9- v Office Hours-D to 12 a. m. 1 to 6 i b lt-q INTO llfliili liraBeaztolleslih .~.-.-.-.:.-.. -- g ‘ medicine on earth for this by is now four months old and a healthier baby you would not want. l am sending you a picture of her. Eveavlbody says, ‘That is a very heal y looking baby.‘ You have my eonaent to show this letterW-Mra. C.W.BENz,18l 8rd Ave.,Altoona, Pa. o woman can realize the joy and happiness this healthy babe brought into the home of Mrs. Benz, unless may have had a like ex rience. very woman who su ers from any ailments culiar to her sex, as indi- cated by ackaches, headaches, bear- ing-down pains, irregularitie ner- vousness and “the blues" sho d not rest until they have given Lydia E. ‘Pl-layman's Vegetable Compound a L :'__-v. Professional Cards. ll. ll‘. DEDIPSEY Graduate sf Beaten School of PIANO TUNING l7! Grafton S!» Charlotte-low! Palmer‘ Palmer H. J. Palmer, K. C. H. L. Palmer Barristers, etc. Bank of Nova Scotia Building Charlottetown, P. E. I. Money to Loan f“ i!!! ' ii . ‘whose inhabitants would BARRIBTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. _Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P. E. Island Clayton Morrison J. P. Commissioner of Deeds, Wills, Etc. ROTARY PUBLIC Prompt. careful attention to Deeds, Wills, Mortgages, etc., ATTESTED. Notes, Drafts, Bills, PROTESTED for non-acceptance of non-payment. . Tryon, P. E. I. J. A. MacDONALD . Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. MONEY TO LOAN Offlce—Riley Building Charlottetown 5r. o. c. Archibald Graduate on N. Y. Poet Graduate Medical School and Hospital Practice limited to Eye, Eiri N0" and Throat Office Bayer Building. Great George Street, opposite Guardian Office Telephone 250 p. m. May be consulted off hours at 118 Hlllshoro 8t. S. S. HESSIAN Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Etc. MONEY 1'0 LOAN Mqnfiggqg P. E. island o. s. INMAN, K. c. Barrister and Attornsy-at-Llw Room No. 12 Cameron Block VICTORIA ROW W.Miles Garrison,lil.D Late Superintendent Chas. Dalton Sanitarium Specialist in Pulmonary Tuber- culosis Office 126 Brighton Road Office Hours-z-i p. m. and by appointment Telephone 267 pMorson 8n Dufiy Banister and Attorney-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN ' Solicitors for Royal link of Canada McLean 8n MoKinnon Barristers. Attornsy-at-Law Office-loyal lank Building Ohariottetewl P. l. Island MaoLeod & Bentley W. E. IINTLEY, K. O. J. A. IINTLIY Iarrlsters and Attorneys MONIV TO LOAN Ofliee-Ianlr of N. l. Chambers J. A. MoEachen, Cph. D. airs alrsoiausr l"l.iii"t.5"..'.?i"‘i‘......." Y- .- [villages wulcl have no B11 Amen OodiiaaedfromhaeOne. exported to other Provinces. _the quantity exported . c. l ecause l do not wish it Province is due to theProhihition Actor to doctors’ prescriptions. list. The principle is abhorrent to ms. But there has been for the last twenty years or more a senti- ment in this Province that we should have prohibition. and so we have had it. that kind that did not prohibit. The late Conservative Gcnernment told the peopiu candid- ly: ' You have ‘been crying for pro- hibition in this Province: now we ‘are giving it to you——resi Prohibi- lion—and it is for you lo say whe- ther you lilre it or not.” I believe in giving the people what they ask for (my hon. friends gave the peo- ple what they didn't ask for) and _we told the people: “Give this law a good test, and when if has been tested we will ‘give you an op- portunity to say whether you wish to continue it or whether you do _or not." The majority of the peo- ple have certainly a right lo pro- hibition, if they really wan! It. But a great many people believed _in prohibition for the other fellow ;——noz for themselves. The Pro bibltion law in this Province today is as nearly perfect as you can have it. The. only question is, has i1 the moral support of the people’! ll is an exceedingly dif~ ficult iliing lo enforce a law fhul. has not got this moral support. As _to whether it has this moral sup port, in this Province,l am no! pre- pared to say. That can only be ascertained by giving the people the right to pronounce on it. You ‘can enforce prohibition to the last degree in a community where the people do not want liquor in any shape or form. But there are many villages in this province quickly _run n boot-legger out of the dis- lrici-yet some of these indignant hesitation _in going into town and obtaining liquor if they could get it. They say: “We don't want liquor peddl- ed in our vicinity. But we want ‘to know that we can get it. legiti- mately when we do want it." We have a liquor law on the sta- tute books of tihis province, and it is the duty of every citizen, while