stlouio applftks may filrm homo. liABCiHYflL-wttl ,,-.\i-‘-s*.v~- . Financial" Strength THE titteigles upon which a Bank is founded, the n z- 0 years it has licy follltwetl during these ET}... strength of a Bank. been in operationfsnd the yearn-these fcdmtes; com- with its present standing, fomr the criterion of the The of Montreal began business in the year 1817, with it modest capital of $1,250,000, ancl for over a century it ha followed‘ a conservative-aggressive policy until 10-day its capital and reserve fund total $4o,ooo,ooo~aod pee in excess of $560,000,000. BANK QF MONTREAL ossrcs Branches in every :, _ MONTREAL, important city and town in the Dominion and Newfoundland vvvvv I cl hhhhhh - vv vvvvvvvvvvvvvv i i ‘l; allowed u one wold. (Jeni mnl hlomtmllloeoleenntllenll SSlFllll) ADVERTISEMENTS Alweltllenente IIIQI Ill: healing, In Ml‘ ION ill‘ "a h" Where eeplee cone to en: use to be tenunlelo Ive cents it he allied to out a eevel M11181 Contractions count no one “Olde- ttlloee to cover eolt nut leeenpoly all nlweztbe- h h h h; h Lhh h vvvvvvvv vv_vvvvv v vvvv h hhufhmhhhh vv-V vvvvv w ‘oi lino llllueo (u sum) 0 he overlooked. Alveetllementl . be “ ‘ illi- - q h h hhhhhh vv vv vvvv h h_h h hhhhh w-vvw vv v vv vvvwvv FOR SALE. hh h hhhhhhh hhh vvvvv v vvvvv NURSING I JOAT FOR SALE -BOAT AND engine, twenty seven foot over‘ ‘ell, and B mackerel nets sud moorlngsq-Goorgs Ropsomhior- OR SALEQ-FARM AT CORN- ‘ well, sixty Jlvo acres owned b7 tors. cool-go n. soott. Ami? &,Bentloy. Charlotte- or aw. W. Crosby. Corn- b0 ' (DID. ma. WANTED wm-rso-rwo asoouo arcane out suitobl for taxi so cc. 12.21 Dort preferred.) AIM? B0! WsrI-rsm-o“ne“oooo“'us'3 e us w " s“ armhole” ureter-rut. Army 224 Eueton Street. The home beautiful can and Radicals mill never benefit any UoVameutr-oven u. farmer's. brder repairs for tho implements Qsfore the rush season comes. All fssun stock <1 1o o. msi-lreilsdug-ob equality. basis. ~ l When c retina the tannins thrill It in 1m to narrator flit in: screons_widt_ milled w , seed mofoio ed. la your mill o equipped? produce eittxtitoly PRIVATE NURSES EARN $15 T0 $30 a week Learn without leav- ing home. Descriptive booklet sent tree. Royal College of Briton“, Dept. 2b, Toronto, Cun- uda. l056d2-20h1ESat25l MISCELLANEOUS SEND M! YOUR RAW FURQF-l will buy for cash or handle on ' "M" for New York or London market. Satisfactory sen vice. prompt returns B. H. Roy- " tier, ‘Summertime, P. id. l. or 1I7~ 16a wast-Sm‘, street, New York. AUCTION SALfio-ON MARCH 23rd, 1921. at 2 p. 1a.. 60 acres of land, "East Royalty 3 1-2 miles from Charlottetown. Has never failing stream. For particulars apply E. Whestloy i 00., bid. Thane are ideal days t0 get the farm forgo going land nil breakage»: in iihc form machinery repaired. so that there will be no dolaiy when the spring rworlt commences. Unless there is an obundonce of early spring rain there will be an eicsptiondlly luw average ‘or! mois- ture in the ground. This will neces- sitate an extra amount of surtlecc tilling before tho gmm is sown. Get ready for this by having your liar- rowo, cultivator-s and dull! tooth simrpénod and in the best possible condition for working up a deep, mellow seed Ibed, so as to conserve n.ll the moisture possible. A diearance Auction Sale will all lnyjuhlio union! m . . ' Bey a Match‘ 1m Auction Wodneedey. tho 8010 It ‘i1 0' eek s. m. - IAml oouistin: of 1:5 sores of choice land. well watered. suitabl- cloth!!! covered wi ti lumbar. snort Olrfllll-flr shod. twang] monar- hams’ u. ‘om “mange-din Ititsefled“. I miles . 