i . i »-it " ‘li ,fl ` i i I-ri , ,hy F' li, fl ,gi ».. ..,- Ni uh L5- wt, ;i` ,ZZ ,ig if = lin .-' tif Si, is te., tr ;5,l iii, if itil is ?‘ - , ,_ `( 5 v. . _ tsl., f fill' 'i:» iffi 75?? ,I ‘ i . ii I ' i l I t 'il' ‘ii a, L-ri. -.vcr »» if \».`r"` . ' A V- _ _ ,V _ ~* ‘f‘?.llf1` “ ‘ r- it f " ' " "T""‘ 'rmi onannqrrnrows auannun ' fo., 1919 F STDIRINGLY ‘$°UPEl2|Ol2! Wil CUPS T0 Tl-IE POUND 4-? ' fTT..zT.`. I IH Till 'Ilia D91' rug wqpw & t\r"4‘- “#1, .__.£e= _;TE_.._L" _ .___ _ __ if ' ' " ' ' ~ 1 The Ideal ‘Pulmonary Tonic =VIN MORI = l CRESO-PHATES Invaluable to all who are weak cheated and threatened with Tuberculosis as well as to those_suil'ering from Anemia, Neurasthenia and Convalescents. on sais Emywhue. im. iso. .\ioniN at co., Limited, Quoin-. cami.. I 1 1 all rf' _ _ __ __-_ WW; __ f‘We Want Candy Cascarets” Rm./ard: 'l`h;it when our tuiigucs turn white, 3 breath feverish, stuiii.ii.'Ii sour :ind bowels consti- paitcd, tluit our niotiicrs give us Ctiscairets, the nice cindy cuthzirtic, :ind not nasty ciistor oil, mineral I oil, c.-ilonici or pills. C;i.~i<;.ii'et.~; "work" without gripingtind never hurt us kids. Cost only 10 ticnis. » .l' , i sie ' \ Q .° I ”_>"<<-» J '\@- //” \ . ‘w . /I /' \ _ 'i 1orciiiitIi'en ;i<_ged one yciii' old :intl un\vai'ds.‘ I \ Z/ Auld B ost LIMITED e Wholesale Grocers Charlottetown, P.E. I. i _ - -ff-= --- A; ;-_-g-_-__ -,eg __ l H . . HAY!! We have in WAREHOUSI-` 'i i'ew (` '..l.] of good A E. ISLAND HAY which we oi`i`er in Cfir lots at close -price either f.o.b. or delivered nt any si.; I i i it-i Main- ‘ and or P. F. island Railway. ` , FEED FEED FEED BRAN AND SHORTS :ind other l"eeds Iitive nd- , vanced in price from $2.0() to $5.(ii) per ton. I We are selling nt old price, FEEDS will lic verv scarcelatei' on. _ We sell in any triaiiitity hy the Img or ton. Special prices in ton lots. ~ POULTRY SUPPLIES all kinds wnoiisiii it iiniii. i Carter & Company Ltd. Phone 203 Queen Street Flour and Feed Store ._ H I .I VH llllliliml l i v T ml Ad* *_ _ 1 . __ _ ~ ‘ ! r < , Petain Ranks With Foch As Great French General And Also Splendid Patriot Y promoting Petain to the rank already held by Focll and Jolfre the French G~v- ernmont has merely perform- ed it duty not to have done which would have been to awaken surprise and even criticism in the Whole world, The defender of Verdun un- questionably earned the right to the distinction already bestowed upon the victors of the First and Second Marne. Foch, Joifre and Petaln are clearly the pre-eminent French acl- diers of this wur. llefore Verdun Petuin had earned repiitution, His oifensive in Cliam- pagnc in 1015 was the iirsi. consider- able victory of the Allies lifter the iniiiutive haul passed to theiii. It, had only louii results and was in no sense decisive, but li yielded more than 25,000 prisoners, more than a hundred guns and brought. the first real sense of victory to Paris and to London. But Verdun was the great test.. When ilie new marshal reached the Mouse citadel, the Germans had tak- en Douitumont. advanced nearly seven miles, and were almost at the last line of defence. To organize his - -i 1 MARSHAL Plriiai'y. 1916. All this Petain did. Within a few days his new tu-my could accept his wdtchword, “'l`iiey shall not pass," and nuike it their own. Nothing in l"rt-ncli history is liner than the story ul Vcriliin, and Peiain was the soul as well as tho hruin of that epic. Afi.i~i' Verdun the politicians chose ii. lieutcniint. of l’ctain`s to replace .lotfri-, grown old and we-ai-,\'. Ii; \\~as an unhappy cltoicc, sind .