hflyij 15, i. PlilNCE EDWARD TODAY ‘ &\VED. L15, 7 d: 8.45 Now is the time to Fumigate We guarantee to rid your house of all kinds of Bugs, Moths, Cock- roaches, etc. Strictly confidential. Office hours: 9.00 a.m. to 1 p.m. ' Call, write or phone. RELIABLE FUMIGATING CO. Tel. 1075. 145 Great George St. L-1450-6- _ (‘eorgetown - . (‘harlottetown Bus Service QTARTING MONDAY, MAY 10th - 8.00 AM. 8.30 AJVI. 8.40 AM. 8.60 A-M. 9.00 A.M. lure Georgetown — - fardigan - - - 48 Station — —- St. Theresas — — Peakes — — -- — Pisquid — — - Fort Augustus — . ivehnter’: Corner 9.35 AM. Charlottetown — 10.00 AM. Charlottetown — 4.00 PM. Pealree — -- — - 5.00 PM. (‘ardlgan — — - 5.30 PM. trrivo Georgetown — — 6.00 PM. Passengers are fully protected by insurance for any accldentqthat may 11mm. while iii-iviii; iii um Bus. Stops at XOBANA TEA ROOMS Great George St. ‘him lure Wednésiliii Hall Hoii ' The most Swing Rhythm In “Top 0f Opened Prin u impressive scene in TOD of the Town." which opened yesterday at the Prince Edward ThEHl-re. is the “Jamboree" sequence $11M D rovides the musical climax for the production. It introduces the new trend in amusement, known as "spreading the Jam." The offering has been done on a pretentious scale. with eye-filling 59B. enchanting melody, lovely dancers and a fresh new comedy treatment for film musicals. Doris Nolan, portraying a millionairesa with a rush of rattlety-bang ideas to the head, gives George Murphy, swing band leader, thebenefit of her inexperience in creating a show for a new night club. Gertrude Nlesen, radio favorite and star of the Fbilies, sings four of the songs. ‘rhey are "Where Are You?" "Blame it on the Rhumba," "Top of the Town" and the swing rhythm finale number, "Jamboree." Three more songs are featured by Elia Logan and other members of the company, "I Feel that Foofng Feeling Coming On," “There Are No Runs iiiot The Town” Yesterday at oe Edward Two Ways About it” and "mfflfiflll Save My Child." The laugh situations are develop. ed by ten comedians, each with a style of humor all his own. Henry Armetta. Mischa Auer, Hugh Her- bert, Gregory Ratofl raise the fun- ny buslnes to a. new high. The dances are diflerent than (“IAKLU I'll i". l u 'l ill‘. days Sta SHOWS AT 3.16 1.00 AND l.“ CAPITOL I q;ui‘1I Milton nun Dramatic romance is the timid: . . . as a flying doctor . iigiiis hi: n! iiscii from run- dllllltltliflliitlilfl, JOHFIMIEAI. JOAN FONTAINE PiiiLiP HIISTON those seen on the screen before. The sword dance possesses an ele- ment of excitement. as well as com- edy. The dance of the weaving hands. through a curtain, is ex- tremely novel. Peggy Ryan, a l2 year old girl. does a dance on a long flight of stairs which marks her us an accomplished performer of rare talent. "Top of the Town" lifts to an in- vigorating musical climax in the closing “Jamboree" scene. The "Jamboree" number is sung by all the principals and by choral groups of 150 trained voices in a joyous sdngfest. There are 23 different choruses, many of them rib-tick- ling. lKO RADIO PICTURE i “The Man Who EMOTIONAL DRAMA OPENED \Vi‘i LJLJ[“(U‘A'\A‘ Today 8i Wednesday 8"'“_'-a l dramatist‘, first to welcome l /;'Ie|ul/!Y." M” “m” OAN "riifiiiilé" d i Found Himself” YESTERDAY AT THE CAPITAL The aiory of a young‘ doctor's rc- iii-iupiiun aficr iin llllliircilf act of kiiuinc-r iii-iii plunged iiiui into a iii-ii Hr lil||ill'l\’\v\‘ and fiiri-i-il liiin to iii-n uiiiler nu ussumi-d name comes tn rho. l':lllllfil Thi-uire si-ri-eu as fl sparkling ni-iileru i-iirr-riiiiiiiueiif. “The .