\ ’V\ its If "yeiiifk; ' " “Ffli-I- f’ Iiiillfflflil ' ltmls Frustration R. R. No.4, Gil-III!‘ Punghhn. "In the year 1910, I had Nervous‘: -Piu:lrdh'on in its worst form: p "illllllflll .' '~‘ wifi- » ‘f0NEl/0-Pl E£ES ii‘ , _LONDON. May ZS-v-UIICII inter- uppttschss to the reported u!!!“ > nt o! In Nessa y9rdoeorsw~ dsufliter or the Briflsh ‘remiss-to Sir Phiiipisssoon. who s o!‘ the richest young men of the Sssicons tron‘ vsrty and obscurity» to tho high- wt. follicles of affluence and soc- =n.i“ ivnflnenuris one of the ro- m es of the inst century. in point of, _ th. influence and financial prestige the Ssssoons occupy ihraighout Asia and Ilohsmetsn Africa much the some position as that enjoyed in Europe by the licusg d Eothechild. ‘Indeed, these iwo fllbIcln-i dynasties may he no Qohasd in hand, since the Bother’ d Sir Philip Sassoon, Lloyd George's prospective son-in- hiw, will “O daughter of Baron 7M doctor: Iiad so ha): of my proved useless until a friend induced me to take “Fruit-n-tives". and never had such good health as have enjoyed the past. eight years. 50c. a box, 6for$ff.50, trial size 25o. At all dealt-rs or sent postpnid b] Fruit-s-tlves Limited, Ottawa. roii SALE. tiusiavo Ictbschlld. one of the hoods of the Paris branch of the Rnlhflfllflfl ‘CIR. illiflnlll! lie headquarters of . iii..- Sassoon firm was at Bsgdad, MM laxebt\vil,)fv°“liw_alllgf "(£3 ‘hfimsauop- w" Huowumian store warehouse an-ls barn .I-.-w .8111 in the early part of the This is near R. Road_ school and churches. For quick sale, the price is right. . they moved their ~f establishment in Bombay, _e the grandfather of Sir Ph-ll- . _ the 1m Bir Al x ‘\..> in his esrly life hore the . lining of Aibdsllah, made his hopie Mn an absolutely fairy-like place 1 ‘r inc suns of “Sass Soucl". un- il he migmtefl i0 England on the S ma-itation of the Prince of Wales luster Edward Vii) in the esrly ' Farm of 100 acres in good heart, 75 acres cleared, l5 acres mixed wood, l0 acres marsh, moderate, JAS_ T. WAITE. Real Estate, Water Street East Sumiuerside. t :-' mull“. 'i\iie house of Sassoon has been in existence for well-night‘ two ‘Mildred years, and it is a curious fzivt that is spite of the wars, of inn" revolutions and of the almost ~~lltIBUfltl strife that has ‘been rag- sround its former headquarters u: Bagtiad, and around so msnyj --.r its ‘branch houses," nwattempt ~. rrild ever have been made in I Lina, in Central Asia. ‘Perslagin Arabia snd Northern and ingsfi-Z mile race track that draws; large gatherings, good bush for’ fox ranch. This is a rare chancel for such a property to be offeredJ JAS. T. WAITE_ Real Estate“, Water St. East, Summerslde‘ WAR-NING i“ m‘ i‘ m‘ '1° “mm-ri.'I'iZi.'Z'Zi§i1m‘Y-'JY.Zliifiiyiiii‘??? ....°;..'.'°l.°.il2;°.‘%.i‘2.?"32h" i"-':‘.“.'.'°.'; e: .'.'I,'..."';3:',5‘.'".,'l'.°'i z-r glrggm 4-,! Ming pnythjng to find if HWY persist in makin: such "vi ‘the Sassoous. knowing by ;‘;,§,°.'5',",,";“,§,“i~; "P" '1,“ dfM‘ “"'“ l-"F ‘lance that the latter never slanderous libeLe aw ea mg ‘vim .i=":-~"-'. an injury, that they form AYLVDIN‘ wiiihins- Droof as to this pi. v of s class that never forgives h ‘K mrai Africa or even in Turkey i‘! i-ionfismts its vsst wealth or " any of its treasures arse‘: abilty as a stock getter may F write or phone the followin" men. ‘ drags on one of its members A N“. n, u“, m?