race riis GIAILOTTETIIWII GUARDIAN Ierulng Dally (Founded In 1587) Prelltlont: Lleut. Col. W. Chuter 8. MeLure Vlce-Prealilent: J. ll. Burnett. I‘. J. l. Iefletary: Lleut. Col. D. A. hlaellnnon, 11.8.0. liter all Managing Director: J. l. Burnett. IJJ. and Lleut. Ian \I0ollte llltoru: Frank Walker A. Burnett, RJZLNJLR. i011 Aetlve Service) The Strongest Memory ia Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." TUESDAY, AUGUST s, 1m Parliament Too ‘Sissy’? .Apropos the suspension from the House of Commons of Dr. Herbert Bruce for denounc- ing the Government's family allowances bill as I "bribe", the Toronto Globe and illnil wonders whether the present Parliament isn't being dom- inated by “panrv-ivaists" in fear of strong words. It recalls that Alexander MacKenzie called the Macdonald (iovernment an "organized hypoc- risy" without a suspension penalty; and that Sir Wilfrid Laurier described Sir Hibbert 'l‘up- per's charges against Major \\'alsh as "con- ceived in absolute anti wanton malice", and an aspect of the Borden Government's naval policy ll "a auahlous and immoral violation of the fundamental rulcs of British parliamentary gov- ernment" without the Speakers reprimand. The (Ilolw am! J/iiil could have gone fur- ther, suggests the OHim-n Journal. It could have looked up some of .\lr. Mackenzie King's char- acterizations of .\lr, Mcighrns “shadow” Gov- ernment, antl would have found rich evidence for its case in some of .\lr. .\lcighen's speeches. There was the turbulent night. for example, when Meighcn told .\lr. llennett that he was the “gvaniilphone of .\l.'tcl\'cnzie and Mann." The (Ila/lie and Jlni/ could have gone, too, to the Mother of Parliaments: back to the days of Fox. Pitt, Burke and Sheridan, and down through the era of O'Connell and Disraeli on through to the days of (Tliamlierlaiii and Lloyd George. lt might have recalled (irattans fairi- ous philippic against Flood; "Sir, I say it to your beard. you are not an honest man." It might have recalled O'Coniiell's description of P l: “He has a smile like the gleam of a silver p te on a coffin." lt might have pointed to Disraelis charlcterizatioii of Gladstone: _ "A sophisticated rhetoriciait. inobriatcd with the exuberance of his own verbosity. and gifted with an egotistical imagination that can at all times command an intcriiiiii- able and inconsistent series of arguments to malign an opponent and glorify himself." It might have recalled, too, Lloyd George's gearing remark to J00 Chamberlain: “While the empire expands the Cliamberlainls contract". or T, P, O'Connor's "Jutlasi. hurled at the same loe; or Cihaitiberlaiifs own retort to John Dil- lon: "the honorable gentleman is a 200d 1111123 of treason": or Justin McCarthy telling John Bright that "his generous impulses of youth have been succeeded by a mean olll 329-" TllfW‘ have never bscn afraid of strong words in the hlothci‘ oi Parliaments, Perhaps it is be- cause they have rcalizetll that angcr is among the cleanest of passions. and that indignation, even ifiexpresscd in hard or perhaps cruel langu- age. at least indicates devotion to a C0l1\'1CllOl1 .__,.-1,iCh is not .1 llflll thing. Courtesy, what is called the "amenities of debate," is‘ desirable. llut when it is carried to the point offalsitv. bfloillci P1 ‘T119613 0-’ ‘mnflhmg m ffllst‘ liypocr - to ihe level of a M-inciple. it can become a dangerous thing. Aiding the Bombed-Oul Hugh Daltiir, pre-ideii: of the llritish litiar-‘l of Trade. rctiily a lleyi neiit of Commcrcr. says he can provide 11lilll_\' furniture for three people, exclusive of carpets and crockery, for about $175. l-iiirnitvrv iiicliiiles a double bed. l single bed, a tll'L‘~'~Cl' with iilirtru‘, a dining table, two 3l‘11lCll.'ll1'.