i s”- PAGE FDURTEEN Here, in a single product, is complete protection against most common potato poses, including early and lare blights, Colorado potato beetles, flea beetles, and leaf hoppers. Widely acclaimed by professionalpotato growers everywhere,this combination Insecticide-Kingicide con- sists of a skilful blend of Basi~Cop' and Micronized‘ DDT. ‘Rcgii trade-marl look for the Green Cross, the sign of Modern Protection a stem cnos 87tlsAnniveTesnry To Be Observed By Zion Con On Sunday. Jul! 20th. Zion Presbyterian Church of this CitY will celebrate the EiIhl-Y-fiiflvflll-h, Anniversary of the congregation and the thirty-fourth anniversary ul the openin: of the 91'6"!" church edifice. Prior to the year 1870 there were THE CHARLUTILEILOKIN QRARDIAN TEXT iii BRIEF (Continued from Page l) basis of fiscal need. The arrange- ment is for five years. An increase of 30 per cent in freight rates would immediately upset the argu- ments presented, and the Province could get no further redress for i five years. E Unique Position t gregatioss John M. Murchison. Charlotte- town; Colin U, McNevin. Char- lottetown; C. Guy MacKenzle. Charlottetown; George D. Msc- "Pill"?! Efiwl" Blind I! I“ m Lend, Oyster Bed Bridge; Walter uniqu‘ Wimml- Th9 Guild!“ N!‘ n. Auld. Freetown; Nell M. Rat- tlohll H-Illwsve has s complete tee, Malpeqte: John Sutherland, m°"°P°IY °I ‘I1 mm“ "m" ‘I! - that by sea. It is said that 00 per Bonneu Charkmewwn’ B" V“. cent of-our exports and imports “ivvszms: 11:22:12.. “$.35; :..‘.".'P"°‘;..°.;'.~ o -~ o»- ch" OIMIOWII‘ I I “Kirk? H. hiacLeod, Hartsville; l-ilarold S. Th’ ma‘ m“ II Is a m°“°p°Iy popularly known as the with a history dating from the year 182B; the Free Church on Prince Street. dating from 1854. Ind m; Queen‘; Square Church on the south side of Richmond Street- datlng from 1856. The congrtifl- lion of GU99!" Square Church iafterwards Zion) was officially ora‘njzgd by the Presbytery 01 Prince Edward lslarid in 1860- Tha Free Church and the Queen Square Church had only ‘map-Sn’ ‘led minister. each. WW" he“ hmon in 1370, The Reverend George Sutherland W“ 111mm“ in the Free Church on the 27th of August i658 and resigned on the 21st November i866. The Rev- erend Alexander Falconer was in’ Quoted, in the QHEEYYS 5W5" Church chine “m d“ °I A“? ust i862, ann continued his min- istry there anti; the 28th day ol September 1869- which cannot be attacked by any -other railway, led Sir Henry Thornton to say that Prince Ed- ward Island ‘always should have special privileges in transportation. There is not even competition by Itrucks, because the small truck trade that has been built up on ‘the Wood Island-Caribou ferry is 'almost negligible, owing to its lack oi capacity and seasonal opera- tion and would not amount to a total trade oi a million dollars Iennually at the present time. E ‘.'As Prince Edward Island is the ionly eastern Canadian Province jwhich has an exportable surplus of agricultural produce, and be- cause Nova scotia, Newfoundland, and other areas lying all about it. import large quantities oi agricul- Rnyncr, Enmore; Angus N. Gil- i i ‘prosper by trading with ,areas in ships which could find >harbors all around within a few miles of each farm. Union Achieved The two churches being then RIVER DRIVER DROWNED ‘clothing as any other country, it was disclosed today in a survey of the work oi U. N. R. R. A. lh Eu rope from 194s to 1947, issued here. ‘ ltaiy got 9,928.700 tons of sup-l plies, the next highest amounts being 21367500 ions for Greece Iilld 2,124,700 tons for Yugoslavia,’ woonsrocx. N. n. July l6-~ (OP)-Waltcr McFarlrtne, 23 o[ Hartfield, was drowned in the st John River here today after he lost his footing while pushing stranded pulpwood into deeper water. He was working with a crew driving pulp down the river. IJFHAIVI, Middlesex, England-, ~( P)~— In order to ease the handling of air