I I FRINGE EDWARD IZéQE-‘Jififi? - - - - v - SHOWS 2:30-78 w \ a WARNER BROS. I FLOOD m: SCREEN \ _ WITH Suusnlnr\_\\\\\ ;\\AND SONG! \ vulnvszssale. \ d $0IIIiRNe ALSO NEWS - MUSICAL COMEDY - DISNEY CARTOON roiuour EMPIRE aliil slirunnliv Show; 1 : 8:45 - Maul» silhlflidy Only 2.30 “LL5.I‘.;;“ii2Z1.LI'IIE~R: BLAGILJACK 1.; ,4‘ r ". gyigigrloovv/Allea-rmvxuelcnsa SERIAL - CARTOON ' SONG REEL - QUIZ LN... THIE "EARSTERN GLJARDIAN Stewart. I15 M In Georgetown: The Past Office: ..'Gruen Watches -; c. n. been ner, Montague. ...."Attention — Mammoth 30-day shoe sale at the Montague Shoe Store. Prices slashed on all lines of footwear. .._,°See Our Window Display. Open stock Wedgwood Sparton and Wild Brier Dinnerware. C. ll. Boehner, Jeweller, Montague. ‘APRIL EIIDWI-ltd’ PBOVIS TOP- arorcn MUSICAL COMEDY A musical romance with a new flourish, laid in the nostal- glc 1912 period against flam- boyant San Francisco. accent: warner Bros‘. newest musical piece, "Aprl Showers," with Jack Carson and Ann Sothern. which gr-naoday at the Prince Edward (hrson Delivers Besides the particular bustle of the period and its accompany- ing romantic drama which is pre- sented. "April Showers" also intro- duces a new Jack carson. Usually associated witll-l straight comic as- signments, the perforlmer leveals a fuller scope to his marked talent- He hoofs, sings, clowns . . and de- livers a particularly fine dramatic characterisation. Miss Sothern is. as always, charming anlfbeautiful. He; singing and dancing is another bright mark in the proceedings. Young Bobby Ellis, who hails from radio, makes a good impression as the young son, bent on following the footlights. Robert Aid-a supplies the other member of the adult tri- angle, and also is called on for sing- ing and dancing chores. B. Z. Sak- .all‘s presence in the cast secures Imuch humorous and appealing comedy. Iiillthorltloe m... I New Sex Theories I Are traditional moral codes to be considered old-fashioned and sentimental nonsense in the light of newly published poll-l and surveys of sex habits? Many leading Americans don't think eo. In The Reader's Digest for June eighteen educators, authors, scientists and religious leaders deny the validity of recent find- ings and urge l tentlon oi con- ventional ideels. This symposium of comment, ing the Digest’; leading article, answers increasing plea-a for gu dance from those who fear ilhat. long- accepted values may be destroyed Excerpts from this cornmenu follow: J. Edgar Hoover, Director oi! FBI: "Man's sense of decency! declares what is normal and when is not. Whenever the American people come to believe there is no suoh thing as right or wrong nonrnal or abnormal, those wlhcl would destroy our civilization will BPDlaud a major victory over ouli way of life." Robert Hillyer, Pulitzer prizd poet and educator: "Young peo- in England neither CAPITOL ' TODAY and SATURDAY SHOWS zoo-mus expired. H. J. MABON OPTOMETRIST Fitting and Supplying Glasses Etc- I ‘ MONTAGUE. P.l:'..l. Office Hours: l0 to l2 A.M. 2 to 5 PM. Holidays. etc. by appointment Office Connected With Drug Store OUT OUR ‘ll PUNCH! ' EXTRA! WESTERN "ECHO RANCH" THOUGHT T0 B! EVIL To the ancient Hebrews, the word "leaven" suggested COEfllpt- ion, and so leavened bread was not permitted in sacrifices. Leaven is la substance producing fermentat- Oil. HEATING EQUIPMENT ' OF ALL TYPES COAL ' GAS OIL ELECTRIC . GENERAL STOVE AIU FURNACE CO. Phone 18M - Gt. GamNSf. In Scotland ofdecreo of divorce dissolves a marriage at once, while party is free to re-marry until six month; have P19 l"! hB-PPY when reminded that sex is a sacred thing. I do not believe that the idealism o1 youth is seriously threatened. American good sense