u I__W-‘IIQAI \ ‘Durante- Tv-m- .am-=ua.‘r,- 350i: FOUR TllE CHABLDTTETOWII GUARDIAN Morning Daily (Founded In 1887) President: Lieut. Col W Cheater B. blebnte Vice-President: J. B. Brnett, FJJ. Iecretery: Lleut. Col D. A. Macliinnon. 0.8.0» Editor and Managing Director: J. l1 Burnett, IJJ. Associate Editors: Frank Wnllier and Inn A. Burnett SUBSCRIPTION BATES By Mail in P. L L, $4.00 per yell’; $2.60 I01’ I mouth $1.25 li-r 3 monins; 50c for one inontn City Delivery; $5.00 per year; 33.0w for b month $1.75 fur 3 months By Mail in Canada and U.5.A. $5.00 per 10M‘ laturdny “er-my: $2.00 per yen; $1.00 for ti nionwli 50c for 3 monflu. The Chnrlulluluiru Guardian mil, he Qhtllltll I 11011111115‘: he“: Agency, Tillie! equate. New Xurki Oil Buutii he»: AKHH‘), corner- Milk and Wnhlngton. Bolfnli meirupoliiun fscvi- Agent-y, 1111b reel Sh, lamina]; J. Fine, 115i Uuy S1,, Toronto; New: Stand. (Jnntenn lAur-er. Ottmvu; \‘tl||l"! Sewn riluiitl, Budbury, Ont; Hub Tobacco film», Mont-tun, h. 11.; Ellen Robertson, Amherst, N. D. _"The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink." THURSDAY, JUNE l9, 1941. Better Left Unsaid ln an otht-rivi-c excellent speech it would perhaps ll.l\‘t‘ lvuvil. as wcll if Premier Campbell had rcfva ml i111 ’l~ll\‘>tl§l_\' evening from advan- cing any :1] ll 1711- zhc incxcusable failure to cs- , . . . . ,_ talilzsh "ir iuizusirics in this Pr0vince_ S0 far a; muuigiriiis arc conccriicrl," the Premier said, "we do u-w scvm to bc exceptionally well fitted for maiiiiilzicturizig fiurposcs but I think we com- pcnszitc for t. .11 to a very large degree with our air training cviitrcs." No one questions the great value au-l llllllfififiilCc of our air training centres. ~ ‘HITS \\'Ll‘(‘ not given us by way of f’ hut~acciwvdiug to Prime Min- , nzie l\'.lH_Q;IIS thc result of a very coniprulu-iisivc survcv niadc in collaboration \\'li’.l1 officials of the Department of National llcfcnsc and svnior officers 0f the Royal Cana- dian Air For-ct» In other words, their selection “m (liqtquwl lI\' military ncccssity and conven- icnce, (lur frw lniii from fog and other advan- tngcs from a flying standpoint made the lo- cation of c.-uu-c= uurlcr the Commonwealth Air TR-niniug plan in this Island Province inevitable. -l_v_ and for oihcr good and sufficient :1 lurgc riuiubcr of air training centres were p “ll iii llll’ \\'cstcrn Provinces. This did not prcvcnt the \\'c<tcrn Provinces from obtain- ing large war production orders. however. At tho lnct session of the Legislature Premier Caniphi-ll was askcd what effort, if any, his ad- ministrzuivm had made towards the establish- ment of any wartime industry or industries in this Province. llis rcplv was that the Govern- mcnt “has at various timcs during the past year urgcd on thc llmtiiuioir Government the estab- lishment in this province of the following, among otlicr, wartime industries :-—Manufac~ iurc of ruincsivccpcrs or other ships; manufac- turc of bombs and munitions; manufacture of proccsscrl milk products; manufacture of pro- ccsscrl fish." Asked to table all correspondence between the Government and Federal Minister or officials, or other persons, in connection therewith, the Premier rcplictl: “Negotiations were conducted, and are still bring continued. by means of per- sonal iuicrvicivs and consultations, as well as by confidential correspondence, with Dominion Ministers, Members arid officials." Apparently nothing came of these efforts. The only correspondence on record is a letter which Premier Campbell wrote to Prime Min- ister King 0n Dcc. 13, 1940, in which he refer- red, among other things, t0 the dissatisfaction of our farmers at their present conditions "as com- pared with that of other industries whose con- dition is grcatly’ improved by the war pro- gramme." lle also stated that the apparent brisk- ncss of busincss in Charlottetown and Summer- sidc "app-firs to be largely attributable t0 the earnings from airport construction and to allow- anccs to KICPPIILiCHlS of enlisted men." There is little new activity