THE New HATS $3, $4, $5, $750 Style is the dominating feature oi’ our new Spring Hats, anti quality makes it permanent. Choose here exactly the type most becoming to your face and figure. The new welt brim, the snap, curl, or bound edge, in narrower effects. All the bright Spring colors. The best range of Men’s Suits in the Province _$15., $25, $30, $35. Suits in Tweeds of all popular colorings—and of the new patterns-Suits of fancy Worsteds and splen- didly stylish and durable suits of serge in grey and navy blue. “The Men’s Store" can lit you. “The Men’s Store" can give you best value. Smartest New Top Coats Every good and popular style——expressed in every good and popular fabric. More of themthan most stores-emore of the abso- lutely new-more models that will fit YOU. “The Men’s Store" is the fastest growing store in P. l. Con1e._in and you'll see why. r The new Top Coats at $15, $20, $25, $35 Mwmawww UNITED I 2-6-2 wks. —BORDEN Cop-operative Ship- ping Club loading hogs at Albany. Thursday aiternoon- W. J. Reid. Secretary. 3156-3-14-21. -WESTERN AGENT-Mr. Cyrus J. Gallant is Guardian Agent in —-FERTILIZER -'r new. ll sun-L L LChal-lottctown, are spending a iew Western Guardian -ROBIN HOOD RAPID CHINA OATS, better oats, better Chins. Howlan. and will be pleased to re- ceivenews. advertistirlg. new and renewal subscriptions. —SEE-"Bound by Oath." sented by the Georgetown Dram- atic Club. Town Hall, Georgetown, Mill‘. 17th and 19th- 3142-3-14wi. —GU A R. D I A N REPRESENTA- rrvs: for Richmond and vicinity is‘ Mr. Ray Brown. who is open to re- ceive new and renewal subscrip- tions. pr-c- . THE OHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN u Eastern Guardian . JEASTERN AGENT-Mr. J. W. Murdock is Guardian Agent in Montague and will be pleased p. receive news items, advertising, new and renewal subscr‘ ions. ' ..*ANNUAL MEETING Eastern Kings IIJLVG Stock Shipping Club. St- Mary's Hall, Souris. March 16th.. 2 p. m. 3139 . FWANTED-Old Plough -Dlg- gClS. J- ll. Brehaut. Montague. 3143-3-14-5i JCLUB MEETING-The regul- ar meeting oi the Success Club, oi the Georgetown High School was hcld in the Principal's dept, on Friday. March 9th. The following officers were appolntedz: Pres. An- na. McLaren; vice-pres, Waldron Levers; secretary. Mildred McLaren; librarian, Bernice Cullen. A --{-O&——*—-— -WESTEB.N OFFICE. -— The- Western Oiflce oi the Guardian h‘ located in the McNeill Building.‘ Water St., Summer-side, where sub; scriptlons and adver sing will bef received. The Guard an may be] Purchased daily at the Western; Oiflce in the McNeil] Building or arl the McDonald News Store. i —A BUSINESS MEETING oi‘ Borden Rink will be held in the‘ Schoolrconl on ‘March 15th., at} 7.80 p.-nl. All interested please ar-f tend. By order 0i thc Secretary of! Trustees. 3155i Pl)’ ciz‘ Illixed Fertilizer and Chemi- cals now on hand at my wars- house in Kenslngton- Come in and haul your requirements home while the roads are good. James E. McNeil]. _ ' 131042343421 -WE ARE BUYING turnips and all kinds table stock and seed po- tatoes every mild day at our ware- house. Parties having carlots oi either seed or table stock. phone our warehouse. Ewen Kennedy. 310l-3-13-6l —CONCERT.-St. Elcnnors Club will present their concert irl Cell- tral Betlequc Hall, Thursday, Nlarch l5-lh- Admission twenty-five tllllrty-fivc. Sale of candy. 3132-3-1-L2l and - <---@--_._- PERSONALS -Ml2 and Mrs. Jnlrn- Williams. days with friends ill Murgate. lic- fore returning home they will visit their son George. anti Mrs- Willi- ants in Summerside. —-I\ir. and Mrs. E. A. Large and daughter, Summersitie, are leaving today on a month's trip to Southern California- -Miss Miriam Cameron, daught- er of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Cam- eron oi Summerside. has returned home from the City Hospital, Char- lottetown. -———-<o&--—~ -- —-» The driver oi a sedan-carfiwho was plainly out oi his element in city trafllc. attempted to turn ar- ound in the mlddlevoi a block. and was sideswiped and upset by a hook and ladder fire truck on its way to answer a call. , Striding over to the overturned vehicle, a traffic ofiicer poked his head through the broken window and demanded. “What do you mean byblockin‘ traffic like this? C/mon outta there; you're pinched." "You let him alone.