< and six small chairs. TlIESIJ furnishings would cost ziboiii $600 in iioii-titil- ity furniture, if thc-v could be obtained at all in wartime. People who iptalify‘ for utility furni- ture. have first call on the supplies of titility sheets, pricc-controllcil blankets and utility ma:- tresscs. This is zirrziiigeil by means of "priority dockets." The people who can apply for these dockets are ire-title whose homes have been bombed; people setting up house because they have yvliiug children 1.1- Jiri- i-xpcctinu a child: couples married on or ziittti" ptcitilicr 1, tofu): couples who propose to itizirry within three months; and people who nccd a bed for the growing child. People who-e bcdrling has been destroyed by bombing lt‘it\ also lllllllY for dor- kets. even ii tlicy liav o: lost tlicir furniture. These goods arc not rationed. Only about one |uarter of the total production of bedding will be reserved for docket holders; the greater oart will be sold in the shops iii the ordinary way to thc general public. Clausewitz It is hardly possible to read a military com- nentary without sooner or later coming across the name of Claiisewitz. \\'ho was this fellow? He was a Prussian general and military writer, born near Madgchtirg in 1780, whose family. originally Polish, settled in Germany at the end of the previous century. He entered the Army in 1792, and saw his first active service in the 1793-4 Rhine campaigns, receiving his com- mission at the siege of Mainz. In 1801 he was admitted to the Berlin academy for young of- fieers, then directed bv Scharnhnrst, after whom the modern German battleship was named. On the latter's strong recommendation he was made Adjutant to Prince August, serving in that cap- lcity at Jena, in 1806, and being captured by the French along with the Prince. In 1810 he married Cotintess Marie von Ilriihl. On thc outbreak" of the Russian war in I812, Clausewitz, like ninny other Prussian of-' ficers, took service with his country's nominal enemy, and he negotiated the Tauroggen Peace and later superintendcd thc formation of the Landwehr of East Prussia. He was Chief of phi Hm ing IUTC‘. for l. R. Tl\'\l' woods." Stuff to Count Wallmoden in the 1813 am- Throu visitors paign. but after the 1814 peace he re-entered the Prussian service, and was present at Ligny and “lavre in the Waterloo campaign as Thiel- mann's Chief of Staff. Later he served in the same capacity to Field Marshal Gneisenau, and in 1831 died at Breslau of cholera. His copious military writings, collected and edited by his widow, rank as classics, especially "Vom Kriege," which is an exposition of the Some German militarists blame Clausewitz‘ teachings for the failure of the German plans in the last war, but his dis- ciples attribute the failure in the present one to their neglect. losoph of war. EDIIURIAL notes .-. Quebec and Alberta election day. U l U, I go back and forth, phl 1O Scotland's greatest industry them. but ba ii k. The Church Times, Church of periodical, announces the Bishop of Hong Kong "purports to have ordained a woman priesthood" and denounces thc unprecedented action as "outrageous" and "aggression." two-coluinn editorial, the paper said the man ordained, a Chinese, was Deaconess Lei Tim Oi of Kowloon and that the ceremony was performed last January. It termed this "a flag- rant breach of the working principles of the church." listed in Who's Who as Rt. Rev. Ronald Owen Hall, “preferred to play a lone hand not like a civilized leader who is himself subject to con- stitutional authority but like a wild man of the The matter "will be raised at next Lambeth Conference," said the paper. I i l I T the gh the intervention of Mr. J. R. Mac- Nicol, M. P., in me discussion on the esti- mates we have received more information about ice-breaking ferries than hitherto divulged. But the most important admission made by Hon. Mr. Michaud was that our new ear ferry "will it will turn around. but U I I l Something mysterious is happening with re- gard to the conversion of the S.S. Prince Ed- ward Island into an oil burner. Bruce Stewart S: Co, Ltd. had the contract and already had converted two boilers with four still to do. Ow- for overhaul, the local firm has lost the contract for the remainder, notwithstanding having all the material on hand for the purpose. steamers removal elsewhere U i U I Johnston. Scot es 14 per cen He calcul Five thousand