freight Southern Rail-way plan to build a mile-long ITALY GET! LIONS SHARE LONDON, July i6 - (Reuters) » Italy received from U. N. R. R. K Your times as much food and port. 411,, ltfl 1am ‘uuaiqsnv ‘Aaupiis 1o 110110;) ‘s "g "gold yo 5.10am emu, ing saucers" which many citizens of Canada and the U. S. claim tc have seen. are nothing more or less than a visual phenomenon, has viany persons doing some personal experimenting. The idea is to stare \t a fixed point in a clear blue sky. and according to the professor the ‘ed corpuscles of the blood, passing in front of the retina of the eye, ‘rive the impression of flying kitchenware. So these two young ladies ‘ire trying out the theory. ' This latest picture of King Gustav V, 89-year-old Swedish mon- arch. shows him in full dress unif m and plumed hat reviewing a parade oi athletes, students, and ch dren during the annual National Commemoration Day ceremonies at the Stockholm Stadium. Liberal Convention and Annual Meeting 3RD DISTRICT OF QUEEN'S . A convention ts nominate m candidates to ‘contest the. nest Provincial Election will be held in Mt. Stewart Hell Monday, July 2m et l- awn’, ' l Poll clrslfiilen will please cell meetings and appoint live dele- gem. ~ ‘uwant, advantage We! ithe situatlilon hi0 P121: and there Y B" Isustalnln! lihurch msIud OI two _ I strugglins siding frcm hcre to the London air-, taken oi i ote a union. stronB $B1F~ charges. The unioi: a movement was finally consuimritr-‘e in i870, The old names 0d and uniting churches were droPDB the present verY- ‘Ill-In? “d '1“; phonic name of "Zion chosen 0 the congregation. 1; may be a dlsgresslon to rc- mark that in the opirnion of many. and with good reason too. tin name Zion and what it ag- nifies has had much to do with REV. G. CARLYLE WEBSTER Pastor of Zion Church . the church's steady rise and suc- cess. Whlle the parts enacted by the many worthy fathers of the church, and the many events oi importance transplring in its history since the year i870 are not to be forgotten. they do. however. gradually fade from the perspect- ive. but. the name "Zion" is an ever present urge to the leaders aiid workers of the church, in sv- cry succeeding day. to "act well their part." Indeed, the person who first suggested the name "Zion" may have mane the largest per- sonal contribution to its life and history. New Site Purchased Zion's growth continued, which fact later gave rise to a mova- nient to obtain even a larger church. As a result, the present site, then known as Hobbs Cor- ner, was purchased in i906, and thus the first definite step was token to build a more commodious edifice. The steady growth of the congregation continuing. made thl ,1" of (he proposed new church a serious problem to settle. The possibility oi a still larger con- gregation had to be seriously con- - ‘sideredrbut the IinancinK o! such. an enterprise by a body °! DQ0- r, unaccustomed to a church ht was not to be undertaken without serious forethought. However. Wit-l faith and determination as their chief rtsourcel‘. l-hl! PIOWMWI with an outlay a untlng in all to about “i000. The site was secured in the ye!" 190a; the cornerstone was laid Qgwber 4th. liil; the church - ‘ and “ ‘ ‘ May lith- lath, i013. the debt incurred beln! then reduced to 814.000. a rem-ri- Iabie achievement. the "W" “I lass than seven years of effort. Th. ‘m. mntversary was snark- ed in a special manner b! PIYIP-I eff the balance oi the rnortgllfl Indebtedness on the church 91'0- party thereby comvletlns the 11h- mcisl ODIIIIUOH undertaken by those noble men of faith and vision. whose courage and devo- ion brought about the erection cf this "venerable house.