GUARDIAN I Tun CHARLOTTETOWN MARCH 7. 1931 _._. l" »-_--___ . '-*" -"‘ _ __ --. ' "*~ - . .. . . . . .. ON - .——- lCainpalgn for Increase Deceit front Used lCranoerries bubflcl. o1’ - KE“°‘NGT » m .. . w‘ ‘ b , Consumption of Cotton In Rubber rrotluction‘ Heated Controversy m, M,,,,,,,—¢L-e~a;;,t unu-z-yofllh Qg aggg u, e. ,9 $t§lll Cam ellton N.B ——— t —-'— i n. t on n ve been ve- » , - l _ , , p ~ ' ' n; Meaiubi. a. CUMPTON- ny cot. itotnv o. WATKINS sanmdrmw, 111.. March s.- °M‘: a”:“hrs_°A; Hem, 50,7 For h“ b; _ Alinrervals__e\e; boiler; .1115. be recharged Bright ‘spgt United mu sun CUITBSBBINIQM United Press Staff Correspondent m. incl-its of the crlnberry as com- m pnsmm wed“, hm mmmejw Ammm lflt ls to function: vvw-"rl-y. ‘ MEMPHIS, March 5.-A cam- SALINAS, Cal, March 5.-The pared with other berries have start- homm , hi5 just lhesant: with 1hebody_ Indigestion _ lttiigh to increase the’ consumption day n; nlnfnnt indusll-leg" has re- :66 a controversy between two 1111- Newman.” overwork, wary” lgle hbul-g 0|- maln, deplete’ . ' _ _ of cotton, major crop of the south turned, and the national congress noi newspape columnists. Mrs, Roy Phillips had as her guest nerve for“ and, llineglecmd, may serious] was a con-ha! Q1 fixing for more than a century, is under- has recognized California's newezb-i Archie L. Bowen, who conducts a during the past week, h” amt“, Bus,‘ Flhfllllflflll ‘impair your health y . i‘; f. bet in 1'1 th d ti f bb i’ - ‘ fl ld ' ' » ' | 3°“ “ °"3*:""e' he" .21’.:1:.1;..:":;r....;*:..:.::..:%; ..:.::::.;:." .22.: ..:"...:;...::"‘ 5.3. :.":."::;::r 0' 13522132.”... A W 0' “to w» ~11 e SE15!’ (‘iad to see An educational program carried shrub called Guoyulc and iironounc- intendent of State Charitable instl- The many “lends o! MrfW. B. A" i fihiirfiizyour 5Y5iem “mh ‘mamylstrenlih 311d your n as am get“ on in newspapers and magazines ed "wy-oo-lay." tiitlons, has taken issue w1th'W. G. MacArthur Wm be sorry to hem. that. ‘ma wne- _ _ reported 111W ' ting 10W. Red R088 i8 and mentioned prominently by radio In the Salinas valley 6,000 acres sibley, columnist of the Chicago his health has not been very good‘ MBIIIIItPifiOII sozilgtsfglrslhgé‘! xgdgrzsbgfixiéézzigyol ovey e ‘ I ~ _ ' , ~ _ < “ m’ the be“ Seller W" ...‘:;*";. r2221“; 2:; 221.13%‘;s’-";::::..::i:.:i::'"l:'..*;~:. »f::::“.~;'.2::":.::@:.::.::.:*:*:;: l‘: “s”: "" =~~'---' ~. .. me." , e p la me _ soon be quite wcl age. n. Troubles you gel. the genuine. . wards the consumer, but towards the grower and has a double purpose. Firstly, that of increasing the con- Colnpany opened its $150,000 plantfparlali of all belrles." here fcl- the reduction of the shrub {_ "We have heard of cranberry pie into commercial rubber. Daily pro- ‘but hope never to be confronted 7.10 The funeral of the late Mrs. Mor- garet Cousins, of Burlington, took E. R. Shirley, Traveller '41s. =1- r-s. . ..,-..,.-..-,-.-i Red Rose "i= lfihoice Blends-Red Label and Orange Pckoe sumption of cotton, and secondly, that of getting producers to grow less cotton and to grow this at de- creased costs. Agricultural speakers and writers point out that salvation of the cot- ton grower is the planting of other crops which will make the planter .. and his family self sustaining should i drop and he lose money on the crop. 2n While this campaign is on, thou- sands of college men and women and their younger brothers and sis- ALBBIITON SOUTH sr-litioi. - clm standing of Albcrtoii South school foi- the molltii of February:- 0nd: VII-l, Lcilicnt Nutz. Grade Vf-l, Freda Fraser; 2, Eln- ml. Perry; 3, Eldon Matthews. Grade V-l, Esther Powers; 2, Leo = klcDoiigall; 3, Keir hfaitliows. Wllle Ahearn; 3, Eileen Skcrry, Grade III—1, Gladys Gallant; 2. Robert Bsery; 3, Jarvis: Mnlihcws. Grade II-l, John Gavin; 2. Bessie Matthews; 3, Samuel Fraser. Grade I ia.)