' . H Mllilllllll r m. ll-Eggi .’__*‘% For Beauty, Convenience, Efficiency, and Durability, the “New Monarch” lS the Steel Range Supreme. Cape Traverse Meeting‘ Favours Tuber Bonus Plan A special meeting was held in Cope never-so mu, my 20th, for ihv purpose ct discussing the potato bonus. m; following paper was "=4 by the Chairman Mr- Ephraim Bell, and adopted unanimously, Inviewof theiact that the “mmotmmrmuouscrthsrs- land areholdingmeetinga for the lillrlwscofind thegovernment i0 bomlsths farmer iotbeextent orsioanmeonaummucncrun "M sraduating down to 1-acre,- lothattiresurailgrowerwillbson a level basis with the Inigo. that is 0111' motive oi being hers tonight. As conditions are at consent time, farmers of Canada and particularly Iii P. E. 1. are getting a raw deal. while all the employees o! the government have their salaries peg- ized whether the farmers are driven ""0 Mn or not. Daring this Inst four yglrg, 5nd the farmers apart iii-om the rovernment smployeeshsve not. been (letting g 1mm w", ‘m; u" on”. solution oi this vexed question is to him"! ihe forum's products up to a will" production according to his oldinss. There is nothing radical gr isrfetched in this proposition. i" instance, in Ihmland. wheat “ililoiestttueoyearshasbeen W?" i» 01.86 a bua. for all the “Mi! can grow. this k g flit‘, s iiisrliirriirss filigree 5r. 55g i 8 35%;} giirii _ ' us w,“ ‘Into ma» --~~... 1&2 E QAsLittleAs i $5‘ DOWN Balance 10 Monthly Payments N0 INTEREST. ENTERPRISE tween the upper and the nether milestone. The farmers oi P- E. I. respresent 60 p. c. of the population are theynotabodyworthyoisoms consideration to save them from oanknrptcyinthestressoftirnmas we have today with the resultant effect that business is strangled while the rich‘ are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer? The farmer's position on Prince Ed- ward Island is not rosy. He finds his bilildings are running down. his is being worn out, and in many instances his land tax is not paid. Five years of depression with low prices for farm products has hhn pretty well stranded. As a recovery we feel that it the government to 8 d suppliu for the that he will be This meeting is the opinion that our demands are not un- reasonable and we sunset- that e. copyoftiuisreportbesenttoour representatives." S B E l 3st Dairy Records i‘ Juno the Mo i-lolstelns whose send-oi ial records were reported in the April Bulletin of the Hols- tein-rriesisn Association oi Oanada was Albegweit Quidi Vidi. owned by J. waiter Jones. Charlottetown. P. I. 1. who led the iour-year-oids Plot rk Oolsnthul. 16.531 lbs. of milk and ‘HS lbl. of {at in 9Q days. W. R. Bony-yer, of (Tarlottetown. was well up mung I’! tour-year- Qugqn who I870 10.372 RI. of milk and 5M lbs. offetindilildeys. Aieatursoftilsnuiletlnwuthe, recordef-lean Pentium! ti‘; m. ms no names . voa wousoarcserau wnwsolt. Ont. fl-A "- -eld ltd) who ts aha has a nuance tor movwltlllfi m! can an: can still s ‘a pretty gana o! nrarblss viaitlii hare minds! vflosrltorv tour and l A ‘ENTERPRISE lllllil DUKE. Beyond all doubt, the “Iron Duke” is the most attractive and efficient of all Cast IronRanges. QUALITY rs ECONOMY P” am sign of winter and, like tbs bear - later in the summer so your light is You make such ._‘,,(,,»__ \_. ,, , ,..,.,.__ " 111i! _' (JHARLUYFEIUWN- [GUARDIAN OLMAN-ENTERPRISE RANGE In accepting for you the Maker’s ofier A Price Stove Sale in all their history. price Sale, even if you did not intend do ing so for months. 140k at the Savings - Select Your Range and Mail or Bring Your Order. to relieve a Factory Overstock, Holman’s are staging the Biggest Low ' Big Savings that it will pay you to Buy Now at our Cut- i ADDIPT DELAY. SALE POSITIVELY ENDS JUNE 1. 9 REG. I. fuel. ' 5i big Sturdy Range that, day after v day, for years, bakes perfectly _ .=. gives plenty of heat, yet easy on Lil/lei: Nos . r la ll v ll re ENTERPRISE new ulursrlc 79.50 =SNAPSHOT cull SPRINGTIME IN THE ZOO Get emircnment In your zoo pictures. It adds much to their Interest. "WHAT is it we always look for- the cage or corral and shoot. if the ward to seeing in the spring?" lion's den, ior instance, is at the a teacher asked her class of sight- bl“ 01-14 91 llil @589. which it usual- ycarolds. "The animals in the I00," l? 1s. don't snap your picture from 919e,; up Micki the side and have an ndioining pen Mmkey might h-Ja addad ulna OI Oltfldlfll f0!’ YOU!