TE LT o. Sm"? -' Aylm" At Our Stores ORANGE ’ MARMALADE Fmd ac §2-oz.Jar........... Each G EATON’S - Q ‘ , _ -= as - .._,__,_ * Lb.35G Jill's-it; 4 A FEW . Special! Cairo Palm SUGGESTIONS‘ TOILET cake ' soar 4 m 45G Large Pkge. Large Pkge‘ ilflglixA-‘ELE WHIP, 8% ch19‘: ..:.".*.. ‘Each 25° Each 25G KRAFT MAYONNAIBE, 16 OI. 33c LIME JUICE. Bot. 29c GRAPE JUICE, Bot, _, 29c _ =gig> _ swam‘ Mrxan 25c PICKLES, Bulk Lb. .. PAPER NAPKINS, Pkg. 10c PINK SALMON )4 Lb. Tins 10c. 2 for FRUIT SYRUPS Asst. Flavours. Bot. .. - , WAX PAPER, Pkg. Aylmer TOMATO JUICE Family Size Tin Tin 10¢. ....... .... 2m 19G Eaton's Special Blend corona ............... .. Lb; 28G lb. tin 25G 13c" HOSTESS HOSTESS“ French’s Prepared 3 oz, MUSTARD, i) oz. _iar .. . . . . . . .. ' 1..., in R "' '.,..,\ ‘i -< MEWS WORK lllllTS Shirts in... .ill g... _. 4.4 oi room _ as well as plenty of good wear. Made with triple stitched seams and deep double yoke for extra strength where lb‘ t dd‘ C t , sass s s s s - s osso es n: a ”” -. avy 1r mg , . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .c Ml-B Khaki Shirting 2 1 BAKED MEAT LOAF‘, Lb, 29c Ml-C Blue Chambray for s COOKED HAM (sliced) Lb. 49c BOLOGNA (sliced) Lb. . . . .. 15c Mirror-Polished Knives Strong Sheffield-made Knives, Stain- less, Polished Spanish Slipper Blades with plain white Xylonite handles, Eaton's Pure Olive Oil, 8 ozs. ea. 35c TOILET PAPER, 6 rolls for . . CREAM of WHEAT 2s oz. pkg, . 24¢ § SHREDDED WHEAT, 2 pkgs. 25c A rmasn and cooxrn urns CHUCK ROAST BEEF PLATE BEEF Fresh Fruits and Vegetables . . 25c ‘z QUEEN OLIVE 8 oz. 20c STUFFED OLIVES j" Lb. litioatio ns 0i Voters For Councillor A n d A ss emblyman The iollowing have Two VOTES. one for -the ndidste ior Councillor and the other ior the candidate for Assemblyman: 1—Every person who owns property resl estate worth 0325.00. Z-livery person who has s ‘essehold iriterest in property l! such iu- iercst is worth $325.00. 3~Every husband whose wile owns real estate ss mentioned in Pers- grsph i and I above. ti-Every wiie whose husband owns real estate ss mentioned in Para- graphs 1 snd 2 above. 5—Every returned soldier or ex-ser- vice man provided he has resided in the Electoral District i3 months previous to June l5, 1935. ls-Every duly ordained clergyman having actual charge o! s perish within the district. Every person, msle or iemsle, (ex. cept an Indian resident on In Ind- ian reservation) has ONE vote that is for the Assemblyman candidate if such persoru- - l-—-Is oi the age oi 21 years on the day oi the election. 2——Is a British Subject. Ii-Has resided within the Province for is months and in the elec- torsl district wherein such per- son sceks to vote for st least 2 months previous to June 15, i935. 4-45 the holder oi a freehold estate for his own use and benefit, or who has the use and occupation or actual possession for his own use and benefit, oi any house. shop or piece oi land within the Electoral District oi the value oi $100.00, provided he has owned or used or occupied such property six months previous to June ll. 1935. 5—Is qualified to vote ior councillor candidates. Occasional absence does not dis- qualify a. person who is otherwise qualified to vote tor Assemblyman. A mariner, a fisherman or o. stu- dent has a vote, regardless o! ab- sence, in the Electoral District in which he ordinarily resides. HAY NllTES The May and June rsintall was generally sv rage throughout the Maritime Pr vinces, but the cold backward May weather delayed the hay crop. New clover meadows came through the winter and spring lair- ly well. but there were many thin stands. Many old meadows and some dykeland areas will yield only light crops due to the extreme drouth of last season and some army worm damage on dykelands. On the whole there will be a isir ‘ " PERK Y" ‘deadly little Guts: Pucks ORANGES (Sunkist) Dozen 29c Waterloo b01510“- TOMATOES (firm ripe) Lb. .... 23¢ JLA Dessert n . 6 for NEW BEETS, Bunch ..... 10¢ ' ' ' ' ' " NEW TURNIPS, bunch 10c JLB Dinner "nun." 6 for HEAD LETTUCE, 2 f0!‘ ... . . . . . . .. 25C Send your orders through your ma“ CAULIFLOWER, head . . . . 15c I est M“ Order 0mm CUCUMBERS, each . . . . . . . . 