in ‘that we are in for a long war. The men who -_ _» ,=..-...-:-1.~ -.,»~-, ~._ -',» '. - -._ ,ff , - ._ ,-, "v . »‘» ~.= _,-._-j-¢ 'Rf -.--S ~» Y--i-‘$2 1'- -~"‘=- - ._ _ ww ,,_,, _ L _ wt __, ell. ._ ,_ _____________.___ s l_____,l,,. ___ ssss__l__ ,.t_._.._ __ '___ .._ .___l ____ _'_ .l ,_-__ , _ ______s_.l______e_____ ___ I e _ Y _ __ l_eWeé__W "___£_ _ , ' _,_______,___ '._.-...~-- - - _ ~----s"-"”°' _ _ _ _ 1 ' _ f- - - < ‘ ° -~ JUNE 25 1918 "' I mm __ . 1"`.`. .--.~ \ - » , » ¢» f v \ ' so I 3 - - -f- 1- - ‘*i'*'u '~* *ii 4 1 th' Heretofore it had stood silent mg- . _ . _ i ' ' 'di 'bi i a1°ne» m=>J°S.t1°--S°"1@lh1"g` that “wld “O” iiiiéie-niiiiiigeviiyiiill fimiiiaioffiihehei fah’ some/‘hinge that Could hot eveh be se .iiethods and observing her present course riously threatened. When at last it dawn st erceive.” ed upon our people that the Empire wail hu p veins. The Empire should not fall till th( came negligible things; nothing now mat- ohfeheo their Services’ lghehz h'VeS_if heeo he is no dominant element in the whole coun-- Thls Wa” ohe o t e gleat hah” wma' try at the moment with which a binding' tions of the war the conversion ol"th< ,, f ,, . igreement could be made, but Mr. Taft- be- heretofore ho goods 'hto ehrheht meh ieves thatthe great mass of the Russian ready tohhahdoh everythihg for the Em. ieople could. be depended uponfor co-oper- Ihre’ which heretofore they had looke( -,ation if the Allies pledged themselves to _ . . vithdraw their militar forces after the de- m' Ih the.Bi°mSh army todhy there are th( i`eat of Germany andy allow the Russian Sohsof mhhohalhesi the hows to peemges. oeople to choose for themselves whatever to dhkedoms' to Wealthy esiates’ as wel form of self-government they may desire. as the sons of laborers and _heirs to poverty_ l--he question admittedly is one ef, grave Aho hot ohly are the Sohh 1h the army’ hu, lifficulty, yet delay seems onlly to be making the daughters are also .in the service 0 it Worse Ultimately Germenlfs eastern . 2 ' th before the storm broke were butterflies of i feurlltalelsstitelillteslfe kieegagfeqlflltghl fl-ll-(lillerlg ees upon as simply a place toenjoy themselves their country at home. Titled ladies whc fashion are today doing menial work ir '_ . . . . . . _ 'ie no prospect of permanent peace if the the hospitals, in munition factories, driving germens are permitted to acquire such een_ street cars, cabs, motor busses, in order -_ - l _ that the men hitherto doing this woe till$35.iiedifliiiih523%-iiieiilddsii- mlght go to the from and h-ght' -Jlies from that quarter as well as from Tur- These men and women have found them- key and the Balkans for employment Selveei ah_o*haVe_he9o@ hart ahh---of---large -igainst--the-freeffnationsof'the"West inan- pa'r‘i;'oT`t`l"ie salt ofthe earth. The war has given them an aim in life, has taught their . . _ _ . O _- that there are biggerissues in life than ]|__\m _\_\)-D(l,|,;_\-lvl-Y mere enjoyment. They have come face tc faoevwhh oeahh.; they have looked hatioha; Nearly twenty years ago Mr. G. W. Steev- as well as individual death in the face anc. ,ns Wrote his beets “With Kltehener te have taken their place in the ranks ofthe _-{l.lel.tum_» It beers l,e_reedlne is these fighters and the workers. In this Province lays of stI.u_sele_ if only for an tmderstend ng of how far we have come in our notions have _not seen the bloodshed nor the broken lf a large at,my_ For the Atbare Campaign lh hhhd ahd body; We have Seen ohly the ,he Sirdar’s command was“a total of 12,000 tinsel part of the war, the clean-cut, uni - _O l3_O00 men with 52 guns” Ml._ Steavens formed men marching with band and drum speaks of the leneeelumns ef khaki eembln_ and speeding away to take part-in a great .