"'—""'\$- ..___ i q" F uouum Ads-and to Shop there Regularly. “Look t ihse Big _-s SPECIALS” Now you see why it Pays to Always Watch for Kolman’s WEEK END Corn Brooms quality, Colored Handles. 139° Strongly made and of good ‘ Mirrors Fancy Style for llall, Mantle. 11 “x 1" 39¢ 23 “x9" 53., also GRAPE c TUMBLERS " BEST QUALITY GEORGIAN TUMBLERS AND LEMONADES Amber or Rose. REG. 29c 15¢ AUTO BATTERIES 11 plate $6.20 $9.95 2 quart size Regular $1.98 FREE ELECTRIC RANGETTE 1 only-Reg. $14.50 Special with oven at ICE CREAM FREEZER For s49 RADIO Victor s h 0r t and long wave “Globe Trotter". Reg. price $86.50: $69. Clearance . . . . .. lutely FREE ! over from '39s With every 1-lb. can of Old English Floor Wax, regular price 69c--we will give away FREE a sample 25c bottle of Furniture Polish abso- TENNIS BALLS Made by Slazenger Regular retail 50c each. Carried clear at, each . . . . . . . . . . . . . . PLANT STANDS HAND WRINGERS 3 ONLY Reg. price $5.00. Special at $3.75 last season to 25c Reorts on New - Anaesthetic Gas 11; Ail-ANT!!! CITY. N. J.. Juno ll —iA recently developed anaesthetic sas called oycicpropane was- de scribed by Dr. Paul M. wood. New York. at the owning scientific ses- sions of thmAmarica-n and (ins- disn medical association today. Dr. Wood said cycloprops_ was first used as an anaesthetic in 18D by‘ Cansclsn investigators who s died its effects on animals. Its use on human beings was first re- ported from the University o! Wis- consin in January, 1e91, x; @- clsredirseofthegaslncmcases had convinced him it was safe, pleasant and efficient, satisfactory ‘t; surgeon. patient and anaesthet- . "[1. Cancer of the middle ear. once considered s medical curiosity, is neither so rare nor so hopeless as was once believed, in the opinion cf Dr. Ioroy A. Behall, Boston, who presented a paper on the subject before the section of laryngology. 0i°l°8y and rhinclo y. Dr. Schall described his experi- ence with six cases in which he used surgery followed by radium with sufficient success that four of the group are still alive with no recurrence of the growth from two to four years after treatment. Discussing the importance of pathology to medicine. Dr. George Biumer. Professor of Medicine at Yale University, said in the train- lhs of medical students there is too cmst a tendency to regard pathology as something separate from the actual study of disease in sick persons, instead of the most important link between the labor- atory and the clinic. Ha ‘urged that medical students he required to follow fatal cases to the autopsy that they msy see there the errant condition of the organs that caused the symptoms they have observed. ‘Treatment of the patient first and the disease second is r. prin- ciple that can be applied even in a. condition like curvature of the Spine. Dr. Armitaae Whitman. New York, indicated in the address he- for the section on orthopedic sur- 861W. anaesthesia on the hearts c; 113 at the Wisconsin General Hospital. of them underwent a transient dis- turbance of the heart rhythm. Dr's. Chester M. Kurtz, James H. Ben- nett and Herman H. Shapiro, re- ported. When properly given cyclopro- pane produces unconsciousness in from 20 seconds to three minutes. Dr. Wood reported. It is pleasant to inhale, causes no choking and produces no fantastic dreams. Moreover, the patient awakens fflllldly as from a normal sleep. R- cause the mixture used has s, high percentage of oxygen, there is a high margin oi’ safety, an extreme- ly valuable feature when persons to be operated on are gravely ill or have p0.\'.‘ circulation. Although. like most anaesthetics. it is in- flammable, no reports of explosions 3 for WALPAMUR $1.10 To clear at .. Trend Demands ' Simpler Drugs (‘By ‘The Canadian Press) "ATLANTIC crrv, N. .1., June 1a APhyriiciuns will be comliellfld i° simplify their ways oi prescribin! drugs if medical service is to be paid for by government. Dr. Vol- yicrit E. Henderson of Toronto said today at the joint iwehnr of the rnericnn and Canadian medical sociations here. _ n every country where a nnbon- _ insurance scheme was in oper- tion, the state had found it nec- qsary to limit physicians to stand- gfd drugs whose cost is as low as ‘glycerin; treatment will permit. Dr. Henderson continued. New drugs iiere bound to be expensive until was; production made decxcase in price possible. ‘In view of the fart that much ..dical service was now paid for by the state and that the unlfllll!‘ was likely to lwresse it bshnovcd pflyflglgng to give more thought to the drugs they were using. Dr. Henderson said- l-lenderson said that swan in these- days of remarkable advances. few new remedies of great import- ance were discovered. 1f they were knowledge of them spread into ev- good medical Journal within a a: and they were generally known ‘ twoyears. Be concluded with an appeal to his colleagues to believe they could lrct good results with drugs proprly applied and not to ran that any combination pleasing 5i color o: taste or ea=iiy swallowed " ld do as well a: a carefully ought out treatment. v1 P Bronchhl heatmerit tar-assent ltretchilil of the chial tubes. a disease known to ysicians as brcnchiectasis. has ally come to be recognised as rIIult of infections of the res- tract. Dr. Wilfred P. War- sdhironto, reported a study of 0 cases of this disease which had 031s: ll INSECTS A flat wall finish (in cans 4V; lbs. been much better understood since a way wa.