COMMITTEE‘ In Spring cunt cons and SUIT OUR LAST FIFTEEN COATS and SUiTS ("wins ll ACTUAL 005T PRICE Choose your Fur Coat now from large complete stock of 1938 styles. A small deposit will re- serve your choice until wanted. Free Storage. lSLA-ND F URRIERS "When you re-fur; refer to us." See our racks of Broken Lines of Footwear priced to clear at less than cost. FIRST COME—-FIRST SERVED. PURDE-FERGUSUN SHOE O OM PA N y The Store That Saves You Money ...itillltlttltltthatlttllmll!tilllti!ll:illItilIitiltiittiltltliliiIiltlilltllllillllliItllilliliIiiiItiliiiliiililli!IIillIlliilliiiliilIllIiiiilililiiliilllliililliiiiiiiililiiilllillllilliiliiiIililillltiiilllililitlilitilliiiifllilliiiiliiii i." fienstom. Ne-w Waterford. “MSI ; S LAY AWAY SALE 2' liillilliltliiiiiiiiiiiiiidiil Sunnyside Sam Sherman, Sydney; Miss Kay Glustein, New Waterford; Sam Budovirtzzh, Fredericton: Joe Frans- blow. Sussex; Mir. and Mrs. Nathan Levine, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gilbert, Miss Sophie Shulman, Mm. T, Co- hen, Mr and M213. J. Inmpert and liurny Ininpert all of St. John; Mr and Mrs. Abe Swot/sky. fining. mu; samuei Attls, Montre , and Mrs. Isaac Berlovitch. New Glas- gow. GRAND TRACADIE SCHOOL] Primary Department Honor E011 foi- May. 1. Agnes McAula , 2. Jack MacDonald, 3. y Keiaer. Grade IV (b) 1. Bertie Gibbs. 2. Anna MacKimtrz-n. Grade III 0b) 1. ltflchael Rdblson, 2. Willie Watts. Grade III (c) 1. Margaret Watts, Alvera Watts and John L. Mac- Donald (equal). Grade II 1. Mabel Watts Grade 1. (a) 1. Duncan MlacKm- non. 2. Lclth Watts. mslhest. average, Gmde III (c) class. 94 per cent. Those making over 80 per cent: _ got. accounts that he conslde oil too i‘ ti: Your. c. A. int m SENATE (Continued) Ifon. J. J. Hughes: Nerf: I come to schedule 1110! m5’ from no (Hon. Mr. Sinclair) that the great rush of usinoss under this Act occurred 1n tho first year the low was in force. ‘II-int la 00 tlcdwsrd Island, to referring. For the fiscal year 1086- 36 the expenditure 1n Prince Dds ward Island was $21,618.20. 'I‘ha.t was the second year the Act was in existence. Next year, 1936-37, the expenditure had jumped to $87,- 192.58. We were gettng into our stride then. Let us look at the - ures for the other rovinca. Nova Scotia the 1 5-36 ex i- ture was $9,393.58, and the ollow- irgg year the figure dropped to $4.- 9 .78. Indeed, the expenditure fell in every province of Canada. but t... , Juno Bl. '-((‘.lP) -- "lhe major movement in “to...” ."€‘"“’-..‘.“..°...""‘;.‘..“.‘§"‘3% em n , ur a oonglnodlt ‘lees is u word," Her- enls st theixqrocent snnusl convert on. ‘ next ms move in in- vontou-los." ho d. “i: downward sud. tho rul dongor for purchasing executives from now on will be in overstsying the short side of oom- modity nnrkets. Commodity mar- kets must be watched with gnom- ooro from now on for three reo- sono: (l) tho bulk of the decline ll over, (2) the next isnportant major movement is destined to be upward sud (8) on oommodl“ prices are 1y sensitive to And hold on Ida advice from o leading ‘American commodity oz- peit cams the first general rise in several months. One 1m rtant ex- ception wu silk general y r ed uoksygodmAnothei-o im- co Canada was hogs but o level of this commodl 1s sl- resdy for above the laws of 1938. This lino has never receded :3 for h: recent months on?! to wall obove the average for 193B. Prince Edward Island. The de- crease in New Brunswick was from $3 .2 tt $26,164.22; in Quebec from $134,313.53 to $89,- 430.27; in Ontario from $132,484.79 to $110.404.86; in Manitoba. from $78,083.46 to 867069.34; in Sask atchewan from $134,231.