J‘ —~r-1'c'a.~_»_-'-~ *".‘.‘-*"._s-a.z:u'zv:~ "srocruzrara. ~.. 1'" '* ‘i: 3.33‘. l- _P_"‘<.-'1QL"5.1'I“3 i! TE i‘ E '*" "' i" 4 ’ "’*""‘ A =- = u prewar/s»! r:- "u t; GMILIITTETBII BIIAIIDIAI Inning Dally (Fouled In III) Irouldonli Hui, 00L W. Ohutoc l, Ill-Ito Vim Italian: l. l. Burn“ I-J-l. Inning: Haul. 001. D. A. loci . Ill-o. ‘gm; n; In"! | Dinner, J. I lunch, IJ-l. Idllonn Ironi Wulku, 1nd Lluu, Ill A. llrllfl, LBJ-VJ, (OI AINII lorvloo) IUIISCIIPTION BATK Q Inll tn P, l. l. IMO por your: UM for I mouth! ILQ for 8 mouths; 50c (or on monli Olty Dollvuy ‘.00 our your: "-00 for I mull: $1.15 [or I moutlu; 00c tor one mouth Q lull to olbor Provlncol and UJ-A. ".00 pot your Iulurdny Woolly: flmtl par ynn ILIO for I monthl- Mn for I months Tho Churlnttntown Gulrdluu mo; ho obtllnod ll Iotulllng‘: New: Agoney. Timon Dunn-o. Now Inch 01d loath New: Agency, Connor Illll lad WIIIIIIIMI Bolton lclrupnllcon New: Agonuy, ltlll Pool It. Iollrelh J. '|Il l“ Boy 8t, Toronto; News Btuud Cllllall IAIIIOII Otllwlt Wolfe‘: News Stun! Bradbury, OIL| I!) Iohlcen Shop, llonnlou, N. B» “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.’ WEDNESDAY. mm; 9, m: ' More Car Alibis Ferry Premier Jones does not seem to have made much impression at Ottawa so far as the urgency of our need for a new car ferry is concerned. The informati-cn he brings back is anything but satisfactory. Ile says that under "ideal condi- tions"—that is to say. if instead of talking about it they got busy and started building at once- we would still have to wait until August, I945, for its completion. That is an amazing state- ment. The Premier seems to have accepted it without (iuestion, but it will require more than the proverbial grain of salt to make it palatable. Modern shipbuilding is a streamlined industry, like everything else in this age. If the PIOPCI’ facilities were provided and the work giyen prior- itv as a necessary war measure there is no rea- son why the steamer could not be built in a few months. A twenty-six moutlisl dclav is bad enough, but the Premier has no assurance than even this will be sufficient. “Tihere is," he reminds us, “a war 0n...:1nd there is likely to be further delayx" No doubt the fzict that there is a. war on was duly iln]u'es.<t‘(l on him at Ottawa. But he had a good answer to that. The answer is in 111L- text of the resolution passed unanimously by the Legislzmire at its last session. Inasmuch as the whole issue rests on this point, and as it now seems to have been forgotten by more than the federal authorities, we make no apology for {uoting the resolution here in full: WHREAS the citizens of Prince Edward 1s- land through their several organizations have re~ quested the legislative Assembly 1n session as- sembled to 1nslst that the Domfnlon Government build a new car ferry at once to replace the 5.8. "Charlottetown." AND WHEREAS all the members of the Leg- lzlatlve Assembly fully realize the dtrc cftuatton 1n which the Province finds Itself u regards transportation facilities with the mclnlmd. AND WHEREAS the Dcmtnlcn Government 1s emphasizing the increased production of food products for 1943. AND WHEEAS almost the entire export: of the province are food products essential for war rcqulremcnts, and the total outward movement of frelght. can for the year 1942 amounted to about 17,500. AND WHEREAS the very oxtsmnce of the cltlzens of the Prcvlnce depends upon conttnuouc transportatton facilities because almost all the essential fuel, fertilizers and large quantities of mill feeds and concentrates for the production of butter, cheese and meat products must be Imported. AND WZEAI lhc ouenthl roqulremcntl of the various urvlcoa of the armed forces 1n the Province greatly increases the tax on transporta- ttcn faculties and greatly decreases the carrying capacity of the cu- ferry for other purpccel. AND WIQEAB the present car ferry ll being workod lo the utmost llmlt of 1t: capacity and hm proved