“ said a ic- male voice from the back seat. “How did we know them drunken painters was going to run into us?" High grade, finely pulverized AGRICULTURAL LIME from Government Quarries. shipped In hulk or bags. Low Prices. Write for particulars Brookviiie Manufacturing Co. Ltd. (Operators Gvmnment Lime Plant BROOKVILLE, N. B. ASK FOR THE NEW Wall Paper N». m "the" ssss No.485“',‘,",§'"$5.00 No.Z85'-“,-;",‘.'.'“'$2.35 'No.770"°‘¥‘,'}§“$5.00 ' v».11z'°".'i'i-€‘“$3.1s i V_ svssrellr sxltnmmoll film? llld Iliwlyllll I'll!- H. J. MABON orromnralsr l Catalogue WRITE YOUR. name very plain- ly on the coupon below, cut out and mall w us. and we’ll send yon the blast, moot economical WALL PAPER. CATALUG In Canada. 85 new designs. prices based on double roll oi ‘l2 sq. yards. USE THE COUPON - MOORE l MCLIOD LIMITED Charlottetown. r. s. I. Con. Send the new Wall Paper catalogue P.0.A|ldree| . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Province ...-|.-- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Moons s. McLEOD, imited. Charlottetown, , a .~_. P-E-L =.i' l5 ‘halal-- MONTAGUI, P. l. I. , Oiilco _ with, James Mlar. Georgetown. Mrs. Tapper. who have been visit- ing Mrs. Toppers Mrs. Aitken. Charlottetown, retum- cd to their home in Georgetown. A recently visited Charlottetown. the guest of his son. Hon. Frank Mc- Phee. Minna-ifs Llnlment kills warts. PERSONALS .."Mr. Waldron Levers. George- town. recently visited Montague. A ..°Mr. Patrick McIntyre, New Port, recently visited GeorgetowmA ..*'Mr. and Mrs. A. A. McDonald recently visited Georgetown. A ..“M1‘. Milford Baichhder. oi Georgetown, recently visited Mon- tague. ..°Mr. Stillman. Johnson. oi Georgetown, recently visited Mon- tsgue. .. ..°Misses Mary and Susie Hemp- hlll, Montague, spent the week-end at their home in Georgetown. A ..'>Mrs. J. J. E. Doyle, oi George- town, recently visited Charlotte - to\vn. > ..“Mrs. William Yorston and son Louis, Georgetown. are visiting friends in Rustico. A .."Mr. Roy Grant. Principal oi Cardigan High School. recently vis- itcd Georgetown. .'."Mary Persons from George- town, recently attended the sale held at W. A. Pooles d: Co., Lower Montague. v ..“Mrs. Jack Dicks and ilc: two daughters, Agnes and Kathleen, of Georgetown. arc" visiting friends in Halifax, N.S. ..°Mlss Anne Miar, matron oi thc Prince Edward Island Hospital, is visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Essential i-illor All (Continued Jronl page 1) Nil/CONSULTATION The judges are to, prepare their ratings d.’ the speakers in the some seats which they occupied during the contest. are to sign their bal- lots and to give them to the desig- nated ushers, who are t0. Disco them in the hands oi the contest manager. The contest ma‘ er totals the ballots and gives _he chairman a. written notification oi the results. Tile judges are not to consult during the contest, nor prior to filling out their ballots. While attaching equal importance o composition, the judges are not tn indicate on their ballots what they allowed on each cli those points. 0n the contrary, ' the judges arc simply to late thc speakers -by giv- ing them numbers to indicate their relative standlnlzs——as ilrst. fifth. second. etc., and are to place no other marks or ratings on their ballots. JUDGING TECHNIQUE The low point-total judging ivlli ‘be uscd throughour.» Under this system euch judge will rate every speaker. It should be clearly understood that they are not to rate tile speakers according iect orator. indicating by the mark or grade of 100. but simply accord- ing to the relative merits of the speakers on that particular pro- grsm- They are to give the speak- ers as one. two, ‘hrec, ‘four. five iii there are only five speakers). but not to grade them. ONLY ONE BALLOT ln the 1928 contest the one-ballot plan will be adhered to strictly. in- cidentally the low-point system is the only one which can be used with any degree of accuracy and satisfaction when there are live or six speakers to -bc judged. Under the majority vote method it fre- quently happens-that then-p are us many different. selections for the ifirst place as there are judges. Without the lcw-polnt-totals sy- A stem to mirror the composite mind cl the judges the selection o.