in the way of air- port construction to be expected. and it surely will not bc contended that “the allowances to dependents of cnlistcd men" are given by way of compensating us for lack of employment in war industries! This Province, as the Premier noted, has done exceptionally well both in the way of en- listmcnts and in achieving its objective in the Victory loan campaign. This patriotic response was made (l<‘S]>llC the prevailing dissatisfaction with thc uirmucr in which the King Government ll7l< trr-zitrti the Province. It should spur our provincial and fcrlcral representatives, not to the compl:icciir_v' cxprcsscrl by Premier Campbell, but to more active effort in obtaining employ- mr-ut for our ticfiplrt. by developing such indus- tries as we have to maximum capacity, and es- tablishing such other industries as we are capable of carrying on. Until that has been done, it is idlc to lfilli of our “unfitucss" to participate in Canada's in lustrial war effort, 0r of 011r bcing "coziiptinsfiicrl" ll_\' the fact that we have not hccu cxcludczl from the air training plan. Such strit-wiaciits l"l1(l only to undermine the cfforts which thc Cnmpbcll Government pro- fcsscs to lnvc uiadc. Thcyarc entirely outoftune iviih fhc lcticr ivhich the Premier himself. in a more rcalistic mood, addressed to his leader at Ottawa. Appaling Tragedy A survcy made recently by the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company recalls the appalling number of homeless Wanderers iri Europe created by the Axis menace. More than 300,000 people have been forced to leave Gcrmany. Perhaps 400,000 other Germans have been brought back into Germany from the Baltic, Polish, and Rcssarahian territories by Russia. Several hundred thousand people, mostly Iflvraiiiiaus, were rcccivcd by Russia in her con- qucrcd tcrritorics. mostly from Poland. About 175.000 Austrians are being moved into Gvrinflnv from the Italian Tyrol. A huiidrcrl thousand were expelled from Alsncu-lorrninc bv the conquering Germans. A half million Finns would not livein the part 1-_ of Finland seized by Russia, but moved into dis- tressed Finland itself. In unoccupied France there is a horde of fugi- tives, estimated at 2,500,000, who fled when the German machine rolled across Belgium and northern France. A half million fled from Spain when the Spanish republic fell, and a good third of those are still 0n foreign territory, unable to return. Virtual forced labor in Germany, recruited in Poland, France, Holland, Belgium, Czecho- slovakia, Hungary, and Italy, totals almost a million, with not less than another million pris- oners of war. Other wars have not failed t0 create their rows on rows of dead. their ravaged villages, their ruined farms and cities. None has ever uprooted and scattered like chaff across a continent these millions of help- less, homeless, and yet generally innocent people. .- EDITORIAL NOTES -=. Tuesday Charlottetown was the cynosurc, yes- terday it was Summerside. 1k Ill ll‘ ‘I Lest we forget: the war is not yet won, and more Victory Bonds must be sold before the Dominion even goes over the top. i i Ii i The weather having started to improve it is to be hoped it will continue to be 0n its good be- haviour yet awhile- 4 n- u n- It was really a red letter day in every fesPeFl in the capital of Prince yesterday, one that “"11 be long remembered, and talked about whenever Hitler's name is recalled in history. i 7i It‘ ll‘ A word of praise is due to His ‘ Worship Mayor Campbell of Sumniersidc and his able as- sistants for the magnificent success of their Vic- tory Torch Day celebration. n1 v s The Supreme Court divides attention with the war these days. Seldom, fortunately, is there such a serious calendar t0 be dealt with as there is at the present term. w v v 4- Sixty years ago whisky cost 20 cents a quart, according to an entry in the Fanford. C01- Water Company ledger for 1881. The ledger showed purchase of five gallons of whisky in 'connccti0n with an annual stockholders’ meet- 111. g ##1## With the season approaching