SLIP for $1. Rayon Crepe, will wash nicely and wear to your satis- faction. Tea Rose or White , just like the picture except that the slip has a dainty medallion at front. Rolled hem. ONE DOLLAR post'- paid on receipt of price. Van Raalte Glove silk PANTIES 59c Glove oil}: in Tea Rose or White, all sizes. ’ JUST A REAL G001)‘ _ J THE FOLLY OF GUESSING The “eye-gueuer" is every- where. Men and women guess. Children do not bother to do even that. Many guess their eyes need attention, many more that they DON'T. The former guess is more likely to be true. FACTS are easily obtained. and should be sec- ured by everyone who is not ' Barristers and Attorneys-at-law sure of his vision. G. F. Hutcheson ihfniessionai cards DEATH WINS RACE I-lALlZF'A.X. July 2’i—(C.P.)—The Black Diamond steamship Black Condor lost a race against death when Frank B Hamlin of New York. a. member of her crew, died in hospital here Saturday night. The vessel turned from its course and sped for Halifax when H9-mlm became iii. A wireless message sent a tug with Dr. 8. K. Keshen of Halifax to meet the Black Condor off Chedabucio H88-d. After being lowered into the tug on the toasins seas. the seiunnn WLIS hurried to hospital but died of spinal mcnlnglties. HE SHOULD BE LUCKY HALIIF‘AX. July 2'i.—(CP) —NoW if four-leaf clovers bring sood luck, what would you say about Warren Strum of Mahone Bay? He arrived in Halifax with a six- leaf clover, a five and Just to be sure, another with four petals. found near his home. L_;':-T McLeod & Bentley W1 E. BENTLEY, K. C. J, A. BENTLEY, K. C. MONEY T0 LOAN Palmer & Haslam H. J. PALMER, K. C. A. J. nsswm, B. A., LL. 3. BARRISTEBS, ETC. Bank of Nova Scotla. Chambers Charlottetown. P. E. 1. MONEY T0 LOAN Phone 85. P. 0. Box 127. . . MacGuigan & Tramor MARK R. MacGUlGAN, K. C. C. ST. CLAIR TRAINOR, B. A. Barristers. Solicitors. Etc, MONEY TO LOAN Office: Over Provincial Bank, Richmond Street, Charlottetown. H. McPHEE, B. A., K. C. NOTARY &c. BAERISTER. EOLICITOR Riley Building. Charlottetown. Bell & Mathieson B. E Bell 1). L. Mathieson, LLB. Barristers as Solicitors MONEY T0 LOAN fisneron Block. Charlottetown.P.l:.l. where they should be and the other SURPLUS DRUMSTICKS ANTIGONISH. N. 5 —July 27- (CP)—Biddy Dexter's prize hen. struts proudly about the farmyard with her latest aA:hie'vement—a four-legged chick. Two feet are two. well-shaped and active, are an inch behind. SPINNING and WEAVING Send me your wool to be upon Into yarn and I'0\'£| into hlnnkctn. Charges are. single yarn 23 com: per pound, doubled yarn 26 I-ante. lllunlu-to $3.00. if. Illlunllcred IIM. 1: take. fire nlnlnllll of wool or-r hlanlut. Wool must he “'0'” wnnherl. ;,|| aid gm] burn picked out. The sin of single you In medium. doubled yum fine. medium, colrle nurl honking. Pul shipper’: and own. on name on all purer-I-. nddrcu and Instructions inside. Send by mail or freight. Freight will be plld on ion pound nn._ Price of well washed and picked wool In 20 cents a pound. lvoeinl price for nnvvnnlu-d wool. WM. CONDON 85 On con Street. Char] ottetovm ‘Georgetown-Charlottetown Bus 8;. lice STARTING MONDAY, APRIL 27th. or as soon after as possible. ' L-M36-t-6-B mtlil. Drama, Pathos Are Recalled by Tombstone SAINT JOHN. N. 3. July 2’!- (OP)—NeI.r the main walk in the Old Burying Ground, central Saint John, stands a weather-worn slab of granite saying only that Pierre Durant Record. 34 a planter from St. Lucia island, died Aug. with death. a. slave's unbounded devotion to his master and the set- tlement of a huge inheritance. Early in the 19th centluy when direct trade between the United States and West Indies was barred Saint John's fleet of sailing ships enabled her to build a good busi- ness with the islands. The custom was for s flrm's junior member to sail with the vessel and attend to the business. and thus many friend- ships were formed by citizens of the far-separated points Racord came to Saint John as a pamenger when a ship made her return from st. Lucia in 1820. Suffering from tuberculosis and attended by a black servant, he sought health in New Brun.swick's invigorating climate. In Saint John he received a warm welcome, but the disease claimed its victim the following year. The faithful servant, having worshipped his master, was incon- solable. Records friends tried vain- ly to divert the neg'ro's attention from his grief, and finally decided tose-ndhim backtohisownpeo- pic at St. Lucia. Stricken anew at leaving the city of his master's burial, he was shown every kind- ness and