1v .1; S, BO-PCEEP " PRINTS shown here. A. McDONALD "sronrax" FABRIC, SOMETHING NEW! This is an American Fabric. designed in New kollr lint than t; be A basket weave fabric. Ilhlte ground with colored patterns. Suitable for sport suits and dresses and ensembles. ' Iiii inches YARD 45c ,..,., 70¢ j", Suitable for L‘ Greases . p‘ . . ' I for kiddies or mwn ulia- a Fme Llllifon Volles Fancy Dlmlty 'P‘°’““° "m" mum’ as inehol 1 5 a as inches a "my, we guarantee to give wide $ .5 n"! n“ "rd wnnderful wear, in lovely designs. GINGHAMB ...... Yard 15o yQNGEE SILK Yard 39c filEPBB & RAYONS Yd. 69o KIMONA 05th?! .. Yard 39c TABLE LINEN .... Yard 49o saw RAYONS Yard sac CHINTZES Yard 24o ECRIM ............ Yard llo CURTAIN NET .... Yard 28c new PRINTS Yard to: Voiles of the very Ilneat quality. In an tensive range of the newest raid dalntlest designs. Mlny cola: effects to chose from. Fast colors. fills amour" sraoszn AT sce this clever drama to see it re- NORT}! RIVER pcatcd in, the near future. Tlle play centres around the life of 0,. Tuesday nisbi. May 1th the Star Bright who rles been disowned on; people of N0"?! RJVQ!‘ staged ‘by s. stern and unjust father because- ; three act comedy drama "Star of her elopement and marriage to l-lghl before an \Pl>reciative aud- an actor. Star. however, becomes a moo ill North River hall, Owing imfamous opera singer and under an e inclemency of the weather the assumed name returns to her home, lldlence was not as great as might where her parents keep boarders, in gxpcctcd but an opportunity will time to save her sister Sunnw from a e sflorded those who were unable to marital mistake and at the same G a Now is the Time to Have ' Your House Painted And it coats as much to put om cheap paint as the best. When you buy Naylor’; English Lead, then you have a pm. duct that is the best. You can add more per gallons of oil to per lbs. Naylora Lead, than any other lead on the market. Bethune iiardwareiio. Ltd. ‘IKE FRIENDLY HARDWARE STORE" Plionlfl‘! ' 123 Queen Street 0| ~ Stewart Jones 6f Co. Government, Provincial and Municipal Bonds Public Utility and Corporation Securities A C Service Orders Executed on all Exchanges Through GREENSHIELDS and COMPANY . Montreal Quotations Received Daily atOne Hour-intervals A Comllk" Service A Dependable Corporation Analysis Service Maintained. Current Financial News Received Daily 88 Gt. George St. Phone 73 I dresses. A good wearing fabrle. time effect s. reconciliation to her family. The comedy is supplied in abundance by Jake "Hoover and Me- linda Bandy, whose love affairs cause much merriment. as the parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bright Delightful new laney Dim- ily. suitable for summer To discriminate among the play- ers would be unjust as the parts were all most admirably iaken but of par- ticular note was s part played by Miss Mildred Warren, as Bird Den- lon a college girl. This difficult role called for much sentimental acting and was acted by Miss Warren to a nlcety. Mrs. Jack Moruide, portray- ing a silly maid Meldina. Berldy kept the audience in screams of laughter. Miss Reta Whestley in the title role, left nothing to be desired in her por- trayal of Star Bright. Mr. Wallace Moreside and Mrs. Bruce MacKipley were exceptionally good as was also Mr. Russel Wheatley in the part of the villain. The specialties between the acts are, worthy of special praise. Mr. Ro- bert Weeka is ever popular in his violin selections. Mr. Hazcn Howard was never heard to better advantage and was obliged to give an encore to his vocal solo. The song "Three Old Maids" sung by Miss Mildred War- ren. Miss Reta. Wheatley and Mrs. Fulton Moreside besides being well rendered proved very amusing to the audience. Miss Beth Ladner gave a monologue in a fashion which would do credit to some of our more exper- ienced elocutionisis. Miss Leah Mac- ‘Klnley also gave a reading which was greatly enjoyed. The accomponlets were Miss Amy Hood and i/lira. Ful- ton Moreside. The Casi. of Character! i ‘ket revival have shown tllemaeiveayafforded by the inability, to‘ rel/chi The Financial Situation Better Outlook Brings Reviving Tcndency. (By Janina Wail St, New York, Thursday, May 2.»l020.