51- : J 1i"»":' 1 eo4++H1 _ r‘) 43-m- *,- »..-._.- 4»_»` .- v %3E§=.-`5£*-r- -lnates effectively s campaign cry _lgficult to match in the history of 'ialections in any Province." 3:-_.1-~__;3__ I - _ _ , _ __ _ _ __._....._a...a....a_. . _..___,..__.._.. .\. NotesBy The Way President-W. Chester S. llelmra, I-P. Vlae-Pralldall. J. I. ll|'n,\, lr Ll ____ Secretary-Lian¢.~Cal. D- A. laclilnnola, ll. 8. 0. Editor and llanaglng Dlrae¢ol~l. B. Barnett, I. J. L N0 1lll¢fM' 110W lylhplfhllud Aaaoeiuia rllilirira- Frank Walker and D. K. Currie Une may have been in the pa* w ' ri d isim some ilu aevaueai dellvvhl “‘§§§,‘r§",,£’°§',f,,.“(°','.I°,f|,,,.,) ,.ii.a°i': ug: united some G/andhi’s efforts to improve the lot Anvmrrisiuo aliwsslsnr sv UNITED STATES-The Beckwith Special Aleucy llc., New York Gel tral Building, New York City. 6enera\ Natura Blslldlng, Detroit. lltera¢a\ Building, kumar city. iviiiunshbr 'rswsr nuiidius. Chlfaaei Glen- Bull! mg Atlanta; lilonadnocls Buildini. San Francine; 112| Nm “th lin( Philadelphia. ` --_ FRIDAY. AUGUST ll, 1233. A SHOPPING CENTRE _ __.-.__ More mainland cars are reported to have closed on the Car Ferry to date this year than in the cor- responding period last year. This is highly satisfactory from every point of view, but especially as re garcis the development of the Pro vinoe as a holiday resort, so indus- tornsy-General. Mainland seats 'wiiicn may be switched from the ‘Opposition to the Govemment col- |umn are Digby, Shelburne and |Cluysborough, while on the other 'hand the Opposition entertain istrong hopes of taking Kings from the Conservatives. It will surprise supporters and op- .porients alike if Premier Harring- triously boosted by the P. E. I. Tour- Eton 1, not re¢u_m¢d by u very uub- ist Association. An American citi stantial majority in Cape Breton ten declared the other day that ;S0uth_ The CCH,"-vugtves ue equ. Charlottetown was one of the most ideally situated shopping centres he had seen anywhere-so central, so well laid out, and so abundantly blessed with up-to-date stores, dis- playing their goods so temptlngly and invitingiy. _ There is nd question about it, the city stores offer facilities and ad- vantages for trading that are excel- led nowhere else. At the present time prices are so inviting that it seems hardly possible to believe they will continue to last for any consid- erable time. There B a tendency to itrengthen and raise wholesale prices for all kinds of goods, and the prospect is that the late Fall and Winter will see a distinct advance \li round. N. S. ELECTIONS 'I‘he finally _revised registration in ` Nova Scotia shows 294.588 names on the lists for the impending Provin- cial election. This compares with 253,047 in 1928,' showing an increase of 01,401 in the total number of re- gistered electors. In the last Nova Scotia Provincial election, held on October 1, 1928, approximately 180,- 000 persons went to the polls. ` The most notable increase is in the City and County of Halifax, where the outcry against the new registration system was most strid- ent. In 1928, there were 40,492 reg- istered voters in Halifax, Now there fare 55,755, a gain of 15,263, or rather more than 37 per cent. "This," says the poiitlcaiiy~inde- pendesv. Sydney Post Record, "is by far the most complete registration Nova Scotia has ever had. It elim- that hurtled through the Province lor upwards of a week,-the com- plaint, namely. that there was a 'lonspiracy afoot for the wholesale disfrarichisement of the free and independent electors. A registration of almost 300,000 electors in a pop- ulation of less than 513,000 people, constitutes a record it would be dif- - The officially nominated candid- 'ates in the election number 66, there being 30 Govemment standard ‘near- ers and 30 Liberal contestants nam- ed in the 30 Provincial constituen- cies. In addition to these, Labor candidates of different designations, I.L_?., CCF., and United Front, have been named to the number of six, 5 in Cape Breton County, and 1 "in Halifax centre. outside or usi- ifax