children are leaving London daily because of the menace from flying bombs, and it is estimated that eventually 15,000 a day will be sent away as transportation can be found The Londoti County Counci is operating a four-class evacuation scheme :— Schoolcliildren, aged from Mothers with children under five; 3. Aged and infirm persons; 4. Other people able leave London. The last two classes have to find their own billets. five to 16; l 8 i t George Canning, British Prime Minister, died this date, 1827; made his reputation as an orator, by his speeches in support of the aboli- tion of the slave trade, proved to be one of the most brilliant and witty orators of his time; served in several capacities as member of thc Government of Lord Liverpool whom he stic- cecdetl as Prime Minister in the he died: “When our perils are past shall our gratitude sleep? No.—lit-re's to the pilot (Pitt) who weatli- ered the storm." are! The shore hotels are all having a busy time of it these days, not only catering for seasonal National Park is a great attraction, and hundreds of lioli- day itiakcrs are to be sccn there every day, but especially over the week-cud, cars with trailers. etc., lining the shore in the part assigned to the general public. Two popular hotels in the Nat- ional Park area are Dalvay and Statihope, un- der the personal tnaiiagtcnieiit of Mr. J. M. Mc- Farlytn. Both these hostelries are fully booked till the end of the month, and, for the most part, booked up again for next season. U * l‘ l transients as well. The Though we do not hcar much about it, thc .\. F. and R. C. A. F. are not neglecting to bomb the seats of the robot bombs. A flying- bomb supply" depot attacked by Lancasters on Friday night was inside the cave.- rlosc to the east bank of the Rive; Oise. Entrances are in a cliff about 60 feet above thc great The caves are large enough tu hold hundreds of the bombs, which are stored in this natural air raid shelter and then taken dir- ect to the launching sites nearer the coast. The German Government has expressed its regret to the Swedish Government that two pilotless planes crashed in South Sweden. ity of the Baltic are other robot factories which our airmen are endeavouring to ferret out. It may take time but just as the Lf-boat menace was eradicated, so will t F U In the vicin- he robot. i I! England to the In a wo- he Church Times said the Bishop, the Social Creditors are not appreciated in Lon- don. The Province of Alberta bond and stock- holders‘ protective committee for Great Britain has told Alberta Premier E. C. Manning that it cannot accept the premier‘s the province is "entitled to demand and enforce a reduction in interest terms of its existing loan contracts." to Mr. hlanning was in reply to one written by him March 31 to the coitntiittee in which he was reported to have said that Alberta was en- titled to the reduction because "interest rates generally have gone dowit and there is a sub- stantial amount of refunding being done at con- siderably lower rates than four per cent." suggestion that The text of the committee's letter is her agricul- Making this declaration in the British llouse of Commons, Mr. Tom tish Secretary, said it employs has 20,000 tractors, and produc of Great Britain's food output. ates that after feeding herself Scotland exports 1,0oo.o00 tons of oats, beef, shcep, and potatoes, not to mention 150,000 tons of fish, i i i I 170,000 people, 2. to year in which lime-stone THE flutes By The thy lnDunhlll had founded lfihtere. the excitement t eluled?" n1 Th hey ate; Bennett Cerf 1 bo crowd, ch head by a lhmmd) Mflllnd gives a characteiifsetfon of a New; Review. IIIXO DB thle joke fir"? n Goebbels. m W. L. Clark 1n Wfndeor Star. u a bloodthirsty Fascist. Caureoi lies 1n a local cemetery illness. some garments and. shortly after, 1n the same room, lighted a match. death. The warning has often been given. It 1s again repeated-Hunts- ville Forester. The first farm camp school of Its klnd 1n England to train children 1n agricultural work has been op- ened 1n Warwickshfre. The