\'iveIlt-is gr(-at fsiiiire at the Aisne in April sind May of 1917 for the tiionient. shook the nioriilo ui' the French arniy anti the I-`i'en<‘h nation. Once niore l"i'aiit~o turned to Pettiin, and this time he repeuteil his Verdun achieve- ment on u vast scale. He ieorganizetl thc entire French arniy. lie restored contitlcnce, iiiscipliiio, he transl`oruied the situation in such fashion that in u few months he was able to win a new \'ictor_v ut Verduu :ind a shining success :it the Aisne in taking Fort Malinuison. 'Phe i`iill fruits ot his labors were r¢~vt>u|ctl in the lushioii in which the l\‘i~i-ncli nriuy was riislietl tu the res- ciii- of the siliiiitioii in l’icui'dy Inst spring. tiller the defeat of the Fifth .British Ariiiy und wiiilo the Germans thiruteneii to st-piirute the French from tho llritish. A liner feat than that ot` l\`iiyolli>`:= forces can hariily he recalled iii :ill this wiir, l<`roin that moinont unwziril l’t>t;iii\ siiffered by the rapid cxpunsioii of tho reputation oi' l»‘ucli. 'l`hiil the Allicd coinninnder» in-chicf was the _greater soldier will priib;,tlil_\‘ bt- the jutigincnt of history, that he owes niiicii to the loyal and competent iiid ni Pctuin is unmistak- ubic. 'i'h:it tiicy worked together in coiitpleie linrinony :it :ill liines is a. tribute to tho putriotisni of eacii. it is siiiii that Joffre, Foeh and Petain will he the only inarslisls of I-‘i-ance created by this war. If there are additions one mi1y hope t.0 see included the name of Ctistelnaii, who saved Nancy and made the Marne victory possible in 1914. And if Cnsteinuii r't\i't~ivcB his baton, an equrii ciuiiii uiiiy he urged for l~`i'ant'lir~t ii'l-Ispciry, wliose army ile- feateri that ol' Bulow iii. the First Mai-ite and slit_iri~ti in the litter long t-aiiiptiigns in l<`i'iincr=. Siillsoqilently it was d’l<}s|ici-r~_v who won the recent. vit-tory of 'tho Ceriivi-\'ai'ilai' in the Orii-nt. and sniaslicil lliilgarla and Mitleleiiropii tit it sinizlo blow. There rc-iuiiiiis .\iani:in -~ thc Ney of the present struggle-vvho at Vordun and in nil the recent battles revealed the spirit of his great. Napoleonic pre- iicct-ssoi~. “the bravest oi the brave." Every company of Amerlciiii soi- diors nbrnitd is permitted to adopt one war orphan. -_ -..._»-. _... ...._._.___, li is rzisltii' to rt»t~iivt'r lost monny than lost tinic. Ul*t"\f*i0lli\li.\' :i iiuin succeeds ln tiiriitllnii the woriii. lint fortunately he f‘""'l l~' \_ who have now so haplessiy lost an I ' , -5- _Z .‘ 1;/_ f? courted Catharine of Bra- .tnza and / " ‘ -____ made liter Queen of Englir..-i. Portu- - _ _/f __,f-' gal was weak then, but :‘lit~ was as - _ f: vw* »// ` » . ever lavish. In addition io it mane- ' _ ‘ ' ’ *I-= ‘°""’*° GR WI i Wh t' $4.00t d ?lt° ti 1 ° "G .i ;‘,:z.,..,.. '°ni::°.‘:i $4.00 buy at (present prices? .lust over one thir of a barrel of flour. G G ! gglggeathgearvrvéilr flour was selling at ` _ " No one can say just how much more ' ` ' " the pui'ch:.:i;:j; owcr of the dollar ~ 1' will be in 1924, lilut you can see that Price of W-S- S- the four dollars you -put into War- in February $4-01 Savings Stamps now, will tow, not in Minh U $4-02 only- in number, but in vafue, Your investment in War-Savings Stamps is like the snowball rolling I down a slope. .Nou';.Five-it.a start -_yt ai_'i__¢'_l it grows by itself. i I Your four dollars becomes of n _ every dollar will be worth more. f _-if '\ / money is grQwing,growing, _ W' YH will =.. Whether you buy one 7’ / ‘ day, or each week, or each mo___, » ,/ or only two or three irra ye8H'ciSoUr \ / ~ » ING all the time. " W’5'5' "° “H """“'". 9°" *” Those who cannot inveat $4.00 at a time, 'M' "l"' _ - can buy Thrift ,Stamps at 25 cents each. T/tri/'I Stamps an sold at above Ol lllq# Gil a Thrill Caftll Wlll'lJC plow, and by patriotic atmlgeepm. accepted as $4.00 in exchange lor a W»S.S. - i i \ , r br, A., v» iqW¢v~-_~¢.~..* ..»~--vw <-»..~ ~»- ---~» -\~"~""‘“' If ir ,. li 1-»