lnadequobe to cope with our freight: lltua- tlon because the 5.5. “Prlnce Edward Island" has only two thirds of the frelght carrying capaclty of the 8.8. “Chorlotootowu? AND WIIIZIAB the vclumcof lrofflclllncrou- lng ormounly and tn nddltlcn much of the freight. formerly moved by runner mull: now be ferried. l AND WHEREAS 1n the opinion of lhll Mikh- turc it 1s totally unsafe to rely upon one aged lfcrry_ over 90 years old and which bu already met with two serious accidents thfl winter, to mutntnln the essential ccrvfcel already let forth. j RE RESOLVED that the Leglslutlvo ' Assembly of the Provlnce of Prfnco Edward ll- land petition the Government of Canada. to this steps to bulld a new car ferry, a; u war measure to be ready for the 1943 fall trade. This is the resolution which it was Premier Jones’ business to have pressed It Ottawa. If he needed further arguments he could have pick- ed them up on his way to the Dominion capital. When reminded that "there is a war on" he might well have called attention to the huge new C.N.R. terminal at Montreal, built during war- D keep the cple, in the countries under the Nazi tyranny, informed of what in going on, of the progress of the war, the Allied successes ‘and the mounting preparations which will, in time, smash all the gangster powers. Thcy lift these oppressed people out of despair and give them a great hOpQ, They fan the sacred flame of frec- sistance. The brave and patriotic men who are engaged in this extremely dangerous business deserve great recognition and honor in the United Nat- ions that are free. The old struggle for frec- dom of the press was historically importanh strange new chapter is being written, and it 1S notable for the ability with which this free press of Europe is conducted, for the high courage and sacrifice of the men who do it, and for the contribution which they make toward the ulti- mate victory. Pantelleria The tiny Italian island of Pantcllcria. is the stepping stone to Sicily, and Sicily is the road to the Italian mainland. Pantellcria is only 44 miles from the coast of Africa, 62 miles from Sicily, and the attentions this island is receiving from Allied bombers, from the British fleet, may indicate that it will be the first objective, or one of the first objectives, of the oncoming Mediterranean campaign. Pantelleria is entirely of volcanic origin, and hot mineral springs and what the Britannica calls "ebullitions of steam" are characteristics of the landscape. The island is fertile, says this authority, but lacks fresh water. The population in 1931 was only 9,679, of which 6,874 was in _the main town, Pantelleria, which then at least had the sole harbor On the island and it is fit only for small ships. . Since 193i Mussolini has had air fields built, and no doubt stout fortifications, probably has improved the harbor with the idea of nmlting Pantelleria "another Malta." It must have a considerable Italian garrison, prob- ably German troops also. But its defences have taken a frightful hammering of late and it re- mains to be seen whether Pantelleria can “take it" as Malta did. Pantelleria is the ancient Cossyra, and comes into history in 255 B.C. when the Romans oc- cupied it. The Romans used it as a place of banishment for prominent persons. About 70c A.D. the Arabs captured the island, slew the Christian population, and held it for some cen- turies. In later centuries the Sicilians held it, the Spaniards. and the Turks. Now it is the out- post of Axis barbarism in the Mediterranean. - EDITORIAL NOTES - Average war duties supplement to be paid to civil servants under new regulations will be about $15 a month. The regulations provided pay supplements for civil servants in war de- because of the war. UUUU Table etiquette will become a war casualty if the Farm Security Administration has its way. i, In the interests of conserving food, the FSA ad- vises vigorous stirring of coffee; eating baked potato skins; picking