i PAGE TIIE citniitirrrrawn auinnnu Mornlnl Dally Wounded In III!) President: Lleut. Col. W. Chester B. loll?! Vlca-Prellderil: J. IL Burnett. I‘. J. l. Secretary: blunt. Col. B. A. llullnlon. 0.8.0. Editor and Managing Director: J. ll llflfli- VJ-l- Anochu Billion: Frank Walker n! Hut In A. Burnett. lLG-NJZR. tun Actlvo Borvloll "The Strongest Memory in Weaker Till the Weaken! Ink.‘ noivnkv, my 2s, 104s The Japs And Mr. Gardiner Just about the time Mr. King, in his 0PM‘ ing catnpaign speech, was assuring the people of the Pacific Coast that they could "trust the present administration to carry on _the ivar against Japan Ito the full” another Liberal par- liamentarian was speaking away 0N0! heffi 1B Prince Edward Island. lle was the Hml- .l- Li. (iardiitcr, Minister of Agriculture. Mr. Gardiner may have (<l$s'llll'l€(l, from our extreme remoteness to the Pacific, that that kind of talk wouldn't go wcll here; or he may just have been voicing the real opinion and policy of the King tiovcrnincut. - .\t auv rate ht- chotisc to strike a different note. “l- thrift like the stories going around," he said with reference to those who were de- manding an all-Out effort attains! JQP-"l-W “You would think we ought to fight ourselves into every war that is going on in every part of the would" Precisely what he meant by this statement we do not profess to know. But he made it, and it was obviously not intended to jihe with the assurances his leader was giving the people of British Columbia. Xor docs it jihe with the opinion of the lidiiiiii/‘nr/ Iii-m‘ Prrrr, leading western Liberal newspaper. The Frrr Press reminds its read- ers that "the German nation of 80,000,000 has been beaten, and we must now turn our at- tention to the Japanese nation of 100,000,000. \\'e turn to face a foe which regards death in battle as the crowning glory of a savage religion. \\'e turn to an enemy which shoots its own woundctl, which fights with a fanatical zeal unequalled even by cornered Nazis." Because we are fighting an cnemy which is different from the one we have fought, it warns, we must not make the mistake of minimizing its tiicnace. liven if we accept the doubtful pro- position that the Japanese homeland can be destroyed from the air, it would not win the war iii the east. The Germans occupied France for four years. The Japanese have been in pos- session of Klanchuria for more than a decade. 'l‘liey have made it the base for their heavy in- dustry. Korea and llanchitria alone cover an area. greater than France and Germny com- bined. It is an area with more than 40,000,000 people and under Japanese occupation has been turned into the Ruhr of Asia. in North China and .\'li2lllClllll'l3 there is a highly trained army of several million Japs. To bring it t0 battle will necessitate the libera- tion of South CThina, where other armies must be annihilated. The struggle which is opening . in the. Pacific divarfs anything that we have faced in EHITlPQ. It will not be a war in which our tanks will break ‘through enemy lines and encircle whole Japanese armies which will sur- render forthwith. If the experience to date proves anything, it is this: The Japanese mon- ster must be beaten army by army, corps by oorps, division by division, regiment by regi- ment. and company by company. To count un anything else would he to once again succumb to the folly of underestimating our enemy, which has brought us to the brink of disaster many timcs iii this ivar. Citing these facts. the Free Press denounces the irresponsihilitv of those politicians who talk as if this \\'.'ll‘ in the Pacific was no concern of r-urs. “Caiizuliztiis at [long Kong," it reminds us, “were :uii~ii;g the first to feel the touch of J€l|lilllC>C llilrllilfll)’. The war against Japan is (fanad:i'.s ivar. and Canada will he unfaithful to herself and ignore hcr dcstiirv if she slackens or fails. licv 1c tiauzuliaits know this, Can- adians will lll>l>l that our country have her share of,responsibility. Liziuadiaii armed forces must coiiic to grips with the Japs to redeem the pledge to the boys at llong ‘Kong. \\'e must fit into the struggle where we can best he fitted. wherever‘ and lltv‘i'il‘\'t‘l' that tilay be. There can be no srcuriqv for (‘zuiada until Japan is de- feated, and the sooner these pOllllClélllS realize this the SUOllCT our political discussions will be clothctl in tl:<- raimt-iit of dignity‘ and realiti". The war for freedom and security for Canada is not over. For all we know, it may only now he beginning." lVe ivish .