and humolt ' take care of .the “ but, m is salddening, to see science con-l- petirls with lurid fiction." finest 1- Plltmlré. National Commander of the Salvation Army: "The new polls admittedly were made in limited and spacial 810N115. ignoring many otJher and Larger groups .'I‘he harm of such reports is that they become wag. ,pons for temptation: they may convince boys and girls that now nearly everybody is violating tho moral law. The consequences oil suoh violation can be as grave 99118? as ever." Father ll. J. Flanagan, of Boyg l._ TH’ BULL PUT THAT LITTLE ENGINEERINK a LIBRARY IN TO“ HELP THE YOUNG GUYS TO SUCCEED, AND 50MB OF ‘ 'EN\ ARE REALLY TAKIM‘ ADVANTAGE ' OF IT! ' AGINTII MONTAGUI: Ilrfl I. Land!!- Alllfll llthfl. Ili- LGINT GIUIGITUWN! Walden AGENTS IOUIJI: III Illd III Thafluardianalaileheughtatalsslthe lallswingplsoeain Montages: Hill-l. Iqpfl, la It. Peter's: The Post Olliaa. “MIKE . ‘ IAVII hardaandusrdealarral : III. Olav. In loll-Isl Camden's and {erases Georgetown» I And Vicinity ~ Mr. Edgar Launon of Boston. Maas., has joined his wife and daughter and is visiting Mrs. Lan- norl's parents. Mr. and Mrs. f... H. Douglas. Mr. Hamid Gotell who is em- ployed as an electrician in Mont- real is holidaying with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Gotcll of Georgetown and with friends in the City. Rev. Father Louis Dougan re- turned to the city on Wednesday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Rich- ard Dougan. The cold storage plant of C. H. iliewellyn and Sons. has once again commenced operations in ice-making and storage faculties. under the operational manage- ment of Mr. Emerson Llewellyn. Mrs. Vincent Eiordieta and llttlo daughter Jean of Montreal arrived in the city on Wednesday by plane and motored to Georgetown where she will visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Solemn-n. Mrs. Rufus Olary returned on Tuesday night from Montreal. Quebec, aim- apanding a very enjoyable visit with her two daughters. Marion and Margaret. also with her brother, Gilbert who is employed in the Bank of Mont- real in that city. Merchant seamen from European countries are a familiar sight in Georgetown but this week when ADVANTAGE l5 I RlGHT-“AND 1'0 LIKE TO BE no WHEN HE sToPs I {EM AN’ 5TAi2T5 1o ASK QUESTIONS.‘ - . § BLUFFIN’! the s. S. Andivl of Bergen. Nor- way was in port the friendly wel- come oi a small town was extend- ed w two ladies from the ship- Mrs. Stordahl wife of the chief engineer and Mrs. Olsen wife of the first mate. Mrs. Olsen is a native of Glasgow. Scotland and it was a mutual pleasure when Mrs. H. P. George invited her and her companion to tea. Mrs. George who came to P. B. I. in i921 was delighted to meet someone from her home town. Mrs. John King who came from Edinburgh lair; year was also loci ed in e jo 3 party.-Geo. “i3 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Fitzger- ald and daughter Gaylene lel‘: on Wednesday morning by plane for Vernon, B. C. They were accom- panied as far as the city by Mrs. J. W. Livers and son Jackie. Leo- nard since his return from over- seas with Canada's Army. has been a tower of strength to the Town's hockey and ball teams and a val- ued member of the Holy Name Orchestra. Mrs. Fitzgerald. also an overseas veteran of the Canadian Women's Arrny and a native of British Columbia. has made a host. of friendships during her residence here and their many friends, though sorry to see them leave. send with them their sincere good wishes and the hope that they wlll be visiting us at some future time. PBONOUNCED “JAIL" The synonym for prison is spell- ed two different ways-goal in England. end jail in America. Itia pronounced the same way in both countries. Town. Nebraska: “What a. strang- ely unscientific argument it‘ is one hears - that, because many young _people have failed to live up to certain nltandsrd... we should lower the atandardsi" 3°71" 13816119. educator and novelist: "Are we to believe than Y0"!!! Dflople want to regard sex: as a bodily function, without re- tard to mind and soul? . . . Al spiritual ideal la instinctive with Iwyhood. It is we. the older orlel, wlho fail youth because we tell; “m” ‘I191!’ hlilhest and brightest visions are false." By i. n. wmilml l“... EM your: _GUARDlAN. _ cnalznolra-rqwn Montreal, July 16 - The ap- pointmant of H. C. Grayston to be chief of car service. Canadian Na- tional Railways,-witll headquarters at Montreal, effective today, is announced by S. F. Dingle, chlaf of transportation of the company. Mr. Grayston was formerly genera! supervisor of oarservice, and he now succeeds W. A. Kirkpatrick who is retiring after nearly a half century of railway service. Egg And Poultry Market Stronger The market for both saga and poultry has strand-honed during the past week and paying prices have in eased, reports Mr. F. M. Nash, senior poultry products in- spector. Prices on live fowl in- creased l l-a cents per lb and eggs one cent per dozen. Egg production on P. E. I. ix steadily decreasing. Operators of grading stations report receipts down ten percent from past week. Quality remains‘ good for the sea- son and due to increased demand for eggs throughout the Maritimes all Grade A eggs are being shipped to other Maritime points. it ls ex- pected thayproductlon from this date will decrease rapidly causlrlg higher prices for the product. Poultrymen having laying flocks are advised to retain their birds until production drop: below eco- nomical levels before marketing their birds as live poultry. Due to the increase in prices. operators of grading stations are now quoting producers for ungrad- ed eggs AL 4:! 1-2. AM 4i 1-2. B S3. C lB-m. Wholesalers are quot- ing grading station operators for the graded pack fob station A Large 48 1-2, A Medium 46 1-2, R 38 and Jobbing to retailers at AL cartoned 53. A medium 5i. B ‘cone 40. Eggs are retailing in Charlotte- town for the cal-toned Grade A Large pack 59. A Medium bl‘ and (‘wade B loose 4'7. Poultry Market Brisk The poultry market especially on live fowl is very lively. The Ameri- can demand for the product is strong. Producers in the Delmarva area are receiving for No. 1 fowl live 35 1-2 cents per lb. American buyers are sending trucks to r. b. I, and offering truck load assemb- lers at least .27 cents a ill for healthy fowl less birds with crook- ed breast bones or blisters. weigh- ing five pounds and over. '1'he outy and coat of transporting birds to the u. s. ll. il borne by we Am- ericans. ~ Dealers generally in‘ the Province last week paid 24 1-2-25 cents a llb for all live poultry‘ Wéikhini! five pounds and over, delivered to trucks or assembly points. Where fowl had to ha piwed up at farms a charge of approximately 0M cent ‘per lb. was levied for this service. Anyone having live fowl five pounds and over should hi"! no difficulty receiving M 1-2 cents per lb. There is a good demand for chicken in the United States but unfortunately our chicken art MI- sufflcicntly developed at this time to meet the requirements of the American market. Chickens should not be offered for sale until the! weigh five pounds live. Last Wet! American markets mid the)l>1’°' ducer 30 cents a lb. for- livg chick- en five p unds and over. Some C arlottetown dealers Ire quoting for poultry l5 953mm‘ JPowl no i, five pounds and over M cents Der lb; WW1 M 1' "M" five pounds. 22 cents per lb: Fowl no 2. 