| 4&ert?is&=.r¢""" \ Central Guardian BETTEIK cows BETTER MILK . - 1 HE LABEL IS FiED AND WHITE 7tzhome Tonunc Bay Tea, July ‘ PRESBYTERIAN SERVICES - I ‘As follows-July 24th, Lorne Va]. ‘.119? 111. 11 117110011. ‘Cardigan at 3 p. ,lu. lliontague at 7 p. m. ‘ 2 l 1 wltrsl-uals PLAYERS will pre- l sent Little Miss Jack" in Kingston llall, Thursday, July 21st. 804 0-7-2 1-1i. a NICE snorrnvc. mo coh- ‘sl-ase: .1... ' .:\ ' .._. .. N order to bring to you,‘ under the red and white Carnation label, as fine milk as the world produces, we are constantly introduc- ing the high milk producing strain of our blue ribbon “Contented Cows” into the herds that daily supply milk lo the Carnation Conden- series. In fact, one of the most famous Holstein herds- inall the world is owned by the Carnation Milk Farms. It looks creamy It testes creamy A lgt ls creamy i In this, as in many other ways, we insure the quality of Carnation Milk. Insure that it really will add rich- nessand flavor wheneveryou use it. For Carnation is just pure, fresh milk-evaporated to double richness, “homogenized” so that‘ every drop has its full share of cream. Diluted, it is used in cooking to give greater smoothness and richness. Undiluted, it takes the place of cream at one-third the cost of cream. lOrder from your grocer several tins or a case of 48 tins. Blake's Cook Book. Addrels Cqmotion Milk any, Limited, Aylmer, Ontario. . CARNA TIOIV CREAM CARAMELS-Two cups sugar, 2 cups corn synlp, V; cup butter, 2 cu s Carnation Milk, few grains salt, 1 teaspoon ‘vanilla. Place in sauce pan over Te, sugar, syrup, salt and butter. Stir until mass boils to clear, thi consistency; then arid gradually so as not to stop boiling, the Carnation Mil . Cook to 242 degrees F. or to firm ball stage, stirring constantly. Add l teaspoon vanilla, pour into buttered pans and mark in squares. copy ol‘ Most; Send for a Inc v I Products‘ C 0 Produced in Canada "Front Contented Cow: " i . fscription to The Guardian. ‘TWO SIZES "' TALL AND SMALL lcla CREAM. Ailll p A WARMWEATIIEB The! u the drullinqlllln 1110110 0w ""1 1° 11°‘ 11"“ comfortable, cool’ feieling your remedy is l PERFECTION ICE CREAM dither maul. ohms. law DBO Qllhys u 689601811! m,- qqgq-g m; g9, m]; mason. A delicious “dish of for; feel-Ion n. Groom with e loudly lll-null <11 01" l" 0" Strawberries lmlas beneath the tasty I'll!!! hr manil- nbtunrt seduce- "A servlfll 011100.93" 1“ "“""'” ' ' f5. __ qlllolrlv by w Central ills l" » lauulslr- ‘r y z - ..‘~ 1 ‘. lvertable tn two sizes. Waterproof. ‘One of the best premiums yet of- lfered with a new or renewsl sub- REMEMBER the Confederation Tea Party- by the ladies of Ver- ,noll River Parish on Saturday, July 30111. 7999-7-2021. COME T0 THE ICE-CREAM festival and sports ut Brookfield on Thursday evening, the 21st, at 6 o’- lclock. 8001-7-20-21. tues thurs. i I ,1 THE PARISHIONERS of st. An- .llu's Pllrlnh, Lot 65 intend holding a ‘Gfllllll Tea Party on Wednesday, ,July 27th. Should the day provc unfavourable, the tea will be hold first flno day following. 7997-7-20-81. FREE RED CROSS CHEST CLINICS will be held in tho doc- tors offices ill Eldon, July 22nd morning only. Vernon‘ Bridge July 25lll afternoon only. Ncwfllasgnw, July 26th. Only cases referred by the (ioctors will be examined by the specialist. 3015 HAVE FINE EXHIBIT-Mr. iRongh Tillney, of Summorside. P. 191. Asst. Secretary nf tho Cann- diun Silver Fox Breeders Associa- linn, passed through Monctou Mon- in superintend the installation of the association's exhibit of fox sklnnat the World's Poultry Con- gress which npona there July 27th. Tho exhibit. Mr. Tinney said, will (lflmflfllle some fifty or the finest silver black fox pelts froln the best ranches. ' PERSONALS ‘Miss Rein Collins of Saint John. left Saturday for a vacation at Ilrnckley Beach. P. E. I. Miss Gertrude Dolan. Miss Boat- rice Knowles and Miss Alice Con- lon. of Saint John. are spending ;wo weeks at Brackley Bench, P.E. Mlmllnniel Coles and daughter, Miss Ethel, and granddaughter, M11111 M11111’ 30108.0! Saint John, ac- companied by another daughter, Mrs. Fred Shellinlzion of Silver Falln. left by motor Sunday to visit relatives in Milton, P.E.I., for about two weaker-Saint John Tele- graph-Journal. ' BRITISH STUDENTS TO HARVEST CROPS MONTREAL, July 20.