\lr, Cvllftllllfil‘ had read that edi- torial iu the Frrv Press before he came to Char- lottetown. llc might have nindc a different kind of speech, or at any rate said something it little more iiispii-ing about tlie job the Govern- ment is asking our veterans overseas to under- talw, at the price of a month's fitrlough, so that the Zombies- ciui be lcft at home. Underwater T ieves this is a little story about underwater thieves —— Atlantic Coast hair seals. Smart crooks, too, these particular seals, for accord- ing‘ to the Ffrltrricr Alert-s Bulletin, they open the latched doors of lobster traps and make off with the bait! Reports of the depreda- firms came recently to the Dominion Depart- ment of Fisheries front two of its inspectors in different counties in Western Nova Scotia. Truth to tell. the seals haven't been caught in the act, for lobster traps are set. some fathoms deep and what goes on Itfttllllfl them cannot be seen front :tbove, but the inspectors say the lobstcrmett ltave no doubt who (locs the thiev- ing. Perhaps a bump of the scabs nose against the fasteniig does the trick. Of course. it is not the vane of {he stolen bait that troubles the fishermen; that's a comparatively small t nutter. But ‘lobster trap: that have been rob- bed of bait catch no lobsters, and for fishermen in many parts of the Maritime Provinces lob- sters are their best cash crop. Any man might be excused: cuss word or two if, after spend- ing time and gasoline in two trips to the fish- inggrouiids, first to set the baited traps and then to haul them up again, he found them empty because hair seals had gone off with the bait. As for hair seals themselves, they are of no commercial value in the Maritime Province fisheries though in some Quebec areas fisher- men do catch them, finding a. modest market for their skins and for the oil rendered from their bodies. -EDITORIAL Nuns- The" last week of “The Merry Month of May." - w- u t a Nomination Day for Ontario, Cardigan, and Charlottetown City Council, Ward V. I i U I Property is worth something in Charlotte- town, which would indicate the people here arc in no way afraid of a C. C. F. victory at the polls. iii‘ It is currently reported that though the Charlottetown Airport is slated to close clown by the end of the month, a contingent of Coin- monwealth airmen will be in occupation till at least after the election. a w What a lot of Government-paid publicity for election purposes is coming through the mail these clays. The Liberal Party ntust have found it almost unnecessary to put their hands in their own pockets b0 foot the hill for the super-abundance of printed material reaching the electorate almost daily. iv i: m n The North Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island Regiment are to be into the finish in the Nazi war. They have been five years q/er- seas, on the continent since D-Day, and now have the honour and distinction of being in- cluded in the Allied Army of Occupation. Some of the officers and men will be home on 30 day's leave before taking up their new duties. i l i I r Sir Humphrey Davy, English chemist and inventor, died this date i829; did more in agri- cultural chemistry for the benefit of farmers than any one who preceded him; he investi- gated UllC alkalis and alkaline earths, and isol- ated potassium and sodium, also boron and other elements; he also invented the miners’ safety-lamp bearing his name. r u a o A major disaster to Canada was Mr. Iiiugis absolute unwillingness to hold a Dominion- Provincial Conference, unless he could ask none but Liberal Provincial Premiers to it. As a rc- sult, we have the Dominion Government now trying to make an electorally popular tax sys- tem, with every possibility that what we have saved in payments to Ottawa w-ill go in in- creased payments