Centre and the 4 industrial rid- ings of Cape Breton there are *ight contests between the Gov- emment candidates and the Liberal Opposition. Without suggesting a forecast as to the probable result, the' Post Record says it is manifest that the Govemment faces the constituencies ally confident of Cape Breton North, ; Centre and East. In the last named constituency Neil R. MacArthur, ,K.C., is opposed by Michael Dwyer, E who met with several defeats in past ,years in Cape Breton Norm. In `Glace Bay, D. R Cameron, member ‘ of the late Assembly, is being oppos- ed by Mrf L. D. Currie, who was de- »}feafed twice when seeking public honors, once as a candidate for the House of Commons, and on another occasion as an aspirant for a seat in the Legislative Axembly. The return of Dr. Patton is virtually conceded in Cape Breton West. In Richmond, Victoria and Inverness both sides profess equal confidence, and the outcome may be fairly said to be in doubt in each of these 3 constituencies. It is generally agreed that the party which carries Cape Breton and Halifax will control the um House by a substantial majority. These two ecuntis between them will elect 10 members to the next House, this being a third of its en- tire membership. Cape Breton Coimty is a greater factor in this election than it ever has been in a past contest of the kind. In 1928 Cape Breton County sent 4 members to a House of 43, a little better than one-eleventh of the membership. On this occasion it will elect 5 out of 30, being one-sixth of the whole. This explains the intensity of the campaign being conducted in the great urban constituencies of Cape Breton and Halifax. Polling on next 'Iluesday will attract wide in- terest not only in Nova Scotia but throughout the whole of Canada. EDITORIAL NOTES Tile picturesque Higrilsnd cattle, long the favorites of painters of country scene in Scotland, are said to be disappearing. At the recent annual sale of pedisreed cows and heifers of the Highland Cattle So- ciety of Scotland, held at Oban, there were only 32 entries. as com- pared with 48 last year, 50 in 1929 and 71 in 1928. Animals were sent from meet of the noted Scottish herds, including stmnvasr, Killesr. Inverawe, Loch Dhu, Bochastle, Achnsclioch, Glenaroa. Kilmore, and ner-muddy. '-'nie decline has been noticeable for many years, and in is few years the picturesque shaggy pedigreed Hishlanders will probably become a brood of the past." said s prominent dealer. Cattle of the Aberdeen-Angus and Ayrshire breeds, which command higher prices in the sale rings, are gradually ousting the Highlanders from the giens and hillsides. In his address at Camrose, Alta.. Mr. Mackenzie King stated' that the Liroeral party believes there should be a great national commission to with complete confidence in the outcome. It is true that both sides | sutwardly profess their ability to] win a majority of the seats, but it is also obvious that the Government presents a programme of achieve- ment arid a. platform of proposals r to the Province which warrant it in _expecting s decided mandate from ' the electorate. Among the most interesting con- ; tests are those in Halifax South. where the Opposition leader is fac- .","lng the Hon. Dr. George Murphy, ‘A n Minister of Health; in Hants where fur. A. S. MacMillan, who was A member of the Armstrong Govern- ment prior to 1925, is facing the Hon. Albert Parsons, Minister with- out portfolio in the Cabinet, and in Pictou, where stiff opposition is be- ing offered the Hoa. Johp Douil, At- ~-~ _ ,handle the unemployment problem. He also condemned the Bennett Government for its disbursement of $120,000,000 on relief. declaring that "little was to show for this ecspendlutre." This remark reminds the Montreal Gauette that before his defeat at the polls Mr. King re- fused to recognise that there was a. growing unemployment problem and said that the matter was one for the provinces alone to deal with. Mr. Bennett then insisted that there was a problem and he made the promise that if the Con- servatives were elected to oillce they would tackle the situation and see that no one starved or lacked shelter in Canada. That promise has been kept in the most difilcult per- iod in Oenadah hiscry. A ..