“ to t0 880389.08; from $31,015.40 t0 $15,702.48. Tak- ing Canada as a whole, the reduc- tion from 1035-38 to 1936-37 is s- bcut 25 per cent. The increase in Prince Edward Island in the some period is about 80 per cent, and yet my friend from Queen's says the Act was well administered. I shall have a. little more to say a- bout that. while we were in the Banking and Commerce Commitee tho other day I asked the director, Mr. Gor- don. whose duty it is t0 check ex- penditures, vrhether he ever had occasion to check accounts that were too high and he answered “Yes!” Then I asked him if he ever low and should increase, and he said that he did. The inference W115, at all events. that in some of the provinces the administrators were so stupid that they did not know how to keep their own ex- pense accounts and were cheating themselves- Some Hon. Seisotom: Oh Hon. Mr. Hughes: -—a.nd to protect them. So much for the costs of admiri- istration, but the subject is by no means exhausted. In fact, I have scratched only the surface of the question, and other members will perhaps go further into the mat- ter. So much fol the costs of the organization, which already unount to more than $2,000,000 for Can- fi.-- aa may‘. u. tssttt““"= 0 . . m u“ es: My honourable $3,000,000, ey o- $80.000 for , 0h. he had Hon. Mr. Hugh friend says mount to more than Prince Edward Island. My honour- able friend from Queens said the figure was $82,000. I shall now turn to another phase of the subject, namely, the memor- andum read by the honoun>o lender of the House on the 25th ultimo -—the part relating to Prince Edward Island, which the honour- able member from Queen's sold was all right. is it: "Now to Prince Edward Is- land. The debt situation of fonners in Prince Edward Island differs from that in almost every other province, 1n that the great pro- portion of these fanners’ debts ls to local merchants, who have taloen mortgages on the farmers’ pro- perty.” The honourable senator from Queen's said that for one secured creditor there would on the average five or six unsecured. But this memorandum says, ‘The eat Eroportion of these farmers‘ efbts to local merchants, who hBNB taken mortages on the formers‘ rooert/y." Both statements cannot true. I submit this statement is not true. The memorandum continues: “Many of these mortages have been in existence for reveral gener- ations. the farmer turning his pro- duce over to the merchants, who. in tum sold him his supplies. These merchants are violently opposed to any change 1n an arrangement which, for many generations, has been extremely satisfactory tc themselves, but not so satisfactory to the farmer." The honourable senator from Rcse McIntyre, Rod <1 An M-acKirmon. es MCAGJILY, Jag: and JOhn L hold, Norman Keizer, Mcihacl Robison, Duncim MecKlnnon Calvin Willie. Mabel, Margaret. Alvera and Mabel Watts, lBertie atom. Perfect Attcndnnce:Ma.rgoret,Al- vera. Mabel and Calvin Watts. Rita, Martin eacher. SPECIAL roman rnnciiirnoivs (l-RbyGuordi ' 5 l] NEW YORK. "fxflnemzlldlll cors would be duty in and twine“ to ium and Harlem tomorrow t Wins m Inull-Biahmeling i5“... GANGWAY l A fellow l from . llilde o railwaulnwtion. H: hi? (Silly swim I ‘i2. hit-wt?“ the driver, breothlesgllr: e asked "Three and sixpence. sir." "Well, hares three shillings. You "In 309D the dxpencel" UANDRUFF fixlnlllo 1 ‘m ntaufndnliarqu; -filonlholondlllooqflgp misfit-mtg‘ i J l.lN|M£ T Queens told us a. few moments"? that the great majority of m - ants in Prince Edward Island were snduzn: Prince Edward Island rd view to the dissatisfaction of the creditors." short paragraphs which I quoted several allegations, nearly all of which gerated or stupidly false. To b with. I shall state in a general way that the merchants and traders On Prince Edward. Island. like those in must, under ordinary condi have the confidence and goodwill of satisfied . Tllrlllnslcn-lti to the memor- “Many cases of hardship have been reported in this connection. o The fol wing are two sample casein" Just samples. “The creditor had been his debtors 10 per cent 1n on his bills, taking cattle, grain or other produce, whether the debtor former could spore it or not, and is reported to have allowed these fimnens only one-half of the value of such stock and produce l6 o credit on his bill. "A woman owned a fair form and provided s living for her son, his wife and a family of tcn children. She owed s mortgage of $660 at ‘l per cent interest, and with $32 ini- terest only due, the mor es in- stituted foreclosure p " There might