to the Provincial author- ities. Mr. King has not been able even to muddle through. Illliiti Admiral Count Heihachiro Togo, Japanese sailor who practically created the Japanese Navy, died this date, 1934i was sent to Eng- land in i873 where he served on board H. M. S. Worcester, and studied at the Naval Col- lege, Greenwich, returned to Japan in I883, where he rose to command the Naniwa in the Chino-Japanese “far of l894-95; and the Russo-Japanese War of 1904-5 he was in com- mand of the fleet, among his chief exploits lic- ing the bombardment of Port Arthur, the defeat and destruction of Rozhdestvenskyk fleet at Tshtishima, May 27, I905; he icccived the Brit- ish Order of Merit in I906; was promoted .'\d- miral of the fleet in i912. 4 U I The search is now on for Von Ribbcntrtip who really believed what he. told Hitlcr—that Canada could be depended upon not to support Britain in a war with Germany. He gained this impression from the endless babbling of repre- sentatil/e Canadians, starting with the present Prime Minister and going down to Professor F. R. Scott. Mr. Coldwell and Miss‘ MacPhail He noted the late Mr. Lapointes removal of a Canadian representative at (ieneva, for merely suggesting that sanctions should be applied to Italy oventhe Ethiopian affair. He saw .\lr. King's refusal to pemiit Contmonivcalth air training to go on in Canada before the war, and- hence concluded Canada was to default. But he had His Majesty's loyal opposition to reckon with, lid they ivere his and Hitler'| undoing, it!!! Not all the surplus \iVcstc-ri1 litirscs comc here, though a good many do. Establishment of a horse processing plant at Swift Current bc- comes an actuality with the announcement by Reconstruction Minister J.» H. Sturdy that a contract has been signed with the Belgian Gov- ernment for I0,000 tons of horse meat, at a price approximately $2,000,000. Mr. Sturdy’s department initiated negotiations leading to ‘establishment of the plant at Swift Current, and has backed the Saskatchewan Horse Market- ing Co-Operative Association, operator of the plant, to the extent of $50,000. The Co-Op. has taken over a smaller horse processing plant ‘at Edmonton. The Saskatchewan plant will he in operation within a few months. Between 4o and 50‘ men will be employed. There were some 250,o00_surplus horses in southwest Saskatche- wan, said Mr. Sturdy, using up pastures which could be better employed in the feeding of cattle and sheep. Partners and ranchers got "ridicul- ously low prices’ for horses they sold. Under the present arrangement, they will receive as lugli as $30 for horses for which they could get only from $4 to $6 previously. Among the valuable hy-prtxlticts of the horse processing plant will he a permanent supply of sititablc meat for fur ranchers. ' ran cuakouuv ~- ‘Ilfotes ByiThe A Hartford, Conn, '0 arrested after spend! ln a telephone booth. f. mm; rude to lnterru t a description of e new hat.—Gue ph Mercury. Women mod to wan all"; _.. even stiffer and more unspeakable contraptlons than the things men affect-and sh red them up Wlill strip; of WIIBI&OIIO and sti- of steel. Then, by u decree of “Dime Fashion they were suddenly em. anclpated and found the new comfort so marvellous th never went back. to the old neck- amass. What. fashion did for women p". naps war can do for men. Be- ing more conservative than their wives and sisters-more fled to tradition-men need something almost world-shaking to set them free. But; with so many freedom; ln the air ft ls ridiculous that they should continue to wear the ha]. ter of an outworm mode. -'Van. couver Province. In 1941 Field Menhnl Karl Bu. dolf Gercl V0l'l Rundstedf; gent ht; Nazi legions smashln, lnto the Ukraine pillaging and killing mill. tary and civilians alike. H sol- dlers loaded freight cars with Rus- sians, carried them off as glllvag, Rundstedt. our prisoner now. And, ln our hands, he Ls 5n old soldier, resigned to capture, mus. lng about his forty-three years In uniform. As he pulfg on 5 cigarette no one mentions to him the mass murder of the Russians, the torture chambers built behind his lines at. Maldanek. One of our brfgadler generals does sound