110 eorsl under cultivation. he! from Mom mill and 1 Ille 5W9 hqgggi gwmuo, 1s "s... 1 gouorsi purpose more. 6 70ers; 4 pheteotnildseowmsrocs-lvrshimt ;‘1 yeerold: 1 not pig; 5 ‘ -- 0B0 bu. ,0» Vwheels. s 'MlO.lfl8Dlolll'h.l1l diiblil 7B Mill. potatoes; quantity of hay end sis-aw: 100 bus. outs: I00 fioovo» --~ Iloilll 1 I "Iii Yiiofl. 1 “It dfli IlOlQ, l follfip l. hi] alibi‘: ' pl i 1 set 4 heifers: 11st 01:1 Ayrshire bull and 1|tso n1» invite mu l , m1 ,1 _ ItbuJorOLttIiUlUlM-IWIII vioahoruesnlsetswmshhosse Q his leather and stilt - ‘has!’ d t ~ rt fc h. “all: fiery’ ‘:1! dsy , 4:11;. ecmusooun, y,” .. , msdelsooweet ‘our thstenwut einensaths om proves stotmrwtli be held first he 2,1,“, 1 , ‘,4; .....__.h._. huh.‘ M0 fl W i ' . "Alrlfil ' '11“ m. opium 13ml‘ out». o w u; souowine P. A. KILLV. lamest-h - '01’. ON Lenten Sermon At St- Dunstatfs t Cathedral The Lenten sermon lust evening was preached ln ‘st, 9mm!“ Cathedral by Rov. Lowrance iSmtit-h, of St. Dunstsnfis University, who took for his taunt 1st apistleof John, 1. 2: “For the ilfo was manifest- ed, and wet-hove sash" it. alléddmzr witness, and show unto you that eternal life which was with the Fnthar and was manifested unto us." Man, created in God's image (ssld the speaker in port) was in- tended to be lord‘ of all creation. l-lo was to hove-existence with i-he stone, lite with the plants, ‘feeling with the animals. ond intelligence with the ttllgelB_ Great material Kills were lavished upon; but boau- t-ful and {ierfoct us w-ns his lsoriy, ll WM 0d itself unworthy of the cud ‘to which he had ‘been created. “an was mudo to know and u; serve God; for ‘this ho had been endowed with intelligence capable °l PQOOBII-lzing and e heart capable Of loving God. He non received the use of iho different senses like "m" “W115 creatures; but ‘unlike any other creature he had n super- natural life. _ But Satan becmmo jealous of man. and wmbted him. and mun fell. The intelligence which ‘before was beautiful and brilliant now become stooped in darkness. Man, ‘from the moment of his fail. became sub- 300! t0 09MB. b0 sin and to disease of body and soul_ in Adam's fnil every human being mo: wag to come into this world woum be subiec to original sin. Mid thus man was cut off from ‘his Creator. in this state he 11nd no alterna- tive but to follow o. natural end which was death and damnation. But God presented man with a Re- deflmél‘. who. by His sufferings on the Cross. restored man to lite again, and so after- his fall. mun ‘was once more raised to a high evznlnenoe; but ever since that fail his nature, affected by sin, had geein forgetful of tho noodnnss of m, This forgclfulncss of God ma)’ be traced tilrough all human his- tofl’. it is the spirit of the world trriny. Little wonder thou. that the» Holy Fathor, culling :titontion to tho groni evils that thronton tho lgutidation of society, mentions frgeifuiness oi‘ the stipernrtturnl life‘ The supernatural 1m; (“we RetiiD. Rtymontl At St. Pants Church Yesterda Rev. ‘II_ D. dlnyniond, M. A.. branched at both services at St. Psufs Anglican Uhurch yesterday» in ‘the morning M took for his m- joct "God's Holy Nome." 111F851!!!