indulgence aboard the vessel but one morning. a week from St» Lucia, the captain found him sitting on decl<—de-ad. Thirty years later two French- men stopped at Saint John to await passage to Halifax and France. They had travelled through the United States in search of a tombstone. A vast flaw in France was in dispute. an proof of death of one of the direct heirs had to be obtained before settlement could be made. This heir had been a planter on the island of St Lucia, had gone to some place in North America. for his health and had died there. No one living in st. nucla had any knowledge regarding the place of death. The two searchers had wandered vainly through countless grave yards from the Caribbean to Maine. strolling idly through the old Burying Ground while awaiting their ship, they paused to read a tombstone inscription here and there, as they had grown accustom- ed to doing. And when hope had faded they read, "Pierre Darant Racord, Planter, of the Island of St Lucia." The search was over. The tale was ended. U.S. President at Gampobello Wi~Zi.CHPOOL. N. B.. July 27— (C.P.)——'I'hc United States patrol boat Pontchartrian. ordered to Campebcllo Island in advance of vacati;n-cruising President Roose- velt, anchored off thelsland Sunday with her flag at hall-mast for R secret service operator found dead in his berth en the boat. A heart attack was presumed to have caused dcath. Inspector C. K. Gray and other members of the Royal Cnuadian Mounted Police, si‘nt. here for the occasion of the Presidential visit boarded the craft. Later. it was said. the body probably would be re- moved to Eastpori. Me. Continuing his cruise from Nova Scotia waters, President Roosevelt in the yacht Scwanna reached fhc neighboring Island of Grzmcl Mnnnn Saturday aftcmo:n. stopping at Seal Cove, He was not expected to arrive at his summer home here until Tuesday. The President's wife and mother are already here. waiting to welcome the Chief Executive and his three sons when they conclude their holi- day cruise. Mr. Roosevelt‘; stay at Campobello will be brief. on Thurs- day he will entrain at St. Andrews. N.B., to visit the Governor-General. Lord Twccdsmuir at Quebec. novasaor amen T0 FLY l-:i>i0M ounvmcs BERLIN. July 27 —German officials announced that 30.000 carrier pigeons will be released to scatter "messages of peace" to European nations when the tolling & Georgetown ...... 8.15 A.lI.IAsvo C‘ iotetowu ..... ‘fl fig, CI?!” 81‘ L”. IN? .. ‘.3. PH. ea ltond.... .....8.5oA.M. wmuy. c.m¢__u.p_u Baldwin's Road 3.55 A.M. 4. En 8‘ ThE|’€58'I......9.00A.M. _ g_5op_M_ ‘ -- . 5.00 PM ..5J.0 PH. 0 5-15 PM. to st Charlottetown ..~‘“"'90'Cll|\0wn rue-Iserrlalul A|.|.|-SIN Ii tr]. « .'_ NENSTIS ounuuun ....'...s.sor.n. Nobsne'1'u Rooml. BUICK 1 PAIBINGB CAI P. 1. Solomon Eli mac 3... L.-... sci.-.51. .5 YEARS smvnic ranroauc Eiiiiifiii iiiiiiiiii of the Olympic bell chimes in with the gun salute inaugurating the eleventh Olympic games, Aug. l /?u/?~//// 0//79 rrz//7u.«‘€ ./// [I1/n L17/7/5*/ax’ PUTNAMS 18,. 1831. But the plain tombstone ‘ the grand finale of real d.ra.ms including a losing struggle “ Sensation BREEZE” The light touch that slim young figures need for Figure Molding and Freedom A soft flexible two - way stretch step-in that holds young bodies gent- ly but adequately. The newly develop- ed Supplespun has an open - work de- sign, and in the lower back it is closely knitted to flatten. Boneless and hookless. $3. "’l9°*9<‘-“‘lil35’&°l1s-on Widow Visits In Sydney SYDNEY. N. 8. July 2'I—(O.I’.)— llemoriu of the discovery of the North Pole by Admiral Pclry 2'! years ago were revived here over the weekend by the visit of his widow. Mrs. Robert E. Peary. and her daughter. Mrs. ford. Bydnsy was the lei port of cl! made since then. she came to Cape Berton 3053 $0 to return home next week. on Sunday, they visited Louis- burg and its historic Yortrus and expressed themselves as deeply in- terested with the tour of the rem- ante of the once milk‘?! "Dunkirk of America" and its new museum and relies. Early Cut I-fay A Valuable Feed At the present season of the you with seeding and planting pru- tically completed and in some dis- tricts the cultivation and booing of crops under way, many lumen! 