—1, Rita Alictlrli; 2,‘ Wilbur Fraser; 3. lviary Fraser. Grade I tbl-—1, Cyril Null; 2, Eva Millctt; 3, Jnliios Pouw-rs. Perfect attendance:- W'llhlll~ Flu»- er, Alfred Powers, lflstllcl“ Reds Fraser. n::-- DeQAJQQOIQO£>DDiJ C1601 WHEAT clean MEAL l! the best part of the WHEAT rich in protein, one of the best and most nutritious feeds for ; Foxes hung Pigs, Cows live stock. . WHEAT GERM MEAL is a very popular feed and we have not been able to get a supply of ll for a long time, but a. shipment has just come in to " II, Done up ln 100 pound bags x . and selling at the low price of $2.28 per bag. Only :1 limited quahtlty for sale. Fox owner: shofld get a supply of It. Sold ENE Coulitlys must prized possess- ions llzls bccli lost and Eric Country Sil1'\'(‘_\'O1‘, that he would Qnqe Iv_1' violet Aknoumn; 1 land llls big Sillison plane to find it. tlic couiiirys ifllllilCfll boundary. of ilie 1111C. explained ills l.-~lll'\'r-_\' 11nd bran nlmlc of it ‘SlilCE P(l‘.\'f‘l'*i Illu- IYHuruli County nearly u cclitill'y' ago. Teacher-Mrs. Hclril '1‘. hialilicivs. l I ' ‘i |slaizvs wliivli iilrlncd iiic iililr‘ (il.\&ll)l)i‘;11'i‘(i long ago. § F’ that are MILKING and otfhcr g iers in private, parochial and grade schools are entering in the spirit of the project. - The youths are aiding in the dis- trlbution of cotton information. Cotton dresses are being worn by school girls of all ages as their part of the drive. Al; Southwestern, co- educational college lccated .hcl'e, ihe co-eds agreed to wear cotton dreses to classes and signified their intention of wearing them at parties. PLANE MAY HFYT LOST COUNTRY SILYDUéJKY, 0.. Mill‘ LINE 6.—Olie of H. F. Gerold, intimated scnd Sheriff Parke The lost DJS303~1SlOi1 was port of For two weeks, parties searched the woods without finding I. truce TWENTY mlLLlolqs Cog;- _ 0F OLD-AGE PENSIONS Rccviiill‘ GClTJlLl appeared before tile Erie Country Commissioners and plight. The lilie, he d, nus difficult lo find because no OTTAWA, March tL-Carrylng out his pledge made during the election campaign, Premier Bennett will in- trodllce during tlic coming session of parliament legislation for a. federal old age pension scheme. Although the legislation will be welcomed by the provinces and municipalities, re- lieving them of paying their share of the cost. it will place an additional heavy financial burden on the fed- eral purse, as it is estimated that it will cost the Dominion government approximate $20,000,000 per year once the propel: gets under way. At the present raté of cost Ontario will benefit by approximately $2,200,- 000 a. year; and the municipalities in that province by about $1,500,000 a year. Other provinces now operat- ing under the Old Age Pensions‘ Act wil lhave greater proportionate re- lief, as the municipalities do not share the cost. These estimates are based on the latest figures available in the depart- ment of labor, a compilation showing the cost of pensions in the five pro- vinces in which the act is 1n opera- _ tion for three-quarters of the present fiscal year. Hon. Senator Gideon Robertson, minister of labor, stated that this was the only method of estimating the cost of the proposed ilegislation to the Dominion, and that if the department were to make an rolllilrj.‘ was ncpzlrlllcd from (ivrold explained also that ilullier- i-lls llli\llll!lli‘l‘.i>, marks. signs and country The CUillif1l‘;Sl0lli31'S were advised tlzat slllcc the ciids of ilie line were known and most of the land along the course was rough, wooded terr- sin, aerial mapping would save the country much time and money. OLD RIVALRY RENEWED NEW HAVEN, Conii., March 6.