—Students from British universities to ihc number of 40 arrived here today on tho 1027 universities harvesters’ tour. en route to farms in Southern Ontario. After helping with the haying nnd early harvesting opera- tions in Ontario they will proceed tn the West to jnin tho harvesting forces of the prairies. Another and larger group is expected to arrive here tomorrow alier disemharking at Quebec. A third party will join the present arrivals n Saskatche- wan in the harvest without atop- plng over in Ontnrlo. Mnst of the students are taking up agriculture as a profession, and practically all of them are engaged in some scientific course. The uni- versities of Aberdeen. Cambridge, Edinburgh. Glasgow, Krtig’s College London. the London school of Economics, University College, London, Manchester. School of Technology. Oxford. Reading,’ Southampton and Swansea are all represented in the party. With tho exception of n few who have decid- ed to remain in Canada. all will return to their colleges before the end of October. This Wonder Liquid Dissolves Corns Quickly Make them sllrivol up. makes them drop off. malkss your sore toes well in a day or two. Relief is‘ Instantaneous. Paint on a fow drops of Putnam's corn Extractor tonight-coo hnw well your sore corns feel in the morning. It's a wonder liquid-a marvel-worker. Nothing so good for sore corns as Putnam's Corn Extractor. (lot Put- nam's from» your druggist-to-day. Satisfaction guaranteed- r .__.___,_._._ Now is the Time § lo Doctor Your Foxes v-v-vvvvvvvvyy W; are the eels alent for all of Dr. Allen's‘ Fox Rem-- gdl" and they are the but. “ Eremolsne for esrmltee; fit ,.> euro for fits. Stomach powder I for foxes down on the legs; sy, lotion. powder for rick- ets. 01s., etc. Juli and is! its prescribe for you. Harold L. Worthy‘ DRUGOIOT _____THE ell/into ‘Most Famous Picture "THE FATHERS OF CONFEDER- TiON" By B. K. Sandwell, F. R. S. C. in the Toronto Saturday Night Audits Painter ROBERT HARRIS, R. C. A., AND There can be no doubt that the most widely known of ull Canadi- an paintings is “Pile Fathers of Confederation", by Robert Harris, R. C. A.. which was destroyed in the war time fire ill the Parliament Buildings at Ottawa, but is fortun- utoly still represented by the orig- inal cartoon in the National Gal- lory, and has been made familiar to two generations of Canadians by innumerable reproductions and by its use 0n a commemorative D08- tago stamp at the time of the jub- ilcc ten yours ago. , The Dominion of (Jauuda paid" for this world-fnnlous picture tho im- posing sum 0f four thousand dol- lars; and for the "millions of re- production of it, good and bad, that have been circulated over Canada and ull over the world, the artist never received n siuglo penny. Tho. expenses lll connection with tllc' production oi‘ the painting were very great. The artist travelled all over the country ill order to mako direct personal studies [of rllnlcet all of the Fltihorn o1’ Con- federation who were still alive ill I883, when the work was executed. lie was also careful to obtain ill- tcrviews with tho relatives of those who were already dead, so as to insure that. he would have command of the best available data. for their personal appearance. Tie building ill which the Fathers are rwurowu; GUARDIAN ipeople sat or stood through a. tor- |women whose thin clothing was I I-(lrowd of 70,000 _ People are drenchedl (By British United Press) LONDON, July 20.-The King and ‘Queen saw an exam ‘ of massed heroism the other night when 70.000 \ rential downpour of rain to watch the close~of the Aldershot borchllght tattoo. ‘ Not one person in ten had brought an umbrella and the majority of the men had no overeoats. Yet the had endured more than an hour of the rain before a few, ill from ex- posure. began to drift away. And at the end, when the water poured on tents nnd roofs and drowned thel still vast and drenched multitude bored his head to the storm 0o sing "Abide wl Me" and the National Anthem. Surprising scenes were witnessed after midnight at the stations from which special trains returned to Windsor, Woking, London and other places. Engine-drivers filled their warm cabs on the footplate with wringing wet and then gracefully re- tired. Garments were dried before the engine furnaces. ' I The cab of engine E420 attached .120 a first-class special to Waterloo, was quickly packed with women, Clothing was passed out. and hung‘ along the boiler rails until the loco-l motive resembled a monster airingl horse. Men dried themselves at a big‘ platform fire of wood and straw.