-ne lnte_bt,leede squares end rolling mejes_ war of which at this distance we see only tleally ever the desert It was he Statelv the glory of great achievement. If we real- spectacle ii S0 it Was' in those days But ized as they reahze in England and France 3ritain has raised 7 500 000 for the present what war means we, too, would make Wan ’ - ’ greater sacr_if`ices, we, too, would willingly ml-he euther,s astonishment at the enO1,_ forego the hhe of eaee ahd pleasure hho nous quantityof' supplies and munitions of take a hfahd 1h the Stehher aho more ohh' war which were conveyed up the Nile to cult dutiesthat constitute war. Shall we gerbel. and beyond was natural ln these- also find ourselves before we have finished lays What Supplies are needed for the the """"`? nillions upon millions who fight forthe En- "ente? Yet this Soudaii campaign was at ,practical school for some of the men of pro- niiieiicc today. The fine "well-oiled mili- ‘;ary machine,” Lord Kitchener is gone_,"but iot before his mind hadsbeen at work- on :his problem of our times. The Sirdar of Egypt today..is,-General Wingate. Twenty /ears ago he wasa Chief Intelligence Ofiic- er, who made ithis business to know every- thing." “He i's` the type of the learned sol- dier,” says Steevens. “If he had not chosen to be chief of the Intelligence. Department of the Egyptian army he might have been Professor of Oriental languages at Oxford. He will learn any language you like to name in three months.. “As for that mysterious child of lies, the Arab, Colonel Wingate can of ours we have seen the war afar off. We e '|`|ll4Sl.\ _Undoubtedly Russia is going .to be one of the big problems in the final settlement of the resent war. A Germanized Russia, and iiussia is rapidly coming under German influence, will be something that will re- quire more than diplomacy on the part of the'Allies. With Russia and its teeming millions and its immeasurable resources in Germany’s hands, after the latter has been beaten on the western front, what is to hin- der Germany from pursuing her insane pur- pose of dominating the world? Even if stripped of her own immediate possessions, if she still holds Russia, Roumania and Tur- key, her middle Europe, she will be as well off and as able to continue the war as she was when the war be an. Former President lhilliam H. Taft, in a signed editorial in a recent issue of the Philadelphia. Public Ledger, asserted than the future safety of the world demafnds that the Allies establish an “Eastern Front.” He said in. part: - ' _ “It is time to act in Russia. The country is settling down to the commonsense view told you with an air of confidence that the war would end before another spring are now rarely met. ‘ The White Huse and the War Department have been slowly conclud- ing that the _German people can be severed from the Kaiser, not by messages and ro- posals of peace, but by the sword. _ Vlhord _ _ _ _ _ _ by arrangement with those elements of the last man fell. Life and ease and luxuiy be- Russian people who are awake ts the meals _ . . ‘ng of German domination and who Wou teleo el’i{eelfhl.