for meetings of New York trustees 0f savings banks to decide on the dividend rates to be voted on July 1, for the. second quarter, it is indicated that fcwcr mutual savings banks will continue their disbursements at the annual rate 0f 2 per cent. Of the fifty- seven mutual savings banks in that city, thirty- four paid at the 2 pcr cent rate for the second quarter, twenty used the i 1-2 pcr cent rate, and three paid a split-iatclkdivpdclid. The British Ministry of Supply and Ordnance opening three cases of ntachinc tools from the United States, found 24 tins of evaporated milk. With them was a note: "Employees of the Jones Machine Tool Work at Cincinnati send this box to employees where this machine is scnt. The milk is intended for your children, and has been sent without the knowledge of the purchasers of these tools or any agent connected with the same." n: u i: n: Gold receipts at the Royal Canadian Mint were greater in ‘May than in the same month of any other year. Receipts were 448.436 fine ounces against 385,488 in April and 401,431 in May of last year. The appreciable increase of 16 per cent was shown in the short-term comparison while the gain over one year ago was nearly 12 p. c. Receipts in the first five months 0f the pre- sent year were 2,134,248 fine ounces against 2,- 023,357 in the same period of last year, an in- crease of 5.5 p. c. v w n- 1k Maxmilian, Emperor of Mexico, shot this date, 1867. Mexico remained a Spanish colony till 1822, when her independence was secured, and a federal republic was established in 1824. In 1835 Texas became independent; in 1848 Upper California and New Mexico were ceded to the U. S. A European force landed in 1862 to secure redress for wrongs done to foreigners; French troops in 1864 entered the capital and proclaimed an Empire under Maxmilian, an Aus- trian prince. A revolution in 1867 restored the republic, Maxmilian being shot. n- 4- : a The Dominion Bureau of Statistics cost of liv- ing index rose from 108.6 on April 1 to 109.4 on May. i. Rentals advanced from 107.7 to 107.7, clothing from 114.3 to 114.5 and home furnishings and services from 111.7 to 111.8. Several upward revisions in domestic fuel and gas and slightly higher prices for coke in one or two centres, resulted in a rise in the fuel in- dex from 108.9 to 109.2. The miscellaneous in- dex rose from 102.9 1o 105.1 due to the recent 3 cents per gallon tax imposed on gasoline, an in- crease of i0 per cent in rail fares and a 2o per cent tax ori theatre admission charges. Food prices declined from 110.1 to 109.7, decreases for dairy products and eggs exerting more in- fluence on the index than moderate advances for meats, dry groderiez, vggetables and fruits. a- n- "The furnishing of financial resources for war purposes," the report of the Special War Costs Committee of Parliament says, “is a civilian re- sponsibility of the nation at large, and there is a duty on the part of the minister of each defence department to see that the resources so furnish- ed are used to the best possible advantage." It was pointed out though, that such a control would not in any way involve a superiority 0f civilian over service personnel. Similar controls to those urged by the committee exist in Britain. the report states. “In the United Kingdom," it says. "the respective functions of the civilian au- thorities in war departments. who are in control of financial matters, and of the service au- thorities who are in charge of xvar operations and responsible for their success. are well un- derstood and accepted hv Ont’ another as ne- ccssarilv complementary and an lary to one an~ m: -~'-rr.. . l Tl~_III_C_I_~lARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN IIUIILS III Till‘. Ill“ Japanese n: negotiation: with The ivemeriands but Indies for raw materials have reached “me cage of me precipice". Japan had better be careuil she infant be the one no zen pushed over. — Brant- ford Ibcpositor. One Young iady h" 1",. veiled 9.000 miies in order to wed an officer in The Netherlands army training