AY .9, 1921 inHood ttnuiit |iillllI'iln‘inllilnillhiiiti‘lliilihiiiilllili-tltt iiltlilii -‘ i ii i|"Iiil|-liiilii-iv L tillm iil iii . ~ I - . " When Robin Hood dined the old Friar, They had a. time feast,‘it is said, Quoth his _gu 'ti.—-— "May I frankly enquir n" The recipe/Tor such cracking good breadff’ Lmivso W‘ "AFTER EVERY MEAL" Mint leaf. peppermint or lus- cious Juicy fruit. either flavor is a treat tor your sweet tooth. "8 w» ‘find all are equally eood tor you. Teeth. appetite- and dieestion all benefit. ' Your nerves will say “thank you." your vim will respond. warcteirs is ilited tor what it does as well as tor its BIG value at the small cost of 5c. The Flavor Lasts / r 1... I The Ideal Train for Business Men .,___.._._. The Canadian Pacific have announced, effective May 1st, new train service between Montreal and Hamilton and vice versa, which should become popular with Travelling Public between Montreal, Ottawa, Tor- onin and Hamilton and other Canadian Cities. This train will consist oi electric lighted standard sleeping and buffet compartment cars and atsndardlcoaohes, nnd will operate between Windsor St. Station, Mon- treal, Yonge StnStation Toronto and T. ll. and B. Station in Hamilton. Train will leave Montreal, Win dsor St., daily except Sunday at. 9.30 arrive Toronto at 7.00 n. m. and llamilton at 8.30 a m the follow In addition there will be through standard sleeping cars [r0111 Ottawa, Spark St., at l0.00 p in to l-liimilton, returning, passengers ave Hamilton at 800 p. m. Toronto ut 10.00 p. m. illTlVlllg Mimiiefll $7.30 a. m. and Ottawa at 7.15 a. in, next morning- p. m. ing morning. Double Daily Service Between Prince Edward Island and the Mainland Effective May 2nd Trains for Borden connecting With S. S. "Prince i-Idwnrcl island" leave Charlottetown 7.00 n. m. and 1.35 l! I h... .. . . . i ‘ l o 1 Canad la n . 1 - ' . Noah-anal i ‘ 0 l . Riliill q s ; v . v i . . m. Morning train connects with train leaving Tormentine at 10.30 s. m and connecting at Snckvllle with No. 1 Express for Montreal and st Mtmctnn t ' i i i iron CHANGES nv 1.00m. sninvlcni AND FURTHER PARTICULARS APPLY T0 “an; District Pnsvgngrr M‘ ' sienna-iii Olli§ltbiifll i s. E. R. BR OW 146 Richmond St i - Charlottetown _ —-r~>_ i Fire, Liie, Accident, Sickness all Plate . j. Glass imam at Lowest rates. i‘ iiool Strong, Stock iilllilli" .-‘PERbONAL MENTION-Mr. and Mrs. Bulpii and Mr. and Mrs. Nlckersou motored to Georgetown from Cardigan this weak.—lMr. and Mrs. i‘. J. Solomon, Georgetown motored to Charlottetown recently —~!iir. Joseph Hennessey, Chnrlotu: town visited friends at George town.-Mr. McNeill, Cardlignn, vls lied Georgetown recently-Mrs. Aneas McDonald. Charlottetown is visiting Mrs. A. J. tMc-Donnld, G-eorgetown.—tMtss Minnie Owen, Charlottetown is spending [hg sum mer at. Georgetown-Mr. Frank Dalzi-zl c-f the car ferry is visiting his homo atfleorgetowm-Mr. N. Lannignn, Sturgeon, visited friends at Georgetown this week.——tMrs. MCCOHIIHC, Georgetown is visiting friends at Sturgeonqtlillrs. G. W. Hibbet, Georg-eiownwas a passeng- er to Charlottetown-this week.-— Rev. Mr. Greenlees, Georgetown visited friends at Charlottetown re- cenl.ty.-—liir. and ‘Mrs. Alfred Gor- don, itaseneath, were passengers i-o GCOFKQIOWIIr-JMPS. Westnway has returned to her home at Georgetown after spending the whner with her nephew, Mr. Jim McLnr-en, MOIlil)gll8.