up bones in the fingers to get that last bit of meat and wiping up gravy from the plate with bread so that none is wasted. n: a c w Bonaparte crossed the Alps this date 1800; Italy was almost completely lost when Napoleon was made First Consul of France in November I799, and the only hope seemed to be for Gen- eral Moieau’: army, then in Switzerland, to march to Vienna; but Bonaparte desired to strike the blow himself, so he led his army across the Alps and won the great but lucky victory of Marengo. u c c a Mr. D'Arcy Osborne, British Minister to the Holy Sec, has left the close confines of the Vati- can City for a lhort period home on leave. He ha: not been in Ivcndon since before the war. During the months when Italy was waiting, judg- ing her time to pick up easy loot without much fighting, Mr. Osborne could leave the Vatican, but since June, 1940, any step outside the boun- dary would have brought him on to enemy terri- tory, and for over 3o monthl he has had to live within the 108 acres of the Vatican City. When he left to begin hi: leave he was taken to the acrodromc by Italian police, and Italian officials were with him in the aeroplane during the first stage of the flight. a a a a The London Times Ottawa correspondent time at a cost of many millions. How many thousands of tons of material on the priority list went into that structure? How many cor- vette: could have been built out of its steel? How many fuses made of its copper? How many implements of war forged from its metals? Premier Jones might well have demanded an answer to these questions, as well as of the why and whirefor of such work taking precedence over the much more urgent requirements of this Province. .’\5l<ing such questions wouldn't make him popular zit Ottawa, but he WCYUlCl b8 better so employed than in bringing back more alibis. Free Press In Europe 1n the face of constant, deadly peril, a free press is being skilfully maintained by hundreds of heroic men for the enslaved peoples of Eur- ope, and it is rendering eminent service to the cause of human freedom. This underground press. says an exchange, maintains an active ex- istence from northern Norway across Europe w (ireece, defying the Gestapo which, in spite of numviwviis exccutiigis, is ivowerless to suppress it. Iii-cause it says what it likes, without curb or re- strietinii, it is a frcc press, whereas the news- papers wmlrolled by the Nazis give a carefully limited mws service and much propaganda. Hundreds of men-professional newspaper men and umateiirs-have given the" lives t0 maintain the underground newspapers. 'lhey ‘ vince. writes: "The habitant is changing his ideas or having them changed for him. Only‘ 37 per cent of the population lives in rural areas, and the largcr life of the province is to be seen in industrial and commercial centres like Mon- treal, Shcrbrookc, St. Hyacinthe, and other places; among miners of the north and west; in forest domains from Labrador and New Bruns- wick to the frontier of Ontario; in shipyards on the mighty river of St. Lawrence; in the pulp and paper mills of the specious valleys; in the great water-power projects which are now aug- menting the industrial possibilities of the pro- In the Universities of Montreal and Quebec students are alert to new world move- ments, while the growth of urban areas under the impact of war has increased and activities of labour union leaders and those who pro- mulgate new social and economic theories. The problems of race and sectionalism which tended in the past to establish two Canadas within one territory are being given fresh examination by many, and a new appreciation of the country's political future is emerging. The issue is join- ed between nationalism as applied to Quebec and nationalism as applied to Canada. The near future may show the opposing strength with some clean-less, but those who favour a broader Canadianism will not be rejected by initial de- feat. They