has: l, I Lilla. I. l‘. hfluu._wi “Burglary-Lent. Col. I). Editor and Managing Director-J. IL Burnett lauoolnln IdItnta-llrlnl _ In d nee) delivered. lornlng Dally uoiziaengvlsum “'02,,” 5m“ ‘tsp per year til Vlee-Prealdaao-J l. Iarllll l. Iaoliinnnn, l). Il- 0. Walker and l). IL. Currie thathswasinatkhtoornsnthat hewantedtofiethack” ltthl Doctor who. had no opportunity to reply, and, havlht neither lcllc M!‘ facts at his command, stooped to subterfuge and misrepresentation- fl-IE OWN GUA NOTES BY ‘llli WAY Denial by the representatives of the various parties on the Beauhar- nols Committee that u‘!!! 8W to- gether to hush up further disclos- ures can readily be believed.- Aftei lllE BHARLUTTETOWN GUARDIAN Elia“: lfoup ' 0f AUGUST 3, 193i Four Years Ago" “Now that the battlels over, we should all settle down to business. Mr. Saunders, the incoming Premier, and his executive when selected, as welisa his supporters, will no 1h to be firthcr z toned. w!” "'4 I Tguudklll’! lmoke no e w. Le l ltltute Bennett o? ‘Emmi su those now up for m,“ wit?‘ l are the fury and Augugt m, show that they cut‘ be when MONDAY. AUGUST 3, 1931 Mr King Rebuke‘; upon immediate compliance with its ' demand. Mr. B ’ ‘ reaction to doubt fully realize that the country will look for the most that way. r id enforcement of the Prohibition law that luzsever taken 1 am durpflged m, M, . p ace here. There must be no more winking at violations of would sloop a, rum,“ m‘! “ the law. Justice must not be too much tempered with l’ what theydidbrlngout there would bonosenselnllilsllllllilpanythinl’ short o! murder. >Zs—- yours; That Golden Opportunity » l ' ’ a,- 1... their». M». “ bii -' Pi-emier boa pmfelsu to be this illtlmaiilm was to dispatch A ggmpalgn funds was not only well- _ Senate, must convince most people The stinging rebuke administered by premier Bennett to Rt. Hon. W- L. Mackenzie King for his irre- rponslbie attitude towards Beauhar- nols contributions to the Liberal deserved but approved by the richl- thinking members of the Llbcral party. Mr. Bennett's reference to the customs scandal oi i926, when it will be recalled Mr. King raised his ministerial colleague to the that the Beauharnois scandal was but a sequel. Business people every- thcreupon the 3.0.8. call to Senator Mclirthlll’. who happened at the time to be in Montreal: following frantic June 10, 1927 Hon. Senator MacArthur. co. Windsor Hotel, Montreal, Insistcnt demand by Tempe!‘ ance Alliance for Mounted Po- lice. Fear adverse results, politic- ally, unless request immediately granted. Feeling running stront- Indlgnation meetings held. Make sure Police here before next week. Urgent. iSigned) A» C. SAUNDER5- so critical was the situation, that "amused" that the Conservative leader should have said. in the Budget debate at the last session: “You have lost your opportunity of getting an increase in subsidy." After the election Mr. Lea will have plenty of time to ponder on the truth of that statement. The fact that he does not yet realise the golden opportunity that was miss- ed of securing a subsidy settlement whenhisownpartywssinpower at Ottawa, is the strongest , " ‘ evidence of his incapacity in deal with the matter. That opportunity It was on the list of July. 1M5. that the Great Eastern began the laying of the second Atlantic cable. The first cable had been inaugurat- ed on August is, i858, by _an- er- change of messagm between Queen Victoria and President Buchanan. of the United Btates, but on Bop- tember 4th following that” cable. broke- The second cable alsobroke on August 12, i865. and it was not until August l0, i866, that cable communication was assured across the Atlantic's bed. The immediate task of the Ger- man Gcvernmcnt ll of, course to meet the attacks of the llhsclstr and Communists at home, but it is INVIBTIGATING METHODS OI INDUCING SLEEP 5o important is sleep to every human that all over the world re- search men are iavcstlsating the cause of sleep. what causes slew" lcesnee-s, and what. natural means there are aside from drum to in- ducesleep. . Some years age one university hivestigatod sleep by means of its students all of whom were in nor- mal health; the number of time each student moved during the night, how much and what kind of mice causedthenr. to stir or wake Wp, how much sleep cnch student seemed to need. were all possible in this Province. mercy; too often it has been so- Bootleggers, home brew- makers, and sellers and smuggleruof liquor, if the Liberals remain true to their pledpeeand true to their afllliations. with the Temperance Alliance. must ‘be put out o! business." —Patriot Editorial June 27, 1927. “We are going to leave nothing undone to enforce the Prohibition Act, and this can be done. There is nothing im- We have a clear mandate to go forward and enforce this Act and I for one will stand for nothing but enforcement to clesr the Province of this cursed drink tradic. Ypu will not. find this Government lacking in anything it. can def-Hon. B. W. LePape, at Temperance Alliance Meeting, July 7, 1927. “To prombte the growing of cranberries, blueberries and small vegetables, and to thoroughly test. the feasibil- ity of establishing a. canning industry in this Province.”