‘ found in 1922 to make the bronchial tubes visible on x- ray films. ' Of the 110 cases, 59 per cent were known illnesses. Hall of them followed influenza. lrl Dr. War- ners opinion infecllon damages and weakness ihe walls oi the bsonchial tubes and they become strctclrcd during normal breathing because they have lost their elasticity. ll in addition the lungs are (iiacaxcd the forces emrted on the bronchial tubes may be cven grcntcr. There were r3595 of bronrhiocl- asis reported as existing at birth. but Dr. Warner was sllnptical about them. He believed practically all looses could be adequately explained as acquired. Blight Disease of Celery (Experimental Farms Note) Each year a large part of the celery crop produced in Oanada ls dzstrqved by the blight disease, otherwise known as late blight. These losses would be materially reduced if the celery growers would practise the control measures which have been studied and are beins recommended by the Division of Botany, Dominion Experimental harms. This disease may occur in the seed-bed, but seldom does very much harm until the cool rain! duo's of latesummer and early fall when it frequently becomes severe. The typical symptoms may be de- tected on either surface of the leaf as rather small rcundlsh and yellowish spots which later become irregular in outline and black or dark brown in the centre. When these areas become very numerous MAGAZINE RACKS unfinished live decay of the stalks. The more reliable control measures against celery blight are as follows: 1. Spray the plants with bordeaux mixture or dust with copper-lime dust using in proportions of 15-84. The first two applications should be made before the plants are removed from the seed-bed, starting when they are about mi inch high and repeating u few dmys before trans- planting. Continue this treatment when the plants in the field are about six inches high, makinfz thorough applications weekly until a week or ten days before harvest. Five applications are c-nsidered sufficient. When the plants are large, 80 gallons of bordcaux will cover one acre. If dust is used each of the first two applications will take about 2B pounds of the fungi- cide per acre, and the last three about 35 pounds. 2. seedlings should not be left in the crowded seed-bed any longer than is necessary, inasmuch as in- fwtion may be sever-e in spito of precautionary measures. :1. Emphasis should be plsoed on the necessity of ‘ . in; new growth adequately protected by making timely applications of spray or dust. If dust is used it should be applied in the early momlng if at all possible . Suggests Limit To Cat _And Dog Pets (By The Canadian Press) REGINA, June lI-Fsllna dis- turbances reported in a zasldsntisl section moved sedate city alder-men to mirth when a rturhed tsu- payers letter sse action was read to the nesting. Every night. from’ sunset tosun- rise, A. Graham related. “obnoxious "start to yew " Ba wasn't quite sure what it was all about but thought their song was ' ’s No Place Like Bonn Btreot." This was the place. he declared. where "fem-island nuisances not only prevent sleep but waits around enroll] the pelinillsll and industri- ously” scratch out newly-sewn he snmsted limitation of exist- ent pets pointing out disagreement with the act's! one pet cst who mates a habit cf ‘producing quin- csts" gather on the hack fence and have yct been recorded. ‘Holiday Trips T0 Southern Glimes MONTREAL. Que. June ii-Jrhe "Vagabond Cruise" ship “Cclbornefl Canadian National Steamships, leaves the local port this evening with a capacity list of vacation travellers bound via Halifax for Bermuda, Puerio Rico, Barbados, Trinidad and British Guiana in South America. This pasmnger carrying freighter, along with her glster ship the "Ohomedy," is equip- ped to carry a membership list of 20 persons and sails on s. leisurely voyage of 88 days duration of res‘. and quiet, minus the usual form- alities pertainlng to large passeng- er ships. - - In addition to the usual holiday traveller. these cruises are well atronize dby those mekln} to re- sin their health and by teachers and students for the educational value of the trip. Besides the regu- lar ports of call, tlic ship also visits the French West Indies and other Islands when sufficient cargo offers. This extra time at sea. romstlmes occupying an additional week, is cruise fare which embraces all ex- penses while aboar dshlp. 