\luii Who lmunri Himself.“ John lieiil and Joan Fontaliie. who mukr» iheir first itppearunei- together iiii mo svri-vu in this offering, vom- priso ll proiulalni: new film duo. iii-iris work opposite Katherine Hep- hurii, Anni- Shirley llllil Aun Dvornk has pruri-il him nur- of ihe finest young iii-tors on the screen imiay, unri Miss l’i-iii:iiiu‘, who iililllu her film debut in Miss Hephurifs Ylvlllhil "Quality i\'ll'r-i>i_" 5- l ~l‘ t'llllll'l' in her firsi 1i I 'i'lii' liii-iili- iii "'l'lu- . Iliiusi-lf" is ll liirgi- h iimnl rind a Lon .\u;~i . ri-irliaiin ll'llli'l \\‘i'f'1‘l\' in lhl’ Iiliilil highlights ihi- ('llillli.\'. ii Also fi-aiiiriiii: l'llillll llmLi-ii. ll.‘ brilliant. young ni-iiir uiii. i-i- H». avureii in "The Bic lilllllu” il"il "u. . nn tho Jury," ilii» ipporiiii; 4 "llldllil ilillii" \\'i sh, 4hr liilly (Pillar-rt, Viiiiik .\l. Aim‘ Pruip. lmiv Iiflllili ii “The .\lnii Who l-‘oiiinl ll, . Ii. K. l). Ruillu Piciurr-s. TUESDAY, JUNE 15 7.00 P. ilVL-Executive of Senior . P. U.—Board Room. 7.30 P. ML-Senior and ‘ Junior Y. P. U.—fleartz llalL 3.00-6.00 P. lvL-I-loepltal Tea — Cundall Home. Protestant Orphanage ,-~ Collections ( ) \ Borden Per Y. P. U. Mrs. w. rieiiis .50 The following 35c each: Reta Pickering, IVLrs. Herring, Ivirs. Con- stable, Mrs. Birch. Mrs. White, Mrs. Orossman, lVLra. W. leard, Mrs..w. Carin, Mrs. Chappell, Mtrs. Steven- son. Mrs MacTavish, Charlie Love, Mrs. W. Irving. Ethel Ozon. 'I‘ota.l 4.25 Vernon Per Mrs. W. L. Jenkins W. A. Jenkins 1.00 E. C. White 1.00 Gault Murray / 1.00 Mrs. Wilfred Fumes; ",1 1.00 Mrs John Huntley ‘1.00 mrigwcu McLeod _ 1.00 Mrs. J. M. McLeod 1.00 Dingwell Jenkins .50 W. l... Jenkins .50 Ruth Fraser .45 H. N. l-Iowlett .50 William Ross .50 Total 9.45 Specials I Marshfield Dunstaffnage ‘ Y. P. s. 5.00 Bedeque Auxiliary per Mrs. Bowness Mt. Herbert Dram. Club P81‘ 25.25 ome Auxiliary / % ,, L-l442-6-l5-1i T To Clasify TTTETIFOFIWSTTU or unfurnished. Gentlemen pre- ferred. Apply this office. ' L-I45_1__- nail; FOUND-SILVER BLACK MALE fox. Owner may have same by identification and paying for this ad, Dania‘ Farris. Springvale. 4447- truck, recently overhauled Cheap for cash. Apply Austin Kcnncdy. Southport. L-l446-6-l5 GLASSES LOST LAST WEEK. Finder please phone 378-L. Ro- i never increase. We may Experimental Farm’s Business To Guard And Strengthen Vit- * al Link. “The Connecting Link" was the subyect of an interesting address delivered by Mr. Ernest L. Eaton. supervisor of Illustration Farms of llli5 province, at the regular weekly luncheon of the Rotary Club yes- terday. The Rotarians were also privleg- ed to hear Miss Vera Malcolm Campbell iii two vocal selections ‘The Piper of Love" and “Amore, Amore." Miss Campbell was accom- panied by Miss Sue Brenton who was also hoard to fine effect in the piano solo "Prelude" by Rachman- inoff. Thu address of Mr. Eaton follows: “Probably of all our common