— An old rivalry WGSVTCIRXWGd here when Princeton met Yale at hockey. Kay Todd, Jr., Ell wing, has been battling Doc Cook, who plays a sini- ilcn- position for the Tiger, for six years, Before they went to college they played on the sextcts of St. Paul's and Blake school in Minne- sotn. SIDE CURTAIN INJURIES LABOREI! SEATTLE, Mal". fL-Struck by the flapping side curtain of an automo- bile that passed lillii, H. W. Smith, duction runsio 15,000 pounds. This is the first plant of its kind in the United States, although the company has four others (not 1n operation at present) iii Old Mexico. 'I‘hc new plant licre was not placed in operation, however, until _thc con- gress, by an amendment to the bi- ennial army supplies bill, removed his cotton crop fall, or the \market irubbewrom tile list of specially-ox- ceptcd articles which ilie secretary of war was not polnpcllcd to buyi within the confines of the nation. Not New Plan Making DIQPIIDDOI‘ from Guayule is nothing new, according to George H. Carnelian, licad of Interconti- nental Rubber Company alid subsi- diaries. For more than a quarter of a cen- tury his company has been manu- rubbclr from the shrub in lecturing taken from its native areas northern Mexico and southern Tex- as. Revolutions of handicapped production. its Mexican factories completely. Realizing that the growth of the wild shrub could furnish a supply only for a certain number of years, Carnelian and his aides conceived the idea of domesticating it outside of Mexico. in extent. This year of the shrub will be cut froln the fields of the company in this val- ley to be reduced to rubber. A similar acreage will be planted each year, until the price of rubber, or the demand for it, will create another plant. The process of production, from the seeding of plant beds within an immense nursery, to the final de- livery of the rubber in'200-pound f. a5 ACCIDENTS DAILY (British United _Pross) 'MOSCOW, March ii-Strcct cars have caused an average cf 35 accid- ents daiiy since the new year began iii Moscow, and the newspapers and the authorities are expressing con- siderable alarni over the situation. During 1930 tlicrc were 5,600 collis- ions, ancl 3,209 cues in which people were run over or vchiclcs by street cars. 'I‘hei'a were 1,400 cas- ualltles as against 1,000 tile previous your. house in the town served a 1912 and 1920 ‘Then the low price of rubber in the past few - years caused the company to close _ In 1919 they planted an experimental plot hero, five acres 2,000 acres damaged one." said Sibley. Bowen rose to the defense of the cranberry by asocloting it with two periods in his life. “One period was when they used tc produce hives alid the other ivas during the pie eating cal- when the only free and easy democratic chop cran- berry ple de luxe with the top criss crossed like gingham cloth," he said. “This pie retailcd over the coun- ter at a nickel a out which was a third of a whole, or a dime for the whole pie. It beliooved us to merge ourinickels and buy wholesale. Thus, a cranberry pie with two schoon- ers of milk, direct from the barn lot and out of the old tin can, that stood in the ice box, made a meal for at least two of us. “Those were good old days when the cranberries raised the hives and a dime raised a vrhole pie and milk tasted like somctlllf." CLEVELAND WILL START . 1931 CONSTRUCTION EARLY CLEVELAND, 0., Mar. 8.