i" 3 You Catch Cold - on____ eroie toapplyuufitgetl was: any"; Often it or pneumonia.‘ Just pngluinm a “"i‘l",..“”‘“‘......f.§-"°“ “id's?” Ivor o_ o am without the blister. ' m a iHE cilia lll ETHWN llllllllllll fruitless. w. c n. us“: an» as Ilnlger, 1:1. Burnett- y. l). A. Ilelll flow York IeptosolkllIo-lugrnlion China Mirna-minor?!» J. Power. wflruldut, J. l. Burnett; IIIII, D. l. 0. Associate Ihlltw, II. l. Currie. Puworl, I100, TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1925 Musterol is clean" whit ointment made of oileof n: andztherbome , hymen! simples. It, is ' t“ rsan nurses. usteroie sore throat. cold on the chest. rheuma- tism, lumbago, pleunsy. stiflneclnbrm- chitis, asthma, neuralgia, Whitest: pains and aches of the back and joiriig: spminssore muscles. bruises. chilblains. frosted feet-colds of all sorts. Seldom fails to deliver results. 40c and 75c. at all druggists: ' _ The Musterole Co. of Canada, Ltd. Montreal. Fli- iCll-CllllAM-ICE - (REAM You WEE‘ It Let Us SupGpIy You The Ice-Cream season is now open and no doubt you are makiiig preparations to handle the trade. in buying this product you want the best and only the best-it means satisfaction to your customers, increased bus- iness and bigger returns to you, so think it over before placing your orders_ ICE-CREAM . is now the recognized quality Ice-Cream. The people like it and will demand if. We can supply you with any amount of this Prfldu“ a‘ any time. COST OF GOVERNMENT Is Canada getting full value for its expenditure on government? This is a -pertlnent question st a time when the public debt is in- creasing yearly, when taxes are soaring and the cost of living keep- ing company with tihe taxes. We are paying’ federal taxes, provincial taxes and municipal taxes, besides taxes ~for churches, schools, charl- tics and those things which we mildly and helplessly call "incident- a1" expenses. For these services col~ icutivcly the great majority of Can- adians are paying to tihe last dollar of what remains of their earnings after ‘provision has been made for a meagre living and many of thcm even before such provision in made. A statistician has com-piled the cost of our several governments as follows: l-‘orleral government... $424,645,217 Provincial governments 130,887,303 Aluuicipal governments 247255.345. This sums up an average cost of about $445 for every family of five in Canada. All the wheat crop of Canada last year at $2.00 a bushel would not pay the whole cost of government. All the salaries and wages of all the employer; in all the factories in Canada would pay only a little more than half the cost of Kovcrmnent. The-re are 800,000 farmers and farm tenants in Can- ada: ilhe money spent in governing (‘zmadc would give each of these farmers a salary of a little under $1,000, _ - Further ltililiyfilli might be math: h"! H1059 Iil-ZUrL-s will suffice b0 show that we uro paying dearly rm- ‘""‘ l-IMIBPIUHIZ; they will show also, CONSULT OR “WHITE CENTRAL (iREAlylERIES Charlottetown .'= 4-’ by comparison with those ofother c-uuxitries that Canada is the mnng . “Xilcllsivviy ‘sloverncd country in is thus spending its own and tihe country's time, added fifty millions to the national debt and reduced Canada to ‘a condition which the ablast financiers regard as serious. How 1s it going to end? The representatives are quite satsis- si-fled to draw their salary and go 01.11‘ ' Notes By the ‘Way Maritime potatoes travel to dis- ltsnt msrkotsJn those days. To tho British kiss, to Cubs. and other West India islands, to Southern ‘Sta-tee of the big Republic. even to Maine, a great potato-growing state,‘for seed and to British ‘Columbia on the far-off Pacific coast. both for seed and table use they have gone. Not very mdbh money was made, perhaps by eith- or growers o§hippers on last year's crop. but the Maritime tub- ers