in- terests the one we are all most deeply concerned with is wealth. Not wealth in the sense that some of our socialistic friends use the word, but wealth iii the economic _ sense: the wealth that provides us w‘th the necessities of life; Wll-h food. clothing and shelter. In this sense, we know that wealth comes from three things: land, labor and capital-Land of course is Mother Earth, and is the foundation on which a‘l the rest is built and is the one commodity which we can improve the means of deriving wealth from Mother Earth. and in fact all the phases of our modern civilizaton, our cities, factories. clcciric light plants. etc, are really devices of mankind to extract n greater" amount of comfort from Mother Earth. Let us forget, however, for a little while, those portions of Mother Earth which we know as the ocean and also these portions that have come lo be of such great value because of their mhieral pro- ducts and confine our thoughts to that part of Mother Earth which gives us our daily bread, and our dorly de icacies. as our sugar, lea, coffee. This soil is the portion of Mother Earth which concerns us most as citizens of Prince Edward Island. and I do not need to re- mind you if we erased the farms, of the province from the map. our‘ banks. O\il'_ churches. our schools and iriost of our other cherished, institutions, would also disappear in short order. And it is this some por- tion. the sol, which concerns those of us who are technical workers in agriculture. i "When we get down to the fu"; dameniai facts of life, the connect- ing link between mankind and the,‘ soil is a very slender one, and it is‘ oiirinirp onion oiiurriiLife Dependant Upon Simple Chemical Process“ soil, that I wish to discuss. In those dim ages of the past when the fzrst green leaf appeared, vie had our first industrial revolution. That first tiny, green leaf through some means or other, was able to take the water from the soil and the common carbon dioixide from the air. and unite them into simple starches and sugars. Immediately that process started, all other earthly processes were out of date, and the connecting link between animal life and the soil was estab- lished. Mtanknd today is just as dependent on that simple chemical action in the green leaves of piants as his primitive ancestors or any prehistoric animals. The leaf of every plant in the factory where this creative process goes on and none of our boasted modern science has yct been able to duplicate it. The foods on our table today are all ex- amples. Science and our good cook have done wonderful things with our plant products afterward, but we have completely failed to cre- ate any other link between human life and the soil. “We are all familiar with the old saying of the chain being no strong- er than its viea-kest link. and all down through the ages men have sought to strengthen this link be- tween human lzfe and the soil, be- cause once broken, disaster and perhaps death to the individual or the tribe followed. This link has bccu strengthened in many ways, but chiefly b_v the selection of more desirable. more useful and more ef- ficient types of plants, and man- kind lias gone to the ends of the earth to find plants and plant pro- ducts