—City council comrlttees are expected to act favorably on the issuance of $4,- 500,000 worth of bonds to allow an early stalt on the city's 1931 con- struction piegraln. Among the considcrc l the Cuyliloga river, and bonds for $1,500,000 are planned for this pro- ject. Plans at present also call for $500,- 000 for opening, extending and wid- ening streets; $500,000 for storm sewers; $1,000,000 for sewerage dis- posal works and $1,000,000 for street improvements. The river improvement awaits ac- quisition of land and final approv- al of plans by the War Department. The money is a part of the $31,500,- 000 approved at last November's elec- tions. \ HABTSVILLE SCHOOL Honor roll of Hartsvills School for month of February:- Grade X-l; Katie Manhood; 2, Dorothy MacKenzie; 3, Mamie Nich- olson. Grade I.I—1, Mary MaeKenzie; 2, Julia MacLeod; 3, Margaret Mac- Leod. Grade VIII—-1, Lillian MacLeod; 2, Everett Nicholson; 3, Borden Mac- _ Leod. Grade V-i, Kenneth MacKenzie; improvements being is the straightening of die Memorial Church and was well attended, considering the condition of the roads. Rev. G. N. Homers conducted the service. Mrs. Cousins ivas the widow of Mr. Alexander Cousins, who predeceased her ten years ago. She was the last surviv- ing inembcr of the family of Mr. Hall Profitt, one of the pioneer families of the district, and had llvcd her long life of ninety-two years in the same locality. ’I'lloiie who visited licr home will long remember the kindly wel- come and the wonderful hospitality she extended to them. Two sons and tiivo daughters survive to cherish the memory of a kind and loving mother. The sons are, Alexander on the homestead, with whom she lived, and by whose family she was ten- derly cared for; William, of Mar- gate; Mrs. Mary Waircn, of Clinton, and Mrs. Herbert Ramsay, of Malpe- que. One daughter predeceased her many years ago. The dead are like the stars, by day, Withdrawn from mortal eye, But not extinct, they hold their way In glory through the sky. place "on February 26th to the 6211-’ Arthur Johnstone, the young son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Johnstone, of Long River, was operated on for ap- pendicitis on Tuesday morning, March 3rd, in the Prince County Hospital. ‘ Mr. Elmer Bernard, who has laccn so critically iii ifl the Prince County Hospital, is slowly improving. Miss Ella Slirlggs, R. N., who has been on the staff of the Cnildrelfs Hospital, Halifax, for the past four months, returned to her home in Kensingtoli this iveek, A large number of interested spec- tators ivitnesscd the hockey match between the Borden Nationals and the Kcnslngton Granltcs on Satur- day night, February 27th. The first two periods looked like a sure win for Kelisington, but the third per- iod reversed things, the final score was 4-2 in favor of Borden. The home fans are naturally disappoint- ed as the'Gran1tcs had such a. win- ning streak. earlier in the season. It has been said that elections and horse races are alike uncertain. We think that hockey games could bc included lli the some category -made ovcr the sands Rev. D. L. Griffiths, who has been supplying in Clifton congregation for the past two months, will conduct P51119375’ i'iei-e,"n§‘eeng'neilen to leleeeireee the last of June.—-X. BRITISH sedan T0 Ail) SOUTH AMERICAN DRIVE (By Virgil Pinkltey, United Press Staff Couespondeni) LONDON,_ March 6.—Geat Bri- tain's ability to establish major speed records is counted on to play an im- portant part in capturing the trade and winning theponfldence of South America. Britain is making a colossal drive today to impress South America with the superiority of her engineering skill. - ‘ Sponsors of the British Empire Trade Exhibition which will be opened by the Prince of Wales in Bucnos Aircs March 14 have secur- ed the fastest automobiles, airplanes, trains, motor coat and motorcycles in the world for exhibition purposes. These record holders will be assemb- led in one exhibit for public ilispee- tion. Never before liavc they form- ed a group exhibit. Captain Campbells "Bluc Bird," his Baby Austin, the "Golden Ar- row," "Miss England II," Rolls- Royce engines used iii‘ the 1929 win- ning Schneider Cup machines, mod- els of the Great Western locomo- tives used oii record-breaking runs, the single-senior Hawker land fight- er, the single-sealer naval fighter, “Osprcyfl