“ Whn l,a\.,,'"lnan_s 1 that to be boycotted by the mm IIYIVG foals flflfil‘ this horse. . idem “hm. there are M's". (‘hu:.. Hclfinnon, Ilnrlriony, ‘~ "is to pay. firearms and am- ‘(flj l. u-‘tion to be obtained, whims to IVE. , . i“ carried out and harem: to be 1"- irr q: contented and in luxur is to ‘ “ . . . . i. mutant“ “d 1n luxury ‘$10 “y “Big. l~"a_ricl. Qihiun. Egmonr. Loy. " __ j; 1b,; 15,531 jrmonyqpjqgg Sir. Joseph A. Galhtnt, Aliranfs- of ‘h’ numerous mgmbers of v"“:R§.Iof;-p}l'i' D (I8IIRH’\ we family resident in Engalnd and can‘... ‘l’. is. f, ' " m-Omjngnt in Bngllflikflwlfily none mhlltpdrl)’. Arsciiuiilt, “mint (‘ar- .as batter known than Sir Phli- ' ' ‘", " . .. 42,5 tamer the lam, Edward S“; iq-Ihlfl Arsenziult, St. it.tphs..i IEWOD, unless It WIS ‘the latter‘s These men all live within a rad- unch. @119 13m Rueben Qassoom his of four miles from where Snuff who was a boon companion of pe"r(svfg;',e'é‘;'ned m“ yea“ ma; Edward and invariably sceom JOHN M. quiiiisv. ysnisd his niisjesty on his holiday Stanlev ran-iv:- o m New CroIp i .- ‘n: ‘ ii .- l l, ‘idol Arscnaiilt, Earl-lit liiiv, -4 Lhlfr ii Ferguson. \\'elliii;:t-.m, .-< .-i Cape The rSsnoons have purchased -".-:~e“fine ‘house in London after __r.nc\\er until now they own some i-r" tbs costliest palaces in the West Lldnd. Hostnotalbl-e of all was the aim house in Park Lane, built by 2.7m into lBsrney Bnrnato and later lurchstaed lg lgilward Sassoon. BHYbadOGS MOIHSSeS Berna pa . 00 for the free- hold siteuin addition to this ‘great N“ landed ex 8¢h°°nQf D. D. McKENZlE ' in‘Prince Edward island, Farmer land Jane Csmpbsfll his wife of t o one part and the undersigned of the other part, and because of Sourls Dated this Sixth day of May A. D. 187.1. JOHN MGGUAIP. . Montages. mansion, Sir Edward Sassoon‘ --‘ who. by the way was the godson snif namesake of King Edward-— . '. .1.“°‘1..'i.°‘-IQE‘IJZ‘.'Q‘;I'JS.ZZ.B'LE.'K 3°“ """'" "m ‘m’ g“. bu” m Scotland‘ ' ; 59 Tlsrces Extra Fancy. in conclusion, it may be stated 5° Bfll EX"! Find!- riist the Ssesoons. whose generos- at lowest prices before storing. y in connection with lill philan- ‘iii-uplc ‘institutions has been as zivish in England as it has been n India, controlled for more than £00 years the entire opium trade “i” d‘ the Orient. indeed. it would be leffioult to find ,either in Asia. or xirica any great commercial or in mistrial undertaking in which the “ -—-—- ziinlily has not. been more or less There will be solifhY Public mmcdistely concerned. ,Auction in front of the C011" ._..._-<>o@._v__ l-loustadSourlixs, in tlrfiiliigs Counltly; F‘ i t t n S O ‘sane: ,HONORS NEWFOUND- n" 152V‘ as"; m" Yo, We,“ ..iN'D.—A war memorial which 0.61M‘: ‘won. ALL ma; tract ‘c-es not resemble the usual nile- Mecg or parcel of land situate atorical figures is to be erected in lying and being in Township “rance in the memory ofNew- Nllmlzi" l ‘F°'g"g"° ‘gdwgfingllis . , r ce ' nijlldifllidl dead. A finely sculpt" Co“: Y. ‘Jab’ “d ‘lean-um; m; red representation of a stag is to wows, that is m say;__ 30m. w» placed on a great block of gran- mgngiug on the west side of the Io; the work has been designed Souris Line Road at It‘: ‘point lg - ..‘. ~< hi d seventy n s ~01‘ 4 “nulcarried out by the sculpture s‘ “£2 {farm boundary Hue a iaal Getto. Five reproductions Edward Grime.