which would help him to maintain this connecting ink. Po- tatoes from South America. wheat and barley from Egypt and Meso- potamia, corn from Central Amer- ica. cotton from somewhere else and our common vegetables from all over the world. “We sometimes boast of what our present. generation has accomplish- ed in the field of science-our radio, talkies. motor cars, aeroplanes. etc. but these accomplishments were only possible because of what had been done previously in agriculture. No man can do very much in the way of research or constructive thinking unless he knows whore his next meal is coming from. Life and leisure are the two essentials. and only since man was assured that his connecting link with the soil could maintain him without undue Worry, has he found time to develop these many adjuncts of modern civil za- tion. "Our old school copy books used to have a phrase, "Eternal vigil- ing care. In those childhood ii. . we only thought of Constructing: iii.‘ letters as nearly like the copy llnl c as we could. As grown men, v.1: realize that there was muiii uni-c to the lesson than that, and i1‘..- nal vigilance is the price ihai ii». t still be pad if we are to llliIllil-Lll the connecting link bcuvcczi nun.- kind and the soil. “There are none among us. nozv who remember the greai Irish Ifaz. inc oi the last century; how ilic im- tam crop, introduced into Bflliilli by Sir Walter Raleigh, had bow-i‘..- the main article of food of l masses of Irish people; how an 1.11- known disease that your dcviro er. the potato crop and how l$lill'\"rl.iUEl and famine, death and pisiilruc‘ followed; resulting n tin.‘ gi-i ill. Irish migration to [ills lJUllLllitlli. We have none living iioiv who I member that, but we liaic iii. sons and grandsons zriiong us, uiii‘. Irelaiids loss at that time has lJLCII America's gain. Mankind has hOllfl-i the problem of that particular‘ dis- ease. but how many of us‘ llilt‘ n". ize that, had Prince Eldwnrd lrlimci been entirely dependent. on her own wheat crop lust ytiil‘ for lord. we would have had a rcpciiizuii of that Ir sh famine right hero {is 1' happened, our link with iiic :~i)ii was broad enough and - .~iiuiig.; enough so that when one small nncc‘ is the price of safety." You remember how we had to copy that line so many times with painstak- ALLISON HUESTIS ward. L-I448-6-l5-3l. W. Conn...“ 1mg ibis he u, m“ i‘ ___ .- ni- _ - wit: vain. f! .- ISLAND MOTOR TR NS Saturday, at Tormentin Elmira-Charlottetown Service: Leave Elmira at 7.15 a.m. iii};- Lt e via 1.00 p.m. bout. 8.00 tam. Arrive Ch‘town. 10.15 u.m. Leave Charlottetown 4.30 p.m. Arrive Souris (i. L‘! p.m. Arrive Elmira 7.20 p.m. ‘ I New Bu; schedule Charlottetown Effective June 4th to 1min) nowu Slilltlllelilde READ UP , ' iii-si o Dll Dil i Dil‘nll m‘, :‘..:.‘,:1-;':.‘:;-::. 2.11;‘. 212,222. Hunter River“; ten-now “H 2%Zi§‘;.'€§?‘ilziisiiiizhi .,,,,,,....--D. , """" 1220i 12:1 ih:<)|[.7.3o Lv. Charlottetown Ar. 11l-00l10-30l 1~30i 3-30 0-30 360i 510-15 ri.3o| 8.50! 5.30! I.§O|li.50llO.30l 8.50 Ar. Summerside Lv. 9-30‘ 000110“ 2.00 5-00 7-00 i 3H Summerside Q Q D1 6 Borden - Victoria w f i w Charlottetown -_ _ _ g, 8. 