.'.K,..r-..iau_.-P.-s.=~ was... . New- §mort'/"70d!rn., Z‘ PICCGSUITE ‘If n! I/flJ-e Dflebunn Pam li herd I =Ci~ecl it ‘h elegantly styled Ingllllh Z-pco suite c! luxurious contort. Hm- 1y tailored and excellent thrill‘ construction. Gently-form end inviting lounge chair -nultn to enhance your h price affording en frru loving. It l-ypifinl tn value! anti!‘ you now at this store. NGLIAAWS Clftown and Summeisidc aronurrnwu _l nus starter via Cardigan and Newport Ferry Road Loaves Georgetown 8.30 Cardigan . . . . . . . 9.00 Arrives Charlottetown .. 10.00 leaves Charlottetown ... 4.00 Daily service. Parcels carried. ‘Bus will stop on signals. “Nobana Tea Rooms and F. J. flplomons, Georgetown. aei I: -8-2-t 8785 :——— —- . S. FAIINGRTII Leaves BOSTON 10th, 20th, 30th of each month for CHARLOTTETOWN v i a Halifax, arriving three days later. m. . m. m. urn»? a Returning via Bras d'0r Lakes, Sydney and Halifax. or passenger, freight and Qutornobile rates apply to TBuntain, Bell 8t 0o. Phone 829. EY ES I G N T EXAMINATION I‘ Fitting and supplying Gianna, . _ C. i‘ N. J. IAABG N I ‘ OFNMETRIBT Office Connected With Drugstore .J r j Ifrofessiona ‘Bards cLEOD Er BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. O- J. A. BENTLEY, K. 0. - MONEY m L0 JOIIee: 180 "Ilcbmond ltrelt- . . ~ a fir?" "Harland" at three, back It L-ém-r-io-zo-a-z-n-za-za-ao. THE RT. IION. MACKENZIE 9 to 9.30 ‘lllllltlfl Standard Tim; TDNIGNT CFCY—630 kc. and a Coast-to-Coost Network The Central Guardian of local interest but advertising of n newny nature may hc inserted n: l eente l word strictly payable In edvnneu FIVE. ’ L-B856-8-5-li. CONFEDERATION LIFE INSUR- ANCE. L-679B-7-12—3lZ. DR. J. W. McKENZIE of the Polyclinio has resumed his prac- tise. L-B83l-8-3-2i. CHRISTENING CEREMONY- The many friends and relatives gathered to witness s. very inter- esting event solemnized by the Dundas United Church, at a. double christening ceremony held at the residence of Mr. and Mrs- Allan J. Macdonald at Albion Cross on Monday, July 8th, at 8 p.m. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart M. Macdonald was baptized Louise Aileen with her grnndaunt, Miss Sarah Harriet Macdonald, RN, named as Godmother. It is an in- teresting fact to note that Miss Macdonald had stood also as God- mother at the christening of her nephew Stewart M. Macdonald. At the same ceremony the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Nicholson. Alblon- Cross, P. E. L, was baptized with the name Sarah Anne. The home was tastefully decorated with a profusion of roses, petunias and sweet Williams which en- hanced the dignity and beauty of the occasion, PERSONAL S Mrs. L. B_ McLellan and daughter ‘Marlon. of Vancouver, are visiting the farmer's sister, Mrs. R. H. Rcg- GTS. . His Honor Judge Slipp. Frederic- ton, N.B., and Mrs. Slipp have ar- rived to spend a vacation here. Miss Grace Crosby, West Royalty, had as her welcome guest last week her friend. Miss Hilda Binns of Lawrence. Mass. Miss Elaine Macmillan, Kent Street, is spending a. pleasant holiday with relatives in W Jd Island. ‘ Mrs. J. W. MacKenzle, Chorlotw- town. left Thursday on a visit to the Magdalen Islands, the guest of Miss Clam Clark. lvftrs. Wellington Burns had as her guests for the weck her sister. Mrs. W. A. Gay of Wollaston. Mass, and her two nieces, lviiiss Gwendolyn Sella:- and Miss Marion Altken of Edmonton, Alberta. MR8. WALTER. WINCHELL Because Walter Winchell was vacationing when his wife pre- sented him with a baby boy, the noted New York columnist, usually one jump ahead of the atork in recording “blessed events." wee un- able to publish his own "scoop." BLESSTNG B KING This column la reserved for IIIII Reverend A. Firth, pastor of the ,_ Alert-W. Matheaon And now -- an slat LINEN HUCK Towers Direct from the Irish Mills, A record. in value! Heavy weight colored, bordered, I opportunity ‘ bleached L i n e n Towels, 17x32” IRISH LINEN GLASS TOWELS Pair . . . . 