- BOIQQD lotiompanimqnt h m swan acne of m, 1..., ggzregmm I am sir, g4 , ‘ONE 0F A- w! 1a,, .______,____ , ran. wsronrs vocra rm, Ska-Hon. Horace Wright, I ed too much at Searletowr, gm o Friday h1sht—that is from , _‘ ml viewpoint. He tried to m, that it did not matter whelhq- o Provincial Governments we,‘ l‘ line with the Hderal Govgmmm or not, as either would m m I and full consideration at the 1m, of Hon. n. s. Bennet when H would approach him 1,0 ask M _ subsidy settlement. Later in , two Mounted Police officers were Lea Government election platform, 1927. filo are disgusted with the Beau- ._ v-‘n {,3- ; . .142‘; i ‘a §§F m» -. . <"" harnois disclosures and want the mess cleared up as Bllcedily and satisfactorily as possible. | Mr. King's attempt to draw red herring across the trail by de- manding a Royal Commision on party funds generally missed fire ls Premier Bennett told the Lib- eral leader that he could have Royal Commission when a charge I188 made. It is now up to Mr. King to make the next move. will he do it? Premier Bennett summarily dis- missed Mr- King's attack on him- self personally in the following masterly rebuke: actually dcspatched to the Province. They were visible for a few hours on the eve of the election, and a!- tcr the election they disappeared and were never seen or heard of ll since, Moreover, there was the letter sent out by Mr. Saunders March 2i, i921, to leading Liberal support- ers, impressing upon them the need of calling meetings of party workers to decide, "ln the very best interests of the party," whether the Liberal policy should be one of Government Control or Prohibition -—M.r. Saunders stating emphatical- ly therein that it was of "the ut- most importance" that the decision B "The right hon. gentleman spent hours complaining of irkslnuations and innuendoes, for which there is not a scintilla of evidence or the grounding of a single memorand~ urn of e. single conversation, 'Do you call that right and fair and- lustf Is that the sense of decency that prevails in the mind of my right honorable friend, who stands in this House and makes the sort of attack he made last night‘? What was that attack for? “There was not a single person Withm sound of the volcc of the right honorable gentleman who did not know what it was made for. It was made to induce the Canadian people to try to forget Beauharnols; it was made to induce the Canad- ian people to forget that there had been an investigation! It was anl effort through that cunning which has characterized the discharge of my right honorable friend's public duties, as evidenced by that very report of the Customs inquiry in 1928. It was an endeavor by that cunning device to insinuate pro- phetical conditions and draw hypo- Lhetical conclusions, and then af- ford an opportunity to go, out into this country and quote them as in- ’... lllcating the true position of the ‘ Prime Minister of Canada." The Great Betrayal Lea Government members profess to deny that the decisive factor in electing them to power was the Prohibition issue, and that but for that issue the Stewart Government would have been returned with a sweeping majority on its record of achievement. This is a fine example of Liberal "gratitude" towards the Temper- hnce Alliance, the Women's Chris- tian Temperance Union, Sons oi Temperance, Ministerial Association and prohibition supporters general- ly who rendered such vital service to the Saunders-Lea-Mclntyre ag- gregation on that occasion, and who were openly solicited to do so on the ground that there was no other issue in the campaign but the question, on the one hand, of "a grogshop at your door," and, on the other-the Liberal side-of "the great boon of a banished liquor traffic." 