- ot his fellow-countrymen and win Ind-is's independence of British rule, it is hard fn find any justifi- cation for the course he has been pursuing recently. It is unfortunate but if Gandhib answer to arrest irtobe e new fast, it will meet outside of India. even less sym- pathy than was felt for his last one. And we doubt whether it will arouse the loyal support of very many of his followers. Those who go camping In the right spirit-a dee`re to dwell for a while close to the heart of nature- fiiijst lub? of yours Baden. MD. _ THE LIVER AND MENTAL au.ivulN'rs ` Some years ago the superintend- ent cf a large mental hospital dis- covered that a patient who had been an inmate for two years (with no sigh of any change) began to improve shortly after some bad teeth were removed, and left the hospital perfectly well mentally two months later. Wm 5° dmemm P°°P1° wh” th” Immediately dentists were brought “mm V’ their °1d mums' Th° °f' ln and the removal of dead and in- n°° W th” fucmry W'mv1°°k m“°h fected teeth gave such satisfactory b°t*»¢f ie them than on the dar reruns that this institution attained mel' “arted 1°* the °°u“t`fY- Thel' the best record on the continent for Wm 70° E194 W SW Old friends B89-U11 the percentage of cures ih propor-| even if the old friends haven't non to the number of msgs unter-, missed them at alll during their ab- lug the hospital, ' sence. Theirs will be a higher out- A5 the underlying “use of u 1001! OH me W°T1d§ Mid the D055 number of mental cases was thus Will be better pl€8S6d With their shown to be due to poison in the W0fk-that 18, if they rise in _time system, nose and throat specialists V0 S20 ill the 6855 the first Si»1'0B»k-S were brought in who removed in- of dawn and hear all about them fected tonsils and corrected other the incomparable work of countless conditions in the nose and throat, feathered choristers. resulting in the cure of a consider- _.-._ able number oi’ cases. Censorship, never really suppress- This superintendent went fur- es news. It only terrorizes people there in his efforts to remove pois- into whispering and dlstortirig on from the system, by requiring things. If, says an American ex- the attendants to see that patients change, the New York papers had had intestinal movements daily and kept silent about the heat wave, it in some cases ordered ordinary ene- would soon have been rumored that mas and in other cw-S hish ene- l0,000 people were dying of the heat mas, 1 or ccioric irrlgations as they every day in New York. HW 0H11€d» _A point, not fully recognized by In gepumbur 01 um yum- 0,." most of us, is that one of the im- iggorgoo Suu-ur’ mosuy from lim,-ds, portant jobs done by the liver is iwere shipped from cu1¢ut,f,0_ A1] over that of removing poisons from the tm East me oollecmon and export blood. If the liver fails to do this I _ ,of once worthless reptiles are now W°1'k Pf°P€I`1y. then there is that being organized on 3 commercial tired, lazy feeling that is caused by i,b”,s_md the question Mises. Wm any poisonous waste. Thus we speak th, bgmoe of nature be upset fn of a lazy liver as an organ that the detriment of man? It might makes “S uqumemn happen in two way; Rats mmm Dr. A. Lirigjaerde, Oslo, found ljmwue M ,.odem_e,mn mpmes that disturbances of the liver were .'