be such a case on Prince Edward Island. but if so lain creditor was a brother farmer. “Ihese oases were ad usted b .t.he re‘ We have in those two or three have are notoriously ex n every other agricultural community. tions. their customs o. the fnnnera, or they-the merchants -could not continue in business. Now, everyone with as much mentality as a four- teen-year-old bo will agree with me when I say t t in order to get and maintain that confidence and goodwill the merchants and traders would have to treat the formers fairly and honestly. This memoran- dum which the honourable leader on this side of the House, read put on the records of Parlliument of Prince Edward Island as a. hopeless helpless, spineless. debt-ridden class. and th merchants and trad- ers of the rovtnce as unconscion- able Shyl grinding!‘ the very life and soul out of the victims till the bunch who administer the Farmers’ Creditors Arrangement Act on the Island came to their resrue. I shall here relate some" facts which everybody on Prince Edward Island knows to be facts. but of which the Government here appears to be either oblivious or badly informed. Hon. J. J. Hughes: - First as to grain, there ls no grain sold by the farmers of Prince Edward Island except small quanti- ties of oats. Nearly all that grain. and all the other grains grown, are used on the farms. In some ears small quantities of oats are sh pped to Newfoundland, Nova scotla and New Brunswick. where it competes with the oats from the Prairies. The competition amon the traders on Prince Edward Is and who handle oats assures the farmers the high- wt market. price. Then as to the other products which the farmers sell. such u cattle, hogs. sheep, lunba, poultry and eggs, they are Practically all bought and sold bv ormers‘ clubs, amisted by the officials of the ro- vlncial Department of Agricul ui-e and in some instances by the offi- cials of the federal department as well. Prom this will be scan that any merchant who handles any of these roducts must pay the mar- ket pr ce. Next, as to potatoes and turnips. the crop is largely ex rted. Those vegetabes are largely sndled by a iovlnce-wide organization of the armors themselves, of which till s ~ sporItiIinIQ purity._on-d_I flavour of Heinz Vinegdrs. They! revive freshnes l i luring out hidden lid cu ,1 make’ ‘yournsirripltest, salads superb; Got Heinz ' NEINZ PURE VIN - . nun-cm... Mllllflid " -"< White-dllngrdwmwpqq , for month: nn end. They ‘n opnrkle with lllflnd . potency. Alltile gnrs m, . . NEINZ VIRGIN OLIVI 0 --Fir.~i PfQsllnl, only, of chins: nlivq - from (h: most [nmoul orchards in the world. l Clelr, upni-klin , m", ollv: colour unii nvour. i he retired as Deputy Minister, l. member of the local Government has been on the board of directors. The Government gives some finan- cial assistance. From this it will be seen that anybody else who handles potatoes and turntps_must com- pete with this organization and pay the highest market rice. We were told today by the onouroble senator from Vancouver South (Hon. Mr. Illarris) thalfthe Govern- ment was aware of the conditions on Prince Edward Island better than was anybody else. Yet we know what a. Government employee wrote in the memorandum which has been read in this House. when the writer of this precious memor- andum at: that. the merchants of Prince Edward Island obliged the farmers to sell their products at only one-half their value, he wrote o greater untruth than was ever penned by any other man in Can- ada. And remember. this man is a Government employee in a highly responsible executive position. More- over. a cruel hoax was perpetrated on the honourable lender on this side of the House when he was in- duced to read. and thus put on the records of Parliament. this slan- derous document. Hon. Mr. MacAfl-hur- Hear, liar. Hon. Mr. Dondurand: My hon- ouiable friend must remember that I receive reports from fifteen de- portments, and these reports I muct bring to this Chamber. In this case I knew the honourable gentle- man would have full time to cross- sxsmine the perso who had signed that report. and e did so before the committee. Hon. Mr. MacArthur: atble members, if I may word- Hon. Mr. Hughes: I went to pro- Hon. Mr. MacArthur-a! should lilo to so o word on that int. Home on. senators: Or or! Hon. Mr. Hughes: In reply. I woudl my that if the honourable leader on th side of the House had asked any of tho Island repro- sentativeo- Hon. Mr. MacArthur: Yes. i..