and the motorcycle used to set the present world's record will head the exhibit. British trade experts are placing great. confidence in speed perform- ance made possible by British skill and workmanship. Speed is the one wheel horse expected to swing trade to Great Britain. The "Blue Bird" and “The Golden Arrow" represent the present and past holders of the worlds land speed record. Both records were of Daytona. Captain Campbell drove the “Blue Bird" at 240.154 nilles per hour, or 14.79 miles faster than the "Golden Arrow" which was piloted by the late Sir Henry scgrave. “Miss England II" holds tlie offic- ial world's record of 08.76 miles an hour set by Segravc, and the unof- ficial record of 119 miles an hour set by Kaye Don. Don will attempt to establish a new record while ‘at ‘avssrsrons "=- ‘ SHALL-AMERICAN 2:5“ FA - Aria. March g__ (U.P.)-~A1though the University o; Arkansas doesn't have any American athletes this year the it". oitback school can boast four form, all-Americans. Wear "Jake” Schoonover, all“.m_ crlcan football and basketball ma“ m 1009-30, is enrolled in the university law school, Schoonover was an 31L southwest conference athlete in 1M, ball for two years and baskeibgll three seasons. The husky six-loom earned letters in football, Bil-Skim". baseball, and track during his m,“ years of varsity competition. 5pm, over was captain of the camel-em championship basketball team in 1m Tom Murphy. resular forward m, the Arkansas cage team this m, and captain of the frosh baskelibgll squad last season, was an all-Ameri- can cage star in high school Clftlitd, Murphy was selected as captain and guard in 192'! when he led the Bate‘. ville (Ark) high school quintet to the runnerup position in the Xiltloiial tourney at Chicago. Jim Plckren, captain of the Balm. backs basketball five thLs season m an all-American the same year Mm». phy was named captain. Picirren wu given a second team berth at centre, the position he played on the Batu. ville team. Last year the Porker clp- tain was named 0n the mythical Southwest conference team. Clifford show, professional be“. player and student in the university was an all-American’ prep school quarterback in 1936. Show pinyin with the Little Rock (Ark) no. school eleven and was an all-stats man in four sports for three consec- utive Years. After leaving high school Show vu signed by the Little Rusk Bout-hm Association baseball club, Last sel- son he was chosen the most valuiblt man to his team. while with Monro: (La) in the Cotton statu League He has been sold to the Ft. Worth (Texas) League oars. Shaw has been on the Arkansas coaching staff for the past four years agi has officiat- ed in sporting‘ events over Arknnsii and Oklahoma. Tom Plckell, all-American bunt ball guard, in 1m, is not in sclwd this year. Plckell, and all-conierelw! man for three years, is attendlni active a|l.. . i a i i i w. ,. . .. . . ,- hool in C lifornia where he hit n m“, SEED and FEED iaborel. llrally lost an cur. He wa. estimate it would have to be done The statistics do not intimate how 2' John MacLeod; 3, spurgeon Mam the sorvlces l“ mo“ Church, an"; Bucnos Aircs. ice“ nlninfl muclulwolflilk-ln 1°‘ 5703m- “alkmg ‘m a mghway “men A" m Sh“ we? i“ pollntedloufi that nlany of the accidents were fatal Lennan. lottetolvn. on Sunlav March 8th Th‘! Rolls-ROYCE i-"lgmes t° be ex‘ hislatgletic iirowess with a Los An- (Ila 1:: or ~..- l1 .t A r1. pin 51w an eatma e wvud vnv e 811- ' . " ' . v cuitiiiiisbit g-efan zijnbcked 1:11:11 ti proximate. The latest figures show 9"“ IV-l» Llvld Nicholson: 2. “lblmd me "w W“ 9"“ silimd- geles athletic club. at on 11 l -- It I l t ff the cost up to the end of last year Alexander Mad-Mm “m1 M"! Cfll- The funeral °f the m“? MW Jimlcs m" Ludo" Oriel)“ “sod l“ a Super‘ ' ____ .L»e Plwmcn ' and “mos tore o no more recent ones beln available.