FOIL‘ WRAPPED CIGAR WAR mentions members: _ \3 Points lo MacLure & i ' Charlottetown E. R. "ran cmuinorrnrowu Ranks Ital and maturity. We recommend State of San to yield to maturity 1.56%. I .S'an P..1.». Credit NING The attention oi those intere ted in dir ted ' fact that The Charlottetown Fox Blreeders Prblectix sociation is in a more favorable position than ever to pro- secute an who trespass on the property of the under. Remember BEST LEGAL TALENT RETAINED FIRST CLASS DETECTIVE AGENCY TRAINED BLOODHOUNDS MacKinnon, Charlottetown Royalty. , W. K. _Rogers, f l .-':= Southport. S. B. Fox 00., : Charlottetown Royalty Brow. Charlottetown Royalty FOX BREEDERS’ PRO- TECTIVE ASSOCIATION. High The records show that the State of San Paulo, the most , Iiportant commercial state in Brazil, has vlded funds to meet its external loans. always pru- Previous exter- ns have been issued in England, France,‘ Holland crmany and on two occasions were redeemed before Paulo 7% Ten-Year Coffee Loan, due October 1. 1940 for those who require a liberal yield together with adequate safety. Price: 9B and interest, Sinking Fund sufficient to repay at hast one-tenth of these bonds annually by lot at par. Eastern Securities Company i. I M i T E D W. ll. V. DUNBAB. Manager. CHABLOTTETOWN ET. JOBN , MONTREAL HALIFAX MONCTON SUMMERSIDB l-‘BEDEBICTON nsrsiusr. rurri roop for healthy. normal development o! young loses. 8064-80-61. corn: r0 ‘run ARENA non: and select a real good Used Oar for IMIPERIAL PUP?! FOOD is the ideal food for fox pups as it isrrich in vitamines. wholesome, economical and much relished by pups. . stilt-t-Sil-li. WE HAVE A LARGE AEEOI - Cars. which we are selling at low- est prices. Bee these Cars at the Arena Rink. a. l-Iorne es Co. fliila-b-t-Ii l!‘ YOU ABE INTERESTED in a." Used Car don't fall to see our dia- lllayattbeArenaltink. A.Horns& 60- / ssls-s-s-zi OUR USED CAR DEPARTMENT has secured the Arena Rink for a showroom. Call and see our Racon- ditioned Cars before buying. A. Horne & 0o, I IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD, given early and regularly to fox pups, sec- ures gratifying results. For sale by leading‘ distributors ' or direct from fact-OW. Imperial Biscuit Co, Ltd., Charlottetown. P. E. I. 3406-d-30-5i. yodrself. s. Horns es Co. ssls-s-s-zi ' MEN’! of good reconditioned Usesh flN-B-S-Ii . HEAR. THE ORPHEUS EIGHT of Charlottetown, at Victoria, Monday. May nth. at 8.15. These talented artists will present a musical comedy from "Bits of Whoa." Don't misr- hearing Charlottetown! best music- al talent. Admission 50c and 25c. 8466-54-41‘ FOR. SALE-That choice ten room dwelling house of Prof. W. E. Fletch- er. 63 Upper Prince Street; all mod- ernly equipped and in excellent re- Li-" 88 Great George St, Clilsrlotietown’ _ .Stewart Jones 8s Co. Correspondents o! Crreenshields 8s Co. Members o! the Montreal Stock Exchange Moon's rayon Miss Margaret Mcbellsn has re- iumed her duties as teacher in Mount rryos senooLT . The people of Mount Tryon and vicinity are sorry to hear of the con- tinued illness oi Mrs. Percy Quigley. The many friends of Mrs. Lester Francis are glad to see her home Item. aster spending some time is. Prince County Hospital, where she Index-went a serious operation for appendicitis. " ‘us; ._.~’.. Weddell and Miss Annie Weddell, of Boston. mass, have E- pair. Size of lot 12 by l_00 feet. If not disposed oi by Private Sale will be sold by Public Auction shortly. For further particulars‘ apply to ‘ George J. Tweedy, Royal Bank oi Canada Chambers, Charlottetown. 3506-5-3-21 NEW INSTITUTE ORGANIZED- ' A meeting was held at West Royalty i school house on May 1st, Ior the pur- _ pose of organizing a Women's In- fstltute. The ‘Supervisor conducted f the meeting and the following offic- crs were elected:—l=resident, Mrs. Fred Gates; Vice-president, Mrs. E. . Ci. Stetson; Secretary ‘Ireasurer. Mrs- . Cyrus Pickardf Directors. Mrs. Rus- scl Bell, Mrs. MacKinnon and Mrs.. Roberts; Auditors, Mrs. J. W. Trsin- or and Mrs. MacKinnon. The regu- i lnr monthly meetings will be held the ‘ fourth Wednesday of cach month. . 