-i| PUBLIC FORUM This column is Old' lar ala dlseusuiou by eorreapuudanta of qnsatlona of Interest. The Charlottetown Guardian deaa not neeeaaarlly auderae all , aplnleua al earreapondalta M- PIONEER BB-EEDEBS Bir,-A recent issue of the Guard- ian contains an interesting article written by a correspondent of the Ontario Farmer who lately visited this Province and was informed that it is just fifteen years since the Islanders started Holstein cattle breeding by the purchase of three carloads of cattle in Oxford County, Ontario, by J. W. Jones md H. J. Kennedy of Bunbury; and further. that stock from this importation forms the foundation of most of the leading herds. etc., etc. While not wislung to detract any credit due the breeders mentioned, they were not pioneers in our Pro- vincial Holstein breeding, the foun- datlon being laid and well establish- ed when these later additions to the Holstein breeders’ ranks were pink babies. Hoisteins were first import- ed into this Province by the late Benjamin Heartz in 1886 who brought il. number of very fine re- presentatives of the breed, descend- ants of which were bred and raised for many years by Mr. Edgar Heartz of Marshfield. This importation and its descendants have exerted an impressive and valuable influence on Holstein breeding in this pro- vince. Fcllowing the I-Ieartz im- portations Holsteins were imported, bred, tested and shown by W. J. Gibson. Marshfield, John Tweedy, Lea ds Clark, Gavin Harding and others. The most outstanding herd in Canada about the year 1900 was that of Logan Bros, Amherst Pt., Nova Scotia, as their winnings at shows, including that of Hue Canad- ian National Exhibition and in dairy tests, go to prove. This excellent herd made s lasting impression on Maritime Holsteins. The writer imported a. Holstein bull from Oxford County, Ontario, in 1903 and four calves from the' same breeder, J. W. Richardson, in 1905, followed by importatlons from g ver fre uent in a common t of I-08011 BFOB- Sh01'\’flY Bffbf- 009 Of 1 ‘were diminished; or the leather y q We lmwohmm mmm mm mek nw mental ailment, and that it was due the-se animal-1 01 the I-caan breed-| ‘Usd b wi » ut th bas to a large extent to too much Waste IHS, Whiflh W9 “Sd f0l' mln!! F935 B y pmg ° e B °‘ its in the lur e bowel The uve, uimpl as herd sire (Ida Rocker 2nd Vale) l _ 3 . isupply. If those two possiblllt es are ' y . Iwatched and controlled the present c°“1d not take “re °f this mme was Grand chnmpkm for “Verdi ,mm looks with raver on the Suu umuuut; of poison, V show seasons over the Maritime cir- l | A; you know the uve; mes to cuit. He sired many excellent show Kzédears deezezpngsgkif gzrrerxgpect' prevent constipation by manufac- C°W5 End YISHVY Pl'0d1l°¢\’5 th” W0” g turing bile uud sending lt; down the many of the dairy tests then always intestine 11 this bile flows fy-my held in conjunction with the fall 9“""' 1932 °"""“’"“"°‘ '° "“’ and sends wastes out or the bowel SIIOWS- A Small herd largely built mmber °' 392 were ’°“i‘°°°’°d “° then naturally there will not be 011 this breeding was taken in West- tlle Dominion Observatory. For 32 much waste (poison) in the blood em Canada in 1916 by Fred clark' °f me” "_ was possible f'° det'"` for the uve; to removg - my show partner. This herd soon ml” me dstame t’° ‘h° epmenm te enviab re utation on ‘ - crea d an le P ;:?’“°l°tg1°2;l mVem3“u°n5 du-"mi °°'°"“_°"i*-' the Western circuit and when sold P85 _Yea-YS haf/0 revealed Results The by auction some four or five years the main seismic regions of the later 20 head averaged over $300.00, earth as follows: the coasts around Roosevelt Plans ' "Ruby N15" fetching 51',000_00 uf, "h° P“°m° °°¢°“- f-he E857' 314105, W eleven years old, while several the reslvns beslrmins in the Him- ‘NW Y°'k T"'“°‘) daughters or the "vale" sire brought “Mya-S and €XWI1diIiZ through vmws “Imam have been Wt over five and six hundred dollars A913 M|n°1' W the Ai-Nr 8-nd the f°"'h °f the uma necessary t'° sh” each. "Ruby Nig" at one time held h°1‘f-hem part OI Swth America. Uv that me R"~’°°V°"Y AC* ‘B S“°°°“f“1 the canadian R. o. P. three year old 1° the present time no earthquake °1' “°i- Genefal ~’°hn5°“ °“°° “id Record for all breeds. ivlsny other eiiicentre has been located at or that WB °h°“1d 1m°W Wmlm “W really great cows, considering the near the poles. Quakes have occur- 5935- A-T10'-her Fedeml 8Uth°f"'Y very ordinary attention they then red in positions up to 75 degrees Smffd la-9'? Week that the bame 15; received, were bred and raised pre- north latitude and 65 degrees south ‘*11`°5dY him W°n~ what 11° 'Mant vious t.o the 15 year foundation per- lstledde, but there has been nb ev- WH-S that 11 creat and essential lcd mentioned in this review. ldence of any great seismic activ- Chimiie in 31° P‘1'b11¢ temper 1188 OC- An Island Holstein cow bred, rais- ity in the higher polar regions. °\1!