‘ Ministerial Recruits 11\Q']Q|:ord 0T IIUII Wflln-ll‘ ‘tioa durllll ‘hm run h» bee“ one of lnestlmable value and her Ilnflusnce has had-ta fae-reachlri! following has been cevllll 11'0"‘ ROLAND MecDONALD, President. H. C. HIARTZ, Secretory. lion's “Order of Recruits for the Il-finistry" (established in lien 'cisurch is ioioi: ~ ‘as by no means wealtbvl sfieet at home and abroad. The. "With the coming of the rail- way and the carferry thirty years ‘ago, this system of trading was |changed, and has grown to the huge proportion puoted] ebioyte. with a carra e o near Y lis, Charlottetown; Malcolm Cithousand Cams yearly 3C1,“ m; M“D°“*‘“" °mml°°ki Al°himl<lstrsits of Northumberland. rt is Murchison, Charlottetown; Cuth my belief that 1; a 30 per rem 1n- be“ Mad-mm‘- bwrtham? “h” A ‘crease in freight rates were made. nlacheod, Montague; Samuel Pro- m“ “Huge by ‘might w°u1d b; fit, Erectown; Edwin J. White, greatly curga1§gd_ The“; are two REV. .1. s. BONNELL, n.0, Guest speaker at Anniversary Ser- vice on Sunday next, Chflllvlifliflw"; Glendon F. Part- alternative, w the use o; the r511. ‘ada. It was an improvement over Nova Scotia. Certainly the trade ridge. Charlottetown; Allan Lorne way; namely. expo", by 51mm 3mg l what we received formerly. when on the railway would diminish. 328C514"? NEG“; Ififltfiloil; JohnJGnKin export by trucks, particularly w ur oc , taro e own; o s1 Nqva sgoflg; CBTSOII. Charottetown; Lloyd HEW, "It may be said that since the clersori, Port Hill; Donald Nichol ‘truck rates are lowered 50h. Brookiield. Borden-Tormentine In answer to the call of King can reach the mainland but i'. and Country she sent forth one must be remembered lIlECdI/Iifi tarry hundred rid sixteen oi her sons cloes not cross on a sc e u e. at and five daughters in the First there are long waits at either Great War and two hundred and end. Ind "l" the ferry I! l0 PW?‘ fifteen sons (ten of whom have ed that it would be an uneconomi- rnade the supreme sacriiicei and Cfll "ill" V’ ti"! NW5 3°”- m!" nineteen daughters in the Second k9‘! avail: Ti" ENTZthRtr mag] Great War. 15 a" 5- "e °P° W “c The gugsf speaker {or m, am“, for handling trucks. and if cross- vcrsary service on Sunday morning In“ “w” mm“ I“ mgm’ “d In July 20th M“ be the Reverend the winter season would provide John sumenaud Hannah D‘ D" access to the Nova Scotia market Pastor of Fifth Avenue Presby- . at Kama“ and Sydney‘ Inhgergr’; terian Church. New York. m’ womd h’ aboutbona‘ "n!" The music of the day will ho muss Shorter Ihfln y e c" any under the direction oi Mr. Frank steamer’ Johnson, organist and choir dir- ector. who with Mrs Johnson has lately arrived from England to be organist of Zion Church. Suitable nnthems and special music will be rendered at both morning and evening services. Freight Shipments "72 per cent of the tonnage load- ‘ ed on cars on Prince Edward Is- land is agricultural exports. 4'! per cent of the freight unloaded on Prince Edward Island is manufactured material. Of the outgoing tonnage. 60 per cent is potatoes, and the largest propor- tion of it goes to Central Canada. "The National Bureau oi Statis- .ilcs Potato Marketing Report oi H946 states that Ontario produces eighteen million bushels, and Quebec nineteen million bushels, or potatoes. respectively. The pro- duction on Prince Edward Island is about eight million bushels. The value oi potatoes in Quebec on December l"l. l946_ We! 31-03 i791‘ bushel, and in Ontario $1.11 per bushel, and in Prince Edward Is- land s .60 per bushel. “It is difficult in reach these markets even now, but it would be much more diiflcult if the freight rates are increased; indeed, it is likely to check the trade oi pota-_ toes completely, except ior high grade seed stock. of which the Island has a near-monopoly. In i944 P.E.I. supplied the U. S. with two-thirds of the 1.800.000 bushels imported for seed for the i046 crqp. “The Island farmers have only been able to hold their own on these markets by producing hish HTS LIFE SPARE!) Albert Von Kesselring, Cordell commander in Italy, whose death sentence has been commuted