children come from Aston Commercial School, Birmingham, and will spend the mornings 1n education of the more academic kind. just m 1f they were at Aston. During the after- noons they will help the farmers in the district. -- Birmingham Post. out, of NevTTzTauiia will es- cape curfew as this would Involve t erty of law-abiding citizens." an- nounced Mlnister of Justice 1-1. G. R. Mason when questioned on t.h1s topic 1n the House 1n session 1n Wellington. Instead. a special vice squad has been established to meet problems arising from girls under 16 being on the streets at night. Old-‘ashioned people wlll be greatly disturbed to learn that the pie-baking competition at the Stampede has been won by a 13- year-old boy. Even 1n this age of lady rfveters and coal-heavens, most of us have still cluniz to the delusion that cooking, and espe- cially the making of pies. were feminine specialties-Calgary Al- bertan. l Lindbergh was impressed by Ger- man efficiency and the number of German planes which were ready to go into action. If he had known anything about world history he would have known that the race ls not always to the swilft or the battle to the strong. He would have known something about British tenacity 1n the face of danger. But all Lindbergh knew was airplanes, and he made his judgment on the basls of what he knew. The mistake lay 1n asking his cplrilon. -— Pzterbor- oufih Examiner. A Sourdough 1s one who arrived 1n the north country before 1900, according to a man who has ‘lved 1n White Horse longer than that. Who made the ruling 1s not stated. but. 1f 1t 1s accepted, the term may r- applied to persons who are much less pioneers than the Ed- monton old-timers. only those who were in the west by 1895 are con- sfdered 1n the latter category and any one who has been here a mere 40 year; or so 1s still looked upon as very much of a newcomeit-Ed- monton Journal. Rome's monument to Victor Ern- manuel If, King of Italy from 1861 to 1878. 1s the costliest memorial of its kind 1n the world, says Col- 11er's. Built of white marble and embellished vrlth numerous sculp- tured groups and reliefs as well as great equestrian statue of the k1n8. this massive structure occupies a square block, l; as high as an eighteen-story building. cost 86.000.- 000 and was under construction for twenty-slx years before its de- dfcation 1n 1911. In Stockholm, Sweden, the other day. Arne Anderson, a school teach- er, ran a mile 1n four minutes and one decimal slx seconds. 'I‘h1s 1s said to be the fastest mile ever run by man. But that. statement 1s not correct. our Uncle Ted went down into a swamp at. the Black Donald one clay and stuck his head into a hole to see what he could see. A bear was 1n that hole and h. started to come out. And Uncle Ted started to run. He said for the first. mlle he only touched the ton of the high spots with his feet, but after that he Just. settled down to running and he was doing forty- ftve miles an hour on the level when he decided to sto . By that tune he had outrun t e rabbits. so he said, and he figured that as rabbits run faster than bears he could afford to ease up.-Trenton Courier Advocate. George Bernard Shaw has al- Wlys been a bit of a mnrtfnet. 1n Don’ regard to the stage or screen pro- duction of any of his plays. At the present moment his "Caesar 1nd Cleopatra" 1s bSlng filmed at. the Denhnm studl0s. A film reporter who looked 1n at the studio the other day found 0.3.5. who was eighty-eight. years old on Wednes- day, supervising everything from the costumes to the acting, and telling exactly what should be done and how the players (Vivien Leigh the Cleopatra and Claude Raina 1c Caesar) should not. For more than an hour he mood there, n- funinp a chntr, giving advice and fnnructlons. He found fault. with the shoes one of the characters WON; they were not authentic E ttnn. When the filming was ffnla ed for the day he 1s said to have raced pp the steps of a palace eighty feet 11h so that he might. vlew the 11er- gpectlve. The ubilc can depend upon 1t that w en "Caesar und Cleopatra" 1a released 1t Wlll exactly as the author wanted 1t be. Incidentally, Britain 1s not g0- fnv to be left behind 1n the race for world's marke’. 