8 cents par lb- No. l fowl are fairly well flesh- ed birds. The writer is informed that practically all birds u? to weight. not having crooked brnat bones or busters or belM BIT-PIN" ly pirlny fall into this grade. No. 2 grade are thin birds lack- ing flesh on breast and birds with crooked breast bones. bllaterl. or extremely pinny birds. As the .1100 ‘ indicatel, this bird II not deli-Nd. Quotations on chicken as follows: um n. anal a so. o 1s. ._.____.____ It is not necessary M I m" 9° rise when a woman emplbyfl m“ tors his office. lf.a visitor comes m, hqwgvar, be- should rise to greet her and mnain stsndinl un- m gm i; lasted. When she leaves escorts her to tbs. door. ._....._.._._ i W?!“ Live Stock "entries for the Provincial Exhibition, Aug. 10th to 13th, amt be mode before Julyjlth. < Positively no‘ entries will be when after this dais. Supplements For Swine , _.__ (Investments! Farms News) Three tml of monuments. we- tein, mineral and VIE-CHAD, are tananoe or health, vigor, normal growth and efficient gains of swine. The kind and amount of each type of supplement needed will ‘depend upon suoh things aa the season of year, conditions "filler which t!!! pigs an kept, an and basic feeds supplied, says W. W. Oosm. Dominion Experimental Iarrn, Indian Head, Baal. Suitable protein supplanants for swine include akimmllk, buttermilk, tankage and fish meal. Unload oil meal and alfalfa meal are also useful when included in protein or protein-mineral mixtures Ihidh contain at least 80 per cent of tankaga or fish meal. When one 0r two pounds of skimmilk per poundbf Fain is fed to pregnant or nursing sows, and 2 or 2% pounds for weanling pin. and this luvoortlfln gradually reduced to one und per pound of grain {or tini a market pigs, no other proiAin supplemqtl should be neceoaa . The milk products, preferably fed sweat, are beat for nursing and weanling pigs and should be used if possible. In the absence of milk in either form, tankage or a good mixed protein u/pplarnent should be fed at the rate of A to 5 per cent of the grain mixture for pregnant and nursing sows; rte 1o per cent for weanling pigl, gradually da- creasing the amount to 8 or 4 per cent for the finishing period. Minerals which may be deficient in ordipary rations are common salt, lime and iodine. All pigs should be given salt at the rate of one-half to one pound per loo pounda_of grain eaten. If ample amounts of milk or tankage are not fed, one-half to one per cent ‘of ground limestone should also be a ed to the meal mixture fer pigs of all ages. To ensure live, normal litters at birth, each sow during pl grlancy should receive a tablespoonful two or three times Weekly of a supplement to prevent anemia. As muoh iron sulphate as will cover a dkne or half this amount of reduced iron placed on the tongue of each piglet on the "d. 11th and zlst day: after birth is effective in the prevention M anemia. Fresh earth or soda supplied to the young pigs during the nursing period is also effective against this disease. sprinkling the sods Mob a solution of one table- spoonful of ircn sulphate to a quart of water improves their effectiveness. During winter months or when 11in are quartered without much sunlight or green forage, they are likely to suffer from a vitamin deficiency. Good green alfaifa- or other hay, or alfalfa meal, u; valuable sources of the vitamin; likely to be lacking. Reeling from a teaapoo ‘ul to a tabiaapoonful, depending upon the sire of pig, of one of the fish oils will greatly improve the health and thrift of growing pigs and breeding stock under such conditions. ‘LIGHT MAKE! 001D! Objects do not ,oaseas colors of their own but depend for color upon l-ight reflected from their surfaces. FARM EQUIPMENT AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I - WD 6 FARMALL TRACTOR l Cockshurl "70" A TRACTOR Used 2 Years Perfect Condition FARM WAGONS Mounted on Steel .or Rubber ‘I SO-gollon 4-Row SPRAYER l I60-IMPERIAL GALLON 6-Rew SPRAYER, POWER TAKE-OFF, arched axle, odilutoble wheels. Steel Frame, mounted on Rubber. CREAM SEFARATORS MILKING MACHINES MILK COOLERS ' . 