that law remains there i0 obey it. I am not taking sides one way or the other in the molten. I am simply contending that the law should be obeyed to the letter and that the people at the earliest op- portunity should have the rigiht of pronouncing their opinion on it. after they have seen the result of its strict enfocement. It was necessary for us to pass the law first, in order to give the people this opportunity of judging it. Pre- vious to this law people could have no idea of prohibition. for we Icnow that nearly every dug-store was a place where liquor was sold and sold in large quantities. MR. IJEPAGE: Some of them are selling it yet. MR. ARSl-lNAUi.'l‘~—~'l‘bat is pos- sible. But not nearly as many. Ninety per cent of the drug stores in this Province today sell absolute- iy no liquor. l believe the per- centage is even higher than that. l am sure that the drug stores handling liquor today are very few indeed if there» are any. ' The hon. member for Rustico referred in his speech to some newspaper comment about certain firms who had members in ‘this house receiving Government mon- ey. I think my hon. friends have laid themselves open to criticism In this matter. though we have charged nobody with oils-doing. it may lie by pure accident that so many firms in which honourable members are interested appear in the Public Accounts as receiving government patronage. At any rnte, I am not charging those firms willh not giving value for Govern- ment money received: but I do sny, that so far ns they are concerned, there is no need for members to make such a fuss and laud and eirtoll the Government about the very businesslike way in which they have conducted public affairs Iii regard to tliesecontrscts. There is ino cause for boasting, however for we know that my hon. friends are human and are quite ready to pick Government plums in the shape of Government patronage and Government contracts. Let them cease this “holler than thou" attitude. \ The late Government in past years was severely taken to task by my hon. friends because we were expending the sum of half a for that reason were called estra- vagaut. Lei. me point out the large amount of money which this Government will expend in the coming year-well over a million dollars. If they were justified In charging us with extravagance, we are certainly justifled In much stronger terms in " Ing the policy of my hon. friends. I would say it is a riot of expen- diture! And certainly our friends are not modsst—although the leader of the Government claimed that he had a "modest little sur- plus." The Budget. at least, can- not lay claim to the some distinc- tion, because if anything it is ra- ther immodest in its size. The Government by increased taxes has largely increased the revenues of the Province. and it is apparent UXUIQ that in their first year they are speeding every cent of it. Our "Viv. We know l speak plainly on this sublect to go abroad that internperanco in this Personally. l am not a. prohibition- miillou dollars per year and we for, using‘ friends will. that the expend]. Amie Aliefirmiéti Westerriilardus‘ 0' I-l-rravsmm lama pro. —VIOMEN'U SILK LISLE Hose do not think this can be contradic- 50m n 35c no‘ 30m‘ m m". ‘my . All aorta of schemes have been on foot by which liquor has been imported into this Province.| _i could name a great many of the aways by which it hs been import- ed under the guise of this, that has _and the other thing. _of warehouses in this Province-- and it will not he contended that _ali the liquor coining into thenris The Prohibition Commission have no _oversight o! them, and there is no moans by which they can check the quantity of liquor received and iory sale 3 pairs tor $1.70. Sinclair It Stewart, Limited. —-ONLY A FEW days left to to secure you tickets iior St. Dun~ Man's Play "Under Cover" ia Haaipyland Theatre. Bammoraide. Tuesday. llhy 8rd. -BOY SCOUT STOCKINGS. "Killer 66c. going in our big hos iery sale a pairs mi- $1.ao. Sinclair t Stewart, Limited. -MEN'8 FINE Cashmere Hose in black, brown and white. Former value 81.25. Selling nolw in our Hos- iery sale 2 pairs for $1.25. Sinclair i Stewart, Limited. b-come TO THE corlcsR-r and supper h Bi-adslbane Hall on Tlififldfly. May 3rd,. ll night proves unfavorable will be held first fine Itlflht following. » —A CORRECTION-in the re port of program of 0ddfellows' En- tertainment which appeared in is- sue 28in the following numbers were inserted 'ln errorz-Solo. gclolrge Bowness; Reading, Morley e . -.FIRST ARRIVAL-The first schooner to enter Sunimerside Har- bour this year. the “Melr-ose" ar- rived on Saturday morning from Puswash with a full carlosd of hard brick for R. T. Holman, Lim~ ited. —LOADS HERRi-Ntb-A motor boat from Belle River owned by B. (‘ompion 6k (‘o.. arrived in Summ- erslde curly Saturday morning for a load of fresh herring and after loading from P. c. Gallant, 1m on return. —-GE'I'TING BUSM-The water- ing cars. Summersidq. made its first appearance out Saturday morning.