1n movies as she was after the last war. Right now the enham studios are committed to 35 O 3 h. Charla North up- "1 BRIE by remarklni. "If matcnea been Invented after your con- can You Imagine would have e Sntumlly Review of Lifter-azure. Blown aerou a room by a time mb. Wedled In m a1r raid shelter used and sluizxed on the Neal 5W leader (Carl good man hounded by on intangible unseen fear. — When null-Nada In Germany are one ls listenfnz. they tell n : "What 1s the fdenl cow?" Bha mint be u brown as Hitler. u ht u Goertng. have a mouth ‘as 5 ed as the German people." — “"" tloe of the Province. The Jones xii-Ting gsuii-ieaciiiiuiiiiiiiii $.11; °°""““‘°“‘ w“ "‘““‘°" ‘° 9°“ Possibly we make 111m shirt just u loud as his fellow Italian of the same name was Wont to do some years 1m 1n give Metropolitan. —- London Free 855. A well-known lady resident 01' She 1s there not because of years of Her life was snapped out because she used gasoline to wash What resulted caused her instant "undue interference with the 11b- 1 ETOWN GUARDIAN Transportation and Other Island Problems Ialullve Interview Wllh P.E.I. Paulo:- In The Monfllr! T111188. Tore to I I‘ In the postwar year! Prtneo Ed- ward Island, with moat of It: 110D- ulatton e 1n agriculture 1nd flshln . expects to provide techni- cal ucatlon end training for the people of the lnce 1n these and related techn cal subjects. Th1; statement shu been stressed 0n more than one occasion by the Hon. J. Welter Jones. Premier of Can- ada's only Island province. Mr. "Jones first entered the pol- 1t1ca1 field 1n the provincial zen- ernl election of 1885. and won his seat by n. comfortable margin. He In N-CICCIIIG 1n 1909' and Wu called upon to assume the Premier- ship 1n the S ring of 1943 when the then Priemer Thane A. Camp- bell reotgned to become Chief Jus- er 1n the septembe election of that yeag wtnnlng twenty of the thirty M! . "What 1n your oplnlon are the most vital problems lacing Prince Edward Island at the present time?" The Monetary Times asked. "The piecarlousness of the Bor- den-Tormentlne cai- ferry service and the lack of shipping to serve our many harbors are I believe our 011x291’ problems at the Pres?“ e.’ “which of these do you consider the rnost urgent?" "In 1943, 1944 and 1945 the 1m- medlate problem Is transportation by water to the mainland. The chief drawback 1s the car ferry 0n the Borden- Tormentlne route where only one boat, vrhtoti 1s Premier Jones Reviews mz/zvrmz/r... Yes, wanna benefits. ‘Hat's whet you get when you eat Polfi Bren Flakes Check them overl... THEY'RE FIRST wmt ME FOR ozucious FLAVOR" l’ Natural iii-u u. n». form o! bran u help keep you fit“ Jill! OIIMIQII 10150 gently laxative. 2 Wheat nourishment your body needs . . . protein and cerbohydratea, uloful iquantities of iron and phosphorus and other food essentials. 5i An appetizingly diflerent, nut-like flavor that you'll thoroughly enjoy to the lust spoonful. Get Post's Bran flakes today in the ted and cream package. In two sizes: Regu- lar and Giant Economy Size. lint u effective and delicious in bran mufine. Sugarless muffin recipe on the package. ' hardly adequate, operates. The other larger ear ferry was sunk; ln the Atlanttc and will not be re- placed before the autumn of 1945. ‘rhe ferry for trucks and auto-i mobiles operating at Wood Islands to Caribou, N.S.. 1s also very in- adequate especlally for trucks. It 1s expected, however. that improve- ments to conform at least to the carrlers contract will take soon. Transportation Problem In order that the Canadian pub- ic may get a. clear picture of just how serious this major trans- portation problem 1s and how it has affected the interests of '11s provlnce for years, the following facts are revealing. Back 1n 1867 Prince Edward 1s- land did not. enter the Confedera- tton act. as the province was not. satlsf ed with the terms offered (Continued on page eight) PUBLIC FORUM ‘nation lunch. b Ilarletmoiivu Oaarllaa Inna no: ‘ I alone h: STRIKES IN WARTIME s1r,—I wonder 1f a very ordinary country woman might be allowed to speak her mind a blt, re Ihcl strike problem. 