5 Lv. Sunimerside Ar. I 10-10] 1-35 4-50i 7-00 3~30 5(5) i125 9.2: Ar. Borden Lv- 9-35 100 4-15 6.25 8.oo ‘ “ , .15 6.15] 6.25 9.35 Lv. Borden Al” 9 8.10 11.20 Ar. Charlottetown _I.v. | 7~30 4~30| Both Buses leave Charlottetown at 7.30 p.m. to con nect with earl)’ 0011i ‘rain "l- Bmdfll- 9011111101101"! June 5th Bus leaving Charlottetown at 10.20 p.m. connects with mainland S.M.T. Bus Service strand of the link gave viuy we were able to exist. But wheat was a t ure in Prince Edward Isaiul l year and it is still an llilptll item in the set up cf our piuiin; prosperity. What happcncd l. . year may never happn zignlu, i; ., on the other hand, IL may implicit this year or any year, or to any other crop or sci of crops. Eternal vlg lance lS still the priz-c ot :::.".i You may be llllfilfwlCCl i0 knm. hensivc trials of new vaneiies of wheat at several points Ill u"... pio- vmcc this your. "I am sometimes asked if the Lx- perimcntal Farms are uorlii \'.llii‘t they cost, or if the liiusiiuziiiii b} tious, ivhich I am mo;e i» ' cuii concerned with, are worzii \\'llli', My answer is, ilioy arc \\'0i‘lll any place. If they were not using czcr-i nal vigilance for the safely oi (iur connecting link with the soil. Silllllf" other body or organization would b: l necessary. In our great scheme ii-ri division of labor, the EXlltflllifillldl Farms and other agricultural iii- stitutions have been assigned 1h.‘ job of safeguarding ih.s coiuiecti g link with the soil; couiroi oi pi ~ diseases, development of more c1! lent plants, soil and feriililci- treat- mcnts. ‘ll form a part of that job. Does it pay? It is uupossib i‘ w state in cold figures all that it pays. but pay it certainly‘ docs. Take for example the ouc small item of Charlottetown N0. 8O flur- ley. Prince Edward Island glows roughly 3,800 acres of buricy pcr year, chiefly Charlottetown No. Bu. a variety orignated at the Experi- mental Staiion here. On the him. of actual tests, this vuric._v 11.‘; probably added at least five ~‘ per acre .0 tin average yi-iir‘ the province, compared to ihc iii eties it has replaced. Ar. this _vc.i prices, this represents as iucrcri revenue to the farmers of the pr ~- vince of around 20 thousand doinir. Enough to pay the major hllilli‘ vi the running expenses of the Exl"‘1'_1- mental Station. Nov ‘s that tlu: may benefit. What of the results o1 111v increased purchasing power "iiiui. item represents, “hat of the mor- chants and the school teachers euiil the clergymen that have benvilivl because of it. the beuelicicui circle‘! And what of the similar increases in those districts of nclil11lX‘1ll'lll'- provinces which have also b11111" 1i Drofztable to use this barley ill‘- veioped here? And Wllfll- oi tiuve individuals and firms that have dc- vgjopcd a profitable export busini ss in seeds of those improved r1110‘? "Nor, I think, is the cnii yet. By our tie-up with similar iusiiiutiiuis elsewhere. we are able l0 10-“? 