Pace six S m’. P3711792."- . . PRINCE EDWARD - FA CUlAR! m: EIAMING sronv or AN rail... .T0lD wmi m: mucus seigwvu MAGICI- SAT u n u Av TO-DA Y AND ENJOY A LONG __ y. season angst! .,. ,5‘; court. - ~v , ti " " ' JMKE successive ‘PLANTINGS ABOUT ' TEN DAYS APART TO secoua vtaurluq PLANT CORN IN, SQUARES TO m some POLLiNATiON- , \.TH\R‘D Punting-l '2 a NOTE THAT EACH KERNEL HAS lTS CORRESPONDING . SILK. -, d -' 1 7.. l1 1r . 11‘ .' m -- m , ‘J 3i .0 n i i t i w.“ . is , FIRST PLANTlHG d a IIIIIIIII af I .---..... ‘I'll? l lot I IIIIIIII IIIIOIII iE l t llllllll , -..--.-- ;,) i ->|-..... '§ i-~...~-- l 1;, s w. .- 4i creascd tilt.‘ yicltl gardeners l ' ( ‘i ii... l l l. l; .\.l‘l", l i. Jfllizi may IIYCICI‘ ii- Yttst from zl hybrids hale A lnoe t0 Sic‘ . regions Wil“i'(‘ Him tl ent, tilcv siloulli in u‘ tank all-Alnericlui supreme best. Sweet corn is ‘ eaten imlnid because Lil!‘ ii» st cent in iucll “"1 the market. _ A patch of MR 1'11" long, necd not out‘ square feet. 1n planted to thi- should yl days, while til ti‘. require ninety lo (lil(‘ The cars tux: rciiilv i the sill: has turllcii l Npthirigwis gilillcii _ .=. _,s_ .. OWOMETRIST lilnntnzuc. P. E. I. DRUGSTORE '\;vv\¢,\‘*<'v\,|\ 11115. .1 upon an ul- . sow ilybtld - The seedling ' ‘lclifli ild.\€ nlllunr: the.‘ (ievciupment, so that _ , u. ill hvllc- i‘ plantings do better than eariv ones. fldllitllrla, tile Vfiélei-S] dropping Yltlfi 0i li-lr-f tle ra ‘fllej and covering them about 2 incncs P"mung' the plants reach a to lllcllt, FCSLSL-i deep. use, and in‘ height of about 4 or 5 inches, it is lit‘ is llrcval-i ocst to thin them to 8 or 12 inches delicacy at its only when lii."l' lilll"i'(‘$’.illfl,[ 100 SGUB-Te feel-- l . ., l.i~i strains, it navy old l_.'l I‘: ill» ilir... In both vlhitc llliti lviiflii kcrilelecl -~ -- ri“. lu.<- and miti- " ‘AFIICSL Mil. in; Q i“ 5°‘.'°3*_Y' w.:ro, but a clear, glowzng stone of ~y’~]‘f,r‘(;al1",~ay :1 lovely golden tones from pale sun- iiiilg when! I skilful i I planting .\\J§7\XW.\>\7\ EXAM|NAI|UN Ilttlnz and Supplying Glaissu Etc. ll. J. MABUN "of! Office Hnura: If) tn l2 A. M. 2 to 5 I’. Holidays etc" by avmivillllflfl!‘ Office Connected with Mvv>m -\¢\. i; extcn- com befcre both soil and weather have become thoroughly warm — ill- y ivarnl weather, rich soil. and ITIOCICT- Hollie 1 ale moisture are best for corn. Tile sced is quite likely to rot in cold soil. plants are very delig- ate. and cold weather checks their oilen last-r Seed may be planted either in i rows or hills, It is better to enrich '1. about tile h_\‘-,' p001‘ soil in hills, lilllcil should; six seeds Der hill. ill ii pine-ll, apart each way. If ;:.li ii my they should be spaced 25-; to 4 feet dropping five tr spaced 3 fer-t planted in rows, apart, depending upon the height of the seeds at of five or six to the foot, When apart, and to keep them well hoezl until the ears are set. It is consider- Bill. ullc.ll-~,- ..i Hr ore _ fill-i A every, ed better to plant. corn in blocks of] i liliS tilt should‘, several short rows, side by side, ow swc cclll brc - rather than in one lung row. file ome gardcilcl" (rill vlruiv this first D0116“ (i095 flgwéelirliuifiglzhgbwfia“ applied at the rate of 4 pounds to Sweet corn is reasonably drought a are resistant so long as it is cultivated frequently. f]: ' {Orly ‘Q2? AMBER COMPLEMENTS srnmo ' ‘ SHADES Obiltlilldd in. Complementing beautifully the mpular basic s ing cmors - ott prays, the new iges, a; wail as and black - is costume jewelry oi translucent amber. By cutting and polishing, amber is no longer the uninterest- dull yellow our grandmothers light to rich mahogany. Contrast- ing shades have been intricately worked together to create pieces of singular beauty, incoming to both blondes and brunettes. matched necklace and bracelet or hrcocil and earring; would make a lovely set. IIEAVIER TIIESE DAYS Weight of newborn babies varies with .lll? SfldnsilS. AIL/SB born in ‘ Janurljv or Fob nary invariably are lighter than those barn during the summer months. NEW BABY MOTOR Aurmirwrvrwr- 1015A y - CA What's new in shoes tilts season? Lots of thnss- First of all. red shoes have at last been welcom- czi into well-dressed circles. If you lcmember, they have heretofore been considered a little too showy u. trlfle I00 tilontiicrll. for the re- fined woman cf cillCsBlit this year you'll see tilcni walling down the avenue on the best dressed feet in tovm. O O O O Piatfonn soles which boomed and tllell laced not so loll: ago. are buck agaln, bggei" and better than ever. Ill fact, one stoe has even ‘gone so far us to dub them "Foot- ,stoo1s," but tilcsv GXflglClkltlTi soles ilvil be confined mostly to evcnllli.’ |and lit-home wear. . , c - 5 'I'lle D'Ors'~v Silllnur-Ve. horroyvezl frcm our Fi't‘l‘l(‘_i"i-]O{l'.1illg boudoli‘ slipper, is ill-l new friends every d‘ A ‘any fort math» led with the‘ ni illzcilt illltl l: k <- mpetely ‘ a a o a As to silllru. 1e, slicer". are more . ‘cut out tilt-ll t . . .. buck. land lit tile sitic 'l'1lrl'e evrn a new transpil ellt SiiCl‘ fnhric- that’. , with you!‘ tragic slicers . c. _ ' till." “rnlnlrr. you'll y. O O O In tile w-riv o.‘ comfort one shoe l llns t'.!":‘;l lizhi-zis-a- i‘ sir which wlizli as itilc as their name suggests. '.l‘hclir solos. are as flexible circus acrobat and l‘ i colozs of the rn’ ...w. Some of t-hem look just ikc Iilclinn moc- czl.<‘ns and are (iecornted with In- (lian pictuzes. - >»."= rem lo ioif your foot. ‘I gadgets that we've heard of are the little hats wllicil take the place of toe bows. Some ac minnture it... val. so; Le Eh i outfit. There's ino , d, (lmiyly becnire ‘t makes , taking advnnta-ge ol a1 the magic lock diint-y arid i l" SW1‘ finger-t P5- " 111v (mo \'(‘.'\ vi"; pail‘ we sawi ' ' ' I 59pm. ,1 all-over effect that makes a chic lor FRONTIER HEROISM AND ADVENTURE! ROY ROGERS GEORGEI-IAYES In GREEN IIORNET SERIAL CARTOON AND COMEDY tier to be too wide. emphasize the [straight llp-and-COWD lines of your lcutfit, at the same time playing down the horizontal ones. You llLgiiL pipe the insizle edges of your bolero in vrhite to make you .001: '1G‘1I(.',i:i‘ through the yvaist,‘ or add apparent inches U001 YOUT Wall‘ down utt-h a button-front or a pleated skirt. If you have a mature figure. you will probably look best with your waistline siglhtly lower ,than the point marked on the pat- 1 tern if you are stout. your hem- - line should be longer, too. Ii you're ioverlyl tall, cut your height with ia cciitrasting boice. light in ooor ill your ll.ps are heavier than they ‘might be, Light sit-dries make you loci; heavier". whereas dark _or neutral 0119s maize you seem slim. Keep these optical illusions in m‘nd , next time you're planning a. new point in not n It's t-llo general impression the cnscnlbic. '1]1'Ill.1gh your dicssmay be cilarnling and _y;itr hat the unost becoming yuil eier owned. if they tlont g0 together, you won't look smart. Yet it's easy to assemble ii you just remember a few points. First, be sure that your outfit and all its atccaorles have the same degree of formality. Don't. foi iri- siancc. wear a. casual felt sports llril with a fiiiiy aftemoan frock Bin-Inst] And 1f you can't afford twosets of I alcclssories, see that the one you I do mire strikes a hBPPY Ih3dli1m ba~ twccn the casual and the format Secondly, watcill out for color hsr~ many. Don't buy a hat of unusual color Just because it happens to look well with one dress. Unless you can nfiorzl to have several, it should 1th bc of a sliiide that w‘ll har- lzc with mcst colors, such M ’ . or it should he neutral. Yes its tiholittle things that count. If yflll g-ve as mucil attention to the selection of your smal. acute- sol-res ~ gloves. hats. belts and the like - as you do to the choce ‘of C >1 South AlllPTlCZHl Llllbflil» with lttle