i ET i A Raat SLOG AO APA AO 5: | At PUTED WI —— 1 Sbbsbensaneceasangeasecenoenssessecnesesescnscncessentepqenevessstessnssneeneeeeeeeeeeeeeseseneneeeeeeeeeeseeecee LANGUID ildren are sick children. = inactivity and sober faces arenot in keeping with robustchildhood. Theylack | vitality and resistive power, io and are very susceptible to colds and contagiousdiseases. th | iy is ] , . acolls Emulsion. brings new life to such chil- dren. It enriches the blood: it restores health and activ- ity ; it gives vigor and vitality to mind and body. ye. soe 1.00. al} druggists, NE, Chemists, Toreate QEUUGREEREGESGGSARSSES) UEGRORRRUEOEENGED Wedding Gil The abundance of artistic and suitable gifts to be had at this store is well worth a visit to see Nowhere in the city will yo find a more select stock of Ste ling and silver plated Ware th our display. Those who are approaching weddi — nterested in gs will find easy to mihe a chceice fr our Wedding Silver W. W. Wellner. Jeweler and Engraver, CURGHARGEEGUGGUGERGGRESEGI00000CRREREDGLOSEGAUOSESDGOESSURCOUGRRORORERGGGOGEAS/SORCOCRERGREERRDEA- JUGS PAGGRRRREREE see. eee Special Notice. Having pu:chased from Mr. F. J “fornsby the stock and good will of tis Book and Stationery Busines in che Morris Block, we will continue the | business in its various branches, sell- ing at lowest prices for cash only. Miss B. Hornsby , who has managed the business in the past, will be in charge of the store, and wil! be pleased to attend to all old customers and many new ones. A choi-e new stock of Wall Papers lbe2 nce put on sale, and all de- partments of the business will be kept well stocked. A well supplied news and will be a special feature of the business Jhe store will be known as ‘The Bazaar Bookstore » cat (it Successors to F. ¢. dORNSB?. MORRIS BLOCK... . Ch’town, March 15, 1900. SUNNYSIDE DENTSTRY, Offce in New Prowse Block tirst door & airs, Telephone connection. to the right up DR. AYERS —_— — FOR YOUNG MEN. CAMPBELL’S ADDRESS TO THE RADUATES OF ST. 1goo. DUNSTANCT’'S, Chroughthe kind invitation of the Rector, I enjoy the privilege of ad- dressing the young men who today being graduated from the vener- able College of St. Dunstant’s. It is not for form’s sake that I profess my pleasure at being elactinded this op- portunity of joining in the closing ex- ercises of my A/ma Mater. Where ample cause for genuine feeling exis ts, there is no need ot “forcing the soul” 0 empty protestations. ‘The avoca- tions of the present, robbed though they may be of half their ideal pleasure by the disillusioning touch of real life, ms Ly yiel da large quota of enjoy- ment; the joys deep-buried in the bosom of the future may allure us with their mysterious fascination; but no in- fluence opens the fountain of man’s finest feeling, so fully as the memory of honestey—spent days, that are long departed, so I find it as 1 cast iy thoughts backward over the interval of years, narrow though it be, that separ- ates me from my college days within these halls. In those days we loved, revered, and, as faras human frailty permitted, I trust, obeyed as our Father Rector hin whom today we see bearing the staff of Episcopal authority in the diocese. We also knew a member of the faculty, experienced, prudent, energetic, whom the graduates of the Eighties, return- ing here today, are delighted to find guiding the institution to an_ ever- brightening destiny. Apart from him, the personel of the College has com pletely changed. The building itself has been added to and embellished so far as almost to disguise its identity with the less commodious edifice, in which we of earlierdays drank at the fountain of “faith and wisdom.” But the vital continuity of it has not been broken; the spirit of former years gives character still to the essential work. The hands indeed may be the hands of Esau, but tne voice is clearly the voice of Jacob. And even everything humanand perishable about it has been marked by change, there survives that indefinable something—that “charm from the sky” of the poet, which distinguishes not merely the home of our childhood, but also, though ina lesser degree, every halt- ing-place on _life’s* pathway; to “which memory habitually loves to revert. In addressing myself to you, gradu- ates of 1900, Lam conscious of two difficulties which detract somewhat from the pleasure which my privilege confers upon me. Once we pass _be- yond a few fundamental and clearly- defined truths, the giving of advice, or anything equivalent to it, that may influence even in the slightest degree the career of our fellow-man, becomes fraught with responsibilities which no reflecting mind will venture to depre- ciate. Besides, age has usually been recognized as the proper instructor of youth; and, whilst { can ciaim no im- munities on the plea of boyhood, neither canI arrogate to myself the wisdom of grey hairs. Yet, it I mas give you my personal opinion, which verges more and more to convictlui each time the subject is brought befcre my mind, I would submit that ovct- much value is commonly attributed purely intellectual efforts when th: impulses of earlier life h been stilled. “It is as proper to our age,’ Philosopher Polonius was forced to admit, ‘To