15c Mr. Lea’s Statement A Farther Indictment Of Liberal Insincerity After six duys’ silence on the subject of the revel- ntions in the Saunders-Robb correspondence, astatement appears in yesterdays Liberal press, over the name of Mf. W. M. Lea, purporting to give an explanation of his m sstatement in the Legislature charging that the Con- vservaiive Premiers of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick had failed to co-operate with the Liberal administration of this Province in pressing the Mackenzie King Govern- Inent for subsidy settlement. The claim advanced by Mr. Lea is of the most flimsy and ridiculous kind. He says Mr, Saunders’ letter, stating that “ON MANY OCCASIONS" he had "DECLINED TO (fO-OPERATE" with the .othcr Maritime Premiers, was written “some months before the matter was finally r_e- ferred to the Audit Board.” This is the same precious Audit Board which expressly stated it hnd no jurisdiction io make any final assessment, and into whose department the Maritime Claims question was pigeonholed by the King Government in the dying months of his administra- tion. After being refused the co-operation of the Liberal Government of this province “on many occasionsP-AND MR. LEA DOES NOT DENY THIS FACT-was it any wonder that the other Maritime Premiers paid no atten- tion to any subsequent request this Province made for co- operation before~a Board, which they knew was incompet- ent to deal with the matter. Why should they not treat such a suggestion with the contempt it deserved. They knew from past experience that the Liberal Government ofi this Province, like the Liberal Government at Ottawa, was simply playing politics, and that the whole proposal was just an election-hour bluif. - Did-the Lea Government have any faith in its own claims presentation before the Audit Board? Let Mr, Lea’s record speak on this point. He says the lsland’s case was presented on May 10, 1930; but he neglects to state that prior to that, on Jan. 21, V1930, Premier Saunders filed a memorial at Ottawa in which claims for the amount of $438,000 dollars were detailed. While Mr. Saunders was utOttaWs, and on run ‘vsmr sum: oar ON wuflcii . THESE CLAIMS ‘Wain; FILED, MR. LEA, oven HIS own. NAME as. PROVINCIAL SECRETARY gsun ACTING PREMIER, published his notorious "pamphlet". fish ' of claims-to the amount. oi THREE AND A QUART R MILLION DOLLARS ANNUADSUBSIDY INCREA E. bli as. c on ridiculous claim statement-Mill tholiiliiliegdll oxen figs of ‘BOUND seen by the other-Alteri- tliis Premiers, who were "also aware that the brief-filed ' A . warm was! Noll‘ JUST FIED 1N A88 i’ I one so issuer roua L , V, the Audit ‘Board claimed only a seventhgof‘ t“! Injured Carp Now One Out Hospital IIONDON, July 18.—The biggest cairn at the Zoo has quite recovered from his long journey. You can see him any day now. surging up and down his long tank with the speed oi a. torpedo and manoeuvring his 28th body among his lesser cousins, the goldiish, with a litheneas and agility which would be cereditable in e. crop half his weight. But ior the kink in his tail, in- deed, anyone might be excused for thinking that he had been born in the Aquarium in Regent's Park. It's that kink which gives bird's-way as s much-travelled iish. Over iour months ago Dyprinus Carpio-to give him his official name-was swimming happily in a Hungarian river. He had iew cares. since he was big enough to deal with practically all his enemies and icod was plentiiui. In isct it was a llttietoo plcntl- fui, as poor Cyprinus was to ilnd to his cost one evening when, seizing a particularly attractive morscl, ho was unceremoniously hauled in the sir and deposited in a tan k All carps have tempers, and Cyprinus was no exception. His new quarters were small and con- trasted badly with the spacious stream from which he had just been elected; he did not like the lock 0d his companions, also arriv- ing mysteriously from the skies; in fact, he did not like anything at 1 all. And so he protested vigorously. l He protested ell the way from r Budapest to Regent's Park. There» they took him out oi his icznpor- sry travelling quarters a little bet- tered, and with that sad kink in his tail- rontunsiely the Zoo has a sena- torium where even iishes can be repaired, and Cyprinus was well cared ior. Btosdily the tell heaioi. steadily into the little brain Ve- hlnd that [my head came a rim reuisstion that he hsd resohrd s pwoe oi kindness, and that not only need he not tear his enernie‘, but that there were no enemies t4 rear Then. finally. he was sduced to s dist oi horse's h and iound it good. The Aqu _im uses the heart oi one horse s day to feed its fishes, and o! his the pester pert goes to e cam really, and the largest rt o! sll Cysts-mus- Tlseresultislflls. veryhappy l8—(O.P.)