at. Bnrattord. Well, e man is well worth a trip like than at my time. - Peter- boroilxh Examiner. ' Vancouver should study the At- lantic City method. where they have literally wired the police for sound, Bach patrolman is equip- ped with a. hand-sized portable radio PGCIVCX‘, WhLCh costs only $30, weighs 29 ounces ocmplete with shoulder-antenna and earphone, measures only 3 1-2 by 3 1-2 by 1 1-2 inch. The set 1s packed in n leather case and" worn hooked to the -, iicemmk belt. I1 Atlantic City can d0 it, so can Vancouver. an save money. The argument, at City Hall against motorcycles is that police cars are equipped with two-way radio. Well, Atlantic City‘ finds it possible to get along with portable radios for its motorcycle oroe. Surely Vancouver can do the same. -- Vancouver Sun. A nonncement that e new dry dock is now under construction at. East. Saint John, being built. by the Federal Government, and be operated by the Sb John Dry Dock and Shipbuilding Comnariy, is good news for thLs port. It means that the facilities for building and repairing ships here will be greatiy| increased, and this will bring added ocean traffic and its associated‘ business to the port. ‘Eve new dock, 400 feet long, will. be capable of ac- commodating he largest. destroyer in the British navy as well as naval oil tankers. It will be adjacent to the present large dock, and its UJE by smaller vessels will free the larger docks for the handl- ing of the bigger boats. Because of the easy nature of the excavation‘ on the site of the new dock, it isl expected that. it will be in operation | before the end of this year. It. will be a notable addition to the faci- itics of this national port. —Saint, John Telegraph-Journal, . One of New York's foremost physicians reveals the story of the call he received sortie years ago, to go to Durham, NC, and treat Doris Duke's father. He upent a day and a half at. the Duke estate, and then prescribed a change of diet. At the end of the month, he submitted his bill — $14,000. Duke became enraged at; this, called his own doctor, and said‘: “That New York specialist wants me to pay him $14,000 just for changing my bread to toast. It's outrageous Speak to him." The doctor phoned the eminent specialist, at the dis- pensary where he was treating a group of patients without fee. "I have two kinds of fees”, the specialist explained, "The first. is. $14,000; the second is nothing. Mr. Duke can have his choice, of which fee he wants to pay me". Mi". Duke sent his cheque for $14,000. — New York Post. Addressing the annual meeting of the Bradford Discharged Prison- ers‘ Aid Society lVlr. H. M. Dawson, Clerk or the Peace. said he thought. the causes of the increase in juvenile crime were that boys and girls received boo much pocket money, that the provisizri of so. much entertainment caused them to forget. how to entertain them- selves, arid that there was a lack of parental control. He was inclined to support the view that. young prisoners should be taken away from their criminal associations and the stern discipline people‘ were so pleased to talk about the placed ammg ordinary folk and given plenty of work to do. It -' or girls did not receive that. care’ and attention at. school which they should have, because the interest of the teacher was switched over t0 what a head master or head mistress dearly loved - an acade- mic suwess. Ordinary boys and girls ought to have all the atten- tion pcssible, because morals were and character and caligraptny. - Reds Yorkshire Post. English and Ainei-icnnl, Catli- olics. Protestants, Jews uid even e solemn Pon cal Mass celebrated suffering people of Britain. It was a unique and moving service, a community of sympathy and su - iication. As the Catholic Arc - ishop of New York read e cabled message of gratitude from the Catholic Archbishop of London there came into the hushed m crowded nave of the Cpthedral a vivid picture of broken altars, crumbled walls, fallen spires, of the ruined churches where a year 114:0 the ancient. liturgy wu car- ried out as safely and splendidly as in St. Patrick's, They are our sanctuaries, the sanctuaries of all Christendom. that Hitler wrecks, and u the congregation oined in a common rayer-"De ver u: from evil" - shmpe and name of the evil were clear in the minds of e11. — New York Times. wide ranle of materiel: 1s now available for giving m- tcction against. flying glam an for use as substitutes for gloss. 