8-1‘? making plans for cutting hay. Hal’ is one of the most important farm crops ploduced in the _Maritimes and it is doubtful if the average farmer reaslises the value in early cut and well cared hay as compar- ed with hey that is cut later and poorly made. Each year thousands of tons of poor hay is harvested and much of this last quality can be attributed in late outlini- According to ' chemical Cell-5 which have been made, the protein percentage of hay decreases in direct ratio with the age of the grass. In other words. early out clover hay contains approximately 100 lbs of protein per acre higher than hay cut reasanably late. Pro- te'u. it will be manly res-l1zed- 15 the most costly item of live 50301‘ feed and one which is of real .\* Dpriance to the Maritime live stock industry. Clover hay should be cut lust If, however, a farmer with 3 larg‘ quantity of cl;ver hay delays ha)‘- lng operations until all of the ml‘ is ready for cutting, a large quan- Charlotteiown, P. E. I. Lj_ .4 Boéflloclcl Dreams Being Realized By Youthful Tar (By The Canadian Press) ST. MALO, France, July 2'1 — The ring of shipvwrights hammers on the 300 ton barkentine. Cap :Pilar. is making boyhood dreams of Adrian sclig-man of Wimbledon. England, come true. About two months ago Adrian advertised in a London paper for a crew of 10, who would give $500 towards expenses on a 30,000 mile cruise. But it is more than ad- venture for this young trave1‘er— it will be his honeymoon. His offer of a two your South Seas Odyssey met with instant re- sponse from young and old all ov- er lihigand. Applications practi- cally swamped Beligman one man was willing to give $25,000 as his share. others didn't have’ the necessary money. They all wanted to go—1i00 of them. Sdizzman scrutlnimd the "per- sonal" life of most. of them and now he's all ret. His shipmafu. have been cllosell, his ship is be- ing proparcd. Two bluehirds paint- ed on her white bows are 9. fitting symibol of the happy spirit that will drive her around the world. They will take over a heritage bequeathed by a generation of Bret- on sailors who lmve watched the Labrador iceibmgs thunder past her broad decks, and guided her head throutgh the Grand Bank fogs and currents. The Cap Pilar type of ship is passing. Before the Great War 116 or them sailed each year from B! Male across the western ocean for the northern fishing waters. only 25 remain. The Gap Pilar is now refitted for the long- est voyage of her long and adven- turous career. ~ sight/eers who peer dawn and point cameras to capture a snap Of 5 “Hire wlndlammcr," little realire it is no relic they are no. cording. but the rebirth of a. splen- did ship. "Subject to survey." Se- llgman says. "we are all set." There is room in the forecastle for 20 buni:s—ample accommoda- tion for the 10 men who will live there. The cabin aft will be quart- ers for seligman. the skipper. his wife. three officers and a doctor and the site for a new charthouu. Absence of cargo makes it pug- used for improvements and when aible for increased space to be the refit is complete she will be I remarkably roomy ed comfortable !hlD- Orders has-e been placed for Corn xtr chorta. new navigating equipment. tity of it will be over-ripe before it is cut, therefore, the frugal farmer starts hay making slightly beforc clover is in full bloom. know“? that unless such I plan is follow- ed that much of his may W111 V3 to late and therefore the protein content will bcfiieclressergd and the palatability grea y Owe - Good early cut hay fed to live stock, accompanied with a liberal ration of roots, makes an excellent feed, could be retained and costs of production greatly decreased if the my crop were cut earlier than in the past. FIVE-MINTE IIOLD LASTED 14 YEARS iCsnndlnn Pros) GRIBAEBY, lmglsud, July 2'i-A 14-year-old boy who was handed to a woman as a. baby to "mind for five minutes" has Just been re- turned to his mother. The story was told in court here recently when the lad appeared churned with theft of we glasses. "I was on the platform at Don- mister station 14 years ago when A woman asked me to mind her child Edward Staf- of the expedition on the trip north- ward and the schooner Roosevelt also wuheu-eonthoreturn in 1900. Sydney pald full tribute to P23?!’ at the time and Mu. I-‘cu-y's visit at this time is the first she has Motoring from Washington. DC. “renew old friendships." flu plans after the blossoms are in full bloom. ‘ l / I I K, .