“ ‘and; ‘hence viii ‘be made hnd placed at points running we“ by the Magnet q,- ‘lengths biittle frontwhere men the year 1764 for the distance 0f rom Newfoundland distinguished on: liliiitndrfd fimkd t thtlggvdflligiig: - an ax n s o ‘HBIHSEIYQQ. The Newfoundland n" “as” Townships Nam tegiment, whose casualties took a be" H and 45. thence North wavy ‘toil from the population of Mung mg 53mg 5i; chains and lie island, served with grest dis- seventy links; thence East to the _ ‘HICIIOII in tho 29m Iilvlsion in 311:2: R°e"‘:ame“'$°'°t'g; ‘Wana’ ' place of cgmmencement contain- . ing Eighty-five acres of land a little more or lees. The above sale is msde under O u A and by virtue of and pursuant to ' a power of sale contained in a Ill Clt%6il certain ilndenture of MortQI-Rs bearing date the Fifth day of m" ' [November A. D. 1917 made he- Wmbflll ‘ ' . ‘ ‘ tween William l‘. Campbell of »p Cherry Grove in King's County . ‘ < . . '" F ‘ default having been made in the ’ payment of the interest secured '. ‘ . f thereby. “"""'.'""°K,,,~'“ smmflfldto’ For further particulars apply “h “d ‘"1 »' '“'"°'°m°" " r M aid Es Solicitor u Km‘ to ‘ ppm 5.y t0 A. . OQII . Q‘. v tronwsatsndlwitnrnisn '1'. WA! ' .- Ht! . w _. ‘w; 1W" .. dropplngfroin 170 to il-Zpounds. I nmwry, and evcry- medicine I tried l hmme‘ good ban,’ and Ombund dom- of the carburetors, the needle- ¢.-.._. . Ilintsh" i the Copyright, 192i, by The A‘ Dose 0f “Salts" ‘4 :.* IByAIbet-t L.CIough 12am» Momr Sgruicej Review of Reviews \ Inlernationui Syndicate For The Radiator , . . , ~J f A Desirable Treatment Just A/trr Dlscollfinlting Anti-Freeze Solution OONER OR LATER. especially if hard or dirty chemical treatment "hammer-necessary to clean (potash) is probably the most effective scale-remover and one half pound of the commercial article, in flve gallons of water, makes s The drained and warm cooling system is tilled with this . and the engine run for five minutes or so, when the lye solution is drawn of! and the system flushed with clean wafer. As lye is highly corrosive and I be!“ to men‘; “m”; 3g one, 'unplensant to handle. sal soda-not cooking soda. but washing soda (sodium 1 carbonated-is more. commonly used. About one pound of it. dissolved in live gallons of water gives the required strength. This is filled into the suitable solution. cooling system and allowed lo remain flushing from the bottom and is more likely to start the scale. ater has been used. ut s radiator. Lye through a day's use of the csr. when 14"‘ “'1'” "dflmml “"Y"""‘7'“'””‘."' it is rejected and the loosened scale is removed by flushing with clean water in lie/tours”. JAS. S. DELGATY. run in through the lower radiator connection froma hose. The theory of is that it reverses the ordinary direction of flow, There are some radiators, that have been heavily obstructed for n long time, which seem to require even more severe lreaimeui. Commercial murlai lc (hydrochloric) acid in the propon tion of one quart to six gallons of water is the solution used. The cooling system is filled with ih!s and the engine run for flve minutes. The acid is then drawn off and the engine run another five minutes on pure water, ‘which is, in turn. rejected and the whole system flushed out most thoroughly ‘with hose water. As ibis solution is higlily- corrosive. it is not recommended for general use. but only as a last resort. “THKN Ol"'|‘ (XUKBFlll-Ylvlll l l U. \\‘. B. writes: .\l,\" 101.‘. till‘ has if‘ original carbureioi and i not. e~ nut it is somciviru iv-irii, specially! it the throttle-valve shaft bearings] "‘l cannot adjust ix so imt ih.