5am lea of these. ether with app] ances for ventilat on in the blackout. are now on view at. an ARP. exhibit-ion which. was open- ed recently at the Buiidrig Cflflifé. New Bond street, W. The roducts of 120 manufacturing irms are represented, and no fewer than 80 different kinds of substitutes for glass are shown. These materials range in prioe frcm is 6d to 10s a square yard. ‘It-icy are weuthe oof and can be fixed to meta frames by u special composition. A linen rein- forced acetnte is now in popular use and is sold ' 1t S; to 4e l. square yard. There are also on view samples of antiscattcr material. the use of which reducer the danger of flying glass. Photographs illustrate the effective shuttering of glau- mofed factories, and also 110w wired glass line withstood fire in buildings vqlpitgi have been zuttcda - mndou m a. In thlq wnr there are no profits. No great sums are being wrung from Government ccntracta. An example of this is found in the an- l nun statement of Aluminium Lim- ited. holding company for Alumi- num Company of Canada. Ltd. which in enraged entirely in war work. Its mffrstatement compared with the statement of i939 shows that in the beet/year texel ‘m! Vlreel ways seemed to him that dull boys a o! dmhmm, and treachery‘ Q! few Mosiemsmtprayed together at l France ha: effued tih WORDS OF CHALLENGE A THOUGHT A DA! FOB A PEOPLE AT WAR ‘Today the whole world fa divided between human slav- ery and human freedom - oe- tween 0888-11 brutality and t-ne Christian ideal. We choose human freedom-which l8 the Christian ideal." - President Franklin D. Roosevelt. No Alternative (Winnipeg Free Press) Home attempt is bein made in Ontario to keep up the emund for a Dominion-Provincial conference, but it will get, nowhere, since there is no support: for it in the other provinces. The outstanding feature of the Dominion budget, nffectiv. the provinces. was the propasa that. they leave the field of mcomo and corporation taxes to the Dom- inion during the war. The Hepburn government is alone in refusing to do this. All the other provinces are ready to comply, , They are willing to do so because they know there is no alternative to that. policy of war finance. The public iri Ontario knows it. too. There Ls practical] r10 division oi opinion as refiecte in the press. It is recognized that; the province should give way to the Dominion in the field of taxation in question. This would have been made very clear at the conference at Ottawa in January. if it: mad not: been broken off. War finance is a vast problem but the main lines of policy in regard to obtaining tax revenue are simple and obvious. There is really no choice, when the possible sources of revenue are examined. The taxation must necessarily be extremely heavy. and it must, therefore, be adjusted as fairly as possible to the shoulders of the Canadian people. The chief sources of revenue have been the sales tax, income tax on persons and corporations, and the customs duties. The latter. at one time the main source of revenue. has lately been the least. To in- crease the sales tax would not, be a good way to obtain war revenue because it is not levied according to ability to pay. And while the government got $185,000,000 from the tax last year. the PBOPIB P8111 at least; s50.000.ooo more, because 0i the pyramiding of the tax on its way to the consumer. The main de- pendence, therefore, must clearly be on the personal income tax and the tax on corporation profits, be- cause those levies are strictly bB-Sed on abilitv to pay. This Dominion has been com- pelled to wade deeply into those tax fields but it has given the PT°' vinces fair compensation. There is in this no occasion for a. confer- ence. as eight of the provinces fully recognize. Petal“ And Weygand; has been without. foundation: andl (Winnipeg FreehPi-ess Amona the F-erw who exiled themselves W“? France collapsed was Eie J. B015. who m! ttkvienlgv-tféve Wm e . ediitfii; griiie died in London; but.