cast beyond ourselves in our opinion As it is common for the younger sort To lack discretion.” (Ham. Act, 2 Sc. 1.) Man is not all intellect any more than he is all heart. He has pure in- stincts as well as grovelling appetites, and their aim is often truer and more constant than the guidance of his reason, for, as you will eae ad- mit, mankind has risen in the scale of civilization, nerved more by uacalcul- lating outbursts of feeling than by either the placid wisdon of old age, or the exquisite circumspection of man- hood, in which * * * The native hue of reso- ave lution Is sickled o’er thought.” Whatever amount of experience of with the pale cast of I I believe MINARD’S LINIMENT will ‘ure every care of Diptheria. MRS. REUBEN BAKER, I believe MINARD’S LINIMENT will produce growth of hair. : MRS. CHAS. ANDERSON, Stanley, P. E. I. I believe MINARD’S LINIMENT is tke best household remedy on earth. MATTHIAS FOLEY. Riverdale. Oil City, Ont. THE DAILY ‘the world you already possess, you are | about to engage in a life-conflict that , will develope new within yourselves, and unfold to your minds views of human nature of which you had perforce been ignorant. In what manner soever you shall have per- formed your part, aday shall come when your opinions and habits sha!l be fixed, for good or for evil, an occasion like the the weighly question, when, for you, the conflict period of life is past, what will be your settled habits of thinking and acting. full and natural outgrowth of healthy seed already embedded in your souls;or shall they bea_ vitiated product, nourished into a_ pestiferous luxuriance by the decaying germs of a higher life? Many influences for evil effect us all alike, and tend to falsify our early promises. But the specific difficulties that beset the the earnest and educat- ed young man from the outset of his career through the society, and which, alas! often paralize the grasp of guiding truths, and chill the warmth of zeal for good with | reducible to two classes, —those be- | gotten of the disparity between man | as he had fancied him and man as he | finds him, and (2) those springing from his intolrance of opinions and convictions repugnant to his own. if at all worthy of the name, cultivates | lofty ideas. It makes you acquainted | with what is best in every department | of learning to which you are intro- duced. In literature the noblest thoughts of the greatest minds are} continually present to you, developing | your judgment and flavoring your speech. The commonplace, and much more the vulgar, are industriously avoided, or at most introduced to em- phasize by the force of contrast, the | surpassing grandeur of the masters. In history, though the primary aim of history is not to furnish patterns for imitation, you acquire a knowledge of the ideal — perhaps [ had better. say, unreal — rather than of the real man. not contain characters of every sort, good bad aud indifferent; but because, as you find them in books, the qualties for which they are best known have been unduly emphasized to the neglect of other essential elements in every real character. You see only the unconquerabl ecour- age of the hero, and nothing of his pride and cruelties; the sanctity of the saint, and nothing of his foibles and faults: the wickedness of the sinner, and nothing of his numerous acts of natural kindness. What is best in religion is, as it is right it should be, placed befcre you as necessary to be cultivated. THE SUPREME REVERENCE due to the ewill of God; whether reveal edin the laws of nature or in his spoken word; the full and prompt allegiance, of one’s mind to the divine guidance, des- seductions of rebel passion; self-denying charity, hopeful submission to the decrees of Providence, however weighty the burden of affliction they cast upon us, pite the strict justice, _ijese are some of the precepts by which your religious education has ecn guided and controlled. Enobl- ugand beautiful they are, without doubt. But do youalways reflect that the moderating forces of human nature,—weak atall times and _ fre- quently erring,— have to intervene be- tore these principles are realized in actual life ? Here, there is one cause of danger to you, resulting from an abstract and neces- saitly imperfect knowledge of man. The other class of difficulty I said was owing to your intolerance of opinions that run counter to your own. I suspect that your first impulse, on Are You Bilious , THEN TRY ‘ Parsons’ Pills suf tat ECan YBa nn Pills Made say © or sent st la On. Boles." run down take Blood ‘ionie and Laxative Pills For sale cnly at you are Just received—Hoftbran Malt Ex- Products. EXAMINER, CHARLOTTETON JUNE phrases of thought | Hence | present suggests | Shall they be the | the’ wider world of which he started out, are, to my mind, | You are aware that college trainin g, | Not that the chronicles of nations do | acdonala’s Drug Store tract a..d full line of Perfumed Pine 16, 1900 ~~ hearing me make this {one of resentment. You intolerant |The word is hateful to you; the | thing itself is so foreign to your nature and education that it could never live in the atmosphere of your mind And in truth the calmness with which | you hear my opinicn exp-esscd almost | persuades me thatI am mistaken.