'l‘he first meeting will be at the hom: of Mrs. Russel Bell. v -__._..._ NAZARENE ‘MEETING - 111s 'New,England district assembly of the Nazarene denomination. which includes the Maritime Provinces, ' met here Sunday (in Maiden. Mass». and designated pastors for the com-l, ihg year. Because the Maiden Nsz-y arene Church was too small to holdj the many delegaiesra theatre was! hired for the meetings. Among the‘, dve elders ordained wash. J. Myatt,j oi O‘Leary. P, E. L. graduate oi; Eimsdalc. (supply); Hunt-sport, N. B. B. E. Dixon, Box I30. Oxford. N. 5.; Mt. Pleasant, P. E. 1.. to be supplied; O'Leary. P. E. 1.. E. J. and I. G. Myatt. O‘Lesry; Oxford. N. 5-. S. E. Dixon. Box 130, Oxford, N. 5.; skew- hcgan. Me. N. H. Washburn. 32 Bush street, Skowhegan; Bpringhlll. N. 5., 5. E. Diron. Box 132. Oxford, N. S. Mr- and Mrs. Wilbur Weddell and little sons Wyman and Melvin. were recent visitors to North Tryon, the turned to their homes. after spend- ‘Bursts oi Arthur Hsillwell- ing some time with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Waddeil. Mrs- Albert Martin is spending a few days in St. Eleonora, the guest of and Mrs. James her parents, Mr. Winchester. m.’ and Mrs. Lawrence Creamer. oi Charlottetown. have moved to Mount Tryon to take up farming. -__-_\ Mr. and Mrs. Marry Quigley were liindsy vislicrs to Carleton Siding. the guests oi m. and Mrs. Frank noisier. Pletjsfér Board ' f5"! . received direct-from Factory- one lull muss GYPROQ PLASTER BOARD . ;~8-16ihle_lc 4 x 74d x 8-4 x 9.-‘-4 x 10. .91“! Mrs. Leslie MacDonald and little daughter Doris May, were recent vis- itors to Mount ‘Iryon. the guests of Mrs. Lester Francis. Mr. Alfred Wood and daughter Olive were recent visitors to North Tryon. . The people oi Mount Tryon are glad to see Mr. Wm. Weddell able to be up again, liter his recent ill- nesm . m. Wm. .1. Quigley hals mites no farms to Mr. Lawrence Creamer. oi Oh» m. Guisierintends spendlngtha summer months It PO" Borden. iAmbrican motion-picture some. utors in Brssii are trying to popu- lsrise taikies by showing them aa- oiusively for two months. Iondoners were shocked recently when an. American sent to the fu- bearing the inscription "Ion VOYr 838-” i ‘ti? we 1 '7 a‘ Eastern Nazarene College. Assign-fut“ cmnob b. done whet, no m", mcnts of iaastors included: Alberton “mam ‘we m do m not even Indy- and Elmsdale. P. E. I.. A. 5taniord.‘,5n5 Thsra is magic in ‘the air about. beoeaththifground peelu Wt. . . And the brown buds of the troesnow . i991." . . . , . Will soon be changed-tolcaves o! Thsvsnow disappsars-andleaves no Al the silnny. dayrtake their place, Jack Frost no lo r fills the air; Thsbreath o! Sprint is everywhere. The robin-is in hishaunts again. And Joins the other-birds in their "reirairo. . ~ _ Thus are some signs oI-the Spring. Which make the hesrt- attuned in In the garden earl! flowers ice. Of perfume rare and bright bus. Tulips. croouses and daflcdils fair. B-flioicins raise their heads in the air. In each season which rolls around, Happiness may always be found, Farewell! to the season that is past. Welcome ms‘ ssi-isguss here at last. u . -Gatherln_s ‘E. Murchison Natives of Cuba. where fresh fruits for drinks exercised exten- sively. are turning: to soft drinks sent from the United states. The Public"Forum' ' Continued from Page 4 i and buried here in i904. Onward: from here eastward through to st. Louis, a monster offa city, and over the Mississippi ~ river northward through Springfield. Illinois, where we paused to see the old residence or Abraham Lincoln. We went through the house and saw the old relics, in- eluding his favorite rocking chair. and the old corner reception room] with its hcwn oak floor. etc. This part cf Illinois has low land. almost black. and many fields covered with water. This is a great farming lec- itm and the farm houses are above; the average but the black gumbol mud must be disagreeable in wet weather. There are many ‘opal mints! . along this route, No. 6d, and many‘ are not working. They claim: that there lSillD mzufiet for their soft coal ss so many people, especially in the South. use gas, and many rail- ways orc using oil. we pass through Jcllet. a city oi‘ over 40.000 where u’ turn eastward through Chico‘ luighis and on to Indiana. tvhtre l "ct the first cool breeze for was" 1.3L; of rain during the last weck, an ‘srmers are waiting for tine weathei to start spring cropping. I am. Sir. etc. . n. n. liicEWEN. (To be continued) Inscruiable India Continued from Poss 4 .