1 One of the Liberal promises made in this connection was that the Royal Canadian Mounted Police would be requlslticned to enforce the Prohibition Act. When it was ' discovered by the Temperance Al- liance, during the campaign, that this promise was merely a gesture and that no effort was being made to implement it, the Alliance made it very clear to Mr. Saunders, the Liberal leader. that a successful lbilmme of. the election depended should be made Party's interests." Liberal chances, apart. from Pro- hibition, were against the Stewart Government's 4 surely was the leader of the Liberal party. His words, and the whole course of the Liberal campaign. show that; it was solely on their Prohibition promises that they en- tertained any prospect of gaining power, and that in repudiating sibllity for prohibition enforcement stated? Why did he not tell the truth? Surely, in Mr. Lee's position, an explanation is in order-over and above the obvious explanation “strictly in our If anyone should know what the record in 1927, it their pledges by saddllng on the Prohibition Commission the respon- ihcy have betrayed the people who elected them in the most shameful and inexcusable manner. Slick, But insincere What confidence can the electors have in the lender of s. Government who makes‘ deliberately misleading statements on a public platform? At the Kensington meeting, in pe- ply to Dr. W. J. P. Maclvilllarfs statement that the Bennett Gov- ernmcnt had restored the technical grant, Premier Lea implied that the Doctor did not know what, he was talking about because “we have been receiving the technical grant all through our term of office and it amounted last year to $22,000." Premier Lea was well aware that the money we have been receiving for technical and agricultural training is our unexpired balance of the grant voted by a previous federal Conservative Government. He knew that this grant had been discontinued by the King Govern- ment and had been re-establishcd by the Bennett Government. He knew that his federal leader ob- jected when the resolution was in- troduced appropriating the sum of $750,000 per annum over a period of fifteen years to re-establish the grant, Mr. King contending that the Provinces should look out for themselves and pay all their own expenses in this matter. Premier Lea must also have rc- culled that at the lest session of the Legislature he spoke eloquently ln favor of the technical grant be- ing renewed, and commended Hon. Robert weir, Federal Minister of Agriculture, upon his practical in- terest in technical and agriculturaL training. Why than did Premier Lea on- dcavor to mislead his audience at Kcpslnston into supposing that the technical llrant had not expired under the ‘King Government and been reestablished by the Bennett Government, as Dr. MacMillnn had was let slip, and as Mr. Stewart well said, it was an opportunity gone forever so far as the Saund- ers-Lea Government is concerned. ' The first Stewart Government obtained $165,000 additional annual subsidy from an adverse govern- ment at Ottawa and the second Stewart Government, with a sym- pathetic administration at Ottawa will Dress for final settlement or the subsidy question once and for all. 111st is w. Stewart's attitude on the subsidy question. That is why he says the subsidy question is the most vital issue of the election cam- palsn- Ha emphasizes 1t because he believes in it. Premier Lea and his candidates, on the other hand, min- lmlzr the subsidy issue because they do not believe in it. They have nev. er believed in it--nevcr treated it as anything more than a pquflggl football. That is the Lea Govern- ment's "record of performance" on which it is now slime-ling for sup- port, and it is one of the chief rea- Svllb Why lie appeal will be turned down on August 5th. Great Conservative Meeting The manner in which the elect-l ors cheered and applauded the Hon." J. D. Stewart at. the Mount Herbert meeting on Friday night was one of the most extraordinary mgr-ii- festations of enthusiasm ever wit- Xlwad at; s. joint political meeting in this Province- The reception ac- corded Mr. Stewart and the popular Conservative candidates Messrs. MacDonald and Wood was in strur- ing contrast to the marked coolnegg shown in the Liberal speakers. It is significant that the Patriot hssgnot been Ilt to publish a report of the Mount Herbert meeting, although s. saibled report o! the Bradalbane llletllfls on the same night-at which there was no Patriot reporter present-appears in its Saturday's issue. Editorial Notes The Stewart Government is going inl The Hon. Russell Clark admitted ‘it e Wlltlcel eating lest week that two of his own horses were put; m "Wk °ll "l" Public roads. Another deserving democrat! ‘Watch out for Patriot roorbscksi The l-ce cram is bitter when fight- lll! i 1081118’ battle. and will produce its whole be! of tricks in the next three days in the hope of stemming the Conservative tide, From every constituency in ch; Province comes increasingly favor- able reports of a Conservative vic- tcry at the 9011s. The aim of can. servative workers now should be to see that every vote is polled. Eltldelllly the Patriot is ashamed l» publish the scandalous insinu- ation made ‘against a Conservative °mdld°$° by the lion. B. w. u. Pose at the Milton meeting-a statement which was lnqxguggbk even in the heat of political debate, and which no gentleman would M" m" “"4" In! circumstanc- es. Warveteransarenot