to life imprisonment. " Italian news- papers criticized the British de- cision as "an insult to the Italian dead." IRUISES: These‘: nothing so It! name's. n “Isles we". Amissple, seething, bsaihq Gives qlsltl sole! I raisins-cg i IJNIMENI ANNIVERSARY IIRVIOII ll DUNDAS-ANIANDALI UNITID CIIUIOIII on SUNDAY. JULY Ills n; Alnandsle at s us. I _ In Dundee at ‘hi0 PM. itural produce, the Island used to] ‘ these °°mfl 0f PILL. farmers is 40 Pei‘ there. It would be unfair if an in- grsds seed. and by better packing and culling of their product. and the production stock. "With respect to manufactured goods of which the island imports practically all its requirements. these goods cannot be purchased unless farmers are prosperous, and the trade in them would cease to s. considerable extent. As a matter of fact,’ under existing conditions,‘ the population would shift away‘ from Prince Edward Island as it has done in the past. "An increase in freight means that the markets will be restricted. and there will be little or no movemmt in freight, or. on the other hand, the island will revert to water transportation as form-i erly, together with the develop-i merit oi a truck-carrying ferry tn ' Nova Seotla. v "The large items on the imports are fertilizer. limestone and ma- chinery and materials of produc- tion for farmers and fishermen. "At the Charlottetown hearing you were told that the income per farm. and the per capita income of Prince Edward Islanders are among the lowest in Cana s; in fact are only about one-half of some oi the other provinces. The per capita income per Province in 1044 was 8386 as compared with. I8675 for Canada as a whole. Thai ‘net income per farm was $749 in 1044 as compared with $1693 for Canada as a whole. The cash in- cent derived from potatoes so that an increase in freight rates makes potato growing a precarious busi- ness. P. E. l. Subsidy i "The subsidy paid Prince Ed- ward Island. as a result of the late l Imnference, was not based wholly ion the needs of Prince Edward Island. and the settlement would not enable us to approach within 85 per cent of the services given .in the Central Provinces of Can-- ‘our services did not approach, iwithin 65 per cent of the services ‘in the central parts of Canada! on the Yet the Canadian National Rail- I oi food stuffs yearly. The prin- muge’ gruckg ways and the Dominion Govern- ; clpal deficient areas are Halifax, merit have flat rates of pay nil across Canada, which are out of line with rates of pay which the Province is able to provide. "I-t is not possible that Prince Edward Island could adopt at pre- sent s. uniform wage law with the rest of Can ds. Until this position is recognize , it would be unwise for Prince Edward Island to agree with the Railway to charge in- creased freight rates. "Instead oi a horizontal increase in freight rates, some method which would give iull rccognltioi to the purpose and intent of" the Maritime‘ Freight Rates Act, should be devised; that is, if it is shown that an increase in frelgnt rates is necessary. or at least freight rates on bulky commodities should be kept down. Federal Responsibility "The policy oi the Federal Government for a Canadian agri- cultural export program demands a specified production for a speci- fied trade, curtails the freedom of trade between the Provinces. and hampers the export of agricultural and fish products in our ordinary market area. "If an increase in freight rates is granted, it should be paid, in the case of the Maritlmes Provin- ces, by the Federal Government. Particularly is this true with re< spect to feed grains, which. in mv humble opinion. should be always freight free from Montreal east. in order to put us on ah equslitv with the rest of Canada. ‘and parts of Europe which enjoy an ocean freight rate. "It is said that at the present time our purchases from Central Canada, forced on us