‘i,o seg’ l§1"§EmP1f`fE_l MIS,” 1" e;',`_ respond to this form of assistance. There My Wa o ’ e' h e S Sohs’ ’oo S Som ‘s not one Russia today but several. There ither war. ' converse with him'i`or~ hours.” lhuntary: “Utterly-_ fearless themselves, sav comes from competent observers just re- . _ _/_ ages, btbu`ghttup to~_think.destli_,in battle' _ . _ . _ ` d f 1`e‘°?hy lh dahgeh 3 hew hfe thmhed lh. theh I lnligigdhlsiosfiid ggiibdgseahlghehilhgolihssia Who made' a reconnaissance along the banks of the Atbara for eighteen miles? None other -than Bimbashi Haig, whose name is tolerably familiar in this war. W-ho commended the river gun boat “Fatha”and supported a fighting group of 40' men ima skirmishwith 1,000__de_r.vishes? None other than Lieutenant Beatty, R.N., who is quot- ed as saying: “It is all right. We’re doing ’em proper.” Heimight repeat the same fer- vent sentiment as he walks his quarter-deck today, commander of the Grand Fleet, and bearer of appalling responsibilities. Truly_it pays to' re-read Mr. Steevens. Take_ this statement by a black Soudanese warrior: “We are like the English. We are not afraid,” and consider the author’s com-_ m Bm" G nrd|a"1~turneTi.th;t the French, Italian and English” 9oooQ0_‘_Pj°.,*§*_*__***`* l _ _,___ UM n II u i supporters of peace by negotiation _wtth the ' __ - as » Hohenzollegns are beetiming negl_i1gibl__e in - is may umm um. -gan' nm < i~ _-,um gl-_ _ermany’s oveiihonf as een Sf:":°u”.o.id'°" ("°"°'m°' °“°°°°’."l shown so clear1y__in Russia, the Ukraine, IWDIM D-llr (f°w\M 001) 32-0° ¢¢°"\'°'°¢' *"1" Finland- Roumania and Armenia thatrto a '“i',,'2, °¢§,'},‘,‘l"*,,~{”¢'§l,2ie,2,:{’,}`,,,f,',"§¢‘,,,,,',, om, ;,» J.,,,` frenchrnan the"s`o1e alternatives are a de_- »»»nggp_.__»}_]is_»_r}qg»@-__Qg\{»ji_s__g‘ygq 'risive vicéory over the war-1or1d_s or parti- """ ` ';ion and erman suzerainty. eir s ogan __,___,-_,.1oefhfhifi’hfff’f'f',,"h§,_,,__ --.~,.-.-_-,... Liberty or Death,’ has real meaning._They _ »,h ~ ' v , . ~ - - will hold on until we come in overwhe ming ' '1Il`1'l`\G ol “BMA ES numberls. In two _years we clan and i_nust _ . -- _ - - landinf rance on t' ewestern _ront at eas ..§%”.53.i2§ l‘;e5§'iii,’¥iii”»?if.g.f.2.f3§§°,i}*;t?-it =»i;_,,fighiiig,m@i» pfgegyeqiigied __ _s _. _ _ _ V. , _ rn ahh; than,”-‘m elf! qihef-Peri°d_°f the World i l ivdginsei; oefniivsihipahldegugtldeihenldedngy line history' Ih t ehplpmg dhysloff heeioeimeih French a'nd English ar'mieS, this fo'r'ce“caen gg?1:33112”»de§1§;‘;e;3h(-¥o31;Sel§.e,;h segfegrf' 'break down the German resistance and dic- . '_ . 7 . _ . ;ate terms of peace on German soil. This ;'_1th°'t‘t ehort glhdlwlthehtuifhy etglelhfggh will be true except in_ one contingency: If ah 0 eh-loy e azy .hx sly o _ t. § Germany makesRuss1'aa German province, 3";?i¥;_(§_ti§’_fgeth';1§h€h§hgg{‘h;)n; reered 'oh I .f she organizes her agi"iculture_and indus- With the war came a change. The country age; hgliemeégilplgevliei :$19 sseeiegg eahed; ihwas aTel?h§) seivleg’ 3 eah eo Saw 'iiuch more difiicult to attain. That Ger- the Emphe e mplre eeame d heh- nany