1 Let's see where shall I begin? Well first of all to you strikers.‘ here's a questlon-“f-Iavent most. of you got loved ones overseas figm- 111g. yes. and dying too?" “Well. then, don't Ybu thlnk you are shaw- ing your love and pride 1n them- tn a very poor way?" You know, l! I had a job in iinr/‘warttme 1ndus-. try. or at any Wartime W011i. and 1| went on strike. I don't thlnk I could fBCe that returning service man or men. Yes slree, I think I would hang my head in shame! Wheres our reserve manpower? Why don't they take over and at least they wilf be able to say. “Wei helped shorten this war. We step“ pied 1n when the strikers prolongedi e stay of our brothers-ln-armsi overseas." I was talking to n lady recently who had four sons 1n service. What did she think cf the strikes? With a look of dtgust and contempt. she sald of the strikers. " they line a few of them up and march them off to jail, and let service msn take over and show the fellows, who are forever want- fniv, thk or wanting that. that they can zo jump 1n the Atlantic." Good advice, 1 thought, but let's hope some one izives them a good shove 1n, while they are at 1t so they'll stay there. A fellow arrived on the Island lust week in a nice limousine. and when asked 1f 1t were 111s vacation time he casually replied: "Oh. there's a strike on. I'm not Bolng back. you know, till It's settled.’ When questioned he admitted 1t wasn't hard work he wasuninz in the shipyard. He was making $9.50 a day. Some pay! When boys are dying over there. living on short rations. and gofniz through hell for lot less money. No over there, money and living condltlons. c1os-, 0d shop et.c.. do not count. It's love of country and thsdeslre to make a better world for every one to live fn-strikei-s included-though they don't deserve it! Come on. strikers. wake up! Take a long look at yourself 1n the mir- ror and ask thla question of your reflection (Sf you can face 1t). "Am I 801m: to be proud of the part I played 1n Canada's wartime effort or am I to be haunted by the thought; of negligence and shamel that. I felled ‘in the ltne of dutyfi", t forget. our service men can't. strike. neither can the people-in the oppressed nations. so why should you?" 1‘ am. Blr. eta. A SOLDIEII-‘S WIFE AND A SOLDIERW SISTER RR. 1. Hunter River, RE TUNNEL 0R CAUSEWAY? S1r.- on picking up today's na- per. I was rather surprised to tee. under an Ottawa date - itne. on the front one. "P. E. I. Tunnel Included 1n Buggutlmu.” In my 1m letter t had promised not to wrlte again. but the provo- eeflon 1a too crest. But I will try to! ineke this brief and concise ael possible. l How anvone of more than aver- age intelligence, as a member of Parliament 1s supposed to be. could advocate a tunnel 1n a volcanic country, was more than I could t-n- derstand. But on reading the ‘xady of the article I see that Mr. Black advocated r-‘thei- n tunnel or at causeway as the final solution of ow." ti-aiuipl-tstlon dffllcuitles- both tn the Northumberland Strait and 1n the Gut of Canso, et-m nenr—Mu1grave. an expenditure bf $7,500,000 four films. and the Gainsborough studio has 821100.000 worth 1n om- ductlon-Bt. Thomu Timel- Journal. With the distance so short, only about. one mile. as I remember, and the water so deep, at Cape Cor- nbovo Hamlin. ve P0 BRAN FLAKiES WITH OTHER PARTS OF WIIIAT azvz/nrfll/mezz! i ‘ “BUFIET s. 1944 a. BENEFITS OF BRAN TOO... AND WHOLESOME WHEAT NOURISHMENT! that a bridge would be preferable for turbance, the Gut of Canso. But no doubt‘ competent engineers will study the matter. and have the word. same as here. Better means of communlcaslori will be of benefit to Our llélgllbur- inz provinces. and to the mainland 1n general. as well as to the Is- slty as to cause damage. But wno land. But 1t 1s to Prince Edward knows when. or where. the next. land. as a province of Canada. one will be? that all look for leadership 