envisage Canada approaching its greater destiny-a North American country with European associations that has a powerful part to play in interpreting and harmonizing the con- flicting policics of the old world and the new." \ 1 don and create an unconquerable spirit of re- to partments or whose work had been increased _1a rm: cmiuorrmpwu cqéanwgl; t _____ {IlrnlllIrIIII/rzlrq We lleartily lndcrse llotu By The Way Now that. moat o! u: have llw- ccufully mastered those Tunisian names 1t appears that the war Ls about to move elsewhere and there will be l. new crop of jcwbreakers horn. —Bskatcon star-Phoenix. Ion‘ Inland man ldVtffl-lfll for n. wffe and got. 400 applications. He la now convinced .. that advertis- lng pays. We hope he holcs the came views a few years hence. 1f ho accepts one of the applicants as hls partner 1n llfe-Chathum Nelvs. “Ill health" la glvcn u the cause for the replacement of a number of Fascist officials 1n Italy. The epidemic bu: obviously spread from Germany. and the ailment 1s scien- tfflcally known as "Axls txemulltb." or, more co ‘y. the jitters. — Wlndoor Star. Acorns, cltrul fruit seeds and the pulp of the Jerusalem artichoke tire among tahe products officially au- thorized 1n France as coffee sub- stitutes. Ah order issued late 1n 1942 placed’ the entire Frepch harvest of acorns at the disposal of the Na- tional Group for the Purchase of Coffee and Coffee Substitutes. - Exchxige. The problem o1’ the United States after the war wlll not be “what can I sell," but "what must I not sell." America must. buy back goods to the volume of her exports. ‘Ihere are B number of basic exports which rank long before motor curs. Cotton. tobacco, wheat and meat. —Lcrd Perry, British auto manufacturing magnate. It l; thnc that. the place cf the bagpipes among musical instruments be finally established. An enc should be put to the slurs 0n this noble creator of martial airs, because of the need of fostering international accord. The Scottish people may lg- nore and even laugh at jokes on their penurlousness, but there is a Ilmlt. That limit Ls reached when the duality of bugpipe music 1s ques- tioned. —Ca1gary Herald. We arc won‘. to libel animals with the wrong attributes. All specialists will agree that the big, if given the chance, is one of the cleanest of all animals, especially in the precise care taken not to dirty its straw. The piglets are “house trained" almost from the day of blrtly as _I have lately seen. The alleged dirti- ness of pigs 1s due whtfly to the ill-equipped slums 1n which Iou often they are prisoned. _Lcndon Specta- tor. .,____ The question of’ protecting the people now dominated by the Ger» mans Ls not merelv of ssjntin". Germany is desperately usmfl evfirv man and woman she can coerce. The defences which are being‘ cu against us are the work of un 'll- lng but effective hands. If we can strengthen their powers of resist- ance, 1f we care to match terror with sternness, we can hope to save those marked for victimization in the future and at the same 111110 slow down the enemy: militarv ure- parations. Whatever other consid- erations may arise, care for the preservation of Nazi ridden nomi- t-lcns must not be allowed to stand 1n the way Dispatch The Ottawa Journal ls a just paper and in a recent Issue it took up the cudgel for King Henry VIII, who hac been spoken of 1n a slov- enly London dispatch as a monarch who mheaded "most of nu wives," , . . It is not usually recognized that Henry was a man cf extreme sensitivity, and that many ct‘ his brutal actions were a result of hurt feelings allied to great power. I-Ie had bar; luck with women, as many men have who find women irresist- ible. On two occasions he revenged himself on women who had deceived him by taking their lives. Now. reader, ask yourself bhls: If we all had Henry's attraction for women, and his power to behead those who treated‘ us badly, what would the result be? Who can doubt the an- swer: the