iiksiyco at large will give encouragement to revolutionary doctrines or provoke a clash that would destroy all hopes of reconstruction on a firm and last- lns basis. Seventeen years ago Austria de- clared war on Serbia on July :8. Events followed rapidly and by Aug- ust i Great Britain was at war with Germany. We are still paying and many generations to come will pay for the torch thrown into the grass seventeen years ago. We are always surprised, says the New York Herald Tribune, after the arrest of a. rscketeer to read his police court record and find that though he has been caught in the toils many times, he has spent 9, re- latlvely short time in prison. Going through their biographies one worn ders whether it is a greater crime to violate a traffic regulation than it is to commit an assault. Why have our courts been so lenient in handling the cases of these gang- sters? Is there such s. thing in this city as "political pull?" 5° l" "-5 MP- Kl-llt’! connection with the Beauharnois affairls con- cerned the Ottawa Journal sums it up as follows: 1- Ml? K918 slanted certain Order- lp-vcvncll Y18hts to the Beauhsmois promoters. 2. Mr. King subsequently? refused. an investigation of the financial 0p- emllml-rll 07 the Bcauhernois pro- moters. , - SJMr. King, or Mr, King's party, later accepted $700,000 of election campaign money from the Beauhar. noLs promoters. 4- Clflscly connected with Beau- llcrncls. in a lcsal and financial Way were (1) m. King's personal friend and chief of stafl, senator Andrew Haydon. and (2) Mr- King’; personal friends and political cap- tains. Senators McDougsld and Raymond. The Chinese are lending mo“; and more to substitute wheat for m» 1n their every-day diet, and this is i111 to the advantage of the Canadian lame-r. Our exports of whcal: and flour are constantly increasing to the orient market, but this may not always be the case. For China is herself "cultivating wheat; on g vast scale and already pmduggg more of this cereal than we do. In "will llwl. its normal harvest now amounts to nearly 500,000,000 huh. cls a year, without counting the Manchurian output, which means an "ddllwll 0! 40,000.99) more bushels. Emma pm: reports say um German rncnarchlsts are convinced that Herr Wilhelm l-lohenzollern‘; reinstatement as emperor is the Only hope or saving Germany from lsaster. With them the wish is father to the thought, but there are n0 signs that the people in genera] are the least bit inclined m; hi; Ywmflllllli; Rm! they have the say. It would be worse than stupid to dlscourase fact-finding and rc- search. We cannot have too much data on the various problems before us. But it would be encouraging to find a little more attention directed toward learning how to handle and apply this fund of info. ation, in- stead 0f efforts being confined al- mcet entirely to the gathering of it. m!!!’ b81181! by the Saunders-Les- ‘ " ‘ and the in which they were ignored when that assflisltion got into power. The same contomptible propaganda is warmed over and served up in Saturday's issue of the ma Gov- ernment organ. The electors of the Third District of Kings have a good opportunity of answering it by el- ecting two soldier candidates, Messrs. Frlnk McPhce and Leslie Hunter, who can be depended upon forsetthgaroavdilahfll disdauMmadoual-aouiaeveunar. l0 IIYQII-ll-rd the interests 0i’ their LePage aggregation during the last “ extremely unlikely that the people 5min“! Nd "W145 Keill- Yet no one has really discovered the cause of sleep. Now another university, Colgate University, Hamilton, N. Y. through the director of its psy- chological laboratory, Dr. Donald A. Laird, is going to try and find out if there is any truth in the general belief that. any and all of three of the following methods really bring on sleep; physical ex- ercise before retiring; a warm drink before retiring; and s, bath at body temperature before retir- ins. His plan is to have patients, who are not really sick, but who are poor sleepers write him direct, and he will send them four little blank booklets which are labeled simply "Confidential Sleep Record," and no meniton is made of them at his laboratory. A white booklet is used for the normal or “ nrtol" first three days, in which the indivi- dual will note how and the number of hours he slept for these three night. A buff booklet is used for the three days when a. brisk ten minute walk is taken before re- tiring; another color for the three days when the warm drink is tak- “Prince Edward Island ection editorial, 1927. form, 1927. vincial Government and the are now before the jury of orial, June 21, i927. - of our people prevail on "election day, ere long become a Booze Free Area as wellP-Patriot el- “Phe door (against the liquor traffic) is now shut le- gally. It is only a matter