‘ lug from Escduo. Vi. 3:. "Andi appeared unto Abruhiuu. unto Isaac and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty; but by my name JmwvLtH was 1 not known unto them." » Tile following i» a summary of the sermon: _ The words of the text may be amid toconstithto the sigustureto the document of God's love. They signify n renewing of God's cove- nant with Israel—rcnewcd, not for God's sake ‘but for ‘the sake of Israel. They speak a human Ion.- gunge. When a covenant has been B88101! lit the archives of Almighty God 1t needs no renewing. Let us rmnonrber that these Israelites had been in bondage four hundred yoflrae-tcn genera- tions of Slavery, without prophet God must have bean for them sl- most u fading shadow. They ‘had no ‘literature, tin monument but the rainbow, nothing hut vaguo oral tradition. 0n every hand Uhey could soc the sacred bull. the soo- red ibis and other animals rover- cnoori lby Egyptian tradition; Is it any wonder there was need for tho setting up oi‘ a. witness for them? They wet-o o ‘generation urging for zhs title 0i’ their inheritance. The witness God had set upfor them W113. n ~l\'.-\ii1I-3. Not a docu- ment tobe passed from hand to hand. not n. pillar or tablet to be gazed upon, not a greet voice speaking out of the clouds, but a NAlfE-borne to theun by a prophet whose very authority 001ml be quostloned—»God's stamp of witness to eternal Fatherhood of the human family. . This snrrrevi ns-me which remains witness to tho ivorid oi‘ tho Phthcr- homl 0t‘ God. and which has sur- vived u-lmre something ‘more tang- ible might have been lost, wag not by any menns the only namé of (iml. We cannot roenli them all with positive n(vcurnc_t' because the l-lehrmv language had no vowels, and not until eight hundred years after Christ were vowel sounds iii- forxoticn man becomes tho cron- ntrc of his own weak nature. l-lo becomes engrossed in material thing's nnll forgets the working of divine crave in the human soul. l-lo forgets that he is but a. shadow, “but thn grass m‘ tho field which today ls and tomorrow is cast into tho ovon." Tho soul that. hso hr" ‘ n. IQGDIOd God's gift 0i’ gmcn turns invffll‘ Wllh disgust from relivmis mhlugs. Grace than is everything Ito us. 1t is that sift of which our Umi fllleaits in one of His pnrillilPs‘ "wlflml" m0 You tan-n do nothing" l gift it is endowed with c kind of omnipotence. ‘BM “will! with this gift of grace ' which is in every soul freed from‘ 8111,0011 is always assisting in other| ‘WRYB by tfspocloi graces. it is 1101a ‘sufficient to know‘ God. we must continuoto know lllm, we mug; persevere in our behalf, we mo,“ ha"? lldellly- And the soul that porseveres in looking Godward no. quires Faith and l-Iopo, twin grftcep that waft like ministering angelg about humanity. But neither ‘Faith nor Hope wil profit rus unless Charity comes also Tho life of tho ‘true Chris. tiuu must be s.» life of charity. We mllst always remember that two are fellow-workers with God. The Heavenly ‘Father docs not u-orlt directly" either in the order of nature or grace. We got our dolly bread but we must labor for it, God founded His church but it was through tho labor of His apostles, And finally, God has made Heaven for us but it is on condi- tion that we labor dolly for it, We must persevere to the mtri- m; Unust not think that wowvill ow’. he from from the burden und suffer- “18 0f llio_ We nil know rhc his- iory of ‘the liven of t-ho points- lives in which God's gram plgygfl 1i dilly rnrr; and we know what they suffered and the privafigng they endured to the end. Tho gram; of God noes not take sway the “"19" °l "l9; 1i Eli/BB us strength to carry it. -----ooo-§_ DOVER, Mo. March l9.