A Dominion Life Pension Bond, ‘Small regular deposits during years of earning, will provide monthly income, you specify. {Think of the actual necessities Dominion Life Pension Bonds are designed td meet the individual needs of any woman, married or single. Ask the representative in the coupon below for details. OMINION Llré" ASSURANCE COMPANY IIIID OFFICE I peace of mind you will enjoy, ,when you know that your later years are pro- vided for—extra funds for travel, clothes, little luxuries-or a regular income fog the Nsme................... Jaw... ‘paid for by your earlier an assured payable later, at any time of life. Dominion Life your neighborhood, or send - wa-rznmo. onrnmo, Domini Life Assee. Co. Waterloo, Ont. Dept. 17 Please send details of your Pension Bond. Ayn BANK-"OF NOVA scorm r J. A..MacKENZIE, C. L. U. PROVINCIAL MANAGERIPRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BLDGZ-CHA RLOTTETO WN lN MEMORIAM '. ma. Tuaornrnus GALLANT "Ifhe sudden death occurred at Martin on June 1st oi Theophllus Gallant, in the 86th year of his age. Mr. Gallant had been ailing for a icw days, but his condition-ups not considered dangerous ‘and on the morning oi his death, he partook of his breakfast and died suddenly within an hour. The sympathy oi many friends will go out to the family, doubly bereaved in so short a time. _______________ MRS TIIEOPHILUS GALLANT It ls our sad duty to chronicle YOUBIIHILD Not Stupid- Handicapped ' The sealing stupidity of many school children, is directly chargeable to faulty vision. Correctly fitted glasses often work wonders. Have your child's the death oi Mrs. Theophilus Gal- lant, which took place at Martin on April 11th at the ripe age oi 83. For the last few years, Mrs. Gallant was in falling health, but bore her suf- ferings with Christian patience and fortitude, during which time she was often visited by her pastor, the‘ Rev. W. V. McDonald, who also ad- ministered her with the last rites oi the Roman Catholic Church. Mrs. Gallant was a woman of many christian virtues, ready at all times to give a helping hand and always looking on the bright side oi life. For a number oi years she had made her home in Haverhill, Mass, where _she had made hosts oi friends, who will regret to hear oi her demise. Besides her sorrowlng husband, she leaves‘ to mourn, three daugh- ters, Mrs. Felix Rogers, Methane, Mass; Mrs. Ephraim DesRoches, Haverhill, Mass; Mrs. Leo Doiron, Wardhlll, Mass: two sons, Joseph, oi Haverhill, Mass, and Andrew, on the old homestead, and two brothers, John in U. S. A., HUM Tan- is Pineau, Quebec. The funeral, which took place fronl hcr home to St. Ann's Church, was largely attended. A Requiem Mass was celebrated by her pastor, Rev. W. V. McDonald, who also oi- ficlated at the grave. The pall- bearers were: Messrs. Jos. O. Gal- lant, Peter Murray, Jos. T. Doiron, Andrew Doiron, Leon Peters and Mathias LeClare-(l-laverhill and Latvrcncc, Mass, papers please eyes examined 5,‘, Iv li. F. llllTlillESllN F. Cordon Hutcheson Optometrists-At your service. _ . FERTILIZERS That Fertiliser required to finish your planting can be obtained by team or by truck _ It onrflotory in Charlotte- townlor we will send it to you by roll or by boat u you re- illllre,_jl'o.aro ready to serve 1"» * The 51am Limited g __ copy). l J Liberals Oppose l Em bargo Upon Russian Imports OTTAWA, June l2—Definlte 0P- posltion to the Rllfl-‘dln °mb3TB° On the ground that it is “inconsist- ent, unbuslncsslike, inefficient, end will hurt no one but ourselves," came from Hon. W. D. Euler, form- er Minister or National Revenue. who spoke during the budget de- bate Wednesday. The course 0i the government in respefit t° B31551“ was approved by R. L. Baker, Con- servative member for Toronto Northeast. Russia. was "e commer- cial and religious enemifi" By "P ploltlng its own people it Pro-som- ed unfair competition to tho other nations. qrent Britain and t!!! U!