retributive crunch of the dropper would be heard from cawn tlll dusk. —Peberborough Examiner. ‘Ru old llnrekccpcr in these parts, whom I take to be a pattern of our democracy and the apothcosis of our system of fzce government, has never agreed wlth the experts. I remem- ber comlng back from Washington in July. 1940, and the stcrekeeper told me that. 1t might take a couple of years but we would certainly win the war. I did not tell him that some of the most competent experts in the Uhlted Stat/es had Just as- sured me that tlhe war was com- pletely lost and Britain's surrender only a matter of days or, ct. most, of weeks. Again 1n 1941 I came back from Washington with the assurance of America's leading mill- tary writer that the Rucstans could not possibly last until September. The swrokeeper said: “Hitler's doomed now. Old Joe will Wlpt lflm off tlhe 31p." And last Summer when every-one ln.n well informed qusrt/grs know that the Suez Canal was lost the ctorekceper‘ told me 1n confid- ence that he exnetced the Axis tc be pushed out, of Afrla, wit/hm a. your, -Bruce I-Iutchlson 1n vtctorlu Times. 1115111141 0f forty." was one of the statements 1n a report presented at a recent American scientific gather- ing. The view was expressed that modern health conditions and preventive medicine were steadily ncreaslng the limit. of llfe expect- ancy beyond the century mark and that. more active steps must be tak- en to nrovlce for tlhe special needs of those far on 1n years, Some day, 80001111118 t0 B delelutie. schools for them would be established 1n every community with courses designed w enable them to continue to lead use- ful lives. The possibilities that. are opening up for preventing old we from being s perlod to be looked forward w with dread are being more and more widely discussed by careful investigators. Mr. muls L. Dublin, of the Metropolitan Life In- surance Oompanv has given closer ltbentlon to the pubject. than per- haps anyone else. The statistics he presents from time to tune are of exceptional Interest. He declared not long ago that our whole concept of the prime of life may be changed by correcting disturbances ct the chemistry of our bodies and that activities of benefit to society enuld be carried on long after 1t has been supposed they must cease. -E;d- monton Journal. ll YEARS WIRELESS ‘Ihe sinking of the Titanic in 1912 focused mbllc attention upon the Minesweepers Among all tliiconbeccu o)! thh war none deserves better of the country than the 25,000 officers And mm who mm the mincswccpera. The last war taught. the notion to op- preclatc their predecessor: cf l minesweeper today 1a many time: generation 880; but. the mk of the more arduous. The lngenuft of the enemy 1n submarine m and 1n devlsuig new forms of those subtle engines o! destruc- tlon have both been at. At. one time 1t almost aeeme as 1f Hit- ler's boast that there was no un- swer to his secret weapon might prove justified. That 1t dld not was partly due to the courage and technical skill with which the sec- rets of the enemy's new weapons were probed and laid bare so that antidotes to them could be devised but. no less to Lhesteadfast devotion of the mtnesweepers who were deterred by the manifestation of l- new peril, imperfectly understood at first and for the moment beyond remedy, from stead devotion to their dangerous ye monoto and uncomfortable task. Th; full story of their services-co far u t! can be bold at present without od- vflntfl-Ke to the enemy—is to be meld in p sixty-two page pamphlet, His Mayestys Mlnesweepers, published by the Admiralty. . I I The menace ct German Illllnlf- 11m mining 1n the last war was ser us enough. and it. taxed Brit- i~h r‘ ources and seamanshlp to dc- huw. it: but Uh‘!!! have been many nzw developmnts since then. In 1918 there were only moored contact mines to consider, with a few re- finements such as a "delayed re- lensv." Intended to keep a mine on the bottom long enough