-Alec Gunn, of Groenvillc. owner of and cpcrrtlor ni‘ rho motor hos-i which wits burned on Lillifi Chcsuucook inst November. rcsuitod in the (loath oi‘ fourteen woodsmrn, in- cluding three Prince l-Itlwurd ls- iunders, has been found guilty of tloluting the navigation lztrvs in not carrying a small lbout. He was fined $500 and costs. ‘And ‘when tho soul pnossesses that ‘Ihcréd be more spring poetry. if more wo -says “Superior Corn Flakes routed for tho Hebrew language lost its lltoraturc should be lost. A ftrertt group oi’ scholars cnilod the lllussuroflc nave birth to who: has been called the MUBBOPPIH,‘ sciences which have perpetuated the lan- 15111186 ns illPy t-hen found it_ Yet of some of‘ the nzrmes of God they could not write with curtoiniy. \l'c irho speiLk English ‘have more than one name for God. Wo speak of "God", "Our Heavenly Fat-her". "Pile Almighty", "The Lord," "Jehovah", "Josusflindoed wo have come to look upon the name of "Jesus" as the most sacred name of God for us- Tho Hebrew t-onguc had such names for God 11s, ‘“il'i" “Elohim”. It V _ "Jnii”. "Jnhvcii," Axiolml‘. These worn not equal- ly sacred. ""I‘h0u shalt not who the nmuo of Johveh in vain?’ and practically they did not use this name at all. it was so sacred; n, was pronounced only by the priests on‘ the most solemn occnsionu of worship." in their ordinary isn- ouuge a substitute wos uscd, Yet. this mime, JKHVIQH, stood behind and before Israelite history. a pil- lar of light. o mumorial, rt tradi- NOIJ. confléd ‘through success!“ waved of idolatry and keeping them 1G1; a vital relationship with tho one ’ od. Why was this Morbid; an impor- ishibio witness’! Because it stood for s fact. Thorn is no occasion horé to slop to dwell ‘npoit the flrzumonts for the fnct or God's ox- lstoncc: His croatiou is manifest to us nil. ‘His written word of ro- veintion has an authority which is recognized. There nre export- oncos which cannot, be guiusnivi which spook to us of (ind Reality is whttt counts and what in going to count in the world's history. Reality is the challenge flung to the world in these days; let us show. than, that our lives are real, that T"? Drofessions are ‘buildod 0n fact, that we are shat we seem to be.‘ God's eternal witness of Himself bids us do this. The exact counterpart for tho Hobrew name o! “u'itncss" is found in the name of Jesus Christ,’ ‘Ho is to the world the fullestfihtor- protntiou of God's love. l-lis name, which moans "Saviour" is a guar- antee to human life of every ago- to salvation from sin by tho love of (ind. lu tho Epistlestn n“; Philippians, socoml chapter, s1 Paul in tailing, words. urges m5; retailers ‘to pattern their live; 1mm- Hrs lilo: “Lot this mind bu in vou. which was also in Christ “W: who. ‘hem: in tho form of ‘i011. counted it not a prim to be m; an oqttoliiy with God ‘but mods him. self of no reputation and took upon ‘tiim the form of a slave, and bop]; made in the llltonoss of mm, ‘m; b91112 foundiu fashion as o man he humhisiihuosoir mid boggmo gléectllflentrevon unto doom, y“, m, *1 0 i118" Cross. Wherefore 90d hath highly exalted Him flnfl siren llim o llfl-lllfl which is {pom "V"? Milli‘; that at the ncmo of ‘Bow every knee should m» 1m ‘very tdiigu h 1 “m” “Hale ‘Ba on (l confess that, Lord. to rho Glory Ihfiiotl i211 Father.“ This i; tho 0 out umhiury of‘ the world.“ ‘rcatost szi-criii '0. lt ‘.4; t . “ed some in- n; chem‘: ‘nag.’ MMIY 73 YQIIBK llwygr “u; be. "ll" 11° Promises st the mo" bsr. tit A "M" MN idol of grooms” 3' t" Prom mun-um. . 