of law enforcement to keep it closed tightP-Patriot, May 25, 1927. is now known as a Disease Free Area, and if the common sense and sound judgment speech he offered an excuse go, h failure of the Liberals when i1, attempted to get consider“, l"!!! l!" Kins Government. m, excuse was that the Nova 5mm and the New Brunswick “yam mfilllvl b61118 Conservative m, the Province will “Federal Politics is NOT THE ISSUE. It is the Pro- Prohibition Commission that the electorateP-Patriof. edit- THE VOICE OF LABOUR Slr:-—I have been res/ding some letters in the Patriot, signed “Workman? Being a. worklngmau myself I was much surprised that on before retiring, and still anoth- er color for the three days when the bath is taken. Now this is coins to be an in- teresting experiment because these. three methods of inducing sleep have manyfollowersPerhaps you ave learned »» for yourself however that , one or more of these methods do not work in your particular case; you up so that you can't sleep, and similarly with the hot hath; in the case of a. warm drink before re- tiring lt has no effect or may five rise to gas {Oflhdtiqn which keeps you awake. The rule of giving a warm drink to patients in hospital about nine or ten o'clock each night. has been of great benefit in most cases.‘ So we will awn“ ‘he outcome of this experiment and when 1t is completed I shall be ;'~-l to give Dr. Laird‘s findings to my waders. those letters contained no reel facts or reasons why the working- mcn should vote for the Liberals. On the contrary, there are many reasons why they should not vote for them. For example during tho Bell Ad- ministration .the Liberals imposed s, p0“ tax on the farmers and workingmcn of this Province. This tax fell heavily on the worklngmen of Charlottetown who were already paying a city poll tax of $5.00 and if l’. do not mistake Mr. Hlggs was a member of the Legislature at that time. The Conservatives 0n assuming power abolished this most unjust. tax. Under the Saunders-Lea Admin- istration another rotten piece 0f Legislation was put through while amending the Prohibition Act. They ignored the big offenders and stiffened the orrense against a working man taking drinks oi liquor or beer excepting it was or- Today, my heart's an aching pain For England and its gentle peace. I even want the smoke and rain, ‘The dull llt fires that never cease. Icrave the warmth and smile of folk, Friends, trusted, I all. Dear cherished memories awoke, And torturing, polgnant- -c:\ll and catx . Unucr tending hEVB 0h, yesl I know there's beauty here, Sunshine, blue sea, and coloured foam, And, maybe, love and friends to cheer, But, heart and soul I long for home. —Anthony James in the Melbourne Argus. The Duty of the Senate (Montreal Star) The Senate of Canada is a body of great, ’ “ . It ought to he very sensitive as to its honor. It is rim sitting. ft can reed the report of the Gordon Committee as well as any of us. will it be satisfied to do nothlns? If it swallows this report without evidence of acute discomfort-hind withoui. swift action to clear its own skirts-the country will think far less of it than it has in the past. The Committee of the Com- mons has commended itself to the nation by its fearlessness, its bold- ness in fixing blame and its down- right demands‘ that action be taken. lleggers of notorious reputation dcred by a doctor and procured from the vendor. Many working- men who were by no means drunk or incapable have been summoned to the Court and fined or Jailed for consuming liquor while boot- have been able to evade the law leased before their time was serv- ed. Now comes the meanest throw- down ever handed out to the p001‘ workingman. On two different oc- casions while the Provincial Leg- islature was in session under the leadership of Premier Baunde s the Government was asked to present "The Workmenv. Compensation Act." On both occasions it was ignored. ‘This Act was also present- ed to Premier Lea at the last ses- sion and no action was taken to place it. on the statufi books. The Compensation Act, is in force in every Province in Canada and in fact every country in the world has a Workmeuh Compensation ActJ but alas! the Liberals will not les- islate in favour of the workingmcn in this Province. “Workn-lm" writing in Patriot trys to mix federal politics with the issues in the local campaign. He speaks of the work which the Mc- Intyre Highway Provided. Well we all know that if it were not for the Bennett unemployment money that work would never have been done, and, I think it is the first wage in the labourer. They were compelled to pay the fair wage on this iob, because the l‘ rva- iive Minister of labour at Ottawa made arrangements “that all work ers under the unemployment fund were to receive the fair wage scale"- ln this connection