n realistic note when Rundstedt asks him if he isn't surprised by the destruction tn Germany, "No, lslr.” replied the American general, ‘We saw London first." ‘There must be no graceful retirement, no homage ln defeat, no p031;- war political honors for the mill- tary leaders of Hitler's Reich. - New York Post. Columbia University will hardly seem the sam lble president. Nicholas Butler, says the Christian Science Monitor. During the 54 years of his leadership, Columbia has be- comev a truly great centre of learning, ln guallty as well as ln magnitude. nd thorougliout, Dr. Butler has been lts perlpatetlc advertisement and ambassador extraordinary. Hg has been call. ed “the most comprehensively de- corated individual extant." He has known just about everybody, including every British Prlrne Min- lster since Gladstone, and nas crossed the Atlantic over 100 times 1n keeping his contacts bright. He has "been in there" fighting vigorously on most national and world issues which have arisen during his career. He may, of- ficially, leave the president's chair, but; he cannot resign from the Am- erican scene. One cannot hlde so cosmopolitan a luminary under the bushel of retirement. Murray To millions of persons the war has bro-tight a reorientation of values. Simple, fundmierital things have assumed a new importance. Prisoners of war, for instance, have learned how precious a thing ls personal liberty. When released they have had difficulty realizing that they were free to come and so as they jpleased, to eat and drink freely and to express exact- ly what was tn their minds with- out fear of punishment. They have walked about in a spirit of exultatlon just to demonstrate that they really were no longer confined bv barbed wlre and threatened by searchllg-hts, blood- hounds and machine-guns. They have ordered glass after glass of milk at their meals and revelli-d in feasts of white bread and but.- ter. They have taken two hot baths in n day as their idea of real luxury. Most of the men who have served years ln the army, navy or air force value home as ‘they never did before. When on leave, they do not hanker much as for quiet evenings in their own homes with their own kln or in cosy comers with “the girl thay left behind them." To a remark- able degree the glrls have similar feelings. The sexes by comnirm consent agree that there's noth- lng to equal happiness in a nest of your own wit-h the one you love best and the raising of a family. The world always has shown signs of decay when it. has neglected the simple life and fundamental needs. The home and the family are the foundations of national life. The future ls bright: when men and women are content with decent plain living, hard work and the building of a home. --Tor- onto Star. Back to battle-scarred old llrl- taut-fortress of freedom for the whole world in its dangerous days -go thousands of British children who were brought to this side of the Atlantic for safety from ‘the German baby-killers. Canadian homes will be saddened by their going, but none of our peo- ple would have it. otherwise. "East or West, home is best"—-and these precious boys and girls from the savagely-attacked British Isles are “going home." Our American neighbors, too, have had a worthy share ln harboring the war child- ren of Great Britain-another last- ing bond of Anglo-Amerlcnn friendship. The case ls well stat- ed by a. leading U. S. new aper, which asserts: "Nearly six ous- und British youngsters who have spent years tn the United States ln safety from bombs and the ln- jurlous effects of underfeedlng are now returning to England. Many will find that their former dwel- ling places are among the lfi,000 demolished by German bombs. Many will be without kinship, ex- cept the warm-heartedness of sur- vlvlng neighbors. These trans- planted children have had the best of eare from their foster “parents here and have been look after tn the friendliest splrlt by the Un- lted States Committee for the Care of European Children. Many of them are reluctant to leave the United Suites. The returning re- fugees wlll flnd man gs ln fam- llur scenes. Wlioe locks of bulldlngs will have been levelled