found a wider market than ever before. And the wider publicity min on wasting time. as indicated in our yzstcrdnyia despatches. ‘when the talk fizzled out, when there wins n01! :hc necessary quorum of twenty present to hear the many speeches to distant constituents. What are the people, the men who are paying‘ the piper,‘ going to do about it? {iii- EDITORIAL NOTES \ Cleaning up the yard is now in order. The amount of capital invested by the Railway in radio SlJiI-‘li is 851,621.63. The cost of li[|i\"~'_:1 to December 31 was ‘$129,670.25. The total expenditure ‘on same was $181,291.88. l According to a reply to a ques- tion in the llouse of Commons part. of the Summerside Rifle Range. amcun-tingto 5.95 acres, was sold for 8150.00 by the Department uf National Defence. The members a-t OIil-IWI! have not yct wcaricd of well-doing, Judging by the prolongation of the <i_3udgct llribate. two warm days then sea how rest- less they'll become. But let May bring one or P-rrmlcr Stwcnrfs- speech rc- poricd in yesterday's Guardian is altogether admlrablen We do not tlhlnk the Premier of any other Province can equal Mr. Stewart for ‘pained counts for something 'ln the future. All the Marl-times grow good potatoes, none more valued for table use. none of more vigor- ous vitality for seed, or more pro- iductlve. And wherever the potatoes of Prince Edward island have come ln competition with those of the sister Marltimcs in near or dis- tant markets they have never tak- en second place. Not infrequently, as in the Cuban market, they have brought a considerably better price than any other. Rival growers in other provinces have admitted the fact and attribut- cid it to more care and forethought in ussortingfor uniformity in size and soundness and so on. This commendation has a twofold value.- lt is useful as a lesson also. The care bestowed on past. shipments can and should be improved upon. it must not be allowed to decline. Having reached the head of the class i-n potato growing and shipp- ing the leadership must, and we believe will be kept. a In two of the three F's-Farming, Fox-breeding and Fi8hing- our Province leads the’ sister Maritim- ‘cs grcatly in proportion -to popula- tion. Our fisheries, excepting the lobster fishery, are backward in de- valopment and capable of a great cxpansion which ‘has been too long nrgleutcd. No doubt this is largely due to ncarly all of our shipping ports being closed during the win- ler months when access to the decp sea direct from our home ports is shut off. Muoh ‘might be donla profitably -to extend the production of our fisheries and to cloar-cut lnclslvenesls‘ of speech-and There are no iilio world; phat WIIIIB further. they will show other industries ‘and iothvr lint-s oi‘ business have been ,,r-u-~i9lattlv1;_,g :0 r - - ~+--; w’? ssevoee-se‘ ‘wbaoo-oooe-ovoo i INSIDIOUS EYE STRAIN i We use this adjective ad- visedly. Sufferers from Eyeltriifl may have perfect vision and therefore do not suspect the presence of any eye defect- 0 o Q 6 o 9 i O é 9 o The motive power of the entire human organism is . Nerve Energy. I Normal eyes, it is computed utilize about 20% of this Nerve Energy, but when Eye- strain is present. a much larg- cr proportion is required. Hence defective eyesifhwvqb their consumption of an ex- cessive amount of Nerve En- crgy. may seriously affect the functioning of-other organs of the body, and produce lll health. HAVE VOUR EYES EXAJMINED 6. l‘. lluioheson Optometrist l >____ Something About Our Mail Order System Sometimes you find It Im- possible to come to the elty to purchase your drug wsntl or perhaps you have a ‘pre- scription and cannot conven- iently brinq lt to our store. It is for people such as you thht we have established s MAIL - ORDER SYSTEM It matters of. what you as.