“‘€d- T110 ¢““1U51B»Sl'¥1 Senffawd ed and tested in Tryon made an -a by the President he-1 Spread mold- R. 0. M. seven day oifieiril record The lowly herring, so much in ly. Everywhere Americans are now of 708 pounds milk and 27 pounds evldeuue around the coastline Of looking on the bright side. Actual butter. Island bred Hoist/eins won the Murituueg, may be coming into and concrete evidence of improve- First in both Aged and Three year its uwn. Until recently mug of her- ment in business may not yet be Old Classes in the Dairy Test in ring scales were tl-u-own away, but very great or conclusive, but the Fredericton, New Brunswick, in the now, so guuuda Week by Week m_ immense lift in popular morale, the year 1911, and all dairy tests held form; ug_ manufacturers of umn_`dlsplacmg of gloom by hope, are in Charlottetown Exhibition from cial pearls buy thuugauds of pounds unmistakable s`gns of a new day, the years 1908 to 1919 with one or 01 the wales “wl~u¢h are reduueu W It is well to guard against exag- possibly two exceptions in which we an essence that ultimately finds its Ser”-“ld MP9-‘1 in this mltflfv B-S well did 11°* have “H entw- W9” W0” W way to the market in the form of as asain-st exaggerated rears. 'rirere Hvlstvim bred and raised in this necklaces and other articles." it is has been a sood desi or rt sm Og _ Province. ' said that Atlantic coast nsirerrnen either-01' phllvwnhv with respect to Mini’ CB’ 1°‘“1S °f H°‘“°‘"5 W°l'° recently received $2,000 for some the vutlwk- we are told that it will ehivved ¢° CBN Bfmn W1 °©1\=f guy thousand pounds of hen-mg ‘be 5 millennium or elm 3 mMstm_ Nova Scotia points, and several dis- mal” to be mme into pearli Iphe, one Loudon newspaper p,e_ tricts including Victoria and Tryon dleted that presqueut R005, - were noted twenty years ago as Hoi , -1- velts ex- ’ The ,gory of Cuba |, u study in perimerit would be either the gi-gut- stein areas where high class pure- “u_¥wemmem_ Ain me cupmmes cs; achievement in hum", www or bred and grade cows could be ob- of peoples w make ua of .ordemd gl” 9, lfuulvmul dmm,_r» It Wm tained in car load lots, and several liberty. under the sway or spain l>f°b°b1v b° neither- when the °“*’°" "°'“ ‘“‘”°“‘ W°‘“"‘ Cm' for centuries, home of buocnneers, °‘““"° 5° U'”'°°d by the economic his- ”'d" b°“3h° "|“"”° “ °°“‘1d""bl° .uve-traders and adventurers, per. wrisn. it will in an likelihood be ’“““”°" °’ °°’ 1°‘“” °’ H°""’“ secufed by cruel Spanish govemors, f°l"\d YD “V014 either extreme. ‘ “md” in um W" 19"' .but away! emergmz wwmd mm Rath". than cumvate E dmpmmon Splendid pioneer wonk was done by many other breeders in these of freedom the nineteenth century *D expect and demand unlimited ~ 'found Cdob always constantly in\`°1°"111s‘8. it is better to urge a “ny “ya “mt menu” uw pop' ‘revolution against its Spanish mas- ,-*P1113 Of 501118 thankful for small Ibm- The people wanted independ- 'f°\'°l‘5- Th¢v W°U1d have appeared Johnson by the eagemeas of certain ence. lin 1998 the 'United States, W b0 BIG” IIWUTB 0% my time labor leaders to take advantage of ,srrnmthisins with the rebel-1. and “W” il* Pm M" yvm- the "blanket code" end several affirming the possibility of interven- There have been several indica- industrial codes in order tp win for tion, reno the battleship Maine to H011# #Mt the rwvvcry machine iatbemselves rl share in the be-nests. iliavana. The Maine was blown up-,D05 Fullnins with the perfect which may or may not be unfair, by whom will nrvbebly never be ’°m°°t1'me=s desired. one of them is but which were certainly not witn- known; whereupon followed the i0 it *@1090* Hifi-*WGS 01 017|-11° in the intention of the Recovery Spanish-American war. It was U24 The strikes which have Act. These difficulties are in the