for the water above 1t to be swept and re- pcrted clear before it rose tnto the bath of shipping. Mines could be laid only in water sufficiently o to be accessible to German sur ace ships or submarines, and they th-us constituted a, serious danger only wlwn they could be laid in substan- rumbers. Sweeping u channel presented no great technical nltv. though keeping all the p ls clear involved me (ma. ticzr of a large and complex organ- lzntloti, and this absorbed largo numbers of officers, seamen and emit, and no small volume cf ma- terial to the production 0t which manufacturing resources had to be diverted from other fields cf the war effort. In this war, however, i110 mmelayers hnd been reinforced lrcm the nit"; and aircraft, directly illl-Ilvkiflg the sweepers. defend the mines that have been laid. The ndmmnzi by the enemy of hie mag- nztic minc-Amctually a British 1n- vertion of the last war-and later of the acoustic mine, ' vrenpon which 1s not only effective lIl \'C1'_\‘ shallow tidal water, as the moored mine was not. but actually at its deadliest there; and the minelnying aircraft. provide-l the nfians 01' laying them in British ll€11'b0l11‘s and inshore channels for- mcrelv lncicecsible tu an enemy. Ac- cordingly the area to be cleared and kept clear was much increased, while the difficulties and dangers of clearing 1t had become all the greater. The immediate result was that more and more British seamen chiefly fishermen, were summone —London Suzmaay , "Llfc flu‘ some may begin at 100 1 and flocked to m: mine-sweeping ' rvlce. I-I.l‘./LS_.‘V2rncn and men o! ovzaed the antidotes: ccubly dangerous 1n me u": 1 corttiuli-Sd by night as well 85 51a): Tue 1,700-_mi1e “war chan- nel round the United Kingdom was cleared and has been kept clear, for shipping. Nor ls 1t only in home weters that the» sir-vices o! the mmcsxveeyters have been 1 19136013. Arctic tn the Antipodes. “fit. 1s noble record. U. S. Restores Pants Cuffs (Montreal Gazette) The momentous news comes from Washington that the wartime ban on cuffs for men's trousers has been lifted. although the restriction on 198 length may bar the long fellows from the privilege, The gfgcgflfl action emanates from the War Pro- dufilon Board. which, accordingly, deserves the gratitude of the mot suit boys 1n whom have six-inch nether garments Ln caper-soldiers, callers, and bouncers permitting. sniiiierfvnitis tingift’ Thrimu Bibi?“ thesé lines: B so g con m: IKrowo1d.. . Igrowold I shall wear mg bottom,‘ ' ' trousers rolled. o‘ my The subject of the gong mm luv; be tunld forerheaalso safiiozul u mind‘ Gnu’ And 1 have seen the cbcmal Foot- lmllg‘ hvld my coat and sn er, 411d- 111 Short. I WM afrnld. These poetic admissions nro ta- WHOHY or the cowardfce of man where Clothing 15 concgmeqt A5 his any innovation gives che- But as to cuffs, they are a modern development; there were no such wdomments m the Gay Nineties. They seem to have been invented 1n Fra-nce- m- member when French cuffs were m- troduced to slhértslecves? New the of nlaylnt; houginply The 311811511 nobleman who 1n- Wflwd 10118 pants had rheumatism and thought cloth legs dawn u; m; heels would guard his hellt-h. That W88 l Century and more ago and m? 10118 1mm legs are permanent. The first longs were tights, after which came the balloon legs like stcveplpesjpresscd sans seams. 1MB K1118 dward favored them as he favored the homburg ma. Then the lpress was down the centre. and flna y we had the cuffs. What, o revolution! But. 1f bherc 1c need to conserve cloth, why not. wear high. water pants, ha! -way down the calf, active lumberjack style? The” are as picturesque as the longer trousers, cuffed or cufflcaa. WORM FOOD In England, boots which can't be repaired are converted mm fertiliser =oiiboniiisi ~ ; KIDNEY PILLS 'l/\(n/\( H‘ ‘,1’ uinum“ , ""r n vnv" ulo of wireless at IQI. -.THE- l i t GREEK wu RELIEF § rum) CAMPAIGN 9'» KELLY 8i McIINIS That Lisbon-to- Londoni Flight (tbttuwad