\: it will’ miss a! speeds above 30 infp. h. Do you advise buying n new carbure- for’? Answer: Yes. ‘This is quite likely valve of which is progressively opened by throlile moveinpiil and‘ lb:- wcar of the throttle shaft and‘ connected puris has made the rais- ing of the needle vulva incorrect or unreliable n! high speeds. Aside from this, recently ill-signed enr- buretors are better adopted I0 lake account of the change in vol-utility uf gasoline, which has occurred siiicc your cur u-us built, and we think ihnt you would Obizilll considcrnlile advantage by replacing your present carburetor‘ by a modern one. Are you sure that iiie iniwing is not due to ignition failure unit-ad of fniilly carburellon? ISNGINF. RAN OUT 01-‘ OIL G. M. the oli druln open one iiziy lust sum- mer and ull the oli Hill oiii of the ivrlti-s: i 1ivci<lcnlnliy' left crank-case. Not realizing \VI'iilI hmi happened, l run the cm" about 5il| miles, wl h a short oil supply’. t-Tinvc. then I ve been gelling only ~40‘; miles per gallon of oil while i llSPd t0 Bet 125. i hnvc llglllvllfid all Questions u! flfllPffll inlfrcs! in t bolts and packing. Where does the oil escape’! Answer: it undoubtedly escapes pal-l the pistons. Running ivifh l .-_.s_.¢_.--.--___a________._w--> ._ . . Motorigt ,_ wu'ounnnmn_ I low oil supply caused the pistons and rings i0 scratch the cylinder’ nails iinri the oil now goes up by, the pistons excessively, through the scratched and ivurn portions, Into the combustion spaces and out‘ through the exbnusr. Probably you will have l0 have ‘your cylinders bored out and over-size pistons fitted in order 1o restore your for-v nier oil ccoiioini‘. Aii_\"\vzi,v, you hel-_ ler have the cylinders examined and sce what can be done. \\’ EAK STARTING SPAR K 1-‘. Alt-t‘. wrltvcsj: .\ly magneto doel nut furnish u sufficiently hot spark. when the cur is cranked by the stiirlr-r, the engine requiring to be spun by hand, lo obtain I1 I001 siurting spark. New platinum point! linve been put in. I am using four dry cells, connecied to the magneto, for starting purposes. Can I con- iirUi my storage battery instead of the thy-yells and obtain better re- suits? :\Ill~'\\'|_‘l‘l Your magneto should g-‘ve u siiitir-iont sinrilng spark with- u i using batter}. We suggest that you have the ma nets recharged and that you lnspectjlhe plug points to sec lliiil they are not too far apart. is everything about your starter ln such condition as to give the hlgh- _ vs! cranking speed? There is dun- gcr that, if you connect of; [059 storage battery, in place of the dry- ci-iis, that YOUI‘ coil will overheat. especially If the switch is accident- ully lei‘! on, iia the coil is wound for dry byicry current and the storage buttery current will be much stronger. However, if you wish t! lry this, remove the dry cell WICQ and substitute for it n wire from the- slereizc Iialtoryx "- hz- tnniorfsl trill be answered in Hits An Adventure In Years B_Y CAROLYN BEECHER Chapter XLV. How dull and drab looked the tomorrows of ‘life to Sonia. To see Ned happy, then to find a re- fuge somewhere, somehow, where the longing for all she had missed in life would be stllled! She won- dered lf in all the world there were such a place. "What am I going to do? How live? Never to have known-nev- er! Other women have loving hus- bands, children. I have nothing. not even love." it was this perhaps more than anything else that Sonia craved. Her woman hstnre never had been satisfied. Never had she known the fulness of llfe. Once a friend had said: “ "it ‘was aibo-mina-ble for Beverly to ‘leave his money (l5 he did! Why should ihe expect you to live alone all your life, young as you are?" "I feel a thousand." "'1 shouldn't cure how old I felt if l looked as young as you do. l can't understand how you manage to keep so girlish 'looklng." “Because I won't grow old There ls no earthly or heavenly reason either why women should age so much more quickly that} men. We just let ourselves go be- cause we lose interest.