—|Ml‘. John J. Clarke. Alilllllldflig vtisiterl George- town.—eMi. Distant, traveller vis- ited Gcors-etowmQMr. Roger W-gBt uwiiy, Montague recently visit-ed Georgatown.—4Mi-. Lionel MoLaren of rh-q Canadian Bank of Commerce Momague, visited his home at Georgetown .—Rev. Father Gallant Sturgeon. motored to_Georgetown Mondny-QMr. J. N. McCormae, Boughton island, vds/lited George- towm-Misg Myriam Johnson is visiting her home n; Georgetown-— Mr. Frank McEnchern of the car frrry is spending a vacation at his home ii‘ Georgetown-Mr. Harry Raiuse ‘s visiting his home at Gcorgt"to\vn.—-Mr_ Ben Delorie, Vernon ltivter iin visiting Georgi- i.own.-~Miss Nellie ‘MdDonnld, teacher. (Forge-town visited Pan- mure Island this week. A ———-—<o>--i‘ HOPE OF MARINE PEACE wiAlSlllNGTON. May 5.—-Pr0s- pects for an immediate settlement of the shipping wage controversy l-ITTLE were sifid to be anything but bright after a conference today between Secretaries Davis and Hoover and representatives of the Shipping Board and steamship o\vn ers- .\ii'. Davis, however, ‘had not given up hope n-nd arranged to meet later in the day with spokes- men for ‘he unions. I The shipping men‘ were reported to have refused io yield on wage cuts and other questions. It was said also that. the Shipping Board would insist on the 15 per cent. wage reduction ordered by (‘hali- inan Benson ins, iSaturday. ___.._@o-c>_.___ VA LUABLE CARGOE-S‘ FROM ORIENT - VANCOUVER. May 4. —-Above $9,000,000 wlortli 0i‘ silk tfrom the Orient, chiefly Japanese, reach-ed here yesterday on ‘two trans-Preci- fin liners The Monteagio brought f!_000 tons m‘ cirgo all told, the proportion of silk not being stnt- ed. The Kntori Maru, of i-he Nip- pon Yusen Kstisliiri. brought 7000 ions of cargo for this p-nrt, inciud» intg 4,000 halves of silk, which loft for the east tonight. ’l‘-he Moiiteugle carried a full passenger Jtis-i, ntwmlberng 110 sal- oon passengers and nbou-t 500 sleerzitge. Bishop ll. J. llami-iltnn Anglican; Bishop of Nagoya, nrriv- ed en route tlor Toronto. TRANS- CANADA LIMITED 4 UIIBEST TIME ABRUSS TliE ilillillliilil TheTrans-CanadaLim- itcd, the fastest train between Eastern and Western Canada and the Pacific Coast, reaches Fort William in ‘30 hours, Winnipeg in 42, Regina in 53, Calgary in 67, and Vancouver in 92 hours. Leaves Montreal (Windsor St.) at 5.00 p.111. daily; Toronto at 9.00 pm. daily. A Trsln do Lure-Every- thing Canadian Pacific Standard Limited to Sleeping-Car Passengers only (inept parlor-err pssnngsrs lohusn Ilsntrssl and Ottawa) ' FIRST 11mm MAY 22nd Insist! "' 1'35? sfi-Iifftfr n» "' illlillllli PllilFlil ill. M00188 ANNIE MAE Miklbean Montague, wilil be at Moore's store. Eldon, on Thursday M3! i2th. with spring mlllinery. Tile Once Over sy it. l. PHILLIPS FLEET EXAMINED AND FOUND 0. K. The Atlantic fleet has passed its spring examination. President Harding looked it ov- 1nd found it in particularly good condition; much more advanced the spring. ' i lf everything goes all right it should he full grown by summer The President pronounced Hump- ' ion Roads 0. K. as roads go, lint ‘ound them much wetter than those ‘iack in Marion. He referred the, matter to the Highway Department. Going out to review the fleet, the President passed Fort Monroe. . Tort Monroe is the place where the "dent didn't