1n the MLBIBCK and others, also spoke especially as that off Newfoundland a. 19W years H80. would crack the walls of a tunnel. flnal And who can say when we may nave another earthquake? "Agricola" has kept record of them, and they occur with fairly frequent regularity. though not always of such inten- movetnent. would it not be better or the Chlgnecto Canal. When this 0'91’ , w Present a. united front, Instead l5 opened the cla and rock will N110 the suns last. xlimme: of some ask1ng for a causeway and have go be dum somewhere, why Out across the darkenlnz like. other; advocating n tunnel? Leaving my letters out of '.11e matter altogether. your "Agricola." Who evidently has stu died the matter for years. in a 1 cent. issue of Your paper. gave 1 as 111531111011 that an earth dls not have this one 111 orderly mm- ner. and bulld up part. 1f not Ill. of the causeway to Prince Edward Island? A. .1. MACADAM. St. E1eanor';,_P_._E.__I. HAVE YOU A PLAN? Life Insurance does not. tear down any plan a man may have for hi: family. It simply underwrite: Ills pllnl. A LlIe or Endowment policy 1s an fnsured savings plan with guaranteed values for retirement. Conserve the Home and stabilize the Nation. Consult your n t C. |.w g l," Edward Island Dalsiich (Trim. u a Mo“ or In“. PHI”. llyndman 00., Limited. Provincial Manalerl . Offices — Charlottetown - Surnmerslde . Monk"; Thomas McAvinn. C.L.U.. Special Represeutallve at Charlottetown Allison P. McLean, C.L.U., District Manager at. Sntnmerslde Earle S. Jelley. Representative at 0'Leary Cyril! A- B. ShIW. Rellreeentatfve at Montague Peter G. MeEachern, ‘lwresentative at Victoria F. L. MaeNutt. Representative at Daruley KING'S COUNTY Progressive-Conservative Association Annual Meeting and Nominating Convention AT rows: HALL. GEORGETOWN FRIDAY. Aucusr llth At TWO 0’CLOCK P. M. It its Meetl did ii _ uted for the forthligmilifgnlledgttitl“Elhcllioiimllgiiil Chairmen ar'e “quested to call Poll Meetings immediately for the election of delegates to the Convention. Each Poll is entitled to send five delegates. & . (SgdJ LEITl-I TOWNSEND, President. (Sgd.) HENRY MALLARD, Secretary. Black swans. like a. sad pro: Sable. u though flames had bind en 1e thetr fieether- armenvrs hue. Silent. beaks of bood-briizlz‘. w. Show their flerv nature too. White swans tamelv bv the m '- Clrcle where the crumbs Rllgh Forth , Forth. ye glowing br-ogd of nigh WE HAVE THE PROPII. FUR. YOUR. PARTICULAR unfortunate eunuch to hm Io wear a truss we ask the question. with t tug? or In 1t an out of (Illa rum We have 11m rooelved a lblll‘ meat of new stile lfllfllh 1m u”, ‘m; at prlees to stilt everybody. Every led with us 1n the stomadl taken n meal hours. m! "I11! yreveuts n11 bad effects m!!! [as but ft floual net vlty of the stom- mh, “guts digestion and 1111' prove: the appetite. Bottle Today. Mall Order: Given PM!" 11.11. Duane 6* 00- Chartered Accountants 5a Grafton st. C1110"- Phone 2080 BLACK BWANS the wave thelr joumev teaslgi unto the dew. ye black tin arl Stroll: TRUSS CASE To than of you who m Are you satisfied he one you are wen- Doen 1t. fit comfortlbl! GASSY STOMACIIS BELIEVED person who 1s troub- Dr. Evan! Stomach ml!!!" romotes the func- Dou’: Delay. Order 1W Price 85r- TIIE 2 MACS 149 Gm: 0mm 51"" Attention. Box 247 FERRY SERVICE PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — NOVA SCOTIA VIA WOOD ISLANDS. P.E.l. — CARIBOU, N8. JLV. “PRINCE N0 VA” .“The Connecting Link Between Then Province?“ (DAILY-SUNDAYS mcunnnm Daylight Bevin] Th“ Startling May ht the Nova §60lII—I’IIllflQ llwanl lllalll Service will operate three round lrlpo per day. Will Leave Wood Islands Will Leave Caribou I.” l.lll. 9.00 p.51, 11.00 um. and 8.00 p.111. 1.00 || m and 5.00 p 1a. LUNCl-IES SERVED NORTHUMBERLAND FERRIES, LIMITED CIIABLOTIETOWN. r.1s.1. ocroncn sun novcmum son ebuu wiu. at AN- NOUNGED urea. » McLeod a Bentley Iarrllterl and Attorneff-‘l’ Law "UITIII and Oomllilll w. c. ncu-cwv. K- C- s. A. murmur. K- C- 154 Prince Street F. ARIIIIIBALI Chartered Account!!!" ‘nun, Tn"; Bulletin! Charlottetown