‘ -——- FEAR OF SPLIT IN VOTE COSTS FROG. HIS SEAT TORONTO. July 20——'I‘llo decision depicted as sitting—the old I-Iouel- os of Parliament at Quebec-had been Imrllod down and much ro-l search was necessary for the l'o-' (lay uflgynnnyh m, mute to Ottawa construction oi’ the appearance ohlrlllltellt lilo petition, la disqualified tho conference room. All ill all, r11 seems doubtful whether the GmllI-i ant artist can have received much more than a thousand dollars or no of net retur l torn year of hard and unremitting, though doubtless in- tercstinghnrl inspiring. work. Harris naturally assumed that when the Government was acquir- ing his picture it would leave to him, as was usuol. the copyright and the control of the making of reproductions. Unfortunately this point was not dealt with in the Or- der_in Council by which the pictu was commissioned. Still more ull- fortunately, the painter got ma:- ed and went to Europe for cover- months immediately after deliver- ing tho picture to the Government. 0n his return heiouud that. a nunl- ber of people had been permitted to take photographs, and that pho- tographic and lithographic repro- ductions, of all degrees of goodness and brldness, were on sale nll owar the country. But while the fiunntlial return Wilt! unsatisfactory, the painter cannot‘ have been otherwise than grntifietll at the practically universal approv-l al which was extended to the pict- ure_ itself, and at tho rapidity with‘ wlllch it leaped into general popli- lurity. lt had certainly a great, deal in do with ills advent to the foru- most rank of Canadian portrait 11111111911. and it was less tilun ten years from the hanging o1‘ this pic- ture when he was elected to the highest dignity ill tile realm oi‘ Cun- adian art, namely tile Presidency oi’ the Royal Canadian Academy, which he held from 1893 tn 1006. Paintings depicting important historical events nro seldom cithnr great works of art or objects of] popular admiration. "Tllq Fathers. oi’ Confederation” la a notable ex-I ueption to this rule. and the reason is not. far to nook. Ill the first place, it was painted at a sufficient distance‘ of time from the event itself to lrilow of the tree exercise of a great deal of artistic inlngin- ntion. Had Robert Harris been actually present in the council room and made sketches with u view to the. production of such a painting, it is m0l'ully certain that ho would never have been able to produce such an Impression on the public milld an ho did by working nearly twenty years later upon tho task of historical reconstruction. For example. tho figures of the younger men in this stately and vigorous group are not merely ac- curate portraits of tho mcu on they wore in tho sixties. By working backwards from 1883, Harrie was able to give to his Macdonald, his Tupper and many others of the group a sort of prophetic suggestion of the richer and fuller character that they were to develop in their lutor yours, and thus to make them fur more interesting as well as more comfortable to the public conception of them. But the characteristic which more than anything else differentl- ntss this painting from tho ordin- ary run of political records is the tre tment of the three great Wilfh dows and of the magnificent stretch of romance-steeped scenery which lies below them. For the achlevmeontof this effect Harrie had to sacrifice much in the Way of more photographic realism; but the sacrifice is small and the re- sult. is of inestimable value. By setting his. imaginary spectator at a viowpoiilt conpidcrabIy-‘abovo the level of the participants upon the zgelfheflorkkffehenelfeb You” S if? I f. i of 1882-8. of the election court in tllc South Britt-c protest that A. M. McCallum. Progressive M.P.P., who did not fronl voting for holding public of- ticc for cigllt years. is the last chap- lcr of the last provincial campulg in that riding. - Mr. llll-(lnllunl is (Unqualified for huving paid $1,250 to J. G. Ander- son, Liberal llollliuoc, who signed a receipt. that the money was ac- cepted ill lieu of expenses in