0r priest. God and the memory of‘ run cunuwrrnrowm GUARDIAN - n‘ ‘semi’ Pmtl Boil litres One of tho most interesting ice 111069 of the season was held on Pcwnal Bay Bahlrduy 19th. The xvonther was ideal and the ice in excellent condition. There mus n. Jame attendance of horse lovers from the sutrounding country and to lumber from Charlottetown. ' ‘ilhore were three tilmises. a l-‘roo for All. a. 2.40 clam and.» Oreo T808. - in the Free For All there ‘were four starters. namely Wilfred Hui. owned and driven by William Alc NW1. Albert J. owned and driven by Willard Kelly. Let ma Go. own- ed and driven by Jack Kemtedy and Major K. owned and driven by Hurry Jenkins. The race was a hot. one and was decided after four heats with only inches deciding between the first and second contestants. | in this 2.40 clansthcro were four amnion. This too ‘was’ n fafniy good race and brought out some good speed. , | The Green Race. although the horses were new, was also a good one and showed consldemblo speed. FREE FOR ALL Time, '15s. 2.40 CLASS Roy. ...................................... .. 2 3 l4 Nettie M. Baby Todd ... Bordon Prince ‘time, 1.10, 1.09. 1.10. $5M» l GREEN ‘RACE. Bernice R‘ Hillside Boy s-wuc: Time m5. 1.1a. 1.1a. 1.14, 1.15 The Judges were Messrs George Carver. W P. Ho: and Jack Kelly HilLslde Boy, W85 driven by the well known reirismnu, Will. line Neill, and showed splendid humus of speed although he fmlled to win the coveted position. There wvere periods in the race when he looked like a surc winner- but evidently the onthuslastu of hi..- tlr-lver com- municated itself to him in the form or excitement which caused hliu to bred-k s-avnrui times. CREAM ‘FOAMWG tN THE C-HURN. After churnim: several hours l find tho cream has only turned into a thick fomn. l htui the tamrperuttim 62 degrees when starting. Whnt i-s the cause’! Foaming 0i‘ cream in the churn may ‘be duo ‘to too low or too itiglh a temperature. or too long keep- ing; slow or deltwcd churning is Made by ADA. Linnea ‘In vnmu lea-e. twin-r, on. "It!!! Illlltllll l ALBANY L. ll. I). l\'lcLc0<l Ill! 1|?! I “II STANDARD PAINT COMPANY or CAN e ‘ ' I f I > _ _> but I/ny are wart/z Izzare. PAGE t‘: .‘ ». a - - Make ‘your roofs worthy oi the buildings they cover - -—make them ireaytherproof, leak-proof, fire-resisting, ,goo<l looking and long lived. In other wordr-cover ' your barns with Ruberoid Roll Roofing and your home with Rulieroicl Strip Shingles. 1 It is true that the firrt cost of Ruberoicl Roofing and‘ Shingles is higher than that of some other brands- Figuring their cost per ‘ year's service they are the most economical roofings that you can buy. And in addition to this-Ruber- . oid Strip Shingles are coated an t/ze bark-an exclusive feature carried by no other shingles manufactured 1n Canada. Ask one of the dealers samples of listed here to show you RU-BER-Ollil ROOFING Sl-IINGLES (‘l l.\R l.( iiil"lilf'l‘()\\li\.' Rogers l l1r<l\\':|rc (‘l)n! Ltd. HUNTER RIVER S RU-BER-OID Dealers in‘ PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND SOURI S terns Bros. The Hughes Co" Ltd. often cccomponisd by homing‘. ‘You do not state whether your cream is scpnmator or gravity cronrn . Rich scpamtor creurn may bo chunicd at from: 4.2 to 52 do- grueo. Gravity to 65 degrees in summer and 65 to 72 degrees iu winter. ii‘ your creom i.» gravity cream foaming in ‘the churn will result if you hovo kept who cream on the milk