Journsl) 'n Lisbon has revived at/Oriea 01 tacit. understanding" between the Jgerent-s that planes flying w anbcédfrom I-lsbon should go unmol- es . No such “understandlrufl has 0X- Lsted. On the contrary, more than one ‘plane plying passengers be- tween n and Britain has reached its destlnutlon wlth bullet holes 1n its tall and wtngs, and pgsengers on that. mute have never n guaranteed safitg, The alrport at bon, a very large and modem one, 1s lntemn- tlcnal. There, 1n its nmln building, offlclals of British and German lines are separated by only a nar- row hall, but there 1s no Intercourse bctwen them, and none of the “fra- temlzfng" between pilots that some reports have spoken of. On th runways of the field British, Ger- man, Italian, Spanish and Portu- guese ‘planes are to be seen side by 51d’). German ‘planes usually arrive 1n the afternoon, and frequently, after their officers report, w the German Embassy (and incidentally buy u]! all the British newspapers they can la their hands on), start on their rc urn voyage the same da - Nrltlsh planes leave for Britain 1n the early momfng each day- usuully between seven and e1 ht oclock. The ‘planes are of Brit h make. slightly larger than the Trans-Canada ships, though not 119E113’ as comfortable, but the pilot; are Dutch; this being The Nether- lands servlcc that used to run to Rotterdam. but which 1s 110W oper- ated by the British. The flight w England 1| much 1 than l: lccmmonly Imagined,“ bcvwoen seven and seven a half hours. Loafing n, ta a call at. Oporto for gas, but after that. there are no other amps, and curt drawn tightly may not see ou tdc. The usually at a height of 12,000 feet. War—25 Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Prom) June 9. find-New German clrlve from Montdldlcr to Noyon met with modified success: much feces ro- tlrec 1n centre of front and enemy reached Rveasom-aur-Matz. British and German delegates met at. The Hague to arrange exchange of pris- oners of war. "WE? =1 ~ ‘w m‘ .- flttlna end supplying Glens no. If. J. MIBON OPTOMETBIST Mouton: F 1.], Office flours: l0 to l2 m. l! l to l I M. llolldnyu etc. by uppolntmen Office (Jonnectcd with uauosroac I‘ in your chores. Good work deserves a reward. Reward yourself with a comforting chew of l-IICKEY a. NlCl-IOLSONIS " BLACK TWIST" CHEWING ATTENTION : We Need at Once It 1| essential that all unusable lron, ltccl and metal scrap In put lo wur work now: Quantltlcl of this malarial which our truck: will haul from any point on Prince Edward bland. Iull mullet prlcu will In pold. A. BLOCK (Authorized Dealers) Warehouse 1nd yard - 10! Elm Avenue - Ohurlotlctown Phone ‘I68 or 144i i? E. R. Brow & Scnl Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness I and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Agent at Summer-side, D. O. Stewart 144 Richmond St. (lharlottetown The: cnfll this m. sheriff-m °‘°“‘ " nvnslon | Pl!’ IIICIVO pleas of m“? Lg: e8. 1h haw-s: calm 1; “h. u“ v Here 11:0 gm m"; m4 “M 1;"... - The fun whiigpilke‘ or m“ Ifllce. c cud or an‘ h‘ 4 —A!ldf11.'W Moor-man Observei-{l m‘ I” tllaterpruni . . . not rub n11 iiasily nmal soap and mu Arc You Troubled With LUMBAGO or SORE BACK T If y.» we have one of the .. rcmudies to offer, namely, »BACKRITE TABLETS EapocI-ully effective for bngu, Sc utlca, Neuritla, Jo Muuculur and other form: Rheumatism which or - . trclltmentl full to reach. Price 50c per Box. TIIYE TWO MM! 14.9 Great. George Street, Mull Orders Given Prom Attention. “COMPLET i [NSURAN l i SERVIC ” W. K. ROBE I Agencies Ltd. Plmnc 540441 Professional Bard intros-w rMoh-nd 6' Bentley w’ E. BENTLEY K C- l. A. BENTLEY u 0 Blrrlflern and Attornerl-ll Law MONEY r0 LOAN Prince Street "Ullfbuand 00ml" ‘ ll. 1F. AIIBIIIBAI. cimnma Acconnllll" [mum Trust Build!" Olurlollctolll M. ALBAN FARM ' on." um ullnalinll. SOLIOITOB. _ Canadian Bank of Cflllllm" mou|!___1j0.._19*" XTEx wflunues BARRIBTIR. aouclrvl omub so Great curls, Money 1o Inn