investigate, but was issured that the fort still held the loctrine, and that it was in a cool, lry place and could ‘be ilseil in any emergency. .he famous flght between Monitor ind Merrimac was fought. You re- nember those boys! John L. Sulli- lan challenged the winner, but itithing ever come oi it. Secretary Den-Ivy went out on ‘its flagship. They .cail the flagship .he Sylph. The flagship ls, but the iecretary isn't. The Syiph fitted the seFretary of .he navy like a modern kitchenette. \ new flagship .with a larger waist- line will "be built for him at. once. Secretaries of navles, like secre- taries of war and secretaries of state, must have room enough to '.urn around. Those of the last ad- ministration turned around so of- ten there was talk of equipping Lheir ships with turntables. The fleet review was very im- Ioressive. The flagship Pennsylvania ired twenty-one guns passing the presidential yacht. This caused a sensation in Japan, which didn't know our navy had that many guns. The Hartline yacht responded with seventeen guns. The other four shots will he paid within thirty Years. Brigader-Generai Sawyer, ‘.he President's personal physician, thought a few shots should be cori- servetl in case the President be- ing. t Elsi/e" Billie-Shins. forty destroy- ers, twenty-two submarines, and six F9?“ E3819 boats were in the re- view. One of tho Ford boats was 3W9" lust. before the parade. A congressional inquiry will be nerd and the chauffeur court-martinled for leaving a Ford boat around Without taking the key out. The Ford boats are a very 1m. Dortont adjunct to a navy, when a high Se“ is Pllmlins they are the Only boats than can make the grade. A 800d time was had by all. mm $PR|NG. YOU fellahs in the city think Y0“ KIIOW when Spring is here—- You talk about the ‘ozone’ and the "balmy atmosphere," The soinke of busy chimneys takes a differn; kind of hue And sometimes you imagine (ha; the sky is really blue; You feel a fresh ambition in 10hr race for worldly goods, But there ain't no spring whatever, 1h". eXcehilfl in the woods. You kin have your city springtime wich its mud and soot and noise. Fer up here on the river Spring ls here with all its joys; For thero ain’, no bands make music like the robin's ihroaiy thrill There. ain't no park ‘has grasses like the grasses on the hill; The party in the city has more gold, perhaps, and goods, But the world belong; in springtime to “the fellah in the woods. ‘ For and n Ill its: ion lives 30 inns Alwsaabssrs ' _ _ GNEOQIHRJA m onsmiorlnrown connotes Tllll EASTERN GUARDIAN Ez: €'.=::,";.':' "r "'- Cigarettes t i i I .wlll ‘be 7 per cent. The rate of sur- EXQHANGE AND FREIGHT listen Announced f°r Period of Msy 1 to 14 lt)'l"l‘A\\'A. May 2; —in at-wrrl- ince -\\'th the judgment and order nlxlnunsjl Jl the Board of ltailwny (‘tinintis- sinners. the rate of exchange in connvctuuii with Sdlillllllvlll‘; of nu freight between points in ("anutla ind the ljniietl States. from May 1 to llluiy 14 tincluslve, ‘is announced today as at l1 15-16 net" cent, and the surcharge on, the said traffic t-hziriété on international passenger on l‘: pei u...