intends to do these things and that A MUNRUE IJUCIRINE the Allies "rectifying" their frontiers, as old .Iosep-li Vance would say, at the expense of the Central Powers " ` where German. intrigue can create . niiuation, that is to say, she wlll not Colonies Lost Forever Day will be ln this regard, and especially price. she looks' 1`or the' assistace of the duce them -to relax their demands, and it is d‘ifIicii'lt to believe that any of indeed, one is iikeiy. to be insistent ’ _ ThufSday, ffI”§i‘§`»f’ .'I°`.I.§"l'.§“iZlii“'I.‘Z’iL;'Ii°$"fIl”i,“ ' pay' you to take dvantage _of our offering; * “M i _ - ’ _- _ ’ , ___ . _ _. __ _ _ ?liiff'i;'ii%‘“iiiirifiii'ii`.1‘i"“i`i..§Z - Everythlllg U 1T1€H'S Wear If mt Sll5€1C1allY~~ shall not'be left any political swamps e C D _ _ _ F _ another mlasma to' threaten the ;';:::;'J .:;‘ ..‘.'.‘i.‘;°:;'.':.-..".';:z..;i";.f":.': ‘ come earl i i bu the mbre Ou advocate of the principle of self-deter i . , i . . . f ’ 'i ' i 1 27th, is Day: ie '-4 *<1 ..f?-__-»~ D" cn -‘5AU$llllllli WANTS * "‘f ‘ ‘ ” ~ ii h' ° 'I ` ` I is Q _ ~ - \ _ * ‘ __ _ if ,t _ _ l ae _ . oeawnwesodieofnosie _ I While the United States ls pledged » ' not to seek any territorial gain out of ` l ` the war it is not to be inferred thiit ‘ _ - _ _ she will stand ln -the way of any of ‘ ' _ .V A / . \ __ __~_, more you y Y give her consent to little racial _ #__ _ _ , g-roups being owned or controlled by` M€H’S FIIIICY Shll‘|IS ll'l l'llCe SiII`lp33» regular and larger racial groups. This means the ' value, Dmllar Day $1.00. _ _ . _ break up of the Austro-Ilungarian Em- ` Whitg and 'CYBHIII Olllillg Shll‘tS'-20li3I`S ati18Ch€d, l'l'l0SiZiy l"\ pire, anion other things, perhaps an - - _ lndepeiideiii Poland, and very likely ` plques Worth today so $l°50’» independence to several of the peel B|8Ck H058, M811 S15 DHHS af Y - - p1e_s;_i3i§_i__c0ns;iiuisJiimi whence me . Black Cashmeie Hose-2 pairs Dollar Dav $100, mighty Russian Empire. B0yS’ FaI]Cy'shil°tS*D0ii3I' Day 2tf0I` $1.00. - .`_ ' ' i ' - ,Men’s .Italian---Panama Hats-light and cool. $1.00 on Dollar I-lei' attitude toward Germ-iiny's lost D Men’3 HafS " Only 3 fSW d0Z€l'l iCft, on Day- ` » colonies ls not -so clear. President 4 Mule Hide Work-Glgves Stfbllg and dlll3ble"'2 Pairs D0n3f Wilson luis made no statement on the Day for $1 00 ’ subject, and' obviously tlils is not the 50 Me`n,S Tweed SuitS_0n|y one or |_w0 of a pattern, some are ' 'imc for- hlni to do so. Nevertheless, - 1 _ ' t 't 'ls' ii. inatlei of im-portunce to the Worth Oov some and others #M6 50’ Dollar Day your choice at .~:'m{»ii-e wimrnie Aiiwrieafi posiiioii $15.00. This is a chance to secure a H000 S€HSibl@ Suit aid VCU’ 10W ‘s' it of importance to Aiistrzilia. Not Menss Blue Set-ge' Suits --regular V¢1lll€, Zlii SlZ€S D_0ll3I` long ago Sir WilIi:iiii_ lllii.7~he.~i_, Prciiii Day OU '$55. Mes. W.-.ik i-aa.