-- cathedrals in if borougbbrsdirlcnli uGuIIa Pare/is Szrvin. Loo for bim Q lbs GP dealers’ windows. Maritime hay crop, but the contin- ued showery weather is delaying cutting and may injure the quality for market. Farmers in Western Nova Sootls started cutting the last or June, and those in the 5t. John Valley iollowed ugly in July. The Dominion Eulletiis oi Agri- cultural Statistics reports 1,178,000 acres oi Maritime hey in 1083. Qt a BEFORE You our‘ ' GUTTA {hoim-Iticnr it (Mew IY\GUTIA\PERCHA l Look for the Blue Ribbon in the GP Dealers‘ stores ourrnéian See this s THE NEW ANY\OTHER ‘nae ' THE1935 BLUE RIBBON TIRE VALUE What airesd ‘thistire has! Get your business card and measure its depth. "Make, a comparison with any other same-price tire. The Roadflight wins every time! A deeper, wider tread, good for" thousands of more miles, is ‘one of many reasons why you should $ 9»ve ensstionai- value before you buy any other tire. Mdllil the GREATER WIDTH Test The Rosdtiight Tread is definitely wider than any tire at the same prion, sod equally s; wide ss more expensive tires of comparative size. . Measurements prove it! Is otters more sou-skid road more traction, more ra in; surface -— s safer; longer-wearing tire. PRICE $Iss 4.75 x 19 Other slrss pvopodlonsiely ‘ ' . ~ priced ugaf» ... PERCHA mm Ruiiuiiu LIMITIU THI LARGEST ALL-(ANADIAN- RUBlilR (OMPANY. IUUNDFU ~ can is which was 03 per cent oi the total area under iield crops that year. The greater part o1 the hay crop is out too late for best ieedlng value and top market grades. Timothy The New G. P. ROADFLIGHT TIRES are for sale at THE ROGERS HARDWARE CO., LTD., BRUCE STEWART 8: CO., LTD, TANTON BROTHERS. hay cut before bloom and properly cured has about 0.0 per oent pro- trade would benefit greatly from tein, at full bloom 0.3, and when the timely cutting. Proper curing nearly ripe 5.2 per cent protein. and csreiul storing oi hay. Com- The Neppsn Experimental Farm petition in the Maritime markets reports that clover cut in bloom his been very much increased by had 2.2 per cent more protein than the large quantities oi Quebec hay clover allowed to stand mother shipped into Northern New Bruns- The ioLlowing clipping from the Cheshire Obsower will he of iu- terest as many older residents here will recall Miss Pool’: ts-the-r who was a brother-in-lsw oi Mrs. A- Lord oi Bouris. The bells of Christ Church. Alsoser- were muiiied on Bundsy ior one oi its greatest benefactors. Miss Margaret Ellen Poole, Church- msd. Alssgcizmlho passed e/way on Saturday. at the age oi 87. 2hr sixty yes/rs Miss Poole had snduntilistnryces-shsdbeencno d the rims maers in almost every m-t to raise funds. month and cut when the bltassoms grit and Nlove. Scotis last season. are dead. In regard to yiel . 6X.- ere is a arge carryover o! Que- periments have shown‘ that the bee hsy and a. good crop there maximum digestible protein and llflin this 51513011- Quebec hay the maximum total nutrients per prcies in May were down to about acre are obtained by cutting when $8.00 per ton at country points. end in iull bloom. But where there is market prospects are not bright ior a large acreage to harvest it is nec- the i033 crop. Those rumors who esssry to start cutting shes-d 0i’ have top quality hay will command iull bloom in order to finish before highest prices in a buyers‘ market. the hay loses its expensive protein. —-———-————-—— palutability and disbstibility and . _ becomes woody. ' M,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,, m, ,,,,,,_ ,,, Link With Lewis Kentucky Blue. Couch or Quack or Twitch are the earliest grasses, and Carroll meadows where these are prevalent ~ should be cut in the