800d csrigo of automobiles, lumbar, houm products. cheese, various southern ports. Rockfeller Kin (By The csnsdlsn rress) BLAOKIB. Alta. ceipt of a copy of the Rockefeller- family history by rrsd Rocirefellcw, a isrrnor who has lived in this dis- trict for tho past l0 years, has proved he is a distant relative of Jflltlefl D. Rockefeller, the oil meg- ns . lince the time of Johann lteter Rockefeller, their common great-grest-grest-grandfsther who migrated to New Midland frws Germany, in m0. hall a csen var- ieties or thespelling or family name have crept in. In 1M0. tin history shows. Johann Palm's re- fathsrs assavedYfrom rrsnce with a number of l-lusenot families! At that time the name was ‘Mous- Mliill lbchfeller Ilmll’ e. Under the Association. whose membership numbers I000. s hind has been ea~ tshlidhed by which any one er that name may obtain a sduos- tion. John D. Iockefei and his brother can! the cost of compiling and prin the history. sfost of of the faintly live.in Ontario. but siewhave misratestettawest- era premises. A minute stnuy of the effect of persons during surgical operations Madison, revealed that four-fifths included in tip regular round-trip’ The "Colborne“ will carry also a hay. flour. feeds, sardines, packing- fish pro- ducts and a large variety of Can- adian manufactured articles for the Provided For‘ June 19-Ho- he Osnsiilsn members ' Central Guardian ‘Illa ealala is reserved fol news s! local IICIQII see firm at a news; nature lss 0| s seats a word e payable In advance», i TOURIST PIDSPECTB BRIGHT -'i‘ho office of the P. ll. I. Travel Bumeu is a huay spot these days. Yesterday sixty-one enquiries were received, and since the beginning of the season, the enquiries have sverwed ss daily. Each o1 these is answered a personal letter, and a map o1 Island, list of hotels, and other information is enclcnd. Many of the letters ask for specific information not given in any of the prepared folders and this must be secured and forwarded. Each hotelisglventhelistof enquiries received daily that they may write in their own interest. Oversthou- and enquiries have been dealt with to date. and tin year promises to be the best we have had. Many of the tourists who have intimated their - tent-ion or visiting Mince Edward Island this War have not been hers before and whether or not they return again depends a great deal upon how they enjoy lihallllfilvco this year. Our roads are an important factor in catering to the tourist trade. The completion of the Borden to Charlottetown highway will add much to the pleasure of the tourist and the clay and gravel roads should re- ceive attention all through the iSllmUlEI- Hon. M W. Wood, returned home on Wednesday eveniM fwm 3°5- ton, where Mrs. Wood underwent s successful operation in the Park- way Hospital. It is expected that she will be able to return to the Province in about a month. Her friends hope for her speedy re- covery. Hard Work Won Honors In Art (By The Canadian Press) EDMONTON. June l2—L. Petley- Jones, 26 year old Edmonton-born; painter who learned his art from magazines. practice and “hnrdl work", has won highest honor in‘ the British world of art-accept- anoe of s picture by the Royal Ac~ sdemy in. London. according t: word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Hurdls Jones. The pic- tum was s water color of Bebe. Beach, near here. That was not the first recognit- ion cf the youthful artist, hcweve". who forsook a banking career t~ take up art seriously. Last month his picture of a Canadian trappc was accepted by the Royal Socirt" of British Artists. The pictures. painted here ,wlll be hung in Lon- don together with the finest pro- ductions in recent years by the world's’ leading artists. Mr. J9me, who left London six months asp. never received a les- son in art before his departure. "I really believe tuition does not marke an artist-only practice and hard work", he once said. He first besan showing his work at the Ed- monton Art Exhibition where his skill and taltent were recognized quickly by judges and others. Mr. Jones also showed pictures at the National Gallery, at Ottawa. "I am delighted to hear of his , success," his mother said. "It Isl so unexpected. He has been there only s. short time. Ever liXK-‘i he was a child he was anxious to draw. whenever he undertook any paint- ing he slwsy worked very hard." IUONDON. June 12—A Reuters news agency descatch from Takao. Fcrmzsn. tcrvqht said two ships. the Chrlslinia 10:10 and the 51l- vador, bsth reported to be Bri had been held by port nutlir . .. after putting in for rsociri n‘. the elersid port of Kalkm on the southwest part of the lslnncl. "B53100 MILES, AND NOT A PENNY FOR REPAIRS." "ANOTHER QUAKE! STATE FAN, EH9" eflhavedrivsnada-ysles H: 19s: ever-sumo miles _wldicatoaoshasingcylbder hesdcrereniseeeerunaved, mdcsratalltimeshashsd pewerandspsedtcsperala houdidaotspaidoaeesat for meter repairs. My car hssalwayshsuaservieedvdtb Qaslar sum lloeor OI." ‘dusted ha scanllelw in our Ilse. innin- E All reduced one third! OW . . . right now, in fresh leafy Jane, just when you want to be wearing something that is utterly smartly new, comes this oppo tunity to dress well at a saving of ONE THIRD. _ - a The garments are NEW. They are all in styles such as you'll see 13.95 Coats 16.95 Coats 19.50 Coats 25.00 Costs 29.50 Coats for -i u (Experimental Farms Note) R for for . . for for . 11.40 13.00 .............. 16.67 19.67 85.00 Coats for 23.34 worn by well dressed ladies in Montreal . . . Keep in tune with the well dressed world . . . and at such little cost. The New Coats $10.75 Coats for $7.17 $10.75 Suits for $7.17 13.95 Suits for 16.95 Suits for 19.50 Suits for 22.50 Sultsfor 29.50 Suits for 35.00 Suits for 66.00 Suits for 9.30 The Toronto . . . New York. New Suits 9.30 11.40 13.00 15.00 19.67 86.67 9 A 3; i; Esgfisi . in? int.