‘ sire in our.) no all you have to do ls to writs or phono- we qulrsnfés to dsllvor the goods when and when you want them. oivs us A TRIAL‘ AND rmo ourfon vounsstr 8--___. m; ‘ mos MoDONAl-D A UKIY ' Proprietors a ¢sse¢¢¢¢x¢¢¢¢+o4oe4ooeo4 '11; a stand still for the past tin-pg _°" M" years the i-frcat business of ‘iizovcrning has been steadily expand. iinfi- ii- if! 110W the ‘most flourishing ihusinoss in Canada. m‘ "lllnicilifll expenditures, which ‘mill’ necessary to say there um municipalities, like other modern institutions, have been blttcn by thc mad dog. Elftravagange, and are suffering the mngeqngucem iilliwiy under-local control and the "W! ‘i0? ma!’ 594ml)! mhzzled with fiOllfpilfiliiVfl safety, It is gratifying i" "fly lll-at hcro that our own pro. vlm-ial lzovcrnmcnt in the ipgqf {W0 3'0"". act an example which other Rovcrnmen-ts and espeglgny "w, f‘"i"l‘fli government would do well to follow. ll. roiluccd the gas-Mona] indemnity by over 33000. ksiit its expenditures it has within the l! wasted very little time in useless min, limiLs of necessitv and TH“ iedwai zovernunent ovor which Y") 0H8. province or section has control and wihlch can buy up constituencies by a Change of mucy or by bmidi“! a F-‘liiwfly or an clov- ator, is tho real millstone around Canada's neck. Th” federal government in cost. ink. as slated above, over $424,000.- 000. »What fraction of efficiency are we getting vfor Qmr money? What, ‘flor example, has been doing in the House of Com-Hm“, rm. the past two months‘! Making empty “mam” l" "Willy Ibenohes; mnk. ins speeches for the deluiling of ‘°'°°‘°"- "WWW! printed in (Illiiy Hanzards at snonnous costbo the °°“""Y- ‘WWW many of which no one will ever mm, which no newspaper considers worth giving even a sunmsry o; w; which m‘ reported verbatim by an army or “gm? PM‘! lmllvsfflllbers working in ton mlnnos shifts and dictated ti‘; "M11 Md twists after which his, "9 Printed and mailed, also st the 0011111173 expense, to prospective 91°00)" w allow the diligence and tho eloque-ncg of gm mum“; live who is onus soliciting the llrp. port or the "iodellflndent and Imel- dcohol"l~o.l;. . A» w. .. rttmhi... ha,“ polished diction. ficurishos or intrica be cies: no cum- rsomc detail and lrrelevan-cies, nvcry sentence is o flnishul gem, [and is delivered with tailing cffcct which cnrrlos conviction with it. An Ontario member told liouse of Commons recently reason he was returned with such te are largely under 1.0m] control‘ n is large majorities was that he was’ one of a ila-mlly of nine and that he Which reminds us ‘of a New Bruns- wick politician of the old days, one Provincial governments also or iota family or six or “eve” brmhem Twice durlnn m. w" how‘, “ ° spec-ch Mr. Veniot referred to the each of whom Joined a different church and different fraternal soc- 0n—-his religious and social organ- ization was too all-embracing. it is unfortunate that llhe colrfcr: once between calpltal ‘and labour ln Sydney has failed, so far. at all evcnts. We trust Premier Arm- strong will continue ‘his efforts to bring about a settlement. The rock on which the negotrationg stuck f-asg is quite obvious. The miners’ leaders would not consent to any im- mediate reduction; whille the com- pany's representatives declined to cflflllllromiise wltllwut a reduction of some sort being accepted. lest it mlsln be tier-clued albroad that they had to admit they were wrong or Dreflivilhte imdemaniding it. ‘Pro- lwbly ‘had the miners’ leaders con- sented to a five per cent reduction Pending investigations such as were proposed, this would. have liven accepted by the company's r9. presentativoshand u. ‘beginning made at reconstruction and development. -'I‘hM people in the West. ‘Ind-fog |favor political union with Canada. as more likely to improve trade re. lotion-s, and thmt delegates to the trade conference It Ottawa ‘in June will lhroach tbs sublect, w“ n» as. clarartalon