too long or have kept the cream too long ‘before it is churned. The cause of it is the for- mation of alcohol in ifho milk by tho docomposdtlloir of the milk sugar, and‘ the carnlhinstioh of the alcohol with tho fut and the formation of a soap. When this happens no amount of churning will bring but» tar To rprevout this trouble, half n teaepoonful of bolt-lug Soda may be stirred in the cream. and trhis should always be done, if you sus- pect this condition. at least one day before the cream is churned. Ii’ the cream. is too wan-m for tho {iartlclcs of butter to unite. foami- ingwlfi rsstm. and tho remedy is reducing tdmperuture ‘by ‘scams cold waiter; if cream is too cold add warm water, that is, if cream is fresh. Do not ionvo ‘it until you arc naturally in nccd of o herd or flock loader. before purchasing. Take plenty of time and purchase the host individual available. Remem- ber that he stomps his qualities and many of ‘those of his ances- tors upon his progeny. The larger the herd or flock. the more im- portant it is from u financial stand point that the sire be s good one. dm-mnnjggh-m-i No Statement Until After Easter orrhws, Mar. ‘is-non. Mr. Ballantyno will not utako n stato- most on the operations in the Can- adian Government merchant ma- rine until the House roossomblos mtsr the Easter recess. The Min- ister is confined to his Montreal home by a. sovoro cold. Reports re‘ ceifedblisre are to tho effect thlt his condition is improving but it lscoueidered unlikely cm he will attend the sittings of the House until mar Easter. 1 ‘o. 'eeeeieeee' its. fl y‘ Aififioi snEEEBEE” I Government Rlwys OTTAVIA, Mur. lRv-iluforc n11 nt- tontlve house Hon. Dr. Reid. Minis- ter of Railways, today mode ills un- nual statement on the operation oi Canadian Government hallway. Bo showed by dotailed statistics that the operation deficit (‘including flx~ ed charges) on the government lines last your was $69,593,441 in comparison with operating n deficit in 1919 $48,242,536. increased loss twentyono miliions_ attributed to increased expenditures, payrolls, fuel, materials. equipment and sup- plies. What oi’ the future? it was estimated the deficit for i921 (exclusive oi’ the Grsud Trunk Railway) would ho $60,892,720. Dr. Reid inotsncod the cane of tho British and United States Railways to show tho results obtdined by the Canadian National lines were no worse. But he admitted it‘ would be a serious matter to have increased taxation for the railways, In Canada to~tha extent of flfty,‘ sixty or seventy millions of dollars. Nor could ho see mu-ch hope of any management msterkilly reducing the loss on tho Grand Trunk Paci- fic and Transcontinental railways for some yesrs yet. He added: "f do feel the losses on other pur- tions oi’ the road can be reduced and must be vory materially every. stout." As to the Grand Trunk‘ railway, which the Government is‘ to toko over. the company in 1920 foil short $6,663,091 of meeting in isrost on fixed charges. The Grand Trunk, however. had to pay Smeaeooo to employees and back psy between May 1 and Sept. 1 when no increases for frcittht rates had ‘boon allowed. But tho figure six millions did not take into uc- count tho loss of $19,817,873 on tho Grand Trunk Pacific n subsidiary of the Grand Trunk for which the Grand Trunk was responsible. The loss of tho Grand Trunk Pacific had been included in the deficit for tho last year of tho (lovem- meh-t lines, $69_593.44l. Dr. Raid closed with s. note of hcpn. lie