to the ground. Churches, aohoola, shops, play-grounds will have vari- lshed. ihood acquaintance: will have grown older; Jnany will missing; marks of savage de- struction will be vlslble eveiy- where. But the indomitable splalt that enabled Britain to re e1 the Invader ln i940 will be un lsmny- ed. Children who have bee ed for the future of Brltnln by American generosity will enter into a heritage of which they will be the wortliler for. their sanctuary on these hospitable shores." - Stratford Beacon Harold. n e without its lnered- to ‘vuauc i FORUM PEOPLE'S CEMETERY 8lr,—A meetlng has been called for tomorrow (Tuesda) even at 7.30 ln the Ctty b .. of al plot holders and those Interested the People's Cemete ,1. ‘mus t; a very important meet- l and every person Interested ln cemetery should be present. The flnanclnl position of the People’; Cemete y la bad. I under- stand that there are only enou h fund; on hand to nwlntaln to cemeter until the nuddle of ulune and ess some arrangements are made at, this meeting for the care of the cemetery, 1t wlll have to be left uncured for. In which case ft will only be a. short time before It will be in the some position as the old Protestant Cemetery on Elm Evenua was ln a. 18w years ago. Home people may take the stand that they are only interested ln their own plots, and that they pay for the care of them each year. That Is alright. But there are not enough people paying for the care of their plots, nor are they aylng enough. at the present high cost of maintenance, to keep sufficient men and egulpmenr. to gfve lt the care ft requ res, so that. even those plots will be neglected after the funds on hand are used. This also applies to the roadways In the cemetery. . S. Gregory, who has been caretaker of the cemetery for :0 many years, deserves credit for the way ln which he has looked after the cemetery, considering the financial arrangements under which he has carried on. Personally, I have no shares ln the People's Cemetery, nor any other interest, other than I like see a cemetery well cared for and have for many years mufle suggestions for the care of the ce- metery, some of which 1f carried out might have prevented the pre- sent condition. - It ls of vital importance there- fore, that. every person, who ls ln- terested 1n the cemetery. whether they pay for the care of their plots annually, or have them un- der perpetual care that they at- tend this meeting see what ar- rangements can be made for the maintenance of the cemetery. I am. Slr, etc, N. D. MeLEAN. LOBSTER CEILING PRICES Sin-On orders from the War- time Prices and Trade Board there ls a ceiling on canned lobsters of $38.00 to $42.00 a case. The pack- ers pay the fishermen and factory help a price to enable theirl to show a profit, and not a small one, on operations at that. ceiling. In a letter to The Guardian last. whi- ter Mr. Chester McCarthy told how he had obtained $56.00 a case for his canned lobsters, regardless of ceiling price. ‘I understand the Maritime Mer- chant, whlch is supposed to be an authority on prices, quoted canned lobsters $66.00 a case or higher during the last year. Where was the wonderful Dr. Grant (who ls always preaching about all he has done for the’ people of Kings County) and his three Liberal col- leagues alt Ottawa when they would allow such an injustice to the fishermen to hap en? Thepackers tel us they cannot pay any more, that there ls acell- lng on canned lobsters. Then they sell canned lobsters on the open market at prices from fifteen to twenty dollars a case above the ceiling price, and pocket the extra profit. Fishermen of Prince Edward Island, ll: ls time for a change; by all means let us vote Conserva- tlve. I am, Sir, etc., NAUFRAGE HARBOUR FISHERMAN. CANADA'S MEAT SHIPMENTS $lr,—I note with interest an ltem 1n the news from Washington deny- ing certain isolationist "fictions" concerning shipments‘ of meat un- der lend-lease, lntlmatlng that. Brltiiln gets no meat from Canada, but gets it from the U.S. under lend-lease. The facts were set; forth clearly: "Canada ships Brl- tain one-third of her total produc- tion of meat, including 700 mllllon pounds of bacon