“ than fleets usually are so early in liicytale hcriultse ll takes them where the fish are withoul trouble "111 P6811)’ l0 UB6 i" i119 9M1! fliil- dn a year's use alone, not. Cillllililllg .io become M°nr°9 130mm“ i5 REW- The Pres‘ iride a bicycle for his healuh l it was off Hampton Roads that. came too seascik to ilP. worth suv- I F" sicvcilr-fwésKflnizu/e-g _ ___-_ um Interesting Facts About The Bicycle A Potrolen mun recently made 3,- M Hampton Roads the othef day on cvcn trade of u used automo- le tor a new bicycle. ‘S HEDIAC, N_ B.,May 5.-—'l‘he ,~- . _‘ . many friends of Mrs. Mac White hshmg “Dem; mm m u” n‘ of Shediac, will] extend their L0 or noise. "eii _ _ Th. ihillllrlnfi "n 39H. a day for cur-- lures. the cost ut’ :1 bicycle is save-d chess (liliflllpiiilfl, has itlie rim-bition the world's grcutest blc-ycle rider. Err-President Wilson was recent- lv zitiviseil thy life phyr-ican to f.‘ QpriIcJQQQ [c rdgrm ‘The Wheel" is the name ‘of a new Broadway play wlii-trh was selected to ruplaue "Lighininfl which hrolui tin.- rqcoiwl iiill’ long runs. W, A- llllnicr. a prominent Tn- ronio business mun. is a ionmei- iltrcsltlent oi the (‘iinztil-inn \'Vliecl~ men's Association and .1 bicycle Jiooster. i The bicycle lit-s r-arnml n poi‘- nianeiit llililfp as n utility for rupiti delivery st-i-‘rir-o for stores oi all kinds. t ‘ ll has r-itcn been said that noth- ing has ever been Iinventetl to re- plm-c actually the simple and itse- .iul bicycle. i The only tools: necessary to keep a bicycle in perfect running nrriei‘ nrc a wrench. tire pump and oi! ‘pan. ll is a peculiar fact that mun-y prominent bicycle racers had names which end in “er"_ One oi‘ them, Kramer, is still a ‘wonder. Kramer, the DFOIUSSIUIIH] bicyclei ,sLar. is "itetl as a millionaire and wpentls his spare time 0n the golf Jinks. \ i. i ilicyt-le Week is llio nerlotl crichi, vcir when the economic and healthful advantages of the hiqvcir- arc eni-phasizerl. ' Bicycle racks everywhere indi- ixiate the service which the bicycle "afford the workingiiian in ‘getting Hiuticktly to work. The (Yanadiian ‘Wlieelmens As- sociation is tho oldest sport. gov- erning hotly in t-lio whole oi’ the Dominion. .- The ages oi bicycle riders in (fantritla range from two to tiighty yours, illillilftllllg to n recent stir‘- vey, tBicyclcs relieve the street car congestion during rush li-ours in d considerable degree. The problem of transpnrtiiiiion for the working ‘illllll is solvcrl quite easily by the hlcycle_ 5m: a"? Cause oi ; Early 0id Age The celebrated Dr. Miclienhoff, AmAQ‘_.-_.-_. qwwwwv we”? l§ A vwq ' an suthority on early old sgo, i ssys that it is “caused by poisons h gensrsfod in the intestine." F Whenyourstomschcligestsfood I t B i -. - m ‘rv v v"~‘v‘-%Ql;e properly it is absorbed without forming poisonous ‘ . Poi- ~ sons bring on early old ngo and prsmsturedealh. l5 to 30 drops of "Selgelfi Syrup” sftsr meals mlkss your digestion sound. so t‘ 4. ‘A -.. ‘A v w vv vw_v Q-Q vw vwv The Rexill Store 4 The Correct Mixing i oi‘ medicines prescribed by the doc- tor is oi‘ the gravest importance,’ urd we make it a particular study. (Jur dispensing department. never makes an error, because we are too watchful and experienced for that. firing your prescriptions here and rest saiisflai filled carefully, accurately and promptly at a moderate cost. i H. J. MABON Drugqist and Prescription Optometrist MONTAGUE, P. E. i. business will he based sympathy to her ow-ing to the re- iDaiiiel Mirmit-im. of Rundollf. Maine. : lira-cased was a native of P. E. island, but for muny years citizen of islll-liillli), where he was that they will be .. t exchange. __.