order that there might he only onc oppon- ent tn tho Ferguson Government candidate. The money was bor- rowed fronl the bank on a note jointly signed by A. M. lilclCallulu and J. E Toltlwu lnlt. only‘$1.000 oi’ the amount was paid by Mr. Mc- Callum. CARTlllIlQS SUGGESTION Tile Protest ill South Bruce rect- ed largely nu the fact that a nug- gentioll was made by Snnl Carter, of Guelph, former Liberal M.P.P., who rlllimed to have authority from W. E. N. Sinclair and I-Inn. W. E. Raney. that there be only one opponent to the Conservative can- didate, and that one of the nomill- eon rctirc in which oveut he would receive his (lut-of-pockot expenses, H1111 11ml. tllenu were not. to be coni- puttad ill a lliggardly fashion. In South Bruce the result was: W. D. CAIIGILI. lCull.) . . 4,704 A. M. McCALLUM iProg.) .. 4,922 llinjnritly for McCallum. 128. A bye-election will now be neces- ‘ Sllry in South Bruce. NORTl-I BRUCE DISMISSED The North Bruce Protest, brought lly W. H. Fcnton, II.F.Q., against A. P. Mewhlnuey, Liberal. was dis- IIIlHHNl with costs. At the last election tho voting in North Bruce was us follows: I). J. Byers, Conservative 2.938 W. ll. Fentnn, U.l".O. . . . . . . . -2,840 A. l‘. Mowhiuney, Liberal 3,601 Majority fol" Wewhinney 668. TO BEAR NAME OF FlOCH PARIS, Ju'| 20.—Marshnll Fnclfa uulno is lo live on, although there is no male line. The only sou of the. commander in rrlliei‘ of all the Allied armies. s lieutenant. was killed ln the war. Colonel Fournlor, husband 0f one of the marshals two daught- ers. has been accolded the r151". by Presidential decree, to give ills children the name Fournier-Foch. Tilia authorization was given by the Council of State. at. the request of the Minister of Justice. but bad to be made effective by P18511161"- Iloulncrgue- floor, and by henvliy toninl; dovm the effect of strong outside sun- light upon objects between the spectator and the windows. 11111115 was abloto introduce into this nominally interior picture a splen- did sweep of the loveliest and most suggestive scenery ill Canada. B1111 at the same time to achieve by his three great windowsa pattern 1M0 which the groups around the con- ferellcs table are blend-id with c-x- traordinary skill. It all if we our- l], spectators, women as well as men,» 3 roll of 20o drums, every man ln this.‘ l h-lodci $1 l5 evformance is -.—a1‘1d amazirlgyP-exclailned Maria jeritza ‘when she heard the first record of her. captivating voice on the Orthophonic Victrola. HERE is a relllarknllle lrilvu remarkable. singer. ll lakes .-l to secure a he. Metropolitan Op .l lllulsr. 01111 great musical inslnuncul lo give in you in our own homes illni some voice in all its auty—:ls does the new llfllllllillillllk" Yie- trola. llS music is n nluuiclr! This nrcolllplisllull-ul, n Il\'\\' lll i ug ill music, is due l0 the Victor coll! i'lI1l(‘Ll prillriple of “Matched impedance" or "sulolllll flow oi lug upon 11H‘ slug-c 0i file ovgeous soullll".—\lie Ilflllflllll‘ will ll‘ lrolu .1 _ , zllisfllule rellllsul lll lloulc grout voice 11 111k“ a Yiclrola is “truly gorgcou famous opera l it: soprano so is entirely lll keeping, \\'lI 'l'ilcre are six ln-lluliful ml design. whirll may in: obtained from all "His .\lnslor's Voice" Deniers from S775 down to A lllorlcl for every purse. All luudels with electric motnr to clinliilnle $115. p-iulling if you wish, at ctr-l.‘ Deluorlslrntinlls are any His Master's Voicedr-zller now and select your model. oph on nd U onic Trade Mark Refd Victrola Victor Talking Machine chm pany of Canada. Limited, luau... ll the pcriorlnnnre lll the "PAGE ' f» . i’ i. i» 3‘ ’- l , - . 1' " l‘ l 4* ~11 - 7' ‘ . 3. i \ ch lunde possible luusir. new Orthophonic as l\'l|Ilc'lCl'1|Za, ‘ _ , is appearance \ its performance. ‘x ldels, of cllaTming slight additional givendaily. Sec ‘Nude only by Victor Look for the T rlldenlark srsns voles Mlllll-ll ll-IIIJAINADI lnrltllv 11.1.5 "A & solves woro present among the con- forollce- delegates, and had 1115K walked to the window to 81116 upon the scene which must have bcon so profound an inspiration to their deliberations. A mere pol-t- rait painter, to whom landscape backgrounds if employed at all are only n successor for throwing his cont a1“ figures’ “lhto grants; rel t. would never have dreametiiol); playing. the view