— But 'et me be correctly understood. statement, was THE INTOLERANCE of which I speak indicates a leaning to virtue’s side, and is almost inseparable from thee first rooting of virile con-vic- tiony. lt reveals an earnestness and zeal becoming the enquiry and defense of far-reaching You cannot under.iand how honest people can lightly ignore, or prompily gainsay, truths self-evident to you and pregnant with vital con- sequence. You find ithard to suffer such mental blindness or malicious error, or to treat with ungrudged charity those who harbour them. How these dispositions of mind which I have just been considering may prove sources of danger to you will b2cume evident on a little reflec- tion. Going forth into the world to mingle | with men in a wider and more diversi- ‘fied sphere than you have hitherto known, to learn for yourselves by close contact with them, from day to day and year to year, their ways of think- ing and habits of life, you will realize that human nature, seen at close range, | differs considerably trom what it ap- | peared from the distant view-point of ; your studies. You will begin to un- nee how complex man is, how much there is in him that you had but imperfectly considered; also, how | many instincts, how many passions, | how many circumstances over which ihe has no control conspire for his ' elevation, or his downfall. Virtue will | not be found abstracted and isolated from its complement of human nature serenely reigning in an unclouded at- mosphere that sin never pollutes: rather will it appear through the dull and troubled me- dium of human _ passion, fre- 'quentiy in full evidence, sometimes only dimly as through a passimg cloud. Neither will vice stand out before you in solitary prominence. Crimes of a deeper dye than you have ever expect- ed to know wide probably fall under your observation; but enough of good dwells even in the worst character to sometimes withdraw our attention from its most repulsive features. The vil- lian at all times, and in all circum- stances, exists not outside of the imagination. So far however, the disparity which you shall discever between the world of fancy and the world of fact is not directly productive of alarming conse- quences. The overthrow of your ideals, the discovery of weakness, of imperfection, of sin, where you had ex- pected to find the fullest expression of supernatural strength and beauty, is (Continued on page 6) after prices. truths. | other | AAKMAAAAAAA RANA A% ah | Cppire Tes, Fancy Sale and Apron Sale. A cold is danger- ous. Don’t let it get the start of you. A few doses of my ancl Cure = reak up any form of cold in a few | hours and prevent grippe, diphtheria and pneumonia. It should be in every The Ladies belonging to the Sodalities connected vith Notre Dame Convent in- tend bolding a Grand Empire Tea and home and every vest pocket. It is better | Fancy sale in the B. I: 8. Hall, Kent St. — cua insur | on Monday std Tuesday, the 2>th and @ policy MUNYO 96th of June. Strawberries end Ice oe Crean Home-made Candy. The best At all druggists, Ze. a vial. Guide to Healt and Medical advice free. 1505 Arch st. Phils. the reson eftords will be offered. Nothing w li be epared to make the Festival most Entrance 10c. enjovable, =D - a a ABHAF AAS AH PAA MSA HHK ;oSEBHED TIME -sco Buy your seed at Le Page’s old stand and save money. We have a large selection of clovers, timothy, vetches, peas, White Russian, M: snitobe hard and Island wheats. Spring Tooth Harrows and all kinds of farm implements. YW. CRANT & CO; LePaze’s Old Stand, Queen Street, EEETF EGER SESE EEE EEE ELE Is to Your Interest and boy’s FSFE SE FESS FEE To see our mens Clothing, Our sales are larger Than for years, The reason, We are selling good fitting well-made suits for about 20 per cent lower than current prices. Do yourseelf justice. You can save enough: on a suit of clothes to buy a Hat anda pair Boots. J. MACDONALD & GU in clothing Where Worth and Low Prices Meet. A few Things You Will Need The warm weather is coming and you will have to make some chanzes im’ your nj parel to be able to enjoy the summer weather. sUMMER UNDERWEAR We hive a fine line of light underwear for men and boys. better une 70c; and see our $1, U0 suits— you can’t match it in the city. Finer grades at higher A good auit for 50¢; a STRAW HATS Last season it was voted by every one that our straws were by far the nicest in the city This year they will be;still nicer. OUTING SHIRTS We have bought very largely this year in this line of goods and have some of the handzomest Shirts ever sLown in Charlottetown. WHITE YACHTING CAPS: | Look cool, feels cool. [he most comfortab!e hot we ther capgyou,eve'fwore. Also colo: ed caps of all kinds in the very nicest styles. Silk or linen {r mts w.th or without collar, R. H. Ramsay & Ce ; | | nds SORE TiN LG | — rake omen a Sater Ab cc? Raenact emer eee ESD Se REP PEI mange om. re eae ye pee ema ciea ae a 8 il abides i SE en oa ws 00 aa ‘be a ih ir ih RAs il ll. a en re eae a i, eGR NY SOS ar tind nh Romer ses ae ea ae aa SA 5 GL EAGER, ek ARR ple HO ay en Fas NT co ere ont i etary sap ir a rf wy a s Sort in, ete ance: le es “eo ‘a eo oe ws a" —s