‘ laghfl"? 31-79mm! Murray. A- Refidy- W1“ dim Suddenly 0n Ynmme 5-6 hydrwlam t“ establish “ " i ‘ '4 ’ ' ‘ L E D ‘i115 left car. fl ‘because me provinces ogmy make l REMOVE Iogsmigfgfzzsfau EEMEN “Grade III-l, Joseph clsl-lgln; g, Tuesday morning, Feb. 23rd, was the record of 345.4 miles per liour t d , l’ - u) n“ ‘k _mn‘nm “nimfln quarterly returns‘ he explained. R . T, orma MacLeod; 3, Alma Macbemi ield on Satuiday morning. February recently recognized by the Internu- y A rzrc ave... -r -.~ - - - i i - _.___ l Grade r;__1, Leena Nlcholson; 2, 27th. to st. Mary's Church, Indian tirmal Aeronautic Federation. For the three-quarters of the fis- cal year (April 1., Dec. 31- the total cost of pensions in Ontario, Manl- toba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Bri- tish Columbia, the five provinces with the net in force, was $2,773,256. orl this the Dominion paid $4,387,415, ‘and the provinces the other half,,| "with the municipalities in Ontario‘ “Y! mmwfiZh-T m‘ “m” assuminglo per cent. Worked out " That’ "re m""a"d i on a yearly basis the cost would be “m!” mvi-mmly l, $11,607,672, for the five provinces. Cough Is Easily’ Mixed at Home You'll never linow how quietly l ‘M’: m cough or lrllcst cold can bl» c011 i qucrcd. until you try this fauimls reel?“ PORT OF SPAIN, Trinidad, Mar. River, and was largely attended. The pall bearers were Jaliics Pcndcrgast, James Saunders, Loo Hughes, Lloyd Howard and Hugh Morrison. The sincere sympathy of“Llic entire coin- munity goes out to the bereaved hus- band and family in their gl-cat sor- row. Mrs. Ready ivas a ivonlaii of’, ‘ Vernon MaeLeot-l and Ira’ MaeLeod. 6.-It is understood that all obstacles 1 Grade I-l, Mantford Nicholson; to a Canada-West Indies trade, 2, Alexander Frizzle; 3, Oliver Mac- ogreemrnt will be rclnoved as a re- i Leod. suit of important informal convcrsa-i J. Allison MacKinnon~—Tcacher. tlon here yesterday with leaders of.‘ ' the delegation of 200 Canadian busl-l and’ were ‘entertained at luncheon-lay licss men who arc on the way to the’ the governor. They expressed delight British cnipisc trade exposition at i with their journey so far, and were beautiful personality and was loved? Buonos Aircs. highly Opglmlstlc o; a successful w], and respected by all who had the "Kw dcicznlivn was nelcolncd by mutation of their trade-boosting mls-. Pica-iii“? vf 11m‘ acquaintance. ofllccws of tlic chamber of commerce slon. ~ Great Western locomotives daily make the 77.3 miles between Swin- doli and Paddington in '10 liiinutcs, The Great Wcstcrn also holds lln of- ficial runs of 102 miles and 120 mllcs per hour. _ The trim little single-sealer Ilawk- It is uswl in millions 0fili0mvs.l_btr'l‘m1:: er army planes fly at 230 miles Der §n§{l',§{‘,.f“§l',‘l “"l‘{1,‘,’°l,,§’°{,f,‘.,‘§ie"ii all t0 hour» fully loaded at 20.000 icct. They m; flliiffllflatli lair a trifle. M, ‘Mm, , . . t . . tr l .. =- M have a ceiling of 30,000 feet. Tests Pinfix“; nflllllloflliilio iirtiiiipoériinil/fiilrll Hlllfll have been taken during power dives uyrup or strainer honey to Tfllglflnnlg ,, . v . at slightly over 400 lnilcs per hour. fifjliflfiff,“Z§,;§'i}"ifl§ii§.‘.i., flli The Osprey flic.‘ ‘lvc iiiilcs an lioui" gives you f\ purer, better rrlilliluiy- l]; "f?" ' '— - v N = vr ' --v ‘B I ' I“ 3 slower than if... companion la.i.i “Willi; “,::‘t';:1fi‘;":m_fQikérixnfugilllgs entitling uctimi bu o u amen membranes. it is also absorbed into "if blood, wlicrc it nets directly on tllr brill; clllnl fillies. At llic same time. it llfilfilgl l‘ loosens the germ-laden phlegm. l t rec-fold actim explains wil)’ 1 lmlrifi such quick relic even in severe ‘r0119 coughs which filllow cold epidemics. _ PlncxJs i1 bigiiy concentrated com oun of ix milno v otrwlly 1'ln:.