‘ background ‘napahuotera... for there are in m“ for in natural surroundings the lion world a m‘, people who N“ m." and ‘ostrich do not mix socially. Get cameras on the closet shelf at. the 3: a‘ “diam” °t h" “It? 1' yo: may say, "if I snap en e sriirtu a inst the bars ! would get E larggr infdge." That's true enough-and at the same time you would be getting just an- other picture of a lion. Suppose the "his! of the lion is mailer at s floater distance from your camera. How about an enlargement of the lion and enough of the entrance to his den to add environment. l“!!! amateurs overlook the pos- sibilities in trimming and enlarge- ment and in doing so they pass up in the zoo, it. hibernates until the arrival of spring. l_f you own one of these hibernat- ing cameras you had better get it out, dust it oft, carefully clean tbs lens, load it up with iilm and be on hand at your nearest aco when the l per lets his animal family cut of 0' indoor winter quarters to the outdoor cages. There's a real chance for some great pictures and a great chance for some real pictures. There's one great advantage in taking animal pictures at the aoo in early spring. The foliage on ms trsesisnetas hsavyasit becomes much better. 4 hacttround and foreground should be liven careful consideration in maul in the picture and you will n ha convinced by results that it Well worth ill little thought and it requires. ' some VAN BUILDER. 4i Iii. BIIIOI lbsilda hours in bar graudanaughws garden hoeing and Infill M’ her flours. Her three eNldi-cusro iivlngandthsra kslllhiidmd and It elvaslnhilcecnr~m ‘n _Q ‘svisittoe i" Santral Guardian Thll column is reserved for new! of local interest but advertising of a nevvsy nature may be inserted 7t n 4 cents a word strictly payable advance. OONFEDERATION LIFE INSUR- ANCE. 11-8198-7-12-312. FOB SALE at a. bargain, Gasoline Engine Washer. Used only for dem- onstration. Miller Bros, Ltd. 14-7419-5-23-21. BROADCAST on Red Cross from Vancouver at 10.30 P. M. Saturday. L-‘ltdo-S-it-li. IOXMEIL-Iiceding Surlglo Eat- ions exclusively, has given super- ior results whereveried. The cost is lowest. L-lioiil. BEST SILVER. FOX PEI/l‘, March London Sale out of 80.000 skins, was drom a 1934 Pup Fed excluslvg on Bungle as cereal part of Ration, from weaning to pelting, :ccordixrg to owner, E. S. Coffin. Sat-‘mes-tf. INTERESTING EDITION -- To Prof. H. A. Tanton, now visiting the southern United States The Guardian is indebted for a copy of the festival edition of the Augusta (Georgie) Isl-centennial Chronicle. The paper is copiously illustrated and contains articles of much in- terest and value. CHURCH 0F SCOTLANQ-An- nual Meetings. Coleman, Monday. June 3rd at '1 P. M. Sillhrnerside, Wednesday. June 5th at ‘IBM. Seurltown, Monday, June 10th. Cape Traverse, Monday, June 11th at 2 P. M. Canoe Cove, Wednesday, June 19th. Agryls Shore, Monday, June 24th at 7 PpM. DeSable. Tuesday, June 25th at 1 P. M. and General Meetggnsnd Session Tuesday, 25th at 2 . Kinross, Saturday 15th at 1 P. M. L-‘IHB-ll-ils-ii. TBANSIBlBEIl-mmr Norrnsn Vouden, who has been Gish-Station Agent at Charlottetown, P. ill. 1., with Imperial Oil for the past three years, has been transferred to New Galqow in a like capacity. MI. and Mrs. Vouden have‘ taken over the W- D. Chisholm Apart- ment on McLean Street and will be comics-tam setttied there within a few days-New Glasgow News. arrmoscumo maniacs- The utarriage of Pauline Sylvia, dsuahter oaths late A. v. Ooleby and or ma. Ooieby, or Westrnount. o'clock, at the residence oi the bride’ mother sso Belmont Zfibii IEDING- On ENTERPRISE VlDlDliY [A wonderful, medium - priced Cast Iron Range, that will give Many Years oi Superb Service. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED "ideal guardian" greet deal oi happiness and good wishes, when about seventy of the friends and neighbors of Mr. and Mlrs. James MacQuarrle gathered to celebrate their fiftieth wedding anniveesnry. The evening was very pleasantly spent with music, sing- ing and social chat. Mr. Major Lowther gave an address. "W! 1111 Joined in singing "For They Are Jolly Good Rllows." Mr. Mac- Quarrle was presented with a beautiful pipe with a gold band, and Mrs. MacQuar-rle with a. lovely gold brooch, and a handsome cen- terpiece. Mr. and Mrs. MacQliarrle received many messages oi con- gratulations and regrets‘ from friends who could not be with them. The ladies served a. very dainty and bounteous luncheon. After singing "Auld Lang Sync" and “God Save the King”, all departed after wish- ing theni many more years of wedded life. (Other papers please copy.) Famous in Night But Once Enough Dr. Dafoe Thinks A. E. Fulford Canadian Press Staff Writer OALLENDER. 