hatpins thrust tiifOlllYh illelll. Others ‘WhlCil make your f"ot ‘colt just as petite as lllllllfilliv new c, a e wade- brilnmcd sun ilrfis o.’ poforatcd suede. It locks as tilcueli someone fcugot ‘which enzl he was standing on. O O O O Somehow glales have always managed to rc-maih pretty stable. while the otllc~ Jtenls of our ward- robes tcok on new quirks v/lill the advent of each new season. This ' ' glove illakers have I , r ll(‘\\‘ to offer. It's al-cvf-a-txecc lOYCs. Made of one icc-ntinuciils scriill (irlwli, the center | front, they're \cr_v slick and smooth ard aiior. you: hands. Sire seams and set- ill thumbs are completely banished. To you who like to dspliy ndyant- , we. We TQCQIIITIKPIG the flattery of i this new lncudvci silhmlete, ' . t - . Ccnccnlilw liflllrc lmliis with m» "opei" c . cf clothing is 075v, especially if you scw yclu own. F-rst- try to got the olltine or your figure as a whole. Nate wheri- it sec-ms to hr cu: of prc if it is too ‘onlz-ivlilslcrl o. through tllr~ 1mg; [m- Your problem is to around as ncaliv as the average. diverge rm an crop; too wide instance. bring it p:ss'ble‘ Counteract every the normlll with 3 ‘i - S‘ l 3w A cornbread air motor the sine 0i’ a baseball is being tested at. Pcninsylank; Stale College. , Keep Millard’; in the 115st. plr-zltv of freedom for ' nut. 1s. ii‘ you appear -_ ' \\-i¢-- 4 7;‘ . \ I‘ .- ‘ . V‘, v~\< ss-auv" f you dresses, you're bound to ICUI; , well turned-out. Try it this Spring ‘and see, 0 a o l Coats that lcok like dreses u- ltwo-piccc suits, are very practical inewcomers. Made of wool or failiu. and with their skirts gatherei around fztted traistines. these coats ,may be wom over your slip as n coat-dress or over vc-ilr dress as ,0 b"I'l. coat. It looks Ike a i good idc. especially gm- mgsg 0.; 1;, who (tress with cne eye on m; hlirgct. and can't afford enough "Ptllcs to crpe with every vsguy C; zhe weather. n , I .4 n l! s i. //IY ‘AL/ ./¢') m . L. .- f, m 3- f5‘;- \ \\.- r, “l can't do a tiling with him-It's IDIIIII. siri‘ r‘ Canada Unites statesman of the Dominion o! Can- ,ored June 7, when i lature ofjipper and Lower Canada. i Prime Munster when he died at Ot- '_ tawa. June 6, 189i, it ' ' Kins said in the House of Commons i recently will be | arty in which Canadians of all po- TilE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ____fi In Its Honors For “John A” n r Stagtdarlte ) OTTAWA. MAY ZB-WPJ-Pixst ada. first and longest-serving prime minister in its history hnd the na-" tions Grand Old Man of another generation. Sir John A, _Macdonald and his achievements will be lion- Prfnie Minister Mackenzie King and Conservative Leader R. B. Hanson will lead the country in tribute at Kingston, Ont. Monuments to the Scottish-born chief Father of Confederation mark the memorial statuary of a d Canadian cities and towns but it was 1n Kingston where sir John be- came a lawyer, entered public Life and was first elected to the Legis- _ was in Cat- araqui Cemetery on the outskirts of i, Kingston that he was buried beside his mother. The proceedings in Kingston City ' Park June 7, the day after the 50th anniversary of Sir John's death. will be a national tribute wluch as Mi. a tribute above tical views will be asked to 10in. In the midst of the worries of the war Canadians will take time to re- member a great kindly man, a man prone to a iaunty twist of his head, to a wise wink of his eye, to a hu- morous retort-the man who from before Confederation July 1, 1867, until he died in r89} at 76. domin- ated Cariadas political destinies as, Conservative leader and for 19 years as prime minister. The anxious eight days when Sir John lay unconscious in his home in Ottawa the gri that swept over Canada when the news came that he was deaid, will be fresh in the minds of those who still remember limb happy warrior of many a hec- tic political battle His body lay in G. H. SCIIRADER