‘:"":: l m: tie no ivc rig n o rm! 0 - reilucd, palatable form. Mid known ‘s: one of the fltvlhtflllt healing i1 "l" hm sever]! coughs, c est colds and rune I C‘ M“ NEW COOKING riffs Bfczv-lzlczi aids in Cooking occupy :1 scdtlan oi‘ unusual interest among our household displays. A visit will pleasant and helpful course Cooking Ilu-nsll ideas to n who ‘is ‘mien-sled in im- l) 5TH’? r’! i __—'__“_*'_‘— ' lHUSBAND Lawns WIFE DOLLAR The R039“ Phrdware CO- , as REWARD FOR. ulvnnrriuass, l i . =...ii..i.;..il rare}... d..." Everything Would Turn Black Eric Woodsitlc and James Milllnali of Holmanl; Sulnliierside, attended the licckcymatch licl-e on Saturday, plane. night and spent Sunday at their] Last winter o. British motorcycle homes in lllargatc and Kcnslligtoirsct a new dirt track record of 152 Mrs. Andrew 111mg, Hapwqn’ N3" mim:_ f Wsllfifillirly. miles per hour. f‘: had been troubled vvitlrsmotheriiig‘ and rnn- l lag spells and overythin in front of me would 1 tum blackuand {would all down in n faint and | be unconscious for sevefil inluutes. I did not know what eon», 1mm one day z was resin; l where Hllbiihi s Iiflsrt and Nerve Pills has helper! so many peolrleadd decided I would give them a ’ FERTILIZER QUALITY and fiEfil-ililsfi NEW YORK, March 6.—-"I feel I that the unhappiness and strife that! ' she has brought into my lnarrled life; i The stormy years she has given me,l in return for my efforts to estab-l lisli a blissful and contented home, warrants and justifies my bequest to her of this sum," rhymed-or almost lBuRlq-e. IILAURI ‘ ilavl Pll. l" ~wuUna\.nnnI¢#fl§g‘g;,~g~ J Mr. J. E. Gamble has been confin- ed to his home for the past two weeks with an infected sore on his r O'LEARY,/P.E.I., March 6.-Priucc forehead. Hie friends hope that ‘his Edward Island claims ta have the condition will soon improve. oldest skater in Canada, in the per- CANADNS OLDEST SKATEI‘. Price 5C0 I loll ___,__ ,_ _ ,:,,<::,______ r BRINGINO-WIKATHER * " - “ “ "lw s- _ ' w ‘ . . . 2.‘. .'t.zt.tss.zzizlszr... _ »,..;2°*:;'l..R*.‘sif:-rc'z?. l; Hi6 191.10g: wr-m ‘IHIS HUI-IND m i - - __ flA-‘aisi: FoR FAlR~ ' HM _ H“; M‘ 5T '~ zlzl- r rhymed-Ancii Greenburg in be- Mal. I use four boxes and found they help mo . . h. u, nueathing $1 to his wife, Lena, his _ wggaphny): » Rnv Dr J R sqht l g I‘ .5011‘ oi’ Joseph Arscnatut, aged 01 Do not “m” a gubsmuto ficllilcléir; A fliil im of Chemicals and llilreeu Fertilizer N017 . Bold n all dru rial macro! emu. comes time: on reeel of u - .- ‘ - ' ' ‘ * ‘ “l” w" 3'1"“ “@15- 11 resident of Wcfllnaton, who n n gilnrilnfvcd to give broinp will, mes today, disclosed. m». on u: r5 1* w Iv n» r. the t h , f d d penny roi- delivery at attractive prices. _______ » ' '- '1'"? .9"- . . . P“ “if °f__‘__° "M"! ch11" cnivvs a skate almost wry day. mm’ " “n ° ' All goods are made from strictly 1112;‘. rlzlsc. materials i. and the Snpcrphusphsie, Potash z: ‘Ilxsll (lrzuils are Milled, Screened and Bagged iii: day .1 nt is made- \ Thisls QUALITY. Iii) 0901i“; McManlU M0lNflMW*’ .-r moor-r mania. THE lvlcuiY ~ ‘THAT, BAD- l 5HOULD 550i’ \ KlN USE FIVE. q DOLLAQFD- WRLL- TAKE CARE or metre. DOG UNTlL. i CllT BACK- r We can make prompt shipment v-r will ill-oi: or:lcr--. for n limited quantify rf all ilcnla- for =1 wtli at :1 future ilzlte to be named by the buyer, guarsnin ml; or“ . when the grower Wallis ii. No more m: 11-; fr!‘ nrrlrdl of fertilizer from distant points. DHi-vrd frrfliz-w- rlc-livrfie-s Ire expansive and nu loafer- .'~. evil. This is “nnP,' l‘; SERVICE. l . . There's mi lljczit near you-or t-xrii l7‘: dlrawt K n‘ _ j p . 25,, The isullill FElillllZEEi ca, LTD. I t u"? " . , i.‘ ll; l» (JIlARLO'l"l‘1£'l‘()\\'N hi; ‘W? | “Island Goods for Island (J1'.')\‘.'C."I? " ' ‘ I Q1031. In“! FolllIfr-Ffliirfi. Inl i non llrllaln rlullll rv-Mrvll»