by tariff policy are at least fifteen times as valuable as the goods we ship to Central Canada. ‘rhst ls, Prinre Edward Island is exporting its products for the most part. and the dollars obtained from export are going to Central Canada for of disease-free _ Manufactured Goods I MA IVE N '5 Scotch Sfyle OATC A K} 5 Tasty and Nourishing, Rich in Proteins, Fats and Car- bohydrates. ' JULY 17, 1947 M A RV I N ' 3 Finest Qualify Cellophane Wrapped’ I Always Fresh Buy Marvesfs Cakes and Biaeulir- teen‘ el "pad packaged-always safe and clean. pm v y "up", Calms and Biscuits of Qualify Since I90‘ goods manufactured there, and supporting a large population crease in freight rates would place a heavy tax on heavy, bulky goods we now sell to Central Canada and make it almost wholly a one way trade. Effects op Rail Traffic . "As it appears to mo, the net re- sult oi an increase in freight rates would be to engender a policy of building up our shipping again, and oi developing ferries at the cast end of Prince Edward Island to enable us to trade directly with "One of our chief markets is Nova Scotia, which brings in about twenty-five million dollars worth Cape Breton, and Plot/cu Countz; all within two hundred miles o! Prince Edward Island li crossings are made on the eastern ferry. This trade could be increased at least ten times its present volume ii service by day and night was established. “Inasmuch as Nova Scotia was our chief market previous to Cori- federation, all we have gained by the shift to train freight service does not give us bgck the Nova. scotia market but shifts us away from it. It can only be held oy, export by trucks and by boats. The freight rate from Central Canada, together ‘with established agencies in food stuffs travelling mostly in refrigerator cars, pre- cludes competition from Prince Edward Island. A rise in freight rates would not change the situa- tion in our favour in the case,of Nova scotis. Confederation ‘Terms "Prince Edward Island entered Confederation in i373, in order mostly to get connection wltL Canada through the Intercolonlai Railway. This railway traveh north in New Brunswick for hun- dreds of miles, and is a most un. economical route to follow in order to reach central Canada. m», have upheld National policy, and we have allowed our shipping to decline. It WIII he a costly under. inking to change back to shipping, Such a change would greatly our- tail the railroad's business but the tar-ferry would cost the same and must be maintained according to the Confedaratlon Pact of i373. "Prince Edward Island has been able to compete in Central Can. adian markets only because 1i; product is superior, and commands a higher price. Better packing and culling, disease free stock, skilful merchandising and advertising, have given us a standing on the markets of Canada and the Un- ited States that enabled us to pay the high frelghtrates. An increase in freight rates may well destroy our position. “The freight rates might wall be lowered to permit us to reacl an ocean port in winter. It is quiu possible for the railroad to double its business on P.E.I. by a lower scale of freight rates. If rates ars raised it will lose business in vol- ume of freight." -et-@oo<e>oo§-co-Q~eo¢ea MOVIES . HUNTER RIVER THURSDAY, JULY I7 Showing- "BORDER IHANTOM" News and Shorts Af 8:30 P.M. Sharp ~@>eo~a>coaa>to<n>oo@oo-r I sma Protect your Crops by ISLAND EQUIPMEN Just arrived corlond POTATO SPRAYERS. A limited number of the following sizes available: 40 Gallon - 80 Gallon - 200 Gallon Phone, Write or Cull immedioiely— w. a. msuuns ' CHARLOTTETOWN CLAUDE McNElL, O'Leory. 'ROBERT DAWSON, Crapnud. TOWNSEND 8i ST. JOHN, Souris. YERS using good equipment T CO., Summersidn A’! --- awws-t. n i .-\ K W} swan nail‘ ‘i’ ‘I1 . IIV. A. D. llaellfltll. D-D-t Guest speaker {neat Oil . v<\_ we» 2 m» s» es teclsy-Dinny P_s§hf_Mg. mount", »