‘ a win- ner would be impossible. unless u nnnllber of the judges would com- promise, which would make the is- sue depend not on the skill of the contestants, but on the caucusing zsbillty oi thc judges. A BOX SCORE .. The rfolloudng composite ballot illustrates thc workings of the low- polrlt-total system in u. case where A there are rive spcakcrsc and three ..*Mlss Mildred Donovan.’ steno- grapher at the Experimental Sta- Jllilso A 4 tion, spent thc-week-end in George- Judge B 5 town, the guest of her parents, MrJ-Tllllse C-"3 and Mrs. Donovan, Georgetown. "Al ..'-‘The many friends of Mrs. Vic-l tor Refuse are pleased to hear that‘ she‘ underwent s successful opera-phat -by Qilly orle Judge. is the win- i-lfln I01‘ B-Ppendlcitis in the Prince ner over’ Sims who got two out oi‘ Edward Island Hospital on Thurs-l day. March 8th. ‘ . ."‘Mrs. Alice Jenkins and mother. sister-in-law, ——-~--<+§------_ -_- GOWAN BAY SCHOOL |the three firsts. A appear to be tied for second place. it is only an apparent tic, however. Iii‘ the ballots were resubmitted to ithe judges with instructions to con- Iiine their ratings to Sims and Hill. there would he no doubt of the outcome, ‘for two oil them have al- o ‘ read ranked Sims ahead of l-lill- " Capt Mcphee‘ Georgetown‘ The {more would then be Sims. one. plus one. plus two: Hill, two, "plus Atwo. plus one. showing that Sims was really the ‘composite second original and only judges: Smith Jones Sims Hill Brown 3 2 4’ 1 2 i’. 4 5 2 1 12 13 7 7 6 u is noteworthy that m this u‘... agihary case Brown, though rated Sims and l-lill Sims. 4: Hill, G; choice on the ballot. With system oi _ to some abstract ideal oi the p-er- ' the low-pdlnt-total system and an odd number of judges, a perman- e"t tie ls virtually imposslble- Sini- llnrly only one ballot is uccesrsnry it it is clearly understood that thc system is being used lll lllilL logi- The following is thc standing of (lownn Bay School for March: (lrude Vill. 1. Mary Ollicefc. tirade Vli. l. John 0'l(celic. (irztrle V1. L-ii/iargurct 0'Kccic; L’. John Mcinnls. (irllde V. 1. Joseph Conway, ..'. Alllill‘ U'Ki‘.0l4-.. tirade lV. Joseph 0'Kt~.oio. Grade lil. 1. Kathleen llow- icii; 2. Annio llowleit; Ii. Vili~ Mullally. tirade ll. 1. James O'Keefc; 2. James Hewlett. Grade I. 1. Eleanor" Xlullully: L’. Ncllln Hewlett; 8. Florence O'~ Keefe. E. Mullally, Teacher. -Z--¢OQ-- Gas in the Stomach Hurts the Heart Hus prr-lrsurn from u Sour. A|'l11_ L'|\~ sci Stu-much is not only highly unroln- iurlublc. but some dny may prove fut- lll’ \\"lu-u your nmulu urn followrul by blunting. n iccllnll fuluess and pains uruunrl thr- Ilcurt-.vou may be sure that NTOMMYI] GAS is pushing null r-rorvlliug upwards. Thorn the reason for the shortness of breath null sharp. shooting pains. Tn quit-it?! bullish this Uulg neutral- lzu the uclr lly and cleanse null sweet- on tho NNIHIIIPLI~<IIUQB|DR is better than thr- ulmplt- use (if Biaurntcd Magnesia (powder or inb ots). which ‘gives al- Illlllli luainnt rcllui. Plcnsunt, harmless nutl inexpensive Bilurnted Diagnosis has boon used and recommended Doctors and Drogglsts for more than s‘: val fashion. A SPECIAL PROVISION ‘Fhcm is a remote possibility of n rmrrnrluenr, Illrbrcnkiliblc rin—lhar is. u. tic which cunuot llu broken by dropping thc non-tied contcstnrlrs and rctubulutirlg thc rclutive rur- ings oi those tied without resub- mitting the question to tllcjutlgei-l- Tile chance t.’ such a development is. however. extremely siight- Hut even ii u permanent tic should dc- vclop, the ballots are lint to ‘be re- submitted to the judges. 