—Dietinct indications of mar- :during the past week. notwithetand- ‘ an ‘agreement at Paris. There atlllf ling temporary renewal 0f the ex- lémalm emlllentliflfiiiblmo’ of aset- ‘ ftremely tight money situation. The l tlement shortly or in the early fut- , latter. however, was quite evidently connected with the large disburse- ments growing out of first of May payments of interest and dividends, (which for the entire month are es- timated at about $400,000,000). There‘ haa been nothing in the general ec- onomic or business situation to cause anxiety. but quite the reverse, for the prospects of bueinus are un- questionably excellent and improving. and the period of comparative rest which the market has enjoyed has created a distinctly better technical situation. As far as the present out- look can be projected into the future. therefore. it promises a continuation _of conservatively favorable and en- couraging conditions. Credit Conditions Little Altered Credit conditions have been little altered. and the flurry which put call money up to lo per cent during the early part of the week was taken by many as indicative of an intent itiea to applythe same kind of pres- sure as on recent occasions. in Order to keep down the danger of an over- development of the loan account al- ong the same lines as in the past. Still, the fact that U. S. assistance was rendered to themarket by in- teneais closely connected with the looal Reserve bank, gave indication that the recent cautionary slons on that subject were not to be taken too literally, and that those in the confidence of our banking man- agers were not disposed to let mot- tera go to any dangerous point. It lathe opinion of not a few that the restrictive power of the Federal Re- serve System. s.s regards credit, has been exerted about as far as it is likely in be. or perhaps can be. at this time, save in the matter of rais- ing rates for current funds sharply. as during the pest week. in times of special stringency. Interviews with the Governor of the Federal Reserve System from Ins Angelas confirm the impression obtained by many that there is an intention to let con- ditions cure themstlhas and that an advance of official discount rates is hardly m be expected, unless. there should be a renewalof unrestrained speculative activity. ‘Iliese factors in the situation afford n rather more encouraging outlook upon conditions at large. although by no means el- ,.. *9 A Powerful Management '.- . . l. whose help you may have overlooked . . . NTYQONI-IOEUIII financial and in- gum-J “pert; arc working to make ilrofltc for yon wbm you own a single n" q 1319' Foundation. W!» .' T . snob men ll the President of m“ Grain Growen, Limited, the Gm- Inllhnager of the Mend Nickel Com- pany. the President of 8t. Lawrence rape:- mm c mplfll. the - "w" i" Canadian Industrial Alcohol and ma!!! - gflm‘_ _ " gnoeeasful . . . and fnllyroopable of increasing the value o! your investments aa they have their own. ‘Illflgflflflfl Foundation. Limited la an ill- voatsnent colnpafl! Ihlvh “"11 Y" '"‘ opportunity to share in the prosperity of Canada- ) We aball be pleased to mull full gnrtieulri o! tbla attractive security- Edairern Securities Company Ltd. "VIITIBNT BANK“. l . cuaauonarows at. some ssosrraeal. \ . uasmix Lemuel Bright. the father" Wal- ilace Moreaide. v ! Wm. Walker Blnith. iRay MacKinnon. ' Walter Williams Smythe, a student 5Jack Moreslde. ‘ Arthur Pulver. the villain. Russel L Wheatley. v Jake Hoover, a farmer, Bruce Mac- Klnley. . Parson Williams, s. friend. John Warren. Honor Bright. the wife., Mrs. Bruce MacKinley. Star Bright, Reta Wheatley. Sunshine Bright, mother daughter, Charlotte MacKinnori. Bird