‘ "But—“ her friend hesitated, "why don't you marry Delong, Sonia? He's rich and doesn't need your money. it wouldn't menu ' "i Bet I'll never go on a hu er strike so Ion as I can get POST OASTIES anything to him. He is nice, just about old enough to take care of you, and Dora would not be objec- tionulble." _ ' "Right age! What has age to do with marrying and love’! it makes me sick to hear people say what is the right age. Can't a woman love a younger man, a man an old- er woman’! T-hey say love goes where it is sent-I should add if the person is the right age!" “My, Sonia! what a tirade! What ln the "world did -I say to warrant W. “Oh, nothing; i zim Ibad temper- ed, that's all." “l still insist that it was simply rotten in Beverly to leave such a will. "‘lt makes no difference. Sini- ply showed he didn't trust me." "Showed his selfishness, ilim all." Then: ‘iDo you Suppose if he had- married a woman his own age he would have left that will? Not a bit of it! if you had been forty-nine or fifty years old he would have given it to you, minus the strings. Hut because you were young and beautiful he hail to iry to make you live a nun's life. Men, even after they are dead, can hurt us, Sonia." - "Don't men always hurt women?‘ "No, not ‘always. Look at me." "Everyone says your -mnrrled life is exceptional. That proves the truth of what I said. And you are letting down foo niucb. Your husband looks at least five years younger than you do. And hi. is. Let me see. about seven yours old- er. isn't he?" “Yes, but he Sonia." “Don't lmnk on keeping his love without effort.’ "Oh, what nonsense! if he were younger than I, why thntwculd be different. But, thank cod, l was not such a fool ns to marryit young er man. if I had. why then] might have been obliged to make myself miserable to keepvmy looks As we grow older we women think s lot of our comfort and less of our looks." "l guess you are right. But still loves ine as his young, in their prime. at fifty and a woman on thrysheif." "There are many reasons, Sonia. Worry, trouble. children. all have their part." "l have known women with four or five children to look younger than the woman with none, so that argument doesn't hold. We all know that worry ages us. Men don't worry. That's one reason they keep young." "Hews Ned Campbell? Lem-re Fleetvrood came in the other day and niiid he was oaiiiting her por- ' 1 I see no reason why men should be > P I i I I I I l i i I i i 1 i fi ‘What a matchmaker you are! First me, new Ned.’ x "l ha?! a notion you were fond of Ned." "l am." . “But of course you wouldn't be fond of him in the same way Len- ore would." "Why not?" Sonia knew the an- ' sliver flue; she iiiiked the question. “There is ton much difference rolinim, xgmrc pcrmillinrr. l/ mi immediate misirrr is desired, enclose aeil- in YOU!‘ 8868-4111 i118 Rlfroilil Bide? addressed, riumpm envelope. Address Alhcr! L. Clougli, rare of our office. g "flow conventional we all are,” Sonia parrled. "Has love any age?’ Afterward ‘Soniria bhcught of what had been said about age. "Too much difference-on the wrong side. Yes it was true. An older woman coulld not bold a mun younger than herself. But ll. shouldn't be so; it wouldn't have been had she accepted Ned. She felt sure she could compel his love ~she was not at all sure he loved her now even through he had offer- ed her marriage. That abrupt proposal; no lovemaking leading up to it. The memory of it hail left her sore, more uncertain than she had been before. She had thrown Ned and iLenore together ilS much as possible of lute, and through Lenore he had been with other young girls. They all look- ed upon her as of s different vint- age. Would they