1111‘ work of other plant‘ breeders and research workers, and innkc their findings available to farmers of lit»; province insofar as they nresuu-i able. One of the promising iuiro-, ductions we are interested in iusli ii iiiiw a the iiipin; a plant Closely "i" latedto the pea and bean. but rob-l aI-iic of extracting its fond from‘ soils commonly rated {is tor» 11'1"" l ‘ i support profitable plant irrouth. A, TEN-ill official Hermon iviiiiiv-ii ' slates that. the discovery "1 ‘l’ l sweet lupin is of 0011111 i111i1'"' “ill” to that country as the inlrndur mi of the potato. Soviet Russia has CUUYL 4 the: we liaie some rulncr comprv- ‘ rt Tomorrow The Central Guardian i COWFEDERATION LIFE IN-‘ SURANCE. L-6798-7-i2-3l2 SPECIAL nsras AT KENT aaacrr suorrc. L-1402-6-l4-2i. DELICIOUS SANDWICHES and cake served at the Cundall Home ten wiiziy iii aid 0i Hospital. 14-1449. ____. ‘TICKETS FOR rhig-slde seat.» for boalu; bouts at Kensiiigwu Wednesday, June 16th. may be pllfClhibEd ill Charlottetown at the ltevere Hotel and H. L. Worthys Dzumzore. L-I-liO-l-S-lt-Zi. --_.__ POLICE COURT-At the police yesterday a man charged‘ ‘iiilli the theft of a cap from one of the lorai stores was sent to Jail for Ililrlj,‘ drur "Pwo drunks ap- peuri-d and were each fined fivc dollars and costs or five days i:i_ ‘All. i “ i H1011!’ 57mm to the! .ii..ui-. today. Cake and lEUJJw, also afternoon tea F. 11pm 5-3530. 'I‘:¢kei_~, 25 cents ‘ L-IIHU, (‘Ohlf-I AND DIEET your friends ‘ c mi on ihc beautiful \ of Cllilflllll Home today-Zi- ‘I. tilil of llospiial. There will vrll suppized refreshment home made cakes. L-i449. ('.\l)l.'|‘ INSPECTION “WEDNES- . Mmziul lllSllPPllOll of Char- ""01 l llii in: Ll ma. uuuouiiccd yes- l‘ ierd.i'.'. iV-J-L K011i. Cadets will be ’ lll.»l)('1""l at 3.110 and Queen Sfllhlli‘ (Jndoi. at 3.30. IVIRADE — I n full urnform Queen Square in‘. (‘AIIGIE made an impressive befor. hundreds of spec- ziay riuriiig the annual , 1dr‘ iii St. Dunstsns ~ Burilica The cadet bugle band al>o toiii. p.m. F "muzg at Rochfoxd Sq r0. ilzi‘ it ad;- proceeded ‘ . Qu- l. Richmond and Grca: Georgi‘ Siicis to the Bas- silzczi. The return march was by uuy of Great George. Richmond. Ch "i, (tuition, Queen and Kent c .5. l‘ FIVE YEAR OLD BOY INJUR- Illi-lhliih Woaion, fivc-year-old .01‘. o; Mr. and MIX. Everett Wot- iou. Grimm Sta-cot lust night was :"i‘co\i‘i.ii_ Pom cuts and hmlses suiicroii when ‘ iie_ ill automobile driven by .. Ilugiiif», fort Augustus. P. . vi icril. v. The yoiingslei" mi from n parked car oiirriizcd by John Good and had .il'll'illil the lrunt to Cl‘0.\S the i» l:;,- home when struck. drixtii: liilil to the hospital . he». rcpirtvd the accident to polici‘. (lfFlClAI. V I S l T (‘ii iNl) ('liIEl~‘--.\li"s Isabcl .' of {Jew Glasg w. Nova Sciiiii, Grand ClliPl of Pythian Tcmiiv‘. .\l.ll‘lillIiB Provinces. paid "imuul ii it to Charlottctoivn , c No. l7 In: ziiglit. During FROM ion the Trmplr‘ presented llil‘ i‘. .11 .111 .ui<i:1‘.~... a silver tlowi-i- bout‘ aiiii u hour e1 of seasonable II-iivt Ali-s. siiziituck cl San 13in, i, Cu. vczis zit-o a welcome our-u. lrllPI‘ in iii“ evening mem- b"l'.\. lllfl guests were entertained at bruise u: Gariiiey Lodge, the hlzrioi" and Airs. J. A. \'l>l'1'l.\'G PROV I NC E- MI. ‘vxdinlml ,fifilgc.higliebgixgal as King of Ireland but he had re- Glwg,“ of Mae Euler“ ceived the support of only three “irir "~ ill w,» ,.,l,,,0,.5 f0 the members with the Co grave party annlgl,‘ Dav“ ‘ is tgunng refusing to vote. McDermoti. was [he lid}? “.5 and‘ Vkiting the convinced, however. the King ioi-ni illlflll: as of ilio order. He‘ was I “Could y“ to be rerwwd and “m” pro-oi! ni iiie IISSfillbiV of theisecured‘ (‘ii-and Cluirucr of New Brunswick. i and Liv i""‘it addressed the mem- Z _o i- E. bv Airs. Duvall, spoke of the scenery . .