« , IETVIOB. We're proud of Mar-Not. As proud as you will be when you varnish your floors with it. So act now. Call for I can or two at Point Headquarters . . . you'll be glad of our suggestion! Ilfr laugh and /onq lasting! FIoors'tnke dreadful punielunant from the tramp. trump. trump of the funily'a feet. Apply a good protective coat of Mar-Not Fast-Dri Varnish . . . it stands up. month in, month out. Dent the Room . . . scald them with water . . . you'll find Mu-Noe stays tight and Irish: under -11 lime- ’ And it applies to easily. to smoothlyi it dries dushflee in snbour...infourhoureitis set herd and ready for S. W. P. outside HOUSE PAINT. LTTETOWN sending the boy home now." The boy was admonished and discharged. _.__...————:- PARK MEMORIAL T0 LATE KING ST. JOHN'S Nfld, July 27 - (GP)—-A memorial putt to the late King George V will be established at Quid! Vidi lakeside and work On the project has been started- Oomme-nting on the decision to convert the picturesque surround- ingj at Quidi Vidi into a memorial park. the Daily News said in its editorial column the thought "fits appropriately into ‘M scheme for a national mcmorill for five minutes," the foster- approved in Great Bi'W“- _ mother said "she had not come "The betterment of mag! con back when my train to Cleethorpoe ditions and particularly 8 91'0- arrived. so I got into the train. As it was about to move, a woman ran up and said the child's name was Jack. I tool: the child to Cleo- thorpes. "Subsequently," she added. “through the “ ‘ ‘ ‘. 101' the Prevention of Cruelty to Child- ren, I obtained the mother's name and address and I have kept in touch with her all this time. I am boats and all the extra gear neces- sary for an 18 months round trip. The cnnvas—the cup Piinr carries 1'! sails-h being overhauled in the saiimaker's loft down the street. Seligman has visited St. Main with his pya-enhs nearly every year for the post 20 and has a’waya wanted to take one of these fine old ships to sea. “A few months ago," he says. "I first saw the Cap Plinr and even before inspecting many other vessels in England, France And Finland knew that no other selling ships could compare with R10 sturdy barkentines of at. Main - A "lib. mote we see of her the morowelikeher. Bhehasstoodup to the harden; weather and the moat trying conditions generally that my ship could face. “she has been anchored for. months on end in D0 futhovms oil water and mac than 100 miles from the Newfoundland eons dur- ing her fishing days. A lhip that ounetlndupiothatishulitto vision of adequate recreetive facili- tiu for children and adults were thoughts close to the heart of King George and it is a. splended thins that Newfoundland is now to have a memorial and that it should take so fitting a form.’ standanyiliiragintlnesevuxslus," honysproudia. NEW SPECIES OF PLANT PRODUCED , JAMAICA. July 2'1 _.(GP) —Experiments to produce a. banana plant immune from the dread Panama disease which caus- es the trees to wilt before the fruit rqions are nearing success. 86* cording to the Hon. A. C. Barnes. Director of Agriculture and head 0; gm guvonnn A plantations at Hope Gardens. Jamaica argriculturni experts are ottemp‘ mg to cross the disease- immune Rdbustra. and Isestan varieties of bananas with the com- mercially superior but disease- susceptible grades. Nearly. 300 “cromes” have been made. "Panama Disease is a fungus that lives in the soil.’ Mr Barnes said in describing the infection which has made. 30.000 acres of Jamaica soil unsuitable for banana growth. "It gains access to the plant through the root system and gradually destroys the plant by making it wilt. It is highly in- the finest tobacco. you. - "The Good Earth" For over fifty years, “BLACK TWIST" CHEWING has been a favorite chewing tobacco of farmers. The leaf is grown in Ontario where the good earth is especially suited for grown! The leaves are cured and processed right here on the Island by our famous methods which add extra flavor and natural goodness. Try “Black Twist" Chewing-then go back to soother brand if your taste will let . .._-.._.a faction and is easily spread by the movement of soil and dkeued material. It came to Jamaica at ____T__. NURSE SAVES FOUR IONDON, July 2'1 —(OP) -—F0\|7 dmghms of Rev. R. L. Polly at St. Leonard's Vicarage. Choreditch. were rescued by their nursemaid when fire broke out in any Bmlll-Y building eight feet away from 111‘ Vicarage. Birthday Greetings (By The Onllulinn Pres!) To Bob mus. coach and qimrifl‘ back of wlxmlpess. Dominion 5°" ior rugby football champions. Born in International Falls. Mimi. years ago tomorrow. Prion accom- plished the feat of instsllinif 8“ 9”‘ tireiy new system of play 1" Wm‘ nipeg and winning the Cfimdm“ championship in his nrst W“ “J coach. He is a former owl-61“ Concordia. oolloze. }\_ll_l1'_‘_- BRINGING UP FAT HER MR. on»-rum POLITICAL aoss la. «Luna 10 Ask ,'T|-E