--35 P-i--in ii--10-, to Dollar Dav at uniiai suites in csiabiniiing it. Tim ' Boys’ Suits -all sizes from 28 to 33, special Dollar Dav price $5.00, iieierminaiion or Ausiraim not to f Mei-i’s Raincoats-Fawn Parametta, splendid asa shower proof hand buck to Germany _thc German - I r Da _ bossessioiis in the South Pacific that or dushcoat Dol a y she 'has been deprived of was made ` . - ' - ' curly In the war, It ls a fixed p»riii~ R€m€mb€f €V€_l'ythlIlg else Instyle' S.t0l:e W]l)tl'll|theDeX eptlon 0 time of Aus-imiiim policy, just is ii Barsalino Hats at who esa e prices 0 ar ay. is' ii fixed principle with the Afrlk- I anders that Gormanys African colon- . les shall never be given back. It N D is inconceivable that tilie British Im- _ ` _ perial Government should apply pres- sure to the overseas doininions to ln- 7 " I-_ -, -Q. ""'l~_--` the Allies should do so. Australia and , -_ South Africa say, i-ii elfect, “This is s a eiiiyf Keep your ho.nds_off." American Interests in Paclflc 4 The United States ls concerned in io look upon it with the greatest sym- pathy,'for the United States has in- terests in tho -Spiithern Pacific, as is pointed out by Charles M. Pepper in the Washington Star. Before the war the Germans had vast possess- ions in the Southern Pacific, the most important being its' Samoan Island. The Samoan- group was divided up among Britain, the United -States and Germany some 30 years ago, and over L-lie division there was a threatened' .iuziri~el, with Br-ltuln and the United States uniting to curb Germany,wliose representatives there -had been ‘busy sian expedition, a n ed mans The German iiquercd German muiid/ing a new M Austrnlasllaiis .uc lust for land They territory than th velop iii several oth liands on the ot with one hand fear of attack tio trying to stir up native feeling against tematlomllze thee the English-speaking nations. It must lo he a matter oi' concern to the United 'e States' that the Germans should not e be allowed _a foothold In -Samoa when the war is over. any they would li ~ lt d ink i-ioseiie Neighbor is Evmed “am e an S bottom of the sea. In the Cai-ollno and Ladrone Islands, whlcli lie far to the north of Austral- asia and directly east of the Phlllp- We 9; $5* ek- 95% Pk colonleii. Right on the ed-go of -the Iiudiones ls the Anierlcaii outpost of Guam, und the ‘Uiilted' ‘States would appear to have an equal -interest with Aiistralia -tliai. Germany should not Fumnhed by be permitted to speak back into these 45'# 9'# ¥¢ W ti# 9'# 5* ab lsluiid-s from which sho -has beeudrlv- cn. Robert Louis _Stevenson once iniule the remark that Soma was the seeoiid door' to the left after leaving San Frsancliico the fli-at door being Honolulu. Since .then tho Hiiwaflliin you the chhhce to Islands ihnve beqn annexed 'by,UncIn Sum, and Ihe hue an uddltlnnl inter- est In the Slaniouir Inlarids, which Ile iiuiuiiiinii $¢5*$~"S% e This estnbllsliing of .u Monroe Doc- them to despise n trlne in the South Paclflc would thus appcalr to -concern the United States very lnt|ma_l.ely,_even.___if not to the ex- tent -that It concerns Australia.. Uncle Sanrs position in the matterfmay ‘bo Influenced by .hls policy with 'regard to ei to fem nothing ex be governed by pt his kindness back the Phlllpplnes to the Fllllpluos. ` Wm, ‘ph-It up .4 .