‘ he 1m behind him a bwk. "Truth by Hodder a; siwush will from which much can be lelfnved- about, the men “b0 ruried France and then led her down the road to unlllefidmled cts them and their performances he - i A defeat may be no more than, an accident. a collapse no 111918. than s. misfortune: the caP-lu‘. iaifon of Bordeaux the repudia- tion of the signature of France. the prostrotion before the c011- ~ d tn bandonment of more important than mathematics Iilxzroéimgii-e M: Immu- ucidezits nor rnhsfottunes: tihey are dis- honor. u. dishonor which opnreses and will not. cease to oppress my spirit and mv heart. with those, o so many other Freiichnen, initii. is stem frcml her flag. I make e point oi’ declar- in St.1>atr1ck's Cathedral for the in: here and now. however, that v v-n\~ mi o,“ nnmpf that of M“. shai Petairi who has been MIT-Md i. 1:. aeceive. zuiied. There is hardly n. reference to Qiiain in the book which deer not suggest. nenility. “He had the vl- lcmt. eve of exhausted old age.” Wold age and flattery had ex iii- guisheci in him the last learns of, the critical faculty." " en for months. even years. had gambled, on his senile degeneration in bprder his flag." "He had been made to believe (M. B015 makes it clear that. it was Weygand who thus duped hirn) that with the legend attaching to him he would obtain e generous o ' volving no nee-or almost none. In his nftemoon naps he would I06 a Hitler disguised as Blefried begging the furious Peteiri w crane and mee him." m; added] veer of life as held of the puppet government of Vichv has no doubt. ‘icreased his infirmities. He now capable of relying to the world. that them ls not e single German in Syria. . ‘ . . Weygarid figures in this book its i114, man who fanned the omitt- tlce and oarri it through, having been successful in making Petnln beleve that he could thus become‘ the saviour of France. The record.‘ as niven in this book, o! weymmi pronpt surrender, after his nrriveil in France frcm Byfl. to the idea of accepting defeat and aeekin m1 armistice upon any terms ObEaIn-l able and the means by which he advanced the plan with the assist-l nice of Bonnet Level, Beaudoin.~ Helem de Fortes. the mistress of Paul mynnud, fa u eforv of trench-y e11, betrayal and cowardice thatl can hardly be matched in the an- nals of history. ‘the narrator was one of the bezt-iuiown journursts. in Paris who new with his own‘ -e'yes the infamy develo iniz dov by day. M. Bois had :10 , in pre- lwa-r days. been associated with the policy of protectinq Europe by ‘collective action; he had been conspkilous as e. friend of Italy an_q_ln__q111>°1_igrit of sanctions. ife over 5 times as hidh l! in 19:9 and profits were twenty-two per cent! less. Sta-caved bin business cannot carry ire 111d alone. Every m”. vlduai Canadian must help. -Mon- l/lfi- .11: 1'; _, Vchy. Hiti <1 M - ‘ , on the ‘filmed? 0f F7551" l "b" Fcnchmeni: iqfn the urfitfilirclhiafkilii from I-Itier in- . s55 11-"1/01/ 001v? 657 MORE RICH m: l/Ol/R AND Quebec, MARITIME SUMMER SCHOOL MOUNT ALLISON UNIVERSITY Ellhteenth Regular JULYSIh to AUGUST 16th Courses iiiveri in Aria. . Music. Fine Arts and Craft: an well as Matriculation. Stanley Roy! . ILBA, A,B,w_ A., A-B.C.A., ‘will give hi; courses. Special attention Conversation and slonai Courses for teachers. 1. n. A. n 801.8. a. Inecinlllt I»: Iflontrellnenoh will o o n dn e t courses in French. Write for Descriptive Bulletin: The Director Maritime summer schoq] Bukville. N. B. Science u" 9mm‘ Trust Building to ch to Profes- West, hi: ‘JQNILIFI; 1941; .