*‘°‘i'...""...”“;'-é‘$é. 5Y6.’ m" en n p easuzy and romo o the principles of gus- tlce roafioct to the adminis - tion of th Ac . whether the statements in the memorandum were correct he would have receiv- ed inifommtlon that would ha/ve saved him from reading that memorandum. Honour- soy s few years ago the Deputy Minister of g-lculture was manager. since Hon. Mr. MacArthur: Heal-Lhasa’. The new pntcnwi Dllnlop Fort with ‘lath-Edge ‘frocllon In the only firs of In kind in the world . . . with 2,000 solid Irubber tooth to bite and grip the mod . . . providing depend- obllily at ovary Ipoodnnnolohleudrlving one, nllanooolul confidence undo:- overy mood condition. Soo tho now For! now. With Tooth-Edge Traction . . . plus G-ply Cohlo Cord Construction. "llhyour supremo ouormooofooloty. stability and ollom, luxurious riding comfort. hploonyouir worn lira now with mu Dunlap. r. n. asthma. 10o Grafton sum RAGE, 256 Quart Strut J. E. WHITLOCK, 162 Kent Strut GA Hon. . never have been rend. Hon. Mr. Gordon: Whom do you refer to in connection with o mem- orandumf Hon. Mr- Hughes: ‘Rio Director of the Farmers Creditors Arrange- ment Act in Ottawa. On the 19th ultimo. when the senatofryfromw t I t w were n; , or o on minimize, this n1 on the public tre and bring about some gen- eral moments o0 for as Prince Edward Island was con- cerned. the senator from (Hon. Mr. Sinclair) told us we were powerless: that 5,11 we could do was to make a. noise. And $- hapa he was right. Time will . In other words. he told us that he was in such close contact with his relatives and friends, the adminis- trators of the Act on Prince Dd- ward Island, and in such close contact with the head of ice and the Government here, locket on Prtn e Edward Island would go on, muc to our dtscomfiture and to the possible amusement of the beneficiaries. This Farmers‘ Credi- tors Arrangement Act ls csmtainl o gtelt guns where it is we! worked and Prince IIdwn-rd blond u the but field m dlooovuod. To Be Continued NVRIONEIN NI l‘. t m. noun row/um i Friends for sod noofworo nod- of the lots d of Kelvin, who dlod in tho Prince County H‘ ital lftcr o vary 0GP illness of only l. dun. Ho entered the hospital for on X-ray moved into Kelvin ivhei-t m until his death. There are left to mourn, .. hi! father, his wile, n39 : lvlcDonald. and three 5mm] dren, namely, Tilflcstt. 0., B01611. An infant baby .i.. ed him four months m Three brothers and tout‘ sister] so mourn. namely ‘igh, u; die. of Kenslngtcn: May, Mn, thur Warren of Evcshazn, . Amue, Mrs. Dan McKay, Iondon: Elmma. Mrs. Perry l Kcmsin ton; Elh Lrs. Ghampon. of . much sympathy l wmied. funeral took place Saturday ing from the home of his llt> fit-low Mrs. Ronald ilcDoniald. pallbearers wt-rc. Alvssrs. Item, and Ernest Fctlnm. Fmnk, - and Billie hlrllutitri. The .- was condurtrii lv- Rev. ' Monsghan of S. v-n Mlle I where the body was laid to -' llatl Indigestion Gas and Pains In Stomach and Bowl The process of (llplvstlflll i» largely on tiu: (ronililion of stomach, and win-u it is unable do its work properly there rising and snuring of food, agnl l And burning sensation in than! belching and pressure of gas, I". lency, etc. : Burdock Blood Bitters increased flow of gastric ll"? wont-ill for the proper 415W" food. Milo M. C. Wanna, ltlnpflvh“ vvriteo:—“For a innit ""19 I troubled with iuihgvstion. l stomach would not iitgc‘ m)’ " and I would have gins pivot!" ‘ oour stuff coming up ill my m” I “Bed gun-lock Illowl Bitten. t ‘fig: taking onn lmltln l id} cimngo for the hotter. c“ Idem , go keep on, niiil lillvl‘ lilo third b0 I could eat anyihiuz 1W1 M‘, bothered with the rising nndlw of my food." h; w by Thu r. lililhurn Co.“