the working- men would like to know how much of this mpoo of federal money was paid out in labour? The mm a- mount with the Trovincial share ‘would be $180,000. Perhaps the Liherahwiiillveulsnttemiaedac- and, when convicted, have been re » tim. the Liberals ver paid n fair ‘pmclrlblilhfll of the Lea Govern- nn: PIIBLIB ronui? fund before election ' day. They some to be very "mum" on this sub- ject st present. Premier Bennett brmlsht in a. bill to provide for unemployment and this bill wls bitterly attacked and lmocked by Mr. King, who wanted Bennett to name the a- mount of money to bé spent on this urgent, cause. Mr. Bennett re- fused to name the mount; because he intends to end unemployment and help the workingman until such time as condiitions hence not in line with the 130mm, ion Government, nor in line m), our Island Government-Elmo“), being prevailed upon by our mm “Appreciating the action of the Liberal Government Bmmwl to try for an increase n at Ottawa in passing the Old Age Pensions Act, we an- ticipate establishing it. in this Province inamannerucon- sistent with our revenueP-Lea Government election plat- subsicr-considered it w-imd y, usclcss for them to main.- the 1i. tempt as the governments Wm, whom they must work or deal we“ of a vzfferent political stripe 1mm their own. Conservative candidates from W. cry district in Prince Edward h. land owe a debt (of gratitude, l; least) to Mr. Wright for this very conczeu proof of the dealt-hid; of hump the governme 1's n1 m, Maritime Provinces and the ~ ~. ital Grvemment in lin: with cash other i: order that a. proper rum sfdy allowance may be secured 1mm" Ottawa when presentation of w; ~.ln'zns are iointlymadc‘ ln the army We had an order ‘Right. about". face." Tbs was er- "lli"? by m0“!!! the whole body to lace in the opposite dirgmm, Mr Wright.didn’t have to novel)” whole body. He merely Opened 1p; morrh, rnui of! memory of n" » Continued on page 5 bettemDur-lng the mcxeurie Kins term of Government depression and un Joyqnen went to rock bottom and now the Bennett Gov- ernment is compelled to commence the reconstruction of Canadian prosperity. Premier Les while in Upper can ads. last year told the people that there was no unemployment in Prince Edward Island and at that time there were hundreds of men idle in this Province. The Patrolt newspaper made the home state- ment when the uncthliloyment grant was being voted in Parlia- ment. These are some of the reasons why workingmen should not vote for the Liberal candidates but should support the Conservative candidates under Hon. .1. D. Stew- art who will work in oo-opcration and harmony with the Conserva- tive Government at Ottawa. I am, Bir, etc. q WORKMAN MR. MCLEAN‘! SAD MISSION _.._.. Sir:--Many personal friends ex- tend a cordial welcome to Mr. A. E. McLean M. P. on his return to Summerslde. Mr. McLean, trug to colors has answered an S. 0. s, (sink or swim) from the great Lib- eral Debt-Makers of_ Prince Ed- ward Island. They have at last found out how much “hold" they have on the electors for rc-eleotion. Their political outlook has become more and more hopeless since the opening of the campaign. Even thp great Fourth District of Prince gives fMlGh uneasln -,-..-~' of which may be got from Mrpldcafs frequent reference to it in the general Liberal rally in Summer- side. His mind was evidently mush concerned with ‘home progresslf It is generally Blllflcted that the Liberal landslide of I02’! will‘ be reversed in the llburthas was that in the Second Dlstrldi, which is this year going even stronger Con- servat-lve. m. Meneausaid in mlerslie st "Thursday's meetin: that many of the liberal candidates had rt‘ him material assistance in v his elections in the put, and true friend as he is, he wishes now ‘to reimburse them with a Federal smoke screen or any other saving device his political estutenrss may molest. V Mr. McLean's leaving his duties in’ Parliament many days before‘ prorogatlon to reach the death- bedside of his dear friendsll lust one more evidence of one extreme BATlilNll GAPS if you want something nice in Bathing Caps, you will flllil it at our store. Wc are [MRI liberal discounts on these for remainder of the week. Our special 15o cap is a beauty. Call and Ice them. , Baby Pants Extra strong rubber pants for young children. All sires 18c pair. Excellent value. 0 . We have a few nice Beach Balls in various colors and extra large. Olearlnl‘ at 190 ‘each. Get one now. E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTOBE fllllNufoinnnn. .....$9l= m Naiol 69c use Pinhliams Comp. 9k um Beef, Iron c wlna- l" cum Enos rm: Salts 89c Mo Phillipa Milk of Mll- neaia ..... .. 39¢ 60o curmu- smp Fl" “l” ltleIi-nltativcs 35o Aspirin Table-ts 85o runs. a c. Tablets .. 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