__-_..--,_..‘_~-_- themseives. Everything about sirrv veal-is _ o, I MIQ...r THEY ARE‘ 1M P-EjltplAl.‘ The men who work for imperial an Im erial. Most of them have owners ip in the company. for [imperial Oil has made i: easy for them to acquire-stock owner- ship. Through their committees. they also have their art in mans - ing the company. ey share bo lmperlaPs profits and Imperisfs affairs. . Some of these men have been with Imperial almost since i: began fifty years ego. Many of them have been in the company for twenty- five or thirty years. When they retire from active work. they re- main “impel-isl" men under the Imperial Oil Annuities Plan. _ People trust Imperial Oil pro- ducts because the men who make these products take pride in their work andshsre in its result-in- . centives always to do their best. That is one reason why Imperial has grown in years from a small ‘plant at Sarina, Ontario, to a great compan "operating Canrdfs six largest re neries, with miles of tank care-ships on the Atlantic and Pacific, stations in every corner of Canada, thousands ofpartoer-em- . ployees. ' Fifty years of constant enter rise are in the products Imperis Oil sells today. , Marvelube la llflilfs ill! motor oil.‘ ' Imperial Premier and imperial Ethyl are its best gasolines. Which means that nothing finer cube put in your car. i v I Q1 ....‘. .1.“ Use-N ma»... i-'_ ¢°'_N$TANT, E - awaits" . ..- 411v‘ serene $1.31 ' IMPERIAL PREMIER GASOLINE o. PERIAL ETHYL GASOLINE Maavizau s s MOTOR on. POLARINE GREASES [India seems contrary to western oon- Foeptions. and yet, much of India is iolder than anything of mrovfl- Ind not a little isspiritually finer than is much of our heritllt- mm! 15 °b‘ scure. The pool that admittedly may be deep seems at last in be clear; W?» immersion alone proves how strong are v the currents lmomprehebsibiv stirring within its dspts. Every pool in India has hidden dangers. Ancient and Modern ‘Phil it India.) Wishlfll to don modernism she dwells in an lie of a thousand years gone by. Oleaving to_ the~ oldest. she craves for tbs newest- Bpeskins as with the voice oi the indivisible, she s sundered with divis- ions. Bowing in Durbars. she pleads for Parliaments. Elevated by the System. she would abolish those who had elevated her. Afraid to stand alone, she dares to do so. A mere drip in the bucirst wants to fill the ocean. Less than two-and-a-hali million litecamyoioe the decision 0L 24'! millions in Brti-ish Indie. slime. and oi another 50 millions inhabiting the Nanvs Btaias ruled by the Princes The Princes cannot blindly see their powers taken from them. but cannot Tematmblind in national l-lPlYli-ltllll- dust homrepressntative. though. are 'thete vodferous aspirations’! They an heard in British, India alone. though may. be stirred up in the Native States. The 247 millions in British India live in i500 towns and half-s-miliion villages. The educated are in the terms alone. and pfltflld to speak for the rural hordes who are oblivious to government one! the w! collector is satisfied. lsssa a sftiiation? Given u» more! llaehthrsad istoamushtwiih x ' ' 1A Imperial Oi! Product: Are Made in tbs fliariti/ns: IMPERIAL ifiousraiai LUBRICANTS _-....__-...»-...-..=.i¢-;. -.-.-a -._~....-_..