bad prcsonted tho "dork side" but he still was u firm ‘bolievor in the success of the Cami-inn National Railways. Success depended on how they would be managed. “The qtiebtiou is too big to bo a political! football." He urged, appealing for frock discussion 0n tho largest os- pact of tho question. The solu’ tlon of the problem requires joint action of rhensxsmont and eolnioy- oon "unless some action is taken not only to reduce the annual loss occurring ouch yosr but also to plsoo the railways in a position to reduce freight rules I urn sure the future advancement of the country will he seriously lntcrfered with." . 1| VIENNA GIILO A8 DOMIS~ fiOl-Sflifls‘ can Vienna are being titles out u dliuiestic sat-mun cameo. If thoystostm sods- some? otter eating Dfifll more mosh a serious household problem Q ‘l. ‘h! 9! "'9 m“?! saunas BRITMN " BUYS CABLE-Amr- chose of a direct cubic to tho Unli- ed States was announced by Ii. Piltc Pcwso, assistant postmaster- general, in the liottsc of Commons (luring an explanation of post of- fice (vstlmntos in the pending hurl- got bill. Ho said tho British (lav-l ornmcni bud acquired the cabin for £570.000. including £100,000 worth of cubic stock and three cubic sta- tions, ltl. Balilnuskolllgs, Ireland; ilarborlr (lruco, Ncuvfcundlnnd, and Rye Reach. New l-lnmpshirv. Tho cable that lids been bought is in- tuuded a»: a rescrvc fot-‘tho existing Imperial cable. and has been inns‘ od for :1 short time to tho Western Union Company for £137,000 por your. Mr. Posse remarked tiuit. u. new cnblc would have cost £1,000,- 000, and that, thcrcforu. he consid- ered the deal as most profitable. --@-<0¢-—-—- COST OF U.B. RECRUITS-Thc high price of recruits for the Uni- ted States army went down in com- O/VCE A TR/Al. ~ s - ‘_ 1M @0000 fordcd et Montnel with trains for Otmwo, Toronto, “hi; well-hem lPeopieb Cemetery. I BAKER-alt Bunbtlrv. OQO“IOPO- 1m 1N NilltiML Ru Travel National sen "rmtm ssnvics TO ALL com-rs m wssrsnu CANADA We Oanldtdii Nations! lines the belt connections are sf~ Oanldhn lflothl Gilli! mo: Win-nipsg, 008M’! Ind Vsncouver. soup Greet. raAms us Gen. stuns suqd Margeaux's-Skid 33mm. coiooluusmt‘ Gloss Ooeehes. _ ‘ son urn. summons mo osusul. mien- amen new re . oi- Dhtrict ALyggRTgy D. M. hIcLrmI SUMMERSIDE j. ll. Mynck tk Co., Ltd. KlLMUlR Sinclair 5; 5tc,v_-,,.¢,Ltd_ i .\l. C. MCGownn CARDICLAN IIYIICAIKX" WELLINGTON j. l-l. ilacDonultl 3: Co. Kennedy 5t Co. Arscnault 81 GnudetpLtd. my» ~ - ‘moniiwlth otliJ-riallitig markets i-n 1920. it cost an uvoiugc of $86.75 ouch to get 138,040 men to tho colors that your. as contpared with $127 m 191s. in February. 1920. the cost tms $192,316, against $41.’.- lil in December of ll-bB sumo your. _h__-¢o>-———— MIGHT BE WOR8E-~l3ride~tol3c —~l bopo, dear‘ we won‘t Bot any duplicate wedding presents. Groom- tc-Bw-Oh, l don't know. Dad's pro- mixed m4. ti $5,000 chock and I Wouldn't mind rotting a duplicate from your father. DEATHS TOOMIS-At Charlottetown; hlar. 18th, Mrs. Edmund Toomhs. Sonlor aged 96 years. Funeral on Monthly 21st. Bot-vice nt tho 1101158441 Edward St. 3t 2.30. interment on: March . 19th, Mr. John Balm". in the 92nd year of his sge. Funeral on Mop- day at 3 o'clock t0 Cross Roads Cemetery I c/Vz/al (IREOPHOS TONICZAJEPL BUILDER RELIEVES BRONCHITIS cows ANnPERSISTENT caucus r l? EA CH com/vow Ill —A JV n11 Rt M! 0r AL m4 rs ut/‘mz. twin ' O PortAflllllbWllllll¢ W ‘l’. NUOIAN, r1 5' fir‘ _ 1...; s7 .. -.» »=.-.._,_._..h.;._.... 3