and 325,000 head of cattle." It ls curious, Indeed somewhat pathetic, to see the cheap note monotonously struck by_ certain peo- ple on this side of the Atlantic, relative to these “lend-lease" oper- ations? I have no doubt that, when the historian deals with the facts (and “flctlons") of the past slx years of struggle, between free- dom and tyranny, a high place will be given to this lend-lease mechanism-aptly termed even today as "a flash of the Roosevelt genius-which played a central part tn the destruction of the Axla power and. at the same time, saved the lives of myrlads of Allied aol- dlers." I see also a story from London, paragraph: "The world la faced with a shortage of nearly 2,000,000 tons of meat, the tnlnlstry of ag- rleulture said today, ln connection with announcement of a new cu’. 1n food ratlonsm." It grows clearer, daily. that the tanner’; work (like that of a good home-building mother.) is never done. In case the average busy ur- ban reader hasn't; the time or the desire to measure the above “meat shortage", lt may help to say that every Caandlan will have 130 bounds of meat ln 1M5, and that 3.000.000 tons would take care of -—>—:r.€ I ll. J. IMBOII OPTOMITIHST Fltfliir and Sgpplylng Glam . o.‘ Mvnhrue. P. I. I. 0f!»- llgllgtslala." A. u. Ilolldl on elm. by up nhimn e Cunne will DBUGSTOIII in ,,,__ __ ____._.. ._.. _ ._.___._-_._---j- Bruiclten -ilisiiiiiiiiiisiiiiiii It Wat; John Bracken, the Administrator, who with firm hand wrote these words :- "The right of tbe pub- lic'to expect efiicient administration of the funds it entrust: to ‘ the management of the State.” To-day,.these words are embodied in “The People’s Charter” -- that ringing challenge to the faith of Cana- dians in themselves and their country, with which John Bracken accepted the leadership of a great party. As Prime Minister of Manitoba, John Bracken administered the government of that Province for more than. twenty years. For more than twenty years his phenomenal success as a far- visioned. administrator won for him the lasting loyalty and support of the people. Through the long years he retamed their trust; for they knew that it was to the furtherance of their in- terests, their hopes and aspirations that John Bracken devoted his great administrative ability. Thus it was that in the years from 1922 to 1942 John Bracken won five straight elections as Premier of Manitoba. Thus it came about that through raging political and economic storms, against adverse gales of opposition and through the deep dark waters of the great depression itself, it was still John Bracken who held steady the helm of government, steering a straight progressive course, firm in his principles and profoundly aware of his high office. You should know more about John Bracken, his deep earnestness, his albembracing humanityand the almost startling simplicity and sincerity of this Lincolnesque man—-who has never known defeat at the polls. Listen to him as he speaks of Canada today-“Our civilization is at the great crossroads of its history- a revolutionary change in our approach to social prob- lems. We are facing a threefold task . . . a war to win, a peace to make enduring and a. world to make more acceptable to the common man." And does this farmer's son, this John Bracken born in a log cabin, know what the common man wants? Listen again-“The people want a national economy in which ALL can prosper. They want equitable prices » é-adequate rates of pay for workers.” They want “to sever the bonds that tied us to scarcity in the past and release the forces that will give us abundance in the future . . .” And-finally . . . “Had I not believed that we could succeed in this great purpose-J would have stayed back home in Manitoba." B-5 .l_(now John Bracken I jmnczzz_z-s._riiz- me meat supplies for the Can- adian people for the next three years I would like to 511889“ l° 3°“- Mr, Bracken, our next Prime Min- ister, the desirability of keeping speculators away from this vital food-stream. Falr_ Drives. SHI- bllized at; appropriate levels, can do this Job. and save lives. I am, Sir, etc. “CERES” with the following rather grim lead ' War Against Japan By