§ Professional cam, muruvfim-H,“ J°9°Ph MacD BAIBISTER. soucmm: ‘n, Over Tole" h l" mciimnib cliff: Charlottetown i‘ - MURRELI. a on. n. r. Anciiiaiu clunllfll Account";- Oh-vottetim, MclEOD a. arm 111v w. r. 5|; .i. A. Balltff l} g c. l‘. BENTLEY, 1.1;; Barrister: nnlda'Attoi-nq;.n_ MONEY T0 LOAN 154 Prince Street GOOD/VEST FRO/ll svsny POUND» w" IIFRIWEII BLEND fllfllllll PACKED O ldflbd In Canada MAXWELL llj0 ll S E coiirr DRIP GRlND—f0r1'-lriv1’°¢ and Glass Coffee-Maker: REGULAR GRIND - T01‘ Percolator or Boiled Coffee therefore had no bias against the EFT-ill) he b18815 with 115 condem- nation. If weight; is b0 be given to the statunezits made by M, B015, i; i; evident that. any reliance that m; been placed in Weygand as a do- fender of the Colon ai Emp re of France aganst Blue's scheming, $11058 who fcurid comfort 1r the] iepsrt have been the v1ct'm5 of] l l “mans? PPODHEanda intended to misead - MEX VYpmer. in his "Battle for the] was‘ I that France was be-; pu1s1en_ Mm year hbv vesggrdglstsi June of last. n1 ' ' men of Mu- | ch and tomorrow's men o: Bois is correct. General Weygand was a leading member of this lffnobie group. SONNET when in disgrace with fortune and I all nlnm'5b§yes' t 0H6 E " And tfiggble tiiaiiernfinébizii-icivsihimntfv as es. Arid look upon inyselLu-id curse my l . Wllhlnk o?» like to one more rich Fieatiired like'him. like him with nds possessed. Desfrink this man's art, and that mans scope, . With what I most enloy contented as Yet 1n these thought; mygelf g. most despising, Hauiv I think on thee-end then my eta (Like ‘fr! the lark at. break of day s From sullen ‘earthi sings hymns at. heavens gate; For thv sweet. love remembercd, such wealth brings Thai: then 1 scorn to change my state with kings. -Wiliiam Shakespeare. Scientists foresee common use of of a vacuum concrete which will d1‘! in an tiour and b, criwkproof. SMUT 0N GRAIN A eh h t th . fectlvee'geme'ify. 62:1‘ u’ a .1::'.1.':~.:1::~ e ee treated before eowfnppnperl, Onenllint to every (0 gallon; of w: r. Fnll direction; given wflh NOTICE FARMERS We hive fut received 1 m’. inent of every order. PRICE l0 CENTS LB. We also cln‘! the new nnd improved A dust disinfectant for wheat, "ll- Blflfl- One pound treat! Glt your pound 32 bushel to-day. 1 Lh. Tin $1.10. 5 Lb. Tln HAO S- CEBESAN MACS ITION COND POWDER FOR HORSES AND OATTLI Tones up the eyntein. cure: ell akin trouble; and 50 cent; per pggkj‘g_ TllE TWO MAGS DRUGSTOBE 149 G t Geo Mall 01:11:" cii-Iii “F533... tte wooii istAiins-ciimaou can FERRY srnvicr The “Prince Nova" will leave daily, including Sundays, from Wood Islands at 7 a.rn., 11 a.m., andi! p.m., and from Caribou at 9 a.1n., 1 p.m. and 5 pJIl-i Atlantic Standard Time. Until adjustments are com- pleted, it will not be possible to load or unload high trucks at Wood Islands at low tide. NORTIIIIMBEIILAIIII FEIIRIES LTD. ntlori. AAAAA a Say to Your Grocer I Want BBMIMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEll You will enjoy its superior quality [TOUGH gives n glossy coat of hair. For lwelled lite. Purifylfll the Blood and u an Eradicator of worm: it ll In 11111111111: remedy. Price p. H. r. Mans: a. A. x. c, l BAkllibqrigblls-Otlbngg "W! Blllldhl: Quantum" MocGUIGAN & TRAINQR MARK R. MacGUlGAN [to a s1". CLAIR rimmoii’. 11' i; Bbfilstre, Sniicltora. 51¢‘ ' om Molnar '10 10am ‘ ee: vei‘ Provl Richmond Street. Cliiiliiliiffeatriikwu, PALMER 8i HASLAM A. .I. HASLAM. B.A.. LLB, nfAgnlsgillt, mo, Bunk o ova cotia c)“ Chnrlottetown. Elfin“!- MONEY T0 LOAN "lime 85 P.0. Box 11 BELL 8i MATHIESON MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block, cr... loiteton P. E Island. ALEX W. MATHESON BABBISTIZR. SOLICITOR. I'M Money to Loan Collectionl Office: 90 Great George St. i:._ EYES EXAMINER ELASSEilmFiTTEli J. s. TAYLOR OPTOMETRIST New location Cor. Kent and Queen sil- Opposite Rh‘: Grocery Evenings Bv Appointment Phone " sidence 1013 L-ZQI-B-lll- LQ-o0¢+o-o4 .-.._. ---o+o+0<-+*"”‘ AAA‘ L_________,_- A HIT! Our tobacco has scored i018 of them all over the Island- It has a range reachinz "m" Tigriish to Soiiris. It never misses the mark and 8W5 right to the spot- Hickey? Black T wist 10c Per Fig , Manufactured BY iilckoy & Nicholson TOBACCO c0. LTD- CHARLOTTETOWN