“ ed states would do well to follow the example oi Canada, in barring . _ June. The moths oi the chief in- Cutworms And Their Control --__ Cutwornls are stout, hairless cat- erpillars, varying from less than sn inch to almost two inches in length when iuli grown. The colour varies with the species, the most common one being a dark, greasy grey. Un- der normel conditions they teed at night, hiding in the soil during the day. They cut ofl the plants near the ground or s little below it. They attack almost all garden plants, particularly when young and suc- culent. Nearly all our destructive species winter as partly grown lar- vse or eggs in the soil. ‘These de- velop snd attack the plants during May and June and possibly early July. However, cutworm injury usually ceases before the end oi lurious species appear ln July and August, and lay their eggs on weeds, grass and occasionally in the ground. Clean cultivation is an eflectivs method oi control. Ii a crop is to be put on land that has been in sod, it should be ploughed as early as possible in August and cultivated occasionally to keep down grass and weeds sothst eggs will not be laid there, or ii they have been laid be- fore ploughing, they and any larvae or starved. When cutworms have begun to attack plants, the best control known is to use a poison bran bait such as the following: 4 ,_ , Bran, 2o lbs. "M i Paris Green. ‘A lb. (recommended because it kills quickly), ca Molasses, l quart. W?" . Water. 2 to 3 gallons. Mix the bran and Paris Green thoroughly in a tub while dry. Dis- solve the molasses in part oi the water and wet the poisoned bran with the mixture and remainder oi the water until all is wet and will iall like sawdust through the fin- gers. A few flakes oi the above mix- ture dropped near each plant but not touching it, will be sufficient. Ii whole fields are attacked, seat. ter the bait at the rate oi about 20 pounds per.acre over the ground Just after sunset. This time oi day ls best because the cutworms begin to feed then and they preier the bait while it is fresh. One applica- tion is usually sufllcient, although sometimes two or even three are necessary. Ii it is at all likely that cutworms will be troublesome, it is a good plan to prepare the land ior plant- lns In the spring. and a day or two before the plants are set out or seed sown, scatter the bait broadcast over the ground in the evenlngso that the worms will find it and eat. Many will be destroyed in this way. Aluiays remember to keep all live stock, including poultry, from the field where the bait is broadcast, and to use "only utensils that may be kellt for that purpose or that may be thoroughly cleaned after use. Canadian Skilled ‘ii With Pen and Plow TORONTO, Ont., June l2.—(By The canedlan Press)-It is Just fijty yea-rs since Howard Angus Kennedy landed in Canada, bent on farming, and dropped into writing instead. Long afterwards he did get s. iarm, nor was he any oi your kid-glove agriculturlsis, ior he never shrank from the rough- est experience. The plow and the axe are as dear to him as the pen; only fate ordained that but for a few years’ interlude the pen should hold him iast. After 10 years of journalism in Montreal, varied by a summer in the West as wsr cor- respondent throughout the Riel Rebellion campaign, he returned to England, where he re-organlzed and ior 20 years edited the weekly edition of The ‘FIMIES; but all that time he was enthusiastically writ- lng and talking Canada ior the en- llghtenment oi stay-st-homo Brit- ons, and dashing beck here on ev- ery opportunity to keep in touch with the adopted country he had so early learned to love. When at last his son had graduated from MeGlll he pulled up stakes and came beck to spend the rest oi his days where he belonged. He is now the Nations-l Secretary oi the Canadian Authors‘ Association, which holds its annual convention in Toronto this month. The books by which he is chiefly known to the grown-up reader are “The Story oi Canada," "New Ca- nada and the New Canadians,“ "The Book oi the West," the mys- tery-without-murder novel "Un- sought Adventure," and a lively bi- ogrsphy oi his lively and famous uncle Professor John Btusrt Black- ie oi Edinburgh. But he long ago won a far wider and devoted following among the children. A family oi four rznall Canadians begged him ior ‘ielry tales. Having given them all the that have hatched will be destroyed-i There he met an ancientn these camp-fire legends That is the origin oi as he whittled