0n the contrary. the judges are, in such case to be instructed t0 consult. one another and to sclcct by consulta- tion the winner and alternate from among those tied. A permanent tie can never occur in a case where the number of contestants tied l-l not identical with the number oi.’ judges Contestants and contest managers are warned against mie- taking a breakable for an unbreak- able tic. , APPLAUBE l5 HARMFUL ‘Chairmen of meetings are to be instructed to make every eiiort to prevent the interruption o-i speak- ers wit-h nrpplauae. No time will IDOIC» F. J- NOV. Hunter River. tirrsr'.r:rx.b"r"" more than 500 millioremiles of driving in the hands of 0Wn¢tt~a car . of advanced desi 4-wheel brakes, fu gas tank in rear, silent timing chain and many Come in and us the perfected Whippmnour-todoy McLaine Service Station cormsv snos, Summersldo- 4*." " MP‘; MARCH 14*, 1.9 When you buy a the test of , and such features as ‘ force-feed lubrication, I'M» Fnm..1'mm_ . CHABLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. L. A. McDONALD, Sourll- . H- H- ¢°X. Merle"- KINGS couurv causes, Montague- 7V‘ is unexcelled. the chairman attributes it to null- ice- The reason for this provision is that partisans often attempt to baliy-hoo s contestant into favor with the judges. to the] detriment of other contestants, who have only their own merit on yvhlch to rely. Flll‘ill0l‘lll(li8, such intcrrirptions lu- lcricre with lilo brondcustlrlg. which is an important icuiurc. o.‘ thc program. THE 1928 CONTEST rriubjcral: “Canada's Future." Tllllg of spout-ll, uni. more Illun ill lniuutes- ll may be ill‘ll\'0l'ilil in idngllsh or Frcncil. Open to nil bonn ildc students. (irutlos ii. llii null ll. who worn, not iii yours of age on February 1, 1928- . l. i-lt-hool contests ncrr- must -lil he hcld on or before Friday. iilurcll l5 ‘A. District contests must be hcld on qr bdfore Tuesday. April l0- __--o-o>- liitccu yours. Any good druggllt cnn Iumfly you-try it today! be talron out oi the halting o'i n contestant in this manner. unless \\\\\\\\\‘ w Most feed Value m least Money For all general livestock feeding, Quaker Schumacher Feed It is the perfected carbohydrate‘ration—— a scientific balance of corn, oats, wheat and barley feed. together with oilcake meal, odiblc bone meal and calcium carbonate-minerals so vital to the health of animals. and which are usually deficient in ordinary feeds. As a base for a dairy ration, or as the sole grain ration for young stock. dry stock, bulls,_ hogs or horses, Quaker Schnmacher Feed is most. economical. No waste, because of the perfect balance. content, because kiln dried. Palatuble, easy digested, and quickly assimilated. Quaker Schumacher Feed provides most feed VALUE for least money. advice on your feeding problems. The Quaker Oats Com- pany, Peterborough, Ontario. " Quaker r SCHUMACHER FEED Also Quaker Dairy Ration, the best feed for dairy cows, and Quaker Fui-O-Pcp Fccds for Poultqr. THE McLEAN COMPAN OHARLOTTETOWN P. E. I. UY QUAKER FEEDS IN. STRIRED SACKS b\\\\\\\\ .- ... lust will be held at ilenrtz liter-nor- lul Hull. Friday night, April 27- -l. Dominion finals will ‘be hcld All ton, l). C... in the autumn of i928. \ Low moisture L Write us for free DISTRIBUTED BY Y, _LTD. I/ sen A i \ \ i x mm-amw-m- __n. ‘Toronto about May 17. 5. European trip. July. ti. international finals Washing- Finalis ill’ the ()l'il[()l‘l(‘.lll (‘un- ,“Carload Arrivals Next Wee ” l car Cracked Corn and Cornmeal. 2 cars choice Pressed Hay. l oar m. 1 Western om.‘ 1 Carload of Flour and Feeds. PRICES RIGHT iAlso To Arrive On Tuesday, March 20th A Carload Finest Quality Horses These are well broken stabled horses. and selected for us by a real Judge ni horses. We have ‘also on hand a nice nslr of Island bred. four year old ‘re- 1mm- grade Geldings fnr sale either slnsle or as a team. We handle all kinds ilznd classes oi horses. Ileavry Drafts, Chunks,- Trottem and acers. . 1i we have nothing to suit. you we will get you one at a right price. We will sell at a small profit (or quick Sales. ("rifle early and set your plek- Suitable u-nne for respon- sible parties. . c. s