__4-o§i—_ DEATH ‘OF-IISLANDER m MA INE- i‘ IPAG 5 soothes and-eases ~ the flu-out - Relieves huskiness -an Ida/n: producflparIicu/arly pro-pared t death of her brother. the late DEMN FASH was a Ciassed as liidecfint fin» h “I THINK both you fellows are missing a good "thing. “I heard you grouching something terrible yesterday, Jim, about your long, tiresome walk. You were late and got docked. I started ten minutes later and had lots of time. And you, Tom, said your feet burn- ed and ached from walking so much. “Why, my bike and I have the laugh on both you fellows all the time. We spin along home while you’re trudging along. Cycling has walking beaten a mile.” “Well, wheeling is very fine with A Real Bike Like Yours I wish I couldaliord one like it, Bill." “Why, Tom, the shoe leather you're wearing out hoofing it on the hard sidewalks would help pay for a C. C. M. bike like mine. Besides, your time is worth money and a bicycle saves a lot of time. HERE sre over 1.000 C.C.M. Service Stations in Csnsds carrying genuine C.C. M. pom snd living r C.C.M. service, book lo Q thesbove sign. CORCHESTER LADIES con- xw-s. IONS and Immoral Bill sayQcy-ciinn n... Walking Beaten a Milé’ 111ml‘: nodcrn fashion in woman's "dwin- ll. is both indecent and and does not ttnrl to r-levnie ‘our Hllllllllllliiy life. \\'c br-licvt- this to WP“ “m; favorably known "e was Pfgligng ggyies of Bus; in- in the best intern-sis til‘ our 0m"? BiiVB-iliililei 62 years of age and is survidcrl by - ‘J0Y5-" _ his widow and tiwn ilaughtcrs mid l)(tiii‘ill<IS'l'l~Ilt. N. IL Mill’ 5-“ _ V “m” _ PHIIKZPHS (‘colic oi‘ Grcect- ls one by one lbrotlier and three sisters. At tho inonrlily nice-ting of tho VA.\'('(li.'\iCii, - . H-WPRE" "I "Hilly ‘iivylll children who ride Mr John lilcAti-ain, of Lynn; Miss \\'_ 1‘. 'i‘ i‘. tlu- inotiun was inuslt- srnllvt‘. snail and il"'ii-lill fii-Pvivr‘ '11)’ their ‘ilicyilirfi every fiily- Mary of Lynn; Mrs. Armour of_intl unanimously vllrricll that. uir lit-tween Vancouver and Montreal; itnd Mrs. White of ‘We. as a band of (‘hristiiin Wfl- tie will opcn about June l unless ISum llreszcwski, the youthful Shediac. men. wish to [irntest against tht- prtescnt plans go astray. Quasar-q And then. you know, one like mine will last for years.” “That's so, Bill." “Yes. and when you're buying a bike, Tom, be sure to get one with C. C. M. Triplex Hanger It makes a wonderful diiTerence in the ease of riding. It gives your bicycle more speed—and pep—and power." “How much extra Hanger, Bill?" “Not a dollar. C. C. M. Bicycle at: is the Triplex It's on every No Extra Charge” “What about that handy little brake on your bike, Bill?" “You mean the Hercules Coaster Brake. It's been nicknamed ‘the Little Fellow with the Giant Grip’. You’ll notice it hasn't any clumsy side arrri. The Hercules is regular equipment on every C. C. M. Bi- cycle, too." “It's some bike. Bill. Guess we'd both better get that to work, too." 0| kind and ride COM Bicycles , PERFECT— Mnsssr- RED BIRD CLEVELAND - COLUMBIA “The Bicycles with the C.C.M. Triplex Hanger" Canada Cycle 8: i Motor Co., Limited o Montreal, Toronto, WESTON, ONT., Wissipq, Vsscesver For Silo By i 164 Prince \ ‘ Street. iCiiarlottetown Garage Company Limited - I - o, ~ i :\ i n._.....__..u..__i.in_......a.....ili iintniorai