hardly a war. The Spanish fleet 513°!! P M. some of them on a way of being smoothed out. They old and obsolete, was utterly de-' ilfse scale, have obviously given are not yet to be thought of as a atroyed in santiago Harbor; and U10 Admlliiltfation much concern. measure of the success or failure in within a year Spain rel!nquishediThB B081 Strike Seems sure to be the Administratiorrs plans. But Cuba to the United States in trust ‘witltdr 0039"# H10 Opposition of a they do indicate that so imp;-eggq- for its inhabitants. There followed 'l€";h:;¢l1‘ “Kat by the splendid exited and sweeping a. piece of legis- -arwr s temporary period of Am- me ° I 1011 set up by the lution involves in its application criean military government-the ,Pl'¢8|d91lt- In the hands of the com- many elements of human nature free and inckpendent Cuban Re- Dvtent personnel selected by him, mu cugwm which mnnot muy N public. me, tiut is. to an nom the likelihood and peru at ru-im severed by my for-in oi words in; and purposes. President Roosevelt ought to be virtually eliminated. Mr. a mtule. What we have to watch has risen in Washington to tell Roosevelt properly halls it as a for and hope for is the slow and Cubans that unlem they set their great step in advance. putimg wo;-gms out of prmclpu house in order the United States But there rema ns the trouble and methods that cannot escape 0 will proceed to do it for them- which has been caused General the test of time and eicperlenm. . I ___ ___,_,_,_,_.. .____.,.._____,_.~__ .f.__ ._ i _ -~ AUGUST 18 1933 tif" ` slumber spent; The poor estate scorns fort\lI1s‘a angry frown: Such sweet content, such minds, such sleep, such bliss, Beggars enjoy, when princes oft do miss. The homely house‘ that harbours quiet rest; The cottage that affords no pride nor care;; The mean that 'grees with country music best: V The sweet consort of mirth and modest fare; Obscur-ed life sets down a type of bliss: A mind content both crown and kingdom is. -Robert Greene, (1560-1902) Aims Of Education (London Advertiser) 'Ilhe value of the teaching of Latin has been qumtioned because many people after leaving school malke no use of the acquired lmowledgc. A champion qi Lupin P0ints out that the teaching of Blsebrs. and geometry is open to the same objection. The answer in both cases is that the instruction even if not directly useful, is val- uaible as a training for the mind. What B taught, lil ls said, is not so important as that it be taught well. Another controversy is over the question whether education should be vocational or cultural. Emphasis is now laid on the eul- tural side because of the incl-eased leisure afforded by the mechcmsa- tlon of industry. At one time it was contended that children who were not likely to belong to the leisured classes should be taught only the three R.'s--reading, writing, md arithmetic. But today leisure is not confined to the privileged few. Hours of labor have been shorten- ed ao that even in normal times, wfhen uxlcmpioyrnent is not a grave problem, people ln, all ranks of society have a great deal oi’ time at their disposal. Not only has the workmen or the clerk experienced this change, but the housewife has been relieved of is great deal of d11ld8\"1'Y. What use is to be made of the added leisure? ` _ The problem is all the more im- portant because by far the greater Humber Of b°YS Mid Uirls leave the halls of leaming in their ‘tee.ns, and a very small number receive a. University education. There are several of the formative years of life in which education is not sys- tematically directed under author- ity. It is most important that school training should be a. prepa- ration for those years, when the mind is still plastic and easily cap- able of receiving new impressions. Reading ie the most obvious means of development. It is facilitated in large centres of population by fi-ee ularity of this dairy breed and brought excellent business to this Province. In justice to these pro- gressive men the article in question should never have been circulated. Our