50c l d~b°rdered Heavy weight plain bordered Fine, quality co ore 2 ‘or 29c bleached Linen Towels 20x36” 18x31 - Pair . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . 85c Fine quamy typed bordered, 20x30” Hellhfllildled damask bllrdered Zfor . . . . Linen Towels 17x32”. Pair 75c _ _ l 24 36,, Hem-stitched damask bordered linen Plain linen extra argc’ _ liege Towels, 20x36”. Pair 95c 3f0T---------------'---' - ' - ' n OYSTER LINEN ~ Plain‘ Hemstitched Linens . direct from Irish Mills Use these in suitable sizesfor Luncheon Sets, Tea Sets etc.——-— VAT-DYED LINEN in Green and Gold 36x36” Each 50c 17x36”...... ........Each,35c 35x3”....... . . . . . . . . ..Each95¢ l7x45”...... . . . . . . .. Each 45c 17x36"........ . . . . . . . .. Each 60¢ l2x18”.... . . . . . . . . . . . .. Each l5c 17x45",__,._.... . . . . . ..Each75c 12x12". .............. .. Each 10¢ 12X1z"_,....... ...... "Each 15¢ 18x18"..... . . . . . . . . . . .. Each 15c 12x_1$".......... . . . . . ..EachZ5¢ Hand Embroidered Linen Luncheon 5e15, 13 pieca Se; _ _ _ _ _ 5259 p Hand Embfflidered Lille" Lllnchefln Sets, 17 piece worth $8.50 for $6 set J 7 .~‘ ‘.i r-"TT-"fi Irish llnen colored ‘border TAB LE CLOTHS Oyster L i n e n Table Cloths, with Blue, Gold. Green borders, 50x50" At 69c Damask Linen Table Cloths, with Blue, Gold, Green borders, 52x52” At . 98c Irish linen Roller Towelling Irish Linen Roller Tow- elling 17"‘ wide worth 25c, On sale, yard . 19c Irish Linen Roller Tow- elling, 18” wide- worth 28c. On sale, yard . 22c Itwlemlliglfl . Dr. Camsell (By Central Press Canadian) VANCOUVER. Aug. 2-—Hidden among frozen wastes of the rub- Arctic Yukon, hemmed in by ice- ribbed hills and cheerless tundm, are steaming valleys of tropical warmth. Dank. heavy vegetation. thick as the clinging vines of a jungle land grows there; great beasts. remnants of the prehistoric raoe of animals that once roamed unknown- land. S0 go the stories. Gold is there, too, gold in huge quantities, gold in.profusion. hid- den by the mystery that guards the valleys-according to legend. Old sourdough who have spent their lives amid Yukons wilds, 1n- dians roaming northern British Columbia, prospectors following the lure of yellow metal in o forsaken land, all bear tales of this legznd- any valley that has vanished amid ice and mow and yet lives 0n in some secluded gash of the hills. None has ever been there; some have dared the mystery and men- ace that is said to brood over the hidden valley. but none ever re- turned with an authentic story. Always the tale of gold and mystery was the re-telling, of anothcr's story. Many. PIOSDOOMI», trappers. explorers have died prying into the . recrets of the hills. Fimt Indians Lived There Perhaps there is something oi’ truth in the legend of tropical valleys in southeastern Yukon and northern British Columbia. Great dinosaur-us may still splash lazily through pools of steaming water. gold lay thick among the sands of naturally bested rivers. The 1e;- cnds also say that the Nnhanni district o: Yukon was tha cradle of America's inhabitants. That ep- parently is true. Scientists have long agreed that the original in- habitants of North America drifts down from Asia. crossing the Bering Sea. when dry land lay across that strait. There are caves and mounds in this rock-strewn district that bear out the conten- tion that a vanished race once ekeci out an existence there. Rude im- Dlemcnts and utensils can still be < ~=\'r"v~"~ llP l-‘NPHER Mysterious “Tropical Valley” Lures To Adventure In North About‘ myoua. nhfllvil Dr. Charles Cnmsell, who w-ll make aerial cur- vey of legendary "tropical valley” shown on map. Winter scene from "film ls shown BELOW. This strc am in _the S. Nabannl river district \ remains open all winter. found. proving beyond doubt‘ theta party, led by Dr. charles Cantrell. man once lived in the valley-gushed hills. This much, then, is true. Why not the other legend-the story of hidden valleys and jungle gold? Perhaps today the mystery of the Nahanni river country is nearer its unfolding than ever before. An official Oanadia investigating deputy minister of minor in the federal government, is already pushing into the forbidden moun- tain country in an aerial mapping and exploration trip that may tattle forever the legend of the Nehanni. What the party hone to find — if anything-is not stated is still un- explored. rhaps there is gold —— another Klondike; hidden in tho hills. Dr. Camsell wishes to know, Undoubtedly, however, the aerial survey will probe more fully than ever before the story of tropical valleys there. No Arm-chair ‘theorist No arm-chair theorist is Camsell. nod did he work his way up with book-knowledge alone. The gruel- ling struggle of the prospector. the heart-b re a k i n g discouragement, days of endless toil with paddle and pick, with failure and disappoint- ment as the wage. all these Dr. Camsell knows from experience. Nor is he new to tho hunt for Nnhannfs tropical retreats. Once before. when he left University of Manitoba with funds exhausted, he pushed into Canada's sub-Arctic on the trail of gold, and for six years prospected through these hills. In 1807 come new: of the Klondike. Ycung Csmsell, then 2i years old. stazted across the Rockies with one companion, headed (or the Dawson goldfields. All winter they travelled through the frozen wartes, easing their dog-sled over rough mountain trails, seeking passes in hills which they could not surmount, plunging into vallcys unknown to maps. They never reached the Klondike; food ran out at the head of the Laird river and for two months in the early summer of 1898, these two lived by what they could win with rod and gun. But in their travels they stumbled into one of the so- celled tropical valleys. It consisted only of a few hot springs from which gushed warm water, and steaming pools. - Born In North This trek was not an unnatural experience to Charles Camscil. it was in his blood. Born in 181d under the northern lights of Fort Laird where hie father was Hudson _ Bay factor. the lad had tbs north born with him. At 1a he had won his Bachelor of Arts demo from University of Manitoba. Then he was "on his own." Camsell had many years of labor in the north before he achieved success. In 190i he was seeking a tsnninal for the Algoma Central Railway on James or Hudson ‘Bay. 1n i902 he was geologist on a party which surveyed the Peace Rivler country. From mos m 1911 he was doing geological work for the B, C. Size 12 x 18" . -...--... Sizo72x90” L r Cloths, Runners, Place mats in Fillet Lace Fillet Lace Clothe, llunners, Place Mate, etc. Siu 10x 14” Each 10c Sire 17x 36" Each25c Each 12c a h$l.85 EC J Seersucker and Fancy Kingcot Bedspread These are 72 x 90 inches, Seersucker in stripes, Kingcot in fancy designs in Blues» Rose, and Gold. See them-they are their own best salesmen. brunch of the Geological Survey. In 1913 he was given charge 0f the Dominion Geological Survey-end found that his job included explor- ation of practically one-third of Canada which w» still unmapped. Ho started out to do that job and not from Behind a desk. October. i814. brought him news o! the war. far up in the Athabarka country. His country used him in the war years to locate new deposits of minerals needed for munitions. In 1019. with a. nation-wide reputation already his. he was appointed dep- uty minister of mines. i Now once again he turns his at- tention to the sub-Arctic Yukon. New wealth may be hiddemthera. new country waiting to be opened up for industry. During his ex- plorationspDr. Camsell hopes