and strung at his snowshoe-mak- ing on the banks oi the Ottawa, to the lonely small son 0i the white teacher on the Indian reserve. United States editors and pub-l llshers have no particular lil:ing' (to put it mildly) for Canadian stories. outside the conventional type built around the Mounted Po- lice. Yet this book oi Kennedy's caught on at once. south of the line THE CHARLurreTowN 095.3011»: PAGE FIVE one day at Oks, on the Ottawa marvels oi imagination-giving it will be a feature of the exhibition River. Indian chief who had fought on but in the attractive style of a nat- our side in the war o.’ i812. Dis- covering the extraordinary wealth of wonder tales handed down from one story-teller to another among our many red-skinned tribes, he turned into such stories as he had found his young friends most clamorous- ly welcomed. “Tile Canadian Fairy Book," in which the stories are told by young Chiei Ossawippl, ot in dry doses of crude folklore ural born story-teller. Undcr the name of "The New World Fairy Book," it has had in the Un-ited' States l0 times its Canadian cir- culatlon. In fact, Canadians only discovered in the laut few years that this book, for nearly n generation a children's favorite down there, actually belonged to our own country. Not only has it reached its ninth edition, but its author is now celebrating his lit- erary jubilee by thc completion of a companion volllme, "The Red Man's Wonder Book.“ ' To illustrate such a work with the high degree of imagination rc- quircd for giants. dragon", W57- ards and lmps, ns well as intimate knowledge of ollr will! life flllfl rcenery. Mr. Kennedy was arkcd l)_\' his American publisher in find a Canadian artist. The young man The legends on which it ma" based had no frontiers; and public ll- brarians espoclally found it earl"- ly what was wanlrd to rive Mfr juvenile readers an uud stnnrlnz Russian goods, Mr. Baker declared. old stock, he out about for new. A appreciation oi the orfglnal inhab- Ihkgr. m”. hlmltsnts Ol’ this continent, with their he found in the Province of Que- ,bec. George L. Cumlne, ciltcred with ‘own gusto into ti! spirit oi the lwrrk that his 80 pictures "lit ylho words ns a glove fits the hand," be held in the Toronto Art Gallery during inc Convention of the Ca- maclian Authors’ Association. of Canadian illustrators work to STRIBLlNG-SFIIMEIJNG FIGHT TO SET MANY RECORDS (United Press Stall‘ Correspondent) CLEVELAND, Julie 13.—lU.P.l— Alauy “fil'.=.t" records will be estab- lished July 3 when Max Schnlelillg oi Germany locks leather with Young" Stribling oi Georgia for the heavyweight cilampionship of the world. It will l1:- illc first time that a spccllzclc has bran held in Cleve- land's new $;l.0O0,000 lake front luuuicipal starliulu. It will be the first time that the been spent for mcnts. A graduating platform will provide a clear-vision view of the ring. tion has been temporarily relieved to an extent with the hiring of 3,- 500 ushers, ticket takers and general Every user of ordinary gas can vast- liy increase the Power of his motor with Marathon “Blue”—— at no in- crease in cost, for Marathon “Blue” sells at the same price as ordinary gas. The more modern the type of your motor the greater will be the increase in Power. Fill up at the nearest Red Indian pump and judge its Power for yourself. Marathon “BLUE” Gas is made in Canada LFCOLI-FRONTENAC Oll- LIMITED . MAKERS or rm: FAMOUS CYCLO NO-KNOCK moron ' run. asp urn INDIAN MOTOR OILS 59mm? arrange‘ flunkles who will seat the fight DOV ulace ill the stadium. Under the dl- rection of Jim Eustis, veteran mats- tcr of ceremonies of the- 358G350! Square Garden corporation, tlli’ small army will be drilled for more than a wreck in performing its du< ties. The local unenlploymeut situa- luillle uf the Rhiuclaud has de- fciulvrl his illle since he won it from Jack Sluirkcyl last sunlmcr. It will be the first time that oc- cupants oi $.33 srals czul loll hack lu snllll comfort, ludixulual arm- chnirs. l8 inches wide, harm: been purchased in care the weight oi til. top-price ticket holders. lt will Ill- tile first time-so the lacwrdlng to the author o.’ the words himself. These drawings promoters say-that $90,000 has . W ‘l’ .