Recent Graduates At Summerside I. A. MGEAOIIISRN G. H. Schradeu New Glasgow, N. S. and J. A. McEachorn. Mount i Stewart, I’. E I. who were xirnoug thg recent graduates from the R.C.A.F. Tmlnillg School at Sumlnersldo. er it may come) which may tend to weaken that union." At that tulle he was an impetuous YOUIII; man oi‘ 29 years not above a list light. one of which took place in a court room. He changed great- lv as the years went by and became the most patient and skillful com- poser of differences among men conflicting views on the political scene. He made his last formal address to the Canadian people before ection of i891 after 47 strenuous years ill public life and ills un- changed views on Imperial relations were summed up in "As for myself, my course is clear, A British sub- iect I was born-a British subiect I will die." Four months later he died. Early Lite The crowds will converge on Kingston where John A. spent boyhood. Born in Scotland in 1815 he had come to Canada with his parents when five years old. The E a the ei- ' state in the Senate chamber and then was removed to Kingston that his wish to be buried there might be fulfilled. 'I‘here was a wreath of white roses on his breast as he lay in the coffin .‘F‘rom Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, in memory of a faithful and devoted servant." family lived in Kingston most of the time and his father Hugh Mac- donald died there when John A. was still a young man. "I had no boyhood" he once told a. friend. “From the age of i5 I began to earn my own living." h Sir John often liamendted ttlle flat: e ad no univers tv e uca ion u 5mm‘ F“ Em?!" _ was a prodigious reader and after s" John had been a ‘we and entering a law office in Kingston faithful servant of the Crown and nrogressed 5° rapidly that he was United States. m his address he saidl connection with the Mother Coun-i yyrotficflqn m maki- hls country a lied to the bar when 21 years old. a. devoted def der i the B ti.h ca . ' - Empfia He wfsnat Males M61153, 3y He wont by boat to attend his first - legislature meeting in Montreal. h“ “m” "I changing m5 Views m The older rzeneration will recall "- fiFhfieéii-m a consummate eader of his party. One of this strongest critics once said of him: "l-Ie is a man of ex- traordinary ability. I admit as a manager of men, I have never seen his equal. I have often wondered how it was that he was able to so completely mould the character and shape the actions of the men who supported him. "Whether it is magnetism or nac- romancy. whether it is the inherent strength that he - ssesses or wheth- er it is the weakness of the gentlc- men he leads, r am bound to say that. as yet that question is un- solved in my own mind." Most political students agree that the security o1 his leadership was not due to selecting weak men as his colleagues. Many of the ableat men of the country were in his can- ineta. Some writers said that sev- eral of his colle es were greater oratora and in o er res ts more brilliant that the "old ch eftan" but they served under him with unques- tioned loyalty and devotion. Biographers described Sir John as free from bigotry as it was pos- sible for a human being to be. his parents were Presb rian and he was raised by a e ly religious mother. In later years e joined the Anglican church which Lady Macdonald long had been a mem- ber. He regularly attended St. Al- ban's church in Ottawa. After his important part in the Confederation negotiations he be- came the Dominlon's first prime minister from 1867 to i873 when his government was defeated. He was returned to power in 1878 and directing Canadian policies but ne that “J01, A” had a promlnm; aevfrtmgvered ,1" m5 dflflmmatwni nose abodlt which he joked more m Dom mm shmlld Temai", than anvone else. a face macs to "mm" m” Enmire and become l. order for the cartoonists. There Dolxergfl 31m,‘ immrlflnt pa“ 9f n-i