influence him? She ihad given him up. as far as thoughts of marrying him went. have ‘him think of her as too old to love his companionship, The harsh jangllng of the telephone interrupted her thoughts. _ "This is Ned} ‘Miay l come up this afternoon?" "Yes, come at tea time and have some tea Iwith me." (To Be Continued) -€—¢0->-i-- 26 TABLETS ADDED ‘T0. HALL ' OF FAME NEW YORK, May zit-Tablets unveiled at the Hall of Fame yen- terdny in honor of twenty-six men and women. who have been elected to whatrwss described yesterday by Dr. ‘William Mllllgan Sloane, president the American Society of Art and ettsrs, as "that Val- halla of American Weshminister." It was the first dedictation cere- .,mony held there since i907, and the tablets honored all those who bad been elected since that date. Several thousand persons attend- ei. . The complete list of ihose to whom tablets were unveiled fol- lows: il-larriet Beecher ‘Stowe (1811- 1898). author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." l-‘ranbcs Ifllizgbeth Willard (1839- 1898.) Charlotte Saunders (1810-1876). ' Alice Freeman Palmer (1855- 19021. cducstnr and President of Hvelledley College. ' ' ‘ Alexander Hamilton (1757-1804.) Andrew Jackson 11738-1799). Patrick Henry 01736-1799.) Rufus Chests (1799-1859). ‘Daniel Boone (1735-1814).) James Buchanan Ends (i820- 1897). engine-r and builder,‘ of the St. ‘I-miis Fvidss, Willie-m Thomas Green Morton Cushmnn ‘m’. Th‘, would ‘IQ I "n; CQIWIQ, ‘n. “.30, But even so she couldn't bear to| HE expmience of J. F. SmKthe & Co. , Limited of Windsor, Ontario, emp v I and better service which city users with short hauls ‘ are enjoying everywhere. - “Since our purchase of the last Ford Truck from you," i. E they write, “we have been able to deliver our goods a more promptly than ever before. This gives us three I i asizes Ford Trucks, two of which are in constant use. We dis- posed of the last horses we had in March last and find ‘ our delivery expense is nowconsiderably less. We ore J also able to give our customers" better service. In our business, we considcrtwo Ford Trucks a far better investment than one large Truck.” I A new speed _gear, now optional equipment on Ford Trucks, increases its value for rapid delivery with light bulky, loads. iFordgMotor Company ‘of Canada,» ‘Limited y Ford, Ontario ducer (if-ether as on anaesthetic. Louis Agassiz (l807;18'l8) invent- or of the elcetro-unngnct. Roger .Wli-lla|ns (1007-1684), irliiiiiipion of religious freedom. Phillips Brooks ("l83511893), pul- pit urutor Mark liokins (1802-1887). pliiio- soplier and scientist. iAugust iSaint-Gaudens (1848- 1907), sculptor. . Elias Howe (11819-1867), luvenl- or of the sewing machine. Jmnes Fenlmore Cooper (i789- 1851), novelist. . > John Lothrop iMotiey (i814- 1877), historian. Saiinuel l-Langhorne Clemens (1835-1910), humorist. Edgar ‘Allen Poe (1-809d840). orator of the short story. " Francis Parkmpn (182311893). historian. . George Bancroft (1800-1891) his- torlan. William Cullen -B)'l*ant (1791- 1874) pbet and editor. Oliver Wendell Holmes (1309- 1894) poet and humorist. ‘ The addition of the twenty-six names gives the ‘Hall of Fume n population of sixty-three. __ A FINE TRIBUTE PAID TO THE BRITISH NAVY LONDON, May 26.