of Mr. Harry J. Crows, Wm 1m lull returned to Toronto from a visit to the sou-thong meg "Constitutional and commercial uh. the! iety._ Of course he was never beat-i |eral arena is strongly ‘vlngfn Halifax with the hope of ,them. which is far from being the create new manufacturing indus- tries within the Province. i Premier Veniot In closing the (budget debate at Fredericton thc ‘other day gave an imtliriatlon of ‘his intended retirement from pru- ‘vlnclal politics and also stated his confident belief and hope that ccssor in the Premiership of thi- Province, This is interpreted as will be appointed to the Senate in and all his brothers and sisters bad which more is a New Brunswick] large families in ‘his constituency. Hlcanq” or that he WI“ be a can dldate tor the House of Commons at the coining flederal election. fact that lie "is now Jvcr sixty years old" and has been a long time in public life, although he is apparently as vigorous as evcr That he is likely to enter tho frd- indicated by the fact thalt he has for yllilrfi past always taken an active part in Dominion general elections and by- eleotions, notably ‘in the last forlor- al contest in his own country ‘JI Gloucester. where Mr. Doucet. tho (Ionserva-tive candidate. was elect- ed by a handsome majority not very long ago. At this writing the long strike of coal miners ln Cape Breton is still unsettled and the miners are still out. The conference called by Prcmier Armstrong has been siti- uUIIIe compromise being effected between the dlsputants, but ‘no de- finite result ‘has been announced. The wide-spread sympathy for the suffering families of the miners accompanied as it has been by many li ral wontrllbutlons 0f money and food. has enabled the mllners to maintain a resblute at- titudo for s. long period. They in- sist upon a scale of pay that would be considered pretty high if con- stant employment were given fact. The budget debate at Ottawa has degenerated into a series of dull srnd dragging speeches addressed to an almost empty House and completely empty galleries. Evan ‘hlnldad, Jamaica, and Barbados are not likely to cast aside so light.- lon would. establish pa. snout m. terprovlnclml trade between fnces or would than i... u... southern ten-hm! of Csnsdn," y; 0mm bani-iron. "we hi. alrsld Mr." Crow's 1m n father to ma’ ‘DIDV- . 1y their relations with the Mother Count/ry. The West Indies and Cana- da are idewily situated for con- federation, and no doubt ultimately they or». trim; but ti win not result from the conference to be Attorniy General Rand whom h~ h nvarmly praised would be his suc~ meaning, either that M1‘. _Venlot " fir: 730112 of y £01111: g1.“ lain. ll-Dr ‘m: CHEMISTRY or voun aoov J Onc of our food Blleciausis i5 81V‘ fllg us vcry timely advice on the lmpofllllllcc of the minerals in the fond iin points out that of the fif- teen pssentiai ' chemical elements entering into the composition of the body, that telrof them are min- eral ulvmcnts, each with its won special work to do, work that can- not be properly done by any of the other elements. The trouble is that unless we, or our children, have some definite ailment known to be due to lack Of minerals in the food, we do not con- cern ourselves much about our dict. 'l‘his very deficiency may make it easier for us, to pick up some other ailment, because our resistance has been lowered. Another factor entering into it, is that the‘ chemistry of one body is so different from that of another, that lily samclfood gets handled differ-fully after it is eaten. Just as some forms 0f refining itietzils will get, or recover p. high- er percentage of the metal from tho fiilille ore, similarly one body can absorb more from a given amount of the same food. than can another bully. Why‘! Wcll, it may be duc to some inherited qualities, or it may be d-uc to the cure and thought