was a remarkable physical resemb- m 8c 02in“ rm“ mrmn addre”, lance between him and Benjamin ,1, 5'1"‘ ‘m elecm“ “'85 1" 1344 Disraeli, nrime minister of Great ggglkta rag‘ iqlfhxlgstéityd “Eng?! Britain at_ the time Sir John was gang? ggefiselzlekggi‘ or 1937 was prime minister of Canada. res n n . discussions of annexiftfifianwetf) Pomy For Canada ,. Sir J h loved Canada intensely “I. ihekfeelore. need scarcely state my’ and his? guoyant optimism for ‘its rm He’ that the DPWDQNW 01. future inspired his colleagues. He Canada depends “lion its neflnflflwt brought’. in his "national policy" n!‘ remained prime minister until his death. Annual Assembly of Presbyteriails TORONTO, May 29—(CP)—Ei'gh1 clergyman in various parts of Can- ada have been nominated for mod- erator of the 67in general assemb- ly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada which opens in Victoria try and I 5mm W515i? 3° the lltmfifit‘ great industrial nation as well as a “QKJQEYQ Lifmm Whom/ET qlgiijb-Loroducer of primal-v materials. Church, Toronto, on Wednesday, June 4. The retiring moderator. Rev_._i_)r. Wiil_l_am Barclay of Cen- Reld, Montreal. Synodical itpslqn. Ottawa; Rev. David A. Smith, Van. work Foreign Mission night and (h; speakw-Mlss REE- N- from the Bhil Field, India; Dr. G. Gllshue-Tayior. F. R. C. S. from Formosa, Superintendent of the Happy Mount Leprosy Colony, and Rev. E. H. Johnson from lilall. churia more than a week. Minard’: kills pain. Under tile hi,“ “m,” tom Pit. tzts: fibrils; i». LePlge, and m, Wm“, Mil. “d M“ R471 Ho u“ rm: n3; u” o’ naivevddaud-mrllfim‘ w“! 5° "lid on Sunday June 1st, Al‘ tau p, Dlyllrht Savlngmi-gm. at PRINCE EDWARD ruiim The Programme Include; M: by rim BAND on 1- (b kind Rumor“, Eu mm ya. w. Johnathan]: '6', 'i,';_f°'~ THE S ms MliHStAEEESOm M"- Nllul Mclbchern, W: Boner. Alllllbel] B“ ir til ° l-"w rfultffi," 1'3"" "M?! Robert Patchln. ADMISSION FEEE A IIIIYIFRBr-icorliiwl; ECNTION .__ “I tral Church, H ‘m, - l the opening “this gliduellezutww Nominations made by ‘he n.3,“ Pfesbyterles follow: Reva. all Davidson, D. D. Gait, one; R a Ktiichfifli D D.. Hamilton (m- Allan S. Reid D. D.. 1110116831.,’ B. Skene, Vancouver; J, M, ti“: sllllvray. n. n, Sarnia, 0m,- M,“ under Ferguson. Ottawa, 'w_ m MacKay, Weston, Ont., and y; u Paulin, D. D., Windsor, Ont, Among the fraternal delegate; i, the Assembly th's year is Rev. m», J. Addison Jones of Pflilghkgqgi N- Y» representing the waster: MISSION SESSIONS The public is especially invited til the evening lilestlw-gs, q-humm. June s will be devoted to gm’ Missions and the IOUOWlXIg sneak. ers are expected: Rn Dr Allan s, ary for the Synod of Montreal m1 couver. B. 0., superintendentcf Chinese work throughout Canadg and Miss Mary Todd, Deaconess, Wlllowdale, Alta, one o! the Wills. ers. Friday evening June 5 will i,‘ following Foreign Milllonarics will Isabel McConnell, Th.‘ Assembly will COIIUIIUQ fol there.” failure on your part. security is all of Canada. to you with interest. , DWUMEN 0F CANADA! Help Keep the War away From your own doorstep BUY -- Urgae Your Menfolk to Buy --' VICTORY BONDS The 1os_s of all that you hold dear is threatened. Your‘. home 1S now only 10 bomber-plane hours from “over Night and day, in the British Isles and on the sea, in and out of uniform, men defend your hearthstone as surely as though they stood and fought at your own doorstep. They need more tools to carry on this fight — your fight. Decide, now that their efforts shall not fail through any Much money is needed to buy more ships, planes and tanks, to_ keep the war away from Canada, fioinsure Empire victory. _We must win. Lend your Government some of your savings by buying Victory Bonds. to preserve the things that money cannot buy. Your money will come back I Help Finislithe I057 BUY VICTORY nouns I SPACE DONATED BY THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Lend Your