- . I ii Conquored-by_An1:el ‘ pe h te neue-_ There is nothing remote from Aus- " ` ' " an Democratic platform; .wan vto -hand u much "me aB~ t a matter that concerns ii iid the en- __§_lf1ll|_U; in th” ,G_Lh1_h_h___h‘eh"_fe_e___i_h-~e@;;l~ 1~--1--~:-1::---;;fi;f--i i ~---- ' I'w'c'A " ' Y W Y South Pacific. New Guinea, oi- Papua. l YOUR SOLvED si __ ._ . is the German base which most vit- , _ f r"`.!t» has v~b.ee.h_v» hrtfhliohihsv. ally concerns Australia. Before the i BY REV- T‘B‘|'_'Nsc°TT' D*-D* N ' " ' outbreak of wa-r this' island was divid- ' _ _ among the British. Dutch and Ger- the Australian position, and ls 'likely _ s were eaeturetl or _ ' territory ‘in the r, ’ - ' . ar by an Ausfiul- help you solve your heart problems ' iid' since then thi’ religious, natural. social, fliianclnl and , . . ' l )_ A - _ - _ t l. _ i f ' , _‘ _ ' V " In ol ji isteicrl the law in every other anxious care that pei driven into neutral early days of the w a . A co Lacs have admin Dl0Vi1lC€ Ill U0 plexes you If a pcisoniil aiiswei is onroe L10( H1110 N10 ieqlilreil enclose .L flve cent stamp not al\1Ilili@fl lV \Io iiniiics will be published if you have ”ilicid\ ll\0\'@ piefei sign your initials only, oi use ey' ale llkelv 10 ii pseudiiiiyiii geiieiaiiona This l. to develop with plow or hoe, und may l keep inv huiiliniiil at home devoted to develop the first place be just as niie und lov de teriitory they wan b n ni cairying fi rifle iii lng_ to hliii as you were before you -ent und the other i' " in. wl-thout. To iii~ weto iiiarrled, and if anytliiiig ii little e German possess- more so; keep your homo attractive, y iiicet with the and take pains' to have lt spotlessly ns would' probabl _ strallans, but ruth- clean. Dress -and be cvbli more al.- pproval oi’ the Au r ulided buck to Ger- tractlvc in your nppcarun fe than bc- d ii-ta da raise fore y'ou were inurrled. If you have usand pounds, buy an-ilnstruiiieiit and' can do it, play itiidl the islands to the sing frequently. Read to hlin und get 'blip to read to you. Plan new diver- ihan see them _h m a few hundred tho d % ee ge _,Xe g¢ m gp .gg nioirc zill|‘aetlve to hlin than uily' olli- pines, Germany hns also 'Important H dance 91%'-‘¢¥¢Y¢5l‘%9¥ $53 li'HE FOOTPAT To bo glad of life, because lt glves love and to work o lookup at the ~ _ eil with your pos- ntented with your- made the best of A- thing ln the world .° nd iueaniicss. and ' cept cowardlce; to' your ildmlrntlons dlsgusts; to covet up neighbours ex- ot heart and sen- to thlnk seldom on of y‘our`trlend9. hrlst; and to spend- ou inn, with 7bodY_` mi oowsloui-oral-been--_ o-posts on_t_he foot-i and to play and t stars, to be sntlsfl s salons, but not co s between Aiustralla -nnd the Hawaiians. on "hm you have , o cept falsehood ii rather th-an by your nothing thli-is yo ce _. ttenoss of __inannei's; the Philippines, and we 'recall that M yew- ,n9m|es_ 0-ft Y only a. few years ago a plank ln the d ,very day of C ' ' ' these are little guld Ho`m'~y Van Dyke (Ani rights reserved) I) Linscott in this coluuiii will A `iOUNG Wil E INQUIRES, ‘Ilo\\ sions; play games with lilni iiiid'use your iiigeiiiilly to make your home ci' place. - \l¢ l¢ 1* ",WlIA'l‘ IS lflAl‘l`*INl<]SS?" I :im agziin asked llilsqiicstloii by Itlclmrd I). §'I‘hc Sluiidiird illictlonnry says that liziiipiiicss is “Tho state or quality of bcllig liuppy; the plezisiirnblc expor- lciice that springs from posse:-islioii of godd." When you have rest and quiet wliiiii your mind is utpozice, when you liziiinilonizo wl.1ili your clrcuiiistuncos then you are linippy. -I doubt lf happi- ncsb ls pos:-ilblc all tho tlnio, but I um ` sure that lilcssmlnemi wlilch is inucli better than hiippliioi-is is always pos- sible. l ”`”`_`”“`* ’ A Naughty Judge In 'ii case