—Rear-Ad- mirnl Vvllliam '8. Sims who com- manded Lhe U. S. naval forces in the war zone during the last two years of the war. told Admiral Beatty, commander of the British Grand Fleet, and a distinguished assemblage of British and United States naval men and other pro- minent persons today that the British had ‘been disposed to give the United States Navy too much credit for the part it played in the ‘ Allied victory. , in an address at‘ a luncheon giv- en by '-he Pilgrims’ Society in his honor, Admiral iSlms sold: “The British Grand Fleet was the key stone in the Allied arch. without which you in this country would be speaking Gemian with u very strong English accent." Admiral Sims waved BSIIIB per- sonnl, tributes from Admiral Bent- ty and llord Desborough, asserting that had the command of the United States naval forces in Eu- rope been entrusted to one of the forty or fifty other United States officers eligible in rank the result would virtually have been the same. ‘ Lord Deshorough referred to Admiral Sime as having “braved his enemies . if he had any-and he certainly has none on this side of the Atiantic—iby publishing his k book." ‘i outlaw Il-IIIII VHs-nhms ‘f. Th Truck for Short. QtlicIcI-Iai. the economy F011 QUICK SALE House of 7 rooms. good location. Electric lights. House bigb and dry. Lot 200 front by 100. For further particulars apply Waite. REAL ESTATE, Water Sh, East Summerside, P. E. island. . NOTICE Take notioe that any person or persons selling or having in their possession beer or other drinkable liquids, which contain more than two and one-half per cent of alco- hol. which has not been obtained from a vendor will be-prosecuted under the provisions of the Probi- bition Act. (Signed) GEORGE H. HARBOUR Chief inspector "i: -~. i" w;':;'.-':.-.";@;;- - o n - - . .- n ‘Federal To: _. - - to James T.. in!!! l. s‘. Esta"? ~ . Scholafshiiiii Applications will be receflfidl”? the undersigned until June 11th. 1921, from all students desirous" of competing in s. written examination for one of the Connolly Estate Scholarships offered annually by the "Trustees Estate of Owen Connolly." This examination, to be held the third week of July in Charlottetown and Summer-side, will be open to all deserving students who upon investigation shall have been found eligible lo compete in" accordance ‘with the provisions of the Will of the late Owen Connoiy.‘ Each applicant shall stale his name in full, age,‘ names of both parents, Post Office address, and the nature and ex- tent of his studies daring the past four year. ' , M. J. SMITH. \ Secretary Trcstees Estate of Owen Connolly Kinkora, P. E. l. May 17, 1921. Connolly v rill-t vvlll gm- mizsuurs. Ilvlllx satisfaction. B01448 RESUMFTIOI 0F FREIGHT S IIN Thursda The York via the Cape Cod Ca al OUIIBII- elf- Box f y Milton McLeod. F0; BISCUIT The Imperial Cod Oil Fox Biscuit itlnnnfneturvl at Charlottetown. The result nl’ five years practical experience In baking fox lslsult mm IMPERIAL, niscuir COMPANY, LIMITED Charlottetown. l1}. l. EASTERN STEAMSHIP ‘LINES,’ mo. INTERNATIONAL LINE AID PASSENGER !IIIVIOI IIPIWIII . AND BOSTON COMMENCING HAY SI Steamship GOVERNOR DINGLEY will leave 8t. John every Wednes- day at 8 a. m. and every Saturday at 6 p The Wednesday trips are via Enstport and Lubes, due Bolton 11 l. II. 9- . Saturday "ID! are to Boston direct. due Sunder! st f III- FARIII C1180 STAIIIIIOODIS Direct. connection at Boston with Metropolitan Line Stsanis - for NOW n . For rates and additional information sIDLY to C. AI _ “NOTICE! f“ Magnet Cream Se ' for . Petrle Mfg, C0,] 485, Charottstown 1 H. R. Archer, l‘. Fifi- A perfectly balanced ration for foxes If all lessons and especially li- apted for puppies when soaked in lnllk t Guaranteed safe. wholesome and highly Nllslrtl by all lens. Imperial I-‘ox Ilisenlt an bclnl led In the leading P. It. I. nineties and r. . Phone m4‘ . rn. (Atlantic Time.) n. Joli. l- I- A ted . v i ‘is f .