farmers are much too alert in their own interests to have over- looked until such a recent date as mentioned the outstanding dairy qualities of this modem milking marvel, the Holstein cow. I am. Sir. etc.. WALTER M. LEA. Max Factor Society Beauty Aids Created by Max Factor, llolly- wood’a make-up genius; who for many years has been chief eca- metlciarn to the screen and stage profession. ~ Max Factor preparations an in e large way responsible for the splendid complexion of ilseac oeiebritlea. Some of our lines include FAU! POWDER FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LlPS'.l"lUK 'niece preparations an made i c from the purest lngredlanta In wrrect- color, harmony shades to blend with individual complexion eolodng. And ia delicately per- fumed to please the moat fae- tldioua taste. The peculiar ad- hesive qualities of the Inca Pow- der make it “Stay on" and “cling” on under moat trying auditions. » vlsiteurlton and sea this llne of toilet preparations of whlohweareaeleaganlu, l“=.z__il.e_== ’ -.\ Mt onANciz Panos sittin MAESINS l0Nl.a ' R V l v ‘E of content; ~ The quiet mind is richer than a Ihweetcragewnthe nights in careless g Sweet are the thoughts that savour 'Fresh from fran., the Gardens 1 _ For WELL VAIIGIIMI H. GRUUM N Local nepmeuutive ` ‘ ‘ at Morley neun nw onus, summer-uae, r. s. 1., | I or Telephone 291. I, DRILLING " Communicate With \ The Trask Well Co. ‘ 146 Richmond St., E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Class Insurance _ at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown *l -i still# Just received a'. large shipment BRITISH COLUMBIA FIR _ S BRITISH COLUMBIA FIR " All clear beautiful stock . If We also _ Carry I-IARDWALL PLASTER and ;_, t SNOWFLAKE LIME Lowest Prices ”@ r MaCDONALD-ROWE woonwollxmc co. LTD cHAnl.o'r'ra'rowN t ‘1!i¥~'1¢$' libraries, usually under the cane of men and women who are will- ing, even eager. to give gu'dance to readers. In farming districts the facilities are not so good, though librarians do their _best to supply the need and the farming popula- tion is reading serious literature. There is a disposition to regard the teaching of music and dralw- ing in schools as "frllis". But this. like the cultivation of a taste for reading, is a preparation for life after school. Many people who have no marked tatse for'readlng are fond of music, and some have talents which are capable of deve- lopment to a. high dcsffe. Others have a sense of form and color. Even if they are not potential ar- tists in the highest sense, they may give pleasure to themselves and others if this field of- their minds is cultivated. A true conception of education is based upon a belief in the enor- mous undeveloped resources of the human mind and soul. "Democra- cy," says a writer on religious to- pics, is not simply politics, election by a majority, government by a parliament. It is also a. conviction that there are eirtraordinary possi- bflities in ordinary people, and that if the doors of opportunity are prising consequences will from unlikely soiu~oes."""' The notion of liberal education for thrown open wide enough, °¥ It was sometimes defended the ground that education trary education emphasises equality. The object is not to every human being to the u possible extent. SECOND CHOICE, ANYWA! An inquisitive writer is what book would you most like have it you were cast away on desert island? “Swimming for Beginners" be our choice.-Transcript. would Amateur gardeners who may ba intending to plant rt badge this drift'ng of snow should keep mind that the hedge should not less than 35 feet away from road it is desired to protect. If hedge be planted closer, the snow may bank up so much as to extend to the road, when it would be bet- ter if the hedge had not been there at all. r i _ ruff” i i i I cche _ I ` G 1 a privileged few is essentially false. upon cannot produce quality.'Of course it cam- not. Ruskin says that on the con- in pro- duce equality, but to develop tmoat a-Mn( to a fall for the purpose of preventing the in be