from the old-Pur- liamsnt Buildings to such profound lhd legitimate effect. l _ ' Robert Harris while not a native Canadian was brought to this coun- try by his parents as a very younlt boy. ll-lewtis‘ born in ‘i849 in the Vale of Conway, one of the most exquisite of the famous scenic val- leys of North Wales; and he settl- ed with his parents in Prince Ed- ward Island, which in its very/dit- ferent way is also one of the, most exquisite gems of natural besuty. He was educated st Prince of Wei- es College. Charlottetown, sud stud- lsd srt in London. Paris. Italy, Bel- g um and Holland. I-Ils early paint- ing sincludea much landscape work, but liii subsequ tsueeess sl s rt tlst oomlifilsd him m, speck * hst bra oh. The prelim- lr‘ot “Tlle>l1\tlldi§s_~0!>(3911-' was done in the winter _ It should should be not- ed that the original commission from the Government was tor._ s painting of the Ohsrlottetovhl Co terenem-st the some price: it wee . perhaps due to this {not that, the IF it A Shipment of Scotch Granite This together with our already large stock of Grali- .. ite and Marble makes it. easy for intending purchasers to select anything in the Monumental line. rlucns THE LOWEST WORKMAN SHIP THE BEST A CHANDLER & ‘BELL 16,0 Kent Street Phone‘ 741-J_ Q i‘ ‘J I cted for the task. HOWBV-ll‘ 1h? riatfnlmission was inter cbantlefl to one for a 91111111118 01 111° Que?“ Conference. sntsilinl 1011 01' ‘we V: additional wrtrslls- 1100001 000mg to have thought of 1110101151118 3mm“; or payment; and the you!!! artist, unwilllnivto appear grasp- ing, and confident that the com“ right value would be cunsiflfifiblfi- assented to the charge without pro- test. Tha summer of 1883 was spent in Charlottetown in malrlnl; the full-sized cartoon in charcoal which u 110W the properly of lhs National Gallery. In October 0f 1883'I-Iarris removed to Montreal sud took a studio at 42 S8111! 3011" Btroot, where he painted the actual picture. It was hung in the Acad- emy Exhibition of April 1884. llllli on May 1’! ohthat ear the artist bended over the piet re to Sir Hee- tor Laugeviu. Minister of Public Works, sud remslned in Ottawa to see it fitted in its frame and hunl in the old Parliament Building where it was later destroyed.‘ Shortly After the tire in 11116 l-Isn-ls was ked by the govern- ment, whether he possessed ulster- "leis sufficient to enable him. to re reduce‘ the vanished work of art. gle was st first inclined to under- slle to repeat the labor of thirty- ture consideration. and i veiw of your Prince lildwsrdls ll y,» Vin-so yesn previous; but tter ms- ths Tlct tlret the full-nixed prepa- l . eidad not to face the t. mentions demands on his time and onsrlly which the repainting-would involve. The,trsgedy of the destruction 0t this splendid piece oflplctorisl im- aginlation is a striking instance of the folly of allowing u replaceable records of apy kind to q Re e '11 public buildings which are n ab- solutely fireproof. The value of I-Iarrilfs "Fathers of Confederat- ion", measured even in mere dol- ‘am and cents. must at any time have been much in excess of the four thousand dollars which it. cost. the country in 1884. But there is in addition its value ens historical record, which is very great, and still more importantly, its sentim- ental value to all Canadians, as the satisfactory and accepted visual embodiment ot one of the greatest events in their national history. ‘Such values cannot he translated nto money._ . . _.; ,' It is well that tbs qhwrrifie has acquired the original cs’ 0o, ; which was so tortpnsteiy preserve ' u good condition. It would also i eem desirable, in the Interests of posterity. that it should acquire the whole coilectiou/ of.- preltfitllrllr! sketches and of photo notepad written meteriol upon w lei: - the picture was based. sad which must include s , " Jnteroet mutter comeruin jun! l .- l .-~.' . we: till intact he do I’ t Fathers. This eo kill l arillfln flyt int. ..“'t~ ‘:- Wlth every order sent this mouth for s suit er top coat $0 to your measure in sny style set of safety first lightning protect ors and suit hanger free. . s. nlnnsusll ‘x ABSOLUTELY r“ » FREE in during fit guaranteed st list prloe. A - ~l {EYEWIESTED 1W0. _ . Olseses elm_ esielltlfls Y E.7W.<TAYL0R J. S. TKYLOR jlgolslene omnisc- _ lee ‘Richmond strat-