‘ ‘ i n ll d and friend- lw‘ .» “'-'h which they were mt" the people hcrc. They "are [’I(l.1\' vin the Hcchelrica i"r Nwv (31.1 "ou- whore‘ a new chapter " h‘ .:‘..~t:i’i.i'.eri. Mr. Duvsill is a o the College Park Mri. iii‘ p;~<i$~.‘.iil_v clone more intensive woizk uni i llii‘ crop than any other cumin). Wi- are lPniiilg it at sev- oral p ll1i'..~ in ihe province and are Ziipiyuiw, >fllllf‘ of the most prom- ‘Ml c NITRIIIS. Wi‘ nre not ready to nviivi it griivriiily but we are iu! ll mm L-iw‘ some practical . liiizir uri- u few of the strands comprising the link which iimi i-ca. u.» with mother earth and iii .. il"‘ oi pnriicular interest to u: n~ ciizxcns of the most purely ucnviziiiirn! nroviiice of the Domin- lUll "I would .ikc to toll you how our mini brcr-rlcrr ire crossing the na- tivi- blur-lacrry- with a larger grow- n‘: M1ll'lll"l‘l‘l sperics and develop- in: a burnt“: berry on a taller bush. ll\“.'.' ilii‘ l~;.ii:i“.ri~;n_ potato came into bviiiiv and of the turnip varieties Ill.i are tree from (iisrriscs wliichi’ o!‘i‘i‘ ruin a crop. "These are achievements which lime vasilv strengthened our mn- ncciiiu: link but there are tar urriitci" things _\‘_ct to do. 'I'll(‘l‘E is v-oik for ion full time research as- you can buy a variety/ cuticle; will tuke i ' v uni-moon ill Vic- j ran into the ‘ "imagine breakfast wiihoui coffee! " "imagine coffee without Sweet Cops! " t. SWEET CAPOHAL CIGARETTES a ‘i "The purest [mm in n/iic/i tobacco can be smol-iul." —/\’;.r;_'i! OPEGIIGC DANCE 0 THE HIGHLANDS WEDNESDAY, JUNE I6 , i i SMASH (Colitini left this port today for Bilbao to evzuiiate the Bfillsll Consul. A. s. Stevens-on. and empiovccs of the BflllSh cable station in the Basque capital. The French sloop Audacicuse al- so left for Bilbao to take aboard . Rene Custeran the French Consul. Simultaneously 1hr Basque dole. gallon in Paris announced the Bil- bao government. was determined m stay in the city "until the death." Alfredo Espinosa. Basque Zifinis- iei'_of Public Health iold the As- ‘ socated Press in Paris he had been ‘advised of the government's decis- ion after a cabinet meeting. hold in Bilbao at noon. At that time .he said ‘he Insur- ‘ HEIRS still were about three miles from Bilbao proper. iInsui-acri‘ rc- ports have said some houses in Till- baol". outskirts ivere seized by their rillemeni. _ Rafael Picrivea. Basque in Pars declared the viorld. which is abandoning ifiv “if Euzkadi (the Ba licl is to perish." DAIL EIREANN iOontinued from page l» welcomed the constitution. He re- fused to believe oppo-ition Filth‘: chose he could nt prcscni be Ill!‘ 5 actual dictator of the Flee Sl-ilf‘. i All that would be required would ‘Mad be a resolution passed by the single-chambered legislature. It was regrettable, McDL-rinott added. that the new constitution ignored the King and put a $01- urlon of partiizon farther away. Ho. recalled he had proposed an amendment to recognize Georce VI Jame; Dillon. deputy ‘ieudcl Oi 1110 opposition, in a treiichant speech reasserted the Fine Gael (oppos- ition party: aititzido to the Kin: and the British Commonwealth of nations. He said hc believed Irclaucis future in)‘ in free association with the commonwealth and he would 5 always advocate suiii. ing how easy it wa- i0 impo"? 