‘ Chairman of the street wmrnitiee. (hliant. and foreman DesRoche, are seeing things iin the right way, and it is hoped the good work will continue._ ' --VIOLATING GAME LAWS.- l' is reported that four goose hpatq were [e-lzed by wardens along the Muudy Creek shore. 1t appears that some shooting was going on this season contrary to the laws and no doubt more will be heard of this matter in the near fuiure. —-SPRING. GENTLE SPRING.- fPloushing. booing, digging sowing, that seems to be the order of the day among the gardeners of Sum- mersilde end guiburbs. Local stores repor, an unusually strong sale of garden vegetables and flower seeds and a brink trade in Borden tools is also recorded showing that they garden now who did not before and the-y who did last year are doing more. . -=-¢ turss will go on increasing from year to year, tihat notwithstanding their increased revenue, it will not be sufficient ‘to cover these expen- ditures. As time goes on other sources of expenditure will arise and will have to he met and so before very long our friends of the Government will -find an excuse for more taxes. ting revenue-by subsidies and by taxation. For the moment the question of subsidies is settled and direction. diherefore the increas- met iby increased burdens on tho lax-payers. Ever since Confeder- ation it will he ifound that, If not from year to year. at least within every period of five years there penditure. it is inevitable, and follows as surely as night follows day. The large increase of faxes put on by my hon. friends last year shouidhave been sufficient to cover a period of at least ten years. l fear, however, that it will not cover a period of five years-—-l question if It will cover three years! ready they are expending the full amount of their increased revenue. The Commissioner of Pulblic Works is building roads. inent roads-he is at least candid in- mbat. They are such roads as .wiil require care from year to expenditure on them not covered by this loan they are raising. lii duct, they will require more care and more expenditure tham ordin- ory roads, if they are to be kept in first class shape. He says, bow- over. that iilie culverts and bridges are pennanenL-thait they are there for all time. assertion, I am aware of lfhe fact that some very important bridges .built last year-a. so called perms- hnent .bridge——is already in the stream; and we know also of some culverts built at the same time lwbich are no longer in existence. Some of them, through faulty con- wstruction, have crumpled like paper and others have gone to pieces. llihis was in the first year of their construction! l hope and trust itbey are not fair samples of the ibridges and culverts built by my rnon. friends-if so, they will cer- tainly not be very permanent as my hon. friend for Rustlco main- tains. nor will they be there "for all time." -COmes hundreds of miles by ex- We have only two ways of igct- _ we can expect no increase in that Lj- ed expenditures will have to he J has been a gradual increase in ex- -' Al~ Ho says ‘ ' himself that they are not perma- year, and there will be a constant ' l cannot second that ' —KENIINO'I'ON DRAMA“ CLUB will present the apeotac drama "Lighthouse Nan" in the Strung Theatre, Keaaington, Wed, nesday, Mary 4. . —MlN'8 KHAKI Cmmbinalaon Overall Suits. Just the thing for working round your car. Prim 83.95. Sinclair d». Stedart Limited. _ -BIG HOSIERY SALE now on; Manufacturers clearing lines at ' bargain prices. Siuciaim & Stew- art, Limited. -WOMEN'8 PLAIN Cashmere l-lose, previously sold at 81.00. Special in our big hosiery sale 2 pairs for $1.05. Sinclair k Stewart Limited. ~ ~GOAL ARRIVALPThe schoon- er “Harry 8.". Capt. Malcolm, m». rived Saturday in Siiinmersidd with a cargo of coal for Joseph Read d: Co. - -THE 4 ACT COMEDY DRA- ma “Home Ties" will liie presented by the Wide Awskes of the Bede- que Young Peoples society, in the Central Bedeque hall. on Tuesday, May 10. 