3-5 H). ENGINES TRACTOR, TRUCK and CAR - TIRES MANURE SPREADERS, Mounted on Rubber Lima and Fertiliser SOWERS W. R. JEIIIIIIIS I Your International Horvslter Dealer " elm ozone: stain’ "Service Follows" Saks” commonly required for bile rnaln- . ~ Alison: no I u BETTER ran: aloal-zu norm MIRACLE lavmo MASH - m ., luml lilltlliufllllv all Mortgage Sale T° I" "It! by nubile suction in front of the Lav! Courts Building In Charlottetown on Monday the 8th day of August A.D., 1M3, ll the/hour of twelve o'eioeg"‘"5¢m, ALL THAT tract, piece u "mg of land dtusle lying and bah‘ g5 ‘lulu? Number Fifty-five In Km!‘- Countv. In Prince some llllllil. bounded and described as follows, that is ts say:—0N m; North by DeGros MAIIII, on u“ "ll"! b! the Cardigan liver, on the last by land ofbernarfl Mg- LQIJI and an the west by land in the possession of Mrs. A. Modaklll "ill-Ill!!! twenty-five acres of land a little more or less; ALlo ALI. THAT other tract of land situate lying and being an 1mm. ship Number Fifty-five in King's County aforesaid, bounded and described as follows. that ls to layl-ON the north by land In the Possession of W. A. MoKinnoa on theaastbylandinthepolesaion of Bernard McLean, on the south by DeGros Marsh. on the west by land in the possession of Roder- ick J. Bteele and John D. Steele containing twenty-five acres of land a little more or lesa Thea bove sale is made under llfll by virtue of a Power contained in an lndantuorta h: Mvrtrm dated mil July, m; made between John D. McLean q Define Mar-h. in lung'- cml, in Prince Edward Island, "n," of u» first pm, llla l.“ M: Ilalsrd of Charlottetown in Queen's County in Q“ m.“ vrifa of Louis A. Hazard, q q" 59°"! N?!» default having b“; made in Plylhent of the moneys occurred by tlla said mortgage, For articulan apply to “an; l Bentley. Solicitors, can“... town. Dated this lth day at July, m; MARGARET more: rsaazaao, lxeoutri: of" Estate of Ana M llassard. deceased. NOTICE AII Cattle Breeders who Is- tend to exhibit at Charlotte- town Exhibition, must apply he- rnodiaiely for Blood Test, i! Dominion Dept. Agriculture er Charlottetown Driving Pork and Provincial Exhibition Association. c-l-l. rams assure do destructive IIIIIROX- Ciontahu 5 Highly affective s IIITIOX l-7. (Iontaiaa 5 DDT control of blight and iaazis on flora h sevens. ‘IIQX. A 1% dust‘ -_hiigilt and other fuagous flux duets may be and min). They do h! control of lea lady other Enlecla in used as a barn and lives IIGOP. Contains DDT and fixed and destructive insects, and h la spray rather than dust. I ......'°% "t: .... Pecan; 50-h’, it all 4n c-r-rir llll lnls Jamar. iANAblA dshle low-coat v hulk", M C-l-l. POTATO o DDT Add 7% early usd late pars and 7% copper. Specially lied-potato cruel. or when s vlllhfl t orohsrdaand lKly-I gretrornrwilist‘ or fungaus diseases. STD with l. fol Inlea - derived dud copper. Givu elective controls! dlsaasaa. Ipplfadstsa d ( eduri MM y mo eeesp n; upon daeojor their action. C-l-l. POTAI’ IIIAII ro-vv. ‘Illa 50% ulu-mngqmogfnA" D1‘ Insecticide. looommondel‘ is, Colorado potato beetles, and aerlsin truck crops. Widely . Uh Deatror. it oontmla biigild y [Imposed lac grovvarswiao prefer "mt A "w: villus-halal‘ ...'.:'::-:..s.."'-"..............“* W...*.r-“"'5 asinensdyaouea lnllevlei an...» a»; nosalea. lw nun voila N IIIDIICTIIII tl-IMITID