one glvts t0 his body. This would mean that although th: idea of calorles~heat value of food-Is excellent in its way, just how much of any particular food s really digested by any particular body can only be surmised. Anhough minerals-iron, lime, potassium. sodium, and so forth are of iilC llilllC-it ‘importation to the growing child. they are also essen- tiul to the adult. as many of thc dauj/ (Illli, winch has come down lo ll-i through past centuries, is will the correct one. excellent au- heat and energy pro- (luccrs are just a little short on umu-ruls. firm-n vcgctuillcs are rich llimc and iron, but arc short sodium. 'l‘h.-s is why it is the most natur- Iul thing in the world to want to iuso a. little salt-sodium chloride i-on your vtgetnbles. - ln regard to cercals,‘thcy are rich i ilrotelds which are fbulld*s or repairers, but. ‘need a I ln_ in they little more iron In ‘them. S0 your growing child ‘should have milk, i‘cg1‘~tablcs and fruit. and you can't do much bcbtcr tho-n luse thu-‘e also. with some tncwt or log-ii) if yuu do some rcal muscular ‘work. <0&i-~—— roo-ooarooooovovoocvoooo-e i Ulla ruck-1- Itcutling 60-0 *0 90404440 i0 O—O§O 000' WHAT KIND OF A MOUTH HAVE YOU? it is said that the mouth can ‘never deceive though the eyes may,“ so 1t is as well and wfsc to know the A-B C of this most important feature. Full cleanly cut lips show a strong imagination and a love of nil things beautiful; there is a tendency to shyness and an inclina- tion to impatience .Thelr owners are charlablo and -generous, and usually h vc a good power of mimicry. , 0min] ._. ._____ _._________ the small quorum of 20unemhors out of the Z35 cannot be malntainted. Iiut the official reporters continue to take down the speeches, these expert stcnographers succeeding one another every ten minutes the speech are recorded in lion-card, as if political hot air were as wise and weighty as the dellvcranoes of statesmen. What an empty and crostly vfa-re lg ls! ‘ _. ---40>-§_ OLERMONT SOHOOL Following is the standing of Clermont School for Morch_ Grads 1X.—1, Gladys Campbell; 2, liopeIMIII; 3, Hilda Crokeu. Grade Vlll.—~i, Jennie MacDon- ald. 2, Douglas Campbell. Klrade Vl.-1, Annie Murphy; 2, Bessie lM-lli. Grade lV.—1 Vernon Campbell; 2. Daniel Murphy; 3, George Mur- y. ___ . lflrade 111-1., Weston Campbell; 2, Jabs: Mill; 3, Mabelle Peters. Grade 1i.-—1, Gerald Murphy; nnd George Mill, equal. Grade l. (o)—-1.. bell; 2, Robert Dalz z . lei "P! l- (bl-cl. Dolorina Mac- Donald: 2. Justin Murphy, Teloher-r-Mnmic M. Mill, Blanche Camp- lol, 3. William - / w m A , 'l‘lms sugar and flour. which arc goon ‘ r The rosebud and its frsl -.With folded hands by that form of ' n buried with an only hoyl ‘lane too moldy. Finally he cutdas ‘I , t . t \ l‘ ~ ‘APRIQZ - THE cmtnmrmrown Ggsnnlalf L _ O-OO-O-O-OO-IO-O-OiOOOO-OOV-OO-OO-O-O-OO The Public~Forum HISTORICAL AND OTHER UR-NOY . Sir,—l read ‘In The Patriot (AD- rll 17) that “the record of Conser- vatlve Governments (in P. -E. I8- lund) has been one long record of deficits, debt. reckless extrava- gance and neglect of public wmLs 1n regard to trnnsportat on and general Administration." In the Year Book for 1916 (p886 109) there are set out the receipts and expenditures. the surpluses and deficits, of the Provincial Gov- ernment in each and every year be- tween snd including 1880, and 1916. The Conservatives were in office from 1880 to 1890 and again from 1912 to 19l6-——ln all fifteen twenty one years_ At the close of the years the Conservatives were in office there “are shown surplus- es amounting to 253357.31, The re- cord of the years in which the Lib- erals were in office is as follows: 1891 Deficit . --$ 30.43920 1392 " __ 37,651.29 139;; " 119,942.33 r394 " __ 20.16421 1895 " 32862.80 1395 " __ 14135.35 1391 " _ 38,201.65 1393 " _ 42,331.75 1399 " _ 36,915.03 1900 " 911938.16 1901 " 51,202.07 1902 ” _. 