of n slander a lady-had gone Into n witness-box on behalf of theiplalntlfl, whose counsel was exam- lnliig her. _"Now, madam,” the lawyer bezun, "please repeat the slanderous state- ments made by the defendant on this occhslon just as you heard them." "Oh, they were .unfit for any re- spectable person to hear,' was the em- phathatlc afiawer. _ "Then," said the examiner coax- lngly, “suppose you just whisper them to the judge." the natural lot of man, far preferable to defeqt or disgrace, thee; 'have lived with English officers' and nglish sergeants through years of warland pestilence_,_and have never seen any sign that these bre not as poritemptuous of- death as themlseves. ~ T _ have se-en man English emdie. They hLW}_1§.\l.§_u;,seen an 'sli‘oi|i.fear.” ~ ~::::_~:: f.-.lm .-¢,~_-_-=\».~\-- -_- -_~,-_-_-_~ -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_ _ _-_-_-_-,-_-_l,-_-; -_-_-,~_-; _-_-_~_-_-_-_-:-:;:;-_-,~: ____ - - Yet for twenty years, heedles of this and other testimony,~‘ Germany thought that Englishmen were decadent cowards, unable _and uiiwillingjlto.-llight. All this-time Bim- b'a§hi I-Laig and Lieutenant B-elatty, R. N., were trainingfor' lthe leadership* of a United Service embracing seven or eight million men! 'li 3° .ik _ .ir A .1 ‘ ___ _,___ ___e. ,., . ,, ._-_~ _____ _ _ _-_-_-Y-_-_-_-¢_Tv-_-_-,-;,-_-_~; -_1 r _.mad _T Y n all "»."1 iuglit before the iltlzens of Char b lottetowii mid P. E. l. generally that there is ii iinoveiiieiit to start a Y. W. C. A. 'in the Cuiidall residence here. Such an institution will be beneficial to every young lady throughput this Provliicef while she resides in Char- lottetown, not only as a Iionie, but as a centre for (lhrlstian and comniun- ity work. -It will afford an exception- :il oppori-uiiiiy for the city gflrls, or young ladies vlsitlng Cl1arlotteLown,to avail themselves of tli'e advantages of the lilirury. gyiunusluni,`tennls court, boating :ind butlilng fnclldtles, as well as ai geiicrul air of iestfulness and re- cuperation. Tho furnishing of -such an institution will iiecessnrily requlro great cure and expenditure, und here ls :in opportully for any person oi' pei~s'ons -in Charlottetown or else- ?/liere to donate any' nrtlcle along- this ine. Won’t ii club, class. famlly or it plilluiilliroplc person be so kind as to furnish a.‘rooiu -soiiiowliere ‘in this _ ileiidtil iiisnltutiloii Such kindness will bring geiiuliio slatlstaction not only to the iloiior, but to the girl who will enjoy ilic benefit of the gift. Any persuiis desiring to liolp along iln this wily will kindly send iii their names in Mis E T Higgs, Convenor ot the Fiiiiiisliliig (‘oninilttee No 7 Ambrose Stieot ( I I .ini Slr etc EDITH STERNS On behalf ol’.tlie Fuinishlng (‘oin ‘ii ' , `-‘i .V- rl- -- ~ "Fl _ ;`¢4 '11 off 2// " , _ - 1 - `\-\\\1\_\5 \'\\\\\\\\l __" s ll- ” 'nonnsff KIDNEY ,_ Pitts; ii il It l `\ \\\\\i\ . -¥,.,§f_io__i1,.f-_-fgfgif..-ll.,- ____. ___ swim, ¢".§’,§,s§e¢v‘ ,nl ll-,_ __"-v .-7 nv ..~ ‘Z-iliiii, DIABETES hgiiiiiiiiiil' _ . I t _ _ i m|r§\\\\\\\\\\%nlllI l * ~ Sleep' Meter dium riced ll9_fm‘, _ Amgiock iiiade _by-the' Big peoplé. A.good looker. a good timekapei' and a Sure alarm. __ " There are s0m¢ 111 -uf window. 1 ' Prico`$2-25 . c. -mailer J eweler and ~1lhi`Yl’*V°1'~f \ I ° \i ,_ ... .I in »:-ig ri <