to rettledefinltely the truth or other- wise of the tropical valley legend. Anxious Days for Civil Servants (Monctan Timon) Referring to the recent shame of governments in New Brumwick and Prince Edward Island, and the approaching federal election u well as the provincial election in Quebec. the Montreal Gazette remarks that these are anxious days for the civil servants who face the prospect of new. and perhaps hostile, Cabinet ministers sitting in judgment on their records and their actions un- der immediately preceding admin- istrations. In theory, says the Gaz- ette. the civil servant, often appoin- ted as a reward for party service, becomes at once a non-partisan, in- terested only in doing his allotted teak to the but of his ability, and doubtless the majority of them would be quite content to accept this condition. In practice. under tho party system of government. the civil servant is occasionally, if not frequently called u to carry out instructions given a minister, a deputy or a departmental bead which involve partisan interest or discrimination, or, lacking explicit orders, he ll tacitly given to under- stand that considerations must not be ent y forgotton tn dealing with governmental affairs. An un- usually ltrung-mmded and conscien- tious employee may resent this nit- ualion and so incur the ill-will of his superiors: the average man will bow to the force of circumstances. only to find himself, »if the whlrlgig of mutton bright: 00900111] Rltlllg $149 J into power, an obiwt of susplfilvll and perhaps dismissal. Nor are 5110b enforced partisan activities neces- sary to make him the victim of the headsmanb axe, for of the hundreds o! dismissals which followed the taking of office by the Hepburn Government last year in Data-riv- many, and perhaps the malority, were those of employ”! WM b’! no conceivable interpretation 0! their records could be adiudlfd guilty of any political sin 9th" than that they had been Conserva- tives before their appflintment. 01' that they had relatives who were - known to be Conservatives. Bo W19‘ ably unjust were wme o! the dil- plnoemente that several of Premier Hepburn’; strongest journalistic sup- porters felt constrained to utter words of protest against the W310"- sale slaughter of faithful and offici- ent public servants. In marked contrast to this course was that pursued when the present Government at Ottawa came 111M office in mo. Not only were "w" very few dismissals, and those wer- rantoble on valid grounds. B!" fl number of officials known to nave been good Liberals before being tak- en into the service were given rush- er and mom responsible PM“. ll" only points taken into consideration being their maritl. their cllllblllll" end their general fitness for th! pngltlons to b, filled. their viou-s political affiliations bein! scored- In the swooping political cbanses which have occurred in the Past few eeks it is to be hoped that the vic- d“ will exercise the same modera- tion and sense of fair play whlfll characterized the advent of Consev votive rule at Ottawa five rears n2‘ Auornm nnseu. snmss (Oanndisn Pius) RICHMOND. Va" Alli. l—-Ff0m "rumu w remit to remit" isnw way a double or three-play killinll may be announced in the maim’ league baseball records in the not ammt future. hm"- fenoe-busting outfielder of the local tum in the Piedmont Mire ha! an average of .401 and is confident be will noon be called up to the W time. preferably with tho from" ma 80x, a mm with 000mm" brothers-Wu and Rick. YOTITI Then la a fooling of eternity l“ youth which mabu u around: for everything. To be young II i» II one 0! the Ilnmflltfllnllellitt. 4w sconce MCMANIIR‘ tam’? woeosram IT- Maestab anon-ten. suns L ‘KNOWIKVMAOGIES - Hi _ wsu: nsuw rr snub? 5V AND LE out: |5N'T IT wgzoazpg; sac-rust: ousr oaoonno mues- “BsiJI’t=’§=“-"°TH YOU Guarani»?