12.12211 1903 " -. 20,471.91 1904 " __ 68,149.63 1905 " _... 46,116.97 1906 " ____ 27,961.54 1907 ” _.. 10679.85 190g " __ 15,073.38 1909 " _ 17,490.56 1910 " ____ __ 28,054.33 1911 ." ............ _. 41.83326 The record also shows that the expenditures of the years during which the Liberals were in offic. were considerably greater than structurcs as-de from the bones, those h, which ,3“- w_ w_ Sumvnn “QM liwm- - was Premier and well up to those Tile idea then of a well mixed of the war years in which the Hon, Chicif Justice Mathleaon was Pro- mier. _ In vlaw of the unbroken list of deficits throughout the period in which the Liberals held office, the language of The Patriot quoted ut the beginning of this latter is ovi- dcntly as ridiculous as it is false ‘and nngrammntical. I am, Sir, etc., ‘ A BV8TANDER Daily Selections FOR I (iuardian Readers seowoooeooo+u APRIL 21,1926 TPEE FIRST AN-D THE LAST: -—l am the frat, and l am the last. and besides me there is no God. .| ls th.re a God besides inc? yca. then; is no God: 1 know not any. Isaiah 44:6, 8. 'Of\ PRAYER:— Lord. we believe that Thou hast created all things, and tliatin Thee all things exist. and We worship and adore Theo as‘ thc One True and Living God. be- rmlc Whom there is none else. l l i THE LTTLE GRAVE “it's only n little grave." they said, "Only just a child that's dead:" And so they carelessly turned sway Fiom the mound the spade had made ‘that day. Ah! ~th=ey did n01 know how deep a shade ' That little grave in our home had made. I know the coffin was narrow and small. ‘ One yard would have served for an ample pail: And one man in his arms could have bore away. ght of clay; But I ksow that darling hopes wiere hid Beneath that little coffin lid. l knew that a mother had stood that day‘ » clay; l know that burning tears were hid, ‘Neath tho in'g lid, And 1 knew her lip. and chock and w drooping lash and ach- bro were almost as white as he-r baby's now. l knew that some things wore hid away, The crimson frock and wrappinga 889 ' The unis sock and half-worn shoe, The cap wlthxfts plumed and tassels blue; An empty crib with its cover! spread As white as the face of the slnloss dead. 1 . \ . ‘ ‘Tls a little grave. but 0. bowolrol For world wide hopes srs buried there; And ye. perhaps. ‘in com-lug years May see llloe her. through blind- ing tears, . How much of light, bow much of -——-—-oo-§—-—- A our-nun An old sntlsmsn was being duv- ed by: barber whose bend was srfl chin. Hi loti foohpd godly and oeidvtn :1 tolls loo, my mo, thstoombhiof In -~ < st +o+c0 I years. The Liberals were in office p BAKE OUR on BRED/ z H ONE-BAKED WGY Program. wsonesgpi-iriiczz WGYJSchen ‘ dy, N. Y.) General Electric Company 790 Kllocyclco (379.5 Motors) Eastern standard Time BGRJfAi) 155m OFALL‘ . Honor Boll ofRad Point School for the month of March Grade 1X.—l, Mar 2, Donald l, Campb . Grade Vlll. Luella Ching. Grade Vll.——1. Murl Guy Nordstrsm, Grade Vll.——1., Francis Ca , 2, Helen Campbell; 8. Alba bell; 4. Frankie Mclnnis, Grade ‘lV.—1, Mary A. Clllnphll"; 2, Mary A; La aPlerre. ,Grade [1i.-—1, George Bruce- Lyds Bruce; 3. Ervin and Basil Chapman equa othy Chapman. ‘Grade l.—1. ililloanor Campbell; ' 2. Ambrose La Pierre. Perfect Attendance —— Mnry 5L y M: Cam all. —1, Charles Chlng; 2, llbell; el Bruce; y, A 11:55 a. m.—'l‘lma signals. 12:30 p. nn-Stock market re- “lllimil: pm,‘ rl Camp. 12:40 p. m. Produce market re- ort. 12:45 p. m.—Weather-report. a 6:00 p. n1.—-PI‘0dllC6 8nd flwcil market quotations; news bulletnns. 6:30 p. m.-—Progrnm for child- ren. 6:45 p. 1ll.*—AllV8l1l.l1l'B story from Youths Companion. 7:00 p. m.~—l'rogram by Albany 2. Robertson i; 4, Dor- Strand Theatre Orchestra, Julius Campbell, Frankie Mclnnia. Frau. Boxhorn. conductor; Floyd li- cls Campbell. Lloyd MChlnili, M. Walters. organist. bert Campbell, Lowell Ching, E1. SILENT NIGIIT. c. N. R.