1921 at 8 o'clock. Adonis slon; Adults 35c; Children 20c. ll the weather proves unfavoraible) play will be held on Wednesday, May iiui. l-BAOK FROM HOSPITAL.» Mr. Benjamin Patterson has arr rived a: his home vin Summersidq from Kenville Hospital. Mr. Pa ‘ terson has been under milita treatment since February in the Prince Count-y Hospital, P. E, I, Hospital, Charlottetown. and in Kentviile but in none of these, if is regrciinble w say, were they able to elfe-i the desired cure of hii ailment. a piece of shrapnel in one of his lungs which he received while serving with Princess Pat- ricia Regiment in France. ‘ -T'riE Mil-K QUESTIONF-A summons has been issued against a Summcrside citizen for sell-lug milk without u license. Whether or not tiie grievance is for under- soiling. the case will he up this morning in the police court. Milk dealers in St. John announce a. re- duction of two cents a quart in ‘ the retail price of milk effective x today (Monday) ‘St. John is al-- most absolutel-y dependent on lSns- sex and other Kings (lounty, N. B.. districts for its milk. -lt looks as iii’ the Summerslde dealers would be kept busy explaining vwliy price of milk is higher in Summer-- side than St. {chm Ontario. and even the States wnere the producer and distributor must both get profitsynnd this milk invsniablly press with the additional cost-g that this entails. ‘lie it at SINCLA atn-snsaxasseuisse-tn uee-se-sawsqaersts. IRS-Qualit G11 Plus T01». . Wonderful Valued '/.ib.iiii8O==-»1- to Sell at $2.95 pull-over or slip-on style, fully up to the regular $7.50 line of last season. Our price only........ .. . ..-. -.-. Another Shipment of Ladies’ Slip-on Sweaters at The splendid value easily discernible in the first lot i of iihese Sweaters recently advertised has led t0 a speedy sale and we have "been fortunate in securing another ship- ment. The new ones show a greater variety of colors and. combination shades such as rose and nile, tan and tor- quoise, American beauty and black, iicrquoise and green, as w-ell as a number of plain colors. Those who have seen them are delighted with the values and certainly nothing to equal them bias been seen here for many seasons. They are all pure wool in » a good seasonable weight, \ At This Season Much Interest Centres in the New Millinery - » There's a bustle in our Millinery Section these days and witih spring upon us the staff are kept busy with orders for the new season's hats. How smart the new models are in all their springtime colors with their won- derful variety of trimmings used in new and delightful ways._ You will want to see them and make an early selection. We have the opinion that the showing here excels anything to be seen in the province, but then we want you to ‘be the judge. 'I‘he young ladies in charge would be_ pleased to have you call and your order will have their prompt and intelligent services. The prices $2.95 ll I Lare rea y very reasonable.’ ‘J Misses’ or Young Girls’ Sweaters In Similar Line at $2.50‘ ' I These are practically the same line of Sweaters as the women's at $2.95 and are shown in combination colors of torquoise and grey, old rose and nile, tan and American beauty, and other Ladies’ Sweater Coats Special at $6.00 - Tihese are the long model Sweater Coats, tigiht fitting wlaiist with crochet button fastenings. Shown in a good range of colors and were formerly Kiddies Sweaters At $1.50 Just the proper thing ,- for the little ones. All pure wool, slip-on style, colors pink and torquoise. "i patterns, first class workmanship and de- irablein every way. Regular $22.00 Spring 1921price... .. .. at. ---. seas ass good staple models. Priced _ at $15.00 Clearing now at this very low figure. . . . . 20 Coats in assorted patterns, Ruibberized Tweeds, Enid shades. _The value is equally good Ages 2 to 6 year's. A priced _at $9.00. You lwill find them- “; ‘the sizes aorre from _1(1) 50 litttlfi beauty 5 0 exceptlionally ood at this $6 .. o ears. ur s ecia a’ r1 e. ' ' ‘ " ‘ price Zach . . . . . . . . . ' Youreclhofce ' Zgihla‘. . .01: . F‘. Lid ' 5‘ Customers Are Taking Advantage of Our Low i Smart New Coats for Spring are Here . * ' i ' - [if Prices on Womens Raincoats For Your Choosing if}? _ Here are two exceptional values that are well worth _ Anticipating your requirements for something real- Bp While to see. _ , ly nice in a new Spring Coat we present this collection for ",1 20 Raincoats in new and modern styles, assorted your early choosing. You will find here many new and attractive models at a most moderate pricing, and the colors and fabrics embrace those that are greatly in pop- ular demand forspring. We would likeito have ‘the pleasure of ‘showing you the different lineshoiw on dis- play because we feel confident the coat is Here that will appeal to you. Price range is from " $15.00 $10.00 i $12-75 up to $67.50 ' ' o The Newest Designs in Canadian and ‘Am- eriean Wail PQDBTS- I Favored Styles in " New A Dresses . Coats for Spring iZ-il. . i- .—.=.*~.i_,<_-.r—.' . 4L “ ‘ l - :l~ #1.! _.i__"‘ "W71?" r‘: <'.-*.