0nt., Ma/y 24 — (CP)—Looking back on a year of caring for quintuplets as the only physician ever ill n position for ret~ mspeotlon of Just that sort, Dr. Allan Roy Daioe. of Cailnnder 0nt., said he "wouldn‘t have missed it for the world." His little charges will celebrate their first iive-in-one birthday May 38. The gentle country doctor who was catapulted to fame with the birth oi the Dionne babies hopes he will never experience another year like that just past but ls happy that it happened. He hopes the worst is ver. There were drawbacks he ad- mltted-plen-ty of them. Hourly anxiety for the lives oi his tiny charges disruption oi his private practice. intrusion into his private life and disputes that grew up around the banish-these were "on the debit side." They left him at times with the wishiit all hul never happened-that he could go back to his quiet life with his pipe, his books and his dogs. But now that Yvonne. Annette, Cecile Emilie and Marie have ex- cellent chances for lids and most 0f the other difficulties have been swept away he is settling more euufortabigy into his new way of life and enjoying himself. E isms that used to complicate his life he now takes in his stride. Besides the can of the quintuplets and a practice that mfenis eve.- 400 square miles. he meets news- paperinen prorhoters and govern- ment oificials every day. in the last few months he has become a busi- nsss man as well as a physician and as a guardian protects the babies‘ financial interests as well as their health. seeing him as a doctor, father and a ‘ .. execu- GOEDDI. ulhtlflllidmhfldlfll- filfi&iawal the scene oi a tive Olllendernsidcntscsii him the For Your Old _ itgove If Saleable ENTERPRISE A Leader in the Low Price Field —,setting a new, high Dr Dafoo said he prized medical fame most highly of all the things the year has brought. He treasures i1; as the representative oi country practitioners who toil through the years with little recognition. values also the new friends he hos made in contacts outside the little world he moved in before and the genuine new interest he has found m life through the quints. He Through his last thought money, Dr. Daioe admin/ad it is comfortable to think he ls better provided riow with the world's. goods. He sees in the money that has come to him mostly throullh newspaper articles he has written only a means motherless 16-year-old son and to insure him against need in litter years. to educate his He might have made much more in capitalizing his fame but he re- fused to do anything that would take lilrn away from the 1310M"? babies or that might be considered anything but highly ethical by his fellow medical men. He corisldfir-S himself fortunate in having prom- inent medical men. brother, Dr. William Daioc of Tor- onto as advisers in this phase of his changed life. including his A suggestion if other quintuplets were born he might be called on to attend them brought a hearty! “ugh from me dQCtQL ‘Not very. lowing ‘Author! likely." he chuckled. "As l‘ sold Il Shakespearean drama!" i o The Fisherman's . 5i)» ., Fairbanks-Morse Tyrpe "M" Marine Engine d d: 8 H. P. THE CANADIAN Fairbanks-Morse Saint John, N. B. standard eiliciency is of ‘among the 15 the opinion ls general ' f o r All-around wouldn't have missed it for this . world but I never want to go tl-uough it again. It isn't the first’ 100 years that are the hardest in~ this case. It's the firr‘. year-M least I hope so.” DENTISTRY NOT A -- - GOOD CAREER. FOR- . w '- WOMEN TO ADOPT. . .~ .. t m4 .. .‘..l M; w: ronomlo, May 22—0ntarlo his ' about l5 women dentists and even ' that the profession is for menmei _ oi half-dozen women attended the .. Ontario Dental Association conven- tion here yesterday. " one woman delegate explained: “' the lack of her sex's interest. in. dentistry as being mainly because of the great amount of mechanical work involved. Women, she said, ' don't make good mechanics. " " "It's a lOIig and diflicult course-a long hours and lots of studying» and it's not a career upon which to embark if ones ambition is “to marry and have n home," said an» other. . THE MISTAKE Husband (nilcr the theatre“, ‘v “But, dear what did you objebl‘ to?" ~ Wife: “Why. the idea of you belc- - » - Author!’ at s Engine d- 5 Fairbanks - Morse Type Marine Gasoline Engines are sturdily built. . and give unfailing service under the most severe" l working conditionfi " Heavy construction and ample bearings reduce vibration to a minimumf, which means fewer fro}, pairs a d longer life for. the en ne. ,_,. Fairbanks - Morse TYPI, “M” Marine Engines caa-<~~~, be bought on terms ifdeq _""‘i sired. Ask about our Bait; f‘. merit Plan. 3 comrmv, Lima-lisp. l Halifax, n‘