- - - meaning. either of the good or the evil sprit. What you think you may he sewing for a prince may be flung u a breech-clout to a crossing- sweepsr. The defy your per- captions. It is the hidden purposes that are real in India, and these cannot be revealed in any picture. not even when the pigments are splashed on the palette by the Times IndiaNumbe . m ilistructive artic- les are written by experts with first- handmsualiy with lifelong knowledge of what they write. The more illum- inating they are. the farther you are sunk in a swirl of complexities, ethnic religious. ethical. (filly one discon- certing fact impresses itself. India is inexorably Indian. She is an enigma. The mllmatioai bids accep- tance; but denies explanation. British Achievement 1 British achievement in India is very pea-l. and‘ at no time has its white pdministratars numbered more than ‘M00. Their accomplishments are feots obtmdins upon ova-y phase of ills-in the land. The British ha: is -neralofsl.cndon wemanawreatb Wlsatcanany manmshs out oLisbIaoiediai-notdolngmormfornot ihavlfll done this and that: but he has Rubber plantations, ‘in Iumatrr. any garnish; the‘. _ii_is Indian year. graziqgur oi sceomplhliment should _ eovetloiiussuaelansslqlilll- noablallowed to he swamped I blame for omissions. An alien ruling power has never undertaken a-task either Q mammoth or so imponible, or so splendidly performed so sacred a. duty. Nothing like it is to be found in modem history. Its very mag- nificence add poignancy to the in- ‘oispuwsiy stupid superiority with which its creators have held them- selves aloof from, and above, a peo- ple oi differing cultures and a super- sensit ve nature. Perhaps that, that small oversight alone, is the massive obiezizien which has. at last, induced the educated. the thinking, and the national among Indians themse you, with what is ungrsclous indifference to real achievements. to demand that their national aspirati- ons be conceded. The ~ politician" cries "India a Nation." and has made himself heard. To what extent, with what answerelng echo. is not - yet apparent. lie appeals for support from a hetrogeneity of very mixed motivl. But he is raising a standard thee has never failed to summon many peoples to _ heights. ylhfl plunged as many ushers into bitter ‘ Icblivicn. The volume of response Incme or it. sou are " unable h weave ‘doneithat ind ohl. Prnlm for the lthis Mil gets will b5 better knmnflpjgy, 111i; i, m; gglg omiggim u“; _ _______ __,____,______ _.__.____----_-~-sa—-- . 15ml. a iLl"ll1‘3l‘ governor and aciing- illGPii all the grand achievendnts Q ivhizii the many fragments-racial. religious. linguistic, and cultural-of which the population is composed. are hedged around. From the point, of view from which the" people of: this country will now be called upon 5 to examine and pass Judgment upon the future relations between the two countries. this is by no means the, least of the achievements which stand , to the credit of Great Britain in India." Very true. Only while the llrltlsh have been breaking‘ down the barriers severing the Indian peoples’. they have unyieldingly upheld the barrier of social superiority between themselves and cultured Indians. With the fatuity of the most brilliant _ civil axlminisoratfm the sons ‘has ever known, the British in India ilnd g themselves hated because they have 80 never acted as better than "snobs" in their personal relations with the men they were at the same time elevating to high planes of intellectual superi- before the year is mush older. _ ; Butrlhdla a Nation." i. ma Db >1 \ a . I t . i‘; may yet prova how dbsatisfrifll have vlceroy. writes in the Times Indlan|Brltlsh rule in India. The Tiliiglishe ‘ Number, “is derived from the genius lmsn in India has been above reproach ‘ which the British have shovm for 1am held himself ussovwechabiefllha breaking down the barriers with iattitude i5 0n! l0 Wlllllh 11° "3555 h“ submitted when able to resist it. -' PLUMBING sQin llamas I Expeditions and y; Expert Workmans Send to Opposite Prince ass-pi -___._.._- q . l ¢ s5? ltfliv‘ if you want J z.‘ . ii. Traiia, Grafton Sires ‘ I I w Phone 383d ‘_ ' - - . I i: . esewwll