J. M. ROBERTS, JR. (Associated Press News Analyst) The war against Japan has reach- ed approximately the same stage as that attained by the war in Europe at the beginning of 1944. That ls not. to say that. lt will be over 1n 1'! months. It merely means that the sons of heaven have been pressed back to their central core of defences, and that the process of softening by alr ls really getting under way. Aside from mopping up actions ln areas already penetrated. and B possible lopptiig off of Japlmwe outposts ln such places as Borneo, Java and Singapore, the next sev- eral months are likely to be oc- cupled largely by the burgeoning nlr offensive. . The recent raids on Japan stand about on a par v/lth the early raids on Germany. They Indicate that Salpan now bases Just, about as many Superfortresses as it will hold, that new bases have to ‘l. and are being, developed. The chief of these. of course, ls Okinawa. From there bombers and flamers of every type wlll soon be ta lng off from" every vatlable space-and there ls a lot of lt. They will be aided on the west and south from the Philippines, from China by the 14th Alr Force, which already has done tremen- Publlshod by the Progressive Conservative Party, Ottawa. l t Progressive Conservative ‘ -@335afilgéfisfiafitryéaaki; nlcatltiiis with the continent, ‘and yiigbably from Burma by the R. A. . This aerial warfare probably will go on for several months-tn fact, tt will take some time to reach its peak with complete de- ployment of air forces from Europe and attainment of the heavy bomber production program 1n the United States. But there ls little doubt, that It will be ln full swing before sufficient; assault forces hiave been gathered for the inva- son. REMEMBER WHEN By The Canadian Press The great Suzannelienglen who three years previously had reached the pinnacle of her ‘tennis career. collapsed at St. Cloud, Fmncc, 2i years ago today. Miss Lenglen turned profcssloiial two years later ln 1926. She died of pernicious anncmlu in 1938 at he age of 39. JAMAICNS POPULATION Jamaica has about one-half the population of the British West l §_ MTS WANTED At once, 3,000 bus., good ‘quality Island-grown Oats, free from barley. WILLARD PROWSE Brackley. DOMINION COKE now AVAILABLE AT voun LOCAL nEALnrs Avoid Possible Dlillppoilllmelli. Iin The wiiim By Accepting Deliveries During The Summer Months. DOMINION STEEL & LIMIT COAL CORPORATION ED IALIFAX-SYDNEY-SAINT JOIIN-JRONCTON -->'*-'* r "w "i"“‘l‘~-\'-lv1~4AMMM-H4- Ala-kw... » Way. p I dou$df should em .._..¢_.____.__ was: re wk. 0h. Idgglllt N10 1125f fqg Y“ lm°WlI18 how way lead‘ 0h Itook a .. the that ence. g-he less travell has made all the: —-Rnbeit . , TBIISSES unililnililm than: is“ m to wear n ‘Truss the qiiutlon. an cannon. it aim out of date ilyxfgqllfalal then why continua sufferim when we iian alleviate n1: canoe by offering you a W, ‘w! fmlnr. modem aiiti ll];- to-dnto one. All sizes “q as‘: II P1460: to suit every _________ mimaun snur on Guam A cheap but lhllrllllghlv u. foctlve rcncdi. Grain gray. en would wise 1,, u; promptly In order to hm seed properly treated but," lowing. direction; gum wlth each bottle. FOB. BETTER. CROPS flreot your grain with lln new Improved CERASAN A dull illslnfectunt for w]; Oils, Grain, Barley. pound treats 32 bushels. PRICE $1.15 LB. ‘FIN. MACS PIG WORM POWDER It will abolish all trace; of worms and Improve the health of your pigs. Price 35o lb. TIIE 2 MAGS 149 Great George Street Mull Orders Given Prompt Attention. ___. a. r. not» a sou OPTOMETRISTS “Specialists in the fit- ting of glasses for the correction of ocular ile- feels.” 53 Grafton Street Profssioiitl Bards McLeod £0 Bentley w. r. uunnu. l. o. .i. A. nun-rum. S. 0 Barristers and Alton-IMF I41 154 Prince 58"" Duane fit 90- Qrtuvh Mflilmm" I! Gnlton Street. Charlottetown Plano l0" 5°‘ m nun» w Maimlnl- “A llorrolland fltlmlll"! n. r. ARBIIIBALII chum-u AMIIM“ mun nun hi!!!" Chrloflctowl ,,;L,, . . n1 .i. uuitiisii, M- nnurnn. loucflfll umlill. 9- OIJII-ll nuimmo FARMER M. ALBANM Oanelhnlatioffivllm” . an lmllllmtglglqltllfml m‘ oiruwrrlro W! ALEX w. MATHIESO Office: l0 45"" °'°"¢',ii bilifiislksl, iiouomll- (mum I ..