~PROGRAM TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 1925 CNRA (313 lllutres.) MONCTON. N B c-nnor Campbell. Mlary A. Campbell, ——Allce L. Malone. teacher, it} - Printed dresses and plain cloth coats to maltch are Popular ensem- ' pics this spring. .——---—¢0¢-—-—- Rub sou-p and ii"? ivntrr on the lop" nml bcltom cf cane xii-air seals hnt have beguuto seq. it will h'lnk m they will be firm as new. 3.30 p: hi. (A. s. '1‘.)?- PROGRAMME nv s1‘. 101m, n. i . S 1i.. ARTISTS Ensemble by Cmnpaniy- "O Canada." ' “rm . Jim? 1. Mixed (luailtctte—Selectcd, Miss ' ' cs Cllmu and Thomson. Messrs um,“ and smith g;- 2. Tenor Solo»"1*‘arc\vcll in the “SAVE THE FOREST" Desert" (AdfllllS)—MI‘. Charles ' .Sw'ckh0use_ B, sure your match is out 3. Soprano Solo (u) “DYE!” before you throw it away. Heart" (llluttl). (b) "Sunrise and You" (‘Peinl ——~l\i'ss Ermine Clinic. ' ' 4. violin Solo (a) Waltz in A Min- or (Grnhms-liockstelu), (b) Air ‘for the G String (flack-Wilhelm) —Mrs. T. J. Gunn. 5 (ionlrallto Solu- "The Two _ Grcnadlcrs" (Schumann); Miss ulcnda S. Thomson. 6. Tenor Solo (a) "When l Think of Violets" (Doyle) (b) “Out of _ ‘l he Duslfl-Mr. A. (l. Smith. M-stehes have heads but they can't think. Do it for them. Carters ‘Seeds Grow About two hundred Mar chants on Prince Emusnl la- lsnd sell Carters Seeds. ll you cannot get what sctfll you want from them send to U8. l 7. Baritone Solo (a) "Drake (loco Wcst" (Saundcison), (b) "Be Brave and Smile" (Peppery-Mr. E. Clarence Glrvan. 8. Pianoforte Solo-Selected-Mr. J. liayard Gurrle. 9. Mixed Qunr1ette——Scll'ctcil — Aliases Cllmo and Thomson, lllessrs, Girvttn and Smith. 10. Tenor Solo (a) “Angels Guard Thcc" (Godard. (b) “Valc" (itus- scll)——l\ir. Charles Strackhousc. 11. Violin solo (u) “Londondarry Air" (Krlcslor), (b) "Klllaruey“ l1\ioffnli-~hirs. '1‘. J. (iunn. Our Seeds and Seed Grain are tested at Ottawa for 9"" lty and germination. ., Ask for Carters N0. 1 12k Bullion?! Slolov (nls (lnkthc Ropd "Nmkfl" Tymoyhy No, 1 gong “git. a ?iinadgvyl)t?szin'on;g "Queen" Mammoth Clover. Mr. is‘. (flamenco Girvnn. ' N°- l "R°'°" Ahii“ CNN" I No_ 1 Early Red Clover. No. 1 Seed Wheat, Seed Oats, florlcy, F-lold Peal. Vet- ches. Fodder Corn, Buck- wheat and a full line of Vegetable and Flower Seedl. and Field Seeds, 13 (Jontrnlto Solo-“Givo Me tho Open lioad" (Ambroscr-Miss lilondu S. Thomson. 14. Tenor Solo (n) “Tho World is Waiting For the Sunrise" (Penn), (l1) "Whcn—" (Doylci- Mr. A. C. Smith. 15. Soprano Solo (a) “Carlsslmafi 4 (Penn). (b) “Where My Caravan “as Resmy- mo,” __ M,“ "' sn-ilonfonlrri sets. Potato Erminlc Ciimo. 0'0"" Accompanlst-Mrs. J. M. Barnes. E | d p t g p MI; Programme by CNRA Orchestra. u y s?" 61:15:?’ i ‘ "ADDRESS on Fox Breeding by Dr. F. A. Richard, President, Bulbs, etc. Don't neglect the New Brunswick Fox Breeders‘ in ‘i Lawn and Grass Plots, use '_ our "Evergreen" Lawn Grlll and Lawn Fertilizer, Carter&Co. Limited ‘Seodlmeliizto tho poo!!! 0' P, E. Island Association." TUESDAY. APRIL 21, 1925 CNIUK (420 Metres ) REGINA. SAISK. 3 1L m. (M. T.)— Wcckly Bedtime Travel Tale. W. H. Buckley and Pupils Planofonte Recital Address by Hon, Chas. A. Dunning, Premier of Saskatchewan, in connection with Canada's "Save v The Forest Week. In Prince Edward Island one slm {about be to con- serve o nice prove of Trees on every Finn-a most valu- able asset-protects the birds-shelters ffiscsttld-osrvbl for Fox Rsnclilnq-conssrvss the moisture and Add: Ifiauty lo the landsespe. I ' Camp Fires should be built in the open lmflhorouqhl! quenched before leaving by water or earth, Contributed by - llynilman 8r 6a.. r lll. l The Oldest Insurance == Agency In P. 5.1. .- iu-i-s-mfl-s-u-i- Q x4 x L x **“€ f \ »o»o4*~‘- __ 146 Richmond Street charlottetown - Eire; Life.‘ Accident. If"! Pluto Insurance It rote.