011 , the Ifirll peoplel- haired of ob-i ‘taclcs. hi‘ advociiicd making the Commonwealth link as easy to sever as possible so as 10 1310mm unscrupulous agitators playing on feelings by izilkiug of the IICCP-itliy t0 ficht. a way out of the Empiir‘. In closing the debate, Dc ViIlCf-t asericd iiic constitution “as on m cl But know- - \ Il1§l.l'lllli(.‘ll‘i that. would make for peace, order and good government. land to scitic their differences in an amicabii‘ wlllfii. Partition of tho country into Northern irriniiri and ilic Free State was a problem. he said. that would have to be faced and handled u‘. of givc and take. hlcllermotz, iuzeirupting, asked the President in declare his atti- tude in the event there were no partition. De Valera, banciu: declared: “If more were no partition I would proclaim an Irish republic." Only two opposition deputies remained in the chamber to hear the President's closing remarks. but the public galleries and gov- erunicnt benches were packed. sisririis riciii now and if any man w shes to leave n worili-uhile mem- <u'i.il. iiicri‘ is nothing hi‘ could (iii: of mow‘ ineiinn beiicfii to this prn-‘ iiiii-i‘ timii in vndmv ('li't‘.'~l\ ]‘l'i\('l!i were Mi‘. F‘. f’ 41v i‘."f‘l'. S‘. John. .\li' (‘inrrloii Sooner-r. Charlottetown and Mr. Wm. A. Duvall. College Park, Md. u lllll-illllPi ‘il- ‘ l‘ Ill n-‘i-icivliiral icsciirch." i trial iiiugiil Stop it quickly HIT-h RAZ- . Thousands find RAZMAH iuekly relieves couirhin and choking, ami- up i lflfillilllllllflllfl of fllllFflffl, Msha hffllhin‘ any, and aim-p soumi and health . buy to lake. No harmful reactions. Relic —-ormoilfl liundod. 50o and ll at all Tomplooorro RAZ-Illl 500i bmnv MAli ii mun‘, oi conciliation i i - 1., ivouid have to take the responsibzl- also rim: ‘of .\Ii . sque Repub- ser of t“i= Miss Dons Bu. were sincere. If, he said. De Valera l i‘; a W“ open at El am. pm. 5lllTlmPi' ext-robes. Pzioii: for: liar-Mill. ‘ I . AL BLANCHARDX ORCHESTRA 9 i0] TICKETS 501: llllifi Tax] [Charlottetown ..T»~¢.t>.iSchooI Board in Monthly Session hi‘ Sijllfl! ii voting iairmui PHIIL" \\‘(-.~- .. Qlii-l lv~ Tue PER SON “.5 u Iv‘. u’ Lonrloy 2:1’. :r. i..c l‘ . LHQ<p1$d~ Dr. F. ii’. I‘ Pravda-rm‘ o.’ » 1:: the C U,‘ flliiliilli’ sax‘. fflviww .\ii;~.s Flori G- iiiirslzicr of .\'Ir. and Nlrs J F. Gordon, ivhi: received her B H. ‘ doorw- it. hivGill convocnf “ll nccopti i a posziinn Ill ' ‘ Doimizi- inch‘. o.’ iii" Geivzzil Hospital ant upoz‘. h-r dunes June l» i: l! i937. Sn n It would enable the people of Ire- iher duu . lil.\'lll\' [TIE-fi-X‘. .\i ' li .. Plioe. Q-l . ‘ ". Air-nut‘ viii hionriayq J lit‘ ., .\li.~. A. .\l. John oi: o; Pi ll',, iiinizi ui iicr ’i‘7'I "m1" l‘.‘..~..ii ziiyii‘ Iuici‘. m; desk who departed this lilo June 17, 1930. Gone but not forgotten. Inserted by Wife anri Daughter. IN MciViUliIAM iliguii. Bronchil Cough Q‘ Cough! (Lough! (‘ought That never-ending I N. D t . MacL UNDICRTA KER ‘ EBIBALNIER Charlottetown find North Wiltshiro Phone 149