order named. spssqgg L/myg M55103“; Meadows oi Common or Early Red 0p FAMQUQ 5111-391; Clover should be out in advance oi the Mammoth or Late Red. Alslks and Timothy: and last oi all Red- top, Bmwniop and Creeping Bent meadows. . Selective cutting enables the farmer to store separately hay oi the same class and quality and simplifies the grading tor market. All weedy hay should be cut early before the weeds have matured and distributed their seed. and should be stored separately ior feeding on the ierm. The shipping oi over- ripe, hsdly cured, weedy hay mn- not be s paying proposition in the lon run, and s single shipment of and‘. poor material may spoil the reputation oi s producing dLstrlct. In the msnsgemen‘ oi dike or any hey lend. csre should be taken to note week and thin stands with s view to improvement by top dressing with manure or commer- cieiwlertilise; impiedistsly the he! is cut. bit not Ister than deplora- her iirst in this climate, as new growth should have time to mature oh d the eemrnw rue- sont st ons ct the snnusl most- wr ~*g,~=g,;=g=,v W “y” E's; fir‘? °’ “’° DQT. est: in - Iflll ' . grence to stronriuli stands. uet ss a °7 unm""- "" m“. u’ § is ‘ alter ‘cutttnl. hobs‘: roller to press down the m:- iE§sa§§§ Province. At the age oi six years she was sent to England and lived for many years with her aunts, the Misses Poole, at Alvsstorb. a sulburb of Derby. It was there that Miss Poole met the Rev- C L. Dodgson, better group, including Miss Poole, when photography was in its infancy. She Deesured this photograph, ard it is thought that this was actually the earliest that Lewis Carroll prmduoed: Miss Poole went to live in i Alssgor in i874, and had lived in the village ever since, save for Ir short period socni. in Bandbsoh. The funeral took place 0n Tues» day at Christ Church, the Vicar oi Alssger the Rev. C. C.‘ Potts) and the Rev. ‘J. R. Brunskill ot- _t'lolsting. ivlrs- W. A. Heydon was 1st the organ, and her voluntsrles ‘included "O rest ln the Lord." Hymns sung wefio "Blest are the pure in heart" and "O God. help in ages past." As the mourn» ers left the chumh. the Nuns Dimitlls was- chlnted. . Mottled heels were rims. On the sltsrlwcre pissed blue and white flowers roprssetit-ihg ‘the O, l". 5. colours. Anson; the mourners present were; Major-H. B. Poole (nephew). Cholworth, surrey; Miss Poole (niece), isondong-Mns- Noel Kdiltoway (nines), Olsfldidrdillrs; Hudson (niece, Malvern: Mrs.- Psrtsr (niece), Botn-rsesnoisth: Dr. and Dr. Sayers (representing Mr. Robert Grieve, (nephew). -" " "’ Dorothy ' Hudson (mot-squirm), waivers: ' FardyBus Sonics "8; taxi-Service tiliAllLtlTTETilWll to. FORTUNE known as rewis Carroll; the mus _ . TIME TABLE iemous creator of "Alice" in _the Leaving Charlottetown (.00 Idl- Lssving Fortune ......... 8.15 us. book "Alice in Wooden-lend." Tneu "» - llszelbrook 4.20 p-m; < " ningwsu-s ass u-ut a young man o! twenty-tour. “ Keats's Lake 4.85 lam. '" : gundss ....... .. as’; son. Charles Ludwidge Dodgson, as " 4s Road ...... .. 45 ridgctoivn s. san- "Le-wig Qqmp," w“ thenplgnqws. " Cardigan 5.00:p.m. " Cardigan . . . . . .. 0.05 oss- was a first cousin oi Miss Poole! " Brldegtown ..... 5.15 " "ll Station - - - . .- 9-!" l-ll- fgthgt M13 pqoje hm an jntgyegfi- " -Dundus . . . . 5.20pm. "1 Keefe‘: Luke 9.301.111; wry 0* "savory n ....:. .:*:.""~"'- i“ ...:. -'.'.:-.:1'::....."~" z: oocssionoihisvlstto e vas- “"0 - - - - - - -- - ‘II ' ~' ' ‘f. ‘gxggkmi- ,§§‘°“5 Headquarters in Charlottetown —NOBANA was‘ noow Headquarters in flouris- LINNOX HOTEL Gityyllus servo» (Elmira rSourIs f tniown L-vsso-s-u-u. , . » Headquarters Old ‘Spain Tea Rooms, Clftnwlt. Corr Hotel, Souris Losses Elmira ............ . "tlblsesvss Charlottetown ti’! ~ ‘ Souris .... are c m. ltowsrt ........ .. 5.00. ~ Dinpvellg mu. "ass " Moi-cu .. ..... 5J5 ' 5t. Pctsrshm... 8.56 “ 28$. Peters ----.-..--.. 5-“ - ~ ,.uinnsiuoiuu s , l" Mt. stewsrt ' ' Jqurls Mb .--:_-_ ca..." gin Elmira " I" Parcels carried-tit Minimum 0f 25¢- “Bus will stop"_i)l_i'8i81l8|'&tfll\¥ reint- _ nine-w- digit." .......4,..,.rsug\~Ir-4I' 3-. V := ti, 1 us. “Vin ills-s “in u leis 1i,.iv's.-‘us' i.",‘.,,y,..,.‘ss,s-¢s ‘~ massive A ‘ GOVERNMENT. 4 muss» c ._§ 55-2