Denton. a. college girl, Mild- red Warren. Melinda Bendy. Jack Moreslde. Scene: A village in the Adiron- decks. a detective. the elder daughter, the maid. Mrs. THIS HEN‘! MOTTO I! MOI! VITILLUS AND L!!! ALBUMIN 0080080. May ll-Whether or not the "some that lays the golden egg" has been discovered ' in be seen. but thm h a certain bird of the Iimden lpioiea in Peinrbcro county that is striving in get u near that mark as possible. lha has da- veloped g propensity for laying egn with a preponderance of yolk. and her lut offering along this line wu an egg that contained three yolks. Twice before ahe had presented her owner with a two-yolk egg. but big- ger and better ia evidently lier motto. as ahe goea on to w. action. KALIIAI. f lieu is an betel III ill u roan! wlh brill-lilting the ground for caution and ,for close study of credit policies and iindications as new angles of the flatter appear from time to time. ILONDON ‘I0 HAVE ‘ ALL-BLACK BUILDING LONDON. May ll-l..ondcn is to have the first all-black building in the world. It is now approaching completion in Great Marlborough street W. Black granite, the material of which it is being built, is a sturdy material. Rain can soak through it to a depth of 30 feet or more in its native hills, dissolve out the felspar eion of it intact. "Weathering." the enemy_of all rocks, has no appreci- able effect unon it. Instead of crumbling away like the softer atone of the Houses of Parlia- ment. granite gains an added beau- ' ty. It ia made up of a collection of tiny radiating stars of hornblende. each “lighted? as iv. were. from the centre by a. crystal. and it ia ao en- during. that the Aberdoniana build their city of it to save the coat of repairs. The building is to houee the oiiloes of the National Radiator Com- psny. WINDBOlI. LANDMARI! G055 WINDSOR. Ont" May ll-(Cana- dian Pram-Within three months a little, scattered debris will remain to mark the alto of the old 8t. Mary's academy. a Windsor landmark for the pact 60 yearn. Tenders for the d0- molltion of this venerable structure and for the aale of the materials, have been sought by the owners of the building. the listen of the Holy Nausea of Jeaua and Mary. The land. purchased for the Cana- dian terminal oi the Windsor-Detroit tunnel, must be handed over to the tunnel company August 1. so the cleared by that date. Work haa been started on a new and greater St. Mary's acadamylon a site in- Welt landwich township. The new insti- tution will be ready for occupancy in stone has been removed from the old sill the last atone will have laden pa‘. l"? talatorrlrrowrw. "YMBUAY on the part of the banking author- blllldillg mill! '50 rIJBtI. and till lit! September and by the time the 110k Z>..~u~:. 4 l i l. B. Clean.) I 1 Possibly the most unsatisfactory! iside of tile lvhole situatlon- has been‘ lure, based upon compromise propos- gals thought likely to emanate from fiBerlnl. Nevertheless, it remains true- lthat, wilatever may be done. the im- .' |medlate prospects of foreign financ- ‘lng have been considerably impaired? by the partial collapse of the nego- l .tlntions at Paris. This has been es-'_ ipeciaily disappointing to those inter- 1' lasts which are still carrying large: iquantltles of litlillifullfS the‘. have not l [been fully nlulk-xtlzrl, as well as to ithose’ who had entered in‘); partial: iarrangements for placing new loans! ion behalf of foreign bcllolvczs wlth- tin the early future. 'i‘l:e lmlavorable l lquotations for many foreign, andl martlcnlarly Ciellnan. .'.("."J‘J\._‘l‘-'.l(‘£, ellrli Ethe weakness not only of nlarks illltf ‘of some other European‘ currencies afford tzsfimony to the dangers that fwould necezlalily be encountered ll‘. ‘inc satisfactory adjustlnellz Iiiillhid be ' lax-rived at in conllcctlonwiln repar- ‘I lotions. \ ‘ = i i Market Review and Outlook. The fact that prices have shown such power to go ahead in face of the high cost of nloney and disap- pointment over the reparations situ- ation. ls most noteworthy and lndlc- ‘ ates that the market is resting on ii good foundation. This better state of lliquidation, which brought quotations‘ ifor a great many stocks down to n‘ "reasonable basis. and on the excel-f lent trade reports in so many differ- y ent lines which are now making their appearance. thus affording con- F elusive evidence of the country's! great prosperity. Then again. the; confident statement regarding values I recently issued by the head of the' ‘treasury Department has naturally ‘not been without effect. as the pub- lic at large have grown to place great reliance on his utterances which are generally timely and based ,on common sense. Good reason ex- iists, therefore. for the market's bei- fter undertone, although there is ‘ground for doubting whether a con- iillllliilllOll of the upward movement‘ 1 just now is advisable. particularly in iview of the fact that whenever en- lthusiasm manifests itself on too pro- nounced a scale, the disposition of; the banking authorities to intervene. so far as they can. is. made evident.’ jTl-lls .makes the situation not only; lnow. but for the early future. more lor less of a two-sided affair, with ‘limits to the movements of values ,in either direction-a fact which_ ’sl'lould be borne in,‘ mind in making, inew commitments _f_or the time be-y Zing. 1 I ‘l l {drier lyrical-z" i ' BODY ls YOUNG; l BURSLEDON, Hunts, May ll-— 1' lhsve visited today the village rvhere_ Inobody is young, snys a "Dally Ex- 1r f press" correspondent. i It is Bursledon, on the River; Hamble, and the inhabitants boastl .that their aggregate alt. in PTOI-"Ol". tion to population. is the highest inf the country, i , I found twenty-seven old folk V matrix, and yet leave the titanic gkcl- I whose years totalled lilo-an ever- 3uum h“ n m m“ home not made l iage of seventy-eight years each. One; iof them had never been more than‘ {twenty miles away in m; life. and, I that was to see the naval review Iii spithead after the Crimean War. i Another man of eighty-two is still; a member of the church choir, l They tell tales of the old hard-‘ ships of life in their yourlzcr days,‘ when a walk once a week to Southq ampton to obtain provisions was an f event. 'lf‘hey look nsklmtc 0n N" modern inventions which make 11561 easier. ‘ There was a time when Bureledon’ was a hive of industry-s number of! men o‘ war slipped into the River. l-lsmble at this spot. but molt "Hi9, m. “good old days." Now the all?‘ produces strawberries for the 1403"‘ don market, and the men folk vn-estf a precarious livinl lrorn the soil. nsrrlla or aizlvtrnnr Dear MraiMecLennam-At a time of yeurreeent sore bereavement. we feel we must expreas in some way our sincere sympathy in the ioaa of your dear husband. While we sympathise with you_ we realise that only thou who have passed through the sad experience can fully comprehend what the death of your huabsnd means to you. Therefore commend you to the Great Burden Bearer. who alone can give you strength, who knows what it means to endure pain and distress. who ‘comforted those that mourned. and who alone can lighten the bur- , den of grief. l while by it He may be seeking to lead Berrigan will be greatly missed in; the community. aa he Ila always a most sympathetic and obliging rleilh- l bor and friend. ‘ ammonium-ant.“ .,»wo.u-nuuumorrswaeu_ l!" And the choosing interesting when such way given: Personal F by A R li dy weight, Each One of our leaders" standing valu at . . . . . . . . . i This is a. well shaped ting, long style garment, with pointed inserts of elastic and four hose supporters. Sizes 3O 38. Garter belts and girdles, offered in several attractive styles at $1.00 to $3.50. Long Sty Girdle $1. A long style girdle made of fancy stripedrepp, with astic panels over hips lightly boned, with four hose ers. Sizes 25 to 30. Price use luau Mania bearerfwere L. L. Jenkins, D. J d5. Kier Hath‘ s erley, William Cullen and Inui~ llclurigan, To the bereaved the wm W. M. B. of Harlsvill; extend to you athy. are offered-Close contact with the manufacturre-quantity buying and the elimination of unnecessary lines enables us to offer these garments at prices that are certainly not equalled in theordinary You are offered here the advantage of a better selection of true to type styles by reliable makers at savings that are really renlal-kable-a few examples are Miss Harris RECOMMENDED ARRANGED FOR Corsets o? Corselettes $1. Corsets and Corselettes. Made of a stur- and finished with elastic inserts. from a. good range of sizes An Outstanding Value at $1.60 and family our tenderest loving aym- i Lot 65, of Wlllllll he was a faithful‘ .and constant Ii from the garden of this world 1 funeral serrLcs were conducted u. We m1“. I! mlfll’ do some olive plant. g the past/or Rev. Fr. l-lel-rei. The pail ‘ that was given to us. let us not rebel ‘Z -....___._._...-......_....._ . . The New Foundation Garments i is so much more sound economies ittings AT $1. figured pink repp. lightly boned Choose $1.00 Inner Belt Corselette $2.25 An out- l . i 6 An inner belt cor- z . selette at . . . . . . . $2‘ 5 . . lilade of heavy quality bro-f , good fw caded batiste. This garment is well boned and provided with, strong elastic inserts. Sizes 34 to 44. for medium 6o’ Stout figure $2.75 A special for medium and stout figures—A model of excellent » value and service giving quality. Low, bust, elastic top, back laced style. Sizes 24 to 36 i _ i Price 1e 50 wide el- support- $1.50 ‘renazlzgfi. st l... erllle~~j lJcLean. lichen, l-Idlvs member. whore the munity ex-tenda slnoere sympathy. against a providence that now we l cannot understand. Remembering lflj the flower of God's Planting wssl taken from our Earthly garden, the ‘ with hands. eternal in the heaven's. our thoughts away from the things of time to that eternal world. Signed, Mrs. Angus MacDonald. Clara MacLennan. CHICAGO PAINTER! NOW WORK ONLY FIVE DAYS WEEKLY CHICAGO. May ll-Following a‘ one-year experiment, contractors have signed a three-year agreement under which Ohicago painters will work a five-day week. There are 18.500 painters affected. The rate of pay for the period of the contract will be $115214 an hour. In Memoriam EDWARD IERIIGAN The colnnlunit of North Wiltshire l and surrounding districts were great- f ly shocked w hear of the pudden and l unexpected death of Mr. Edward P Berrlgan at the CharlotiAtown r-m- f pital on April 10th, at the early age I of 4| years, leaving a widow (Oath-l erina Ourley) and all email children to mourn the lees of a kind and lov- ing husband and father. The late Mr. AN OUTSTANDING MINE-IN-THE-DLAKING WITH EXCEPTION/ll. I)I‘PORTI'.\}'T?. , mu PROFIT , 1 LOCARPiO COPPER Mines, Limited At 30c Per Share We believe that at its current price of 3O cents per share this company presents one of the most favourable development issues now before the public. Its strong cash treasury, excellent direc- torate and slx well located groups of properties in Quebec and Nova Scotia attest to its serious qualities as an energetic mining effort. Present development work is being concentrated on Group No. l in Nova Scotia “here Government maps and statements definitely indicate that this pro- perty ls one of unusual possibilities. Recent results are so favourable that arrangements have been made to employ day and night shifts. We suggest that you immediately obtain our special bulletin. ATWELL & COMPANY Investment Broken "The Home o] service" Head Office: Imperial Bank Bldg., 6l0 St. James Strut, Mgngggq] m, ' Br :h : M t I bowls , Ot-t s. Cificousmi. lidplooup.) Halifax.‘ . r 8t. Johnb. Nlld. ---------__.._._._...._.. __............._._..l. Mantra. Atwell h Cmnpmy, 610 R- James Street, Montreal. ¢m537lil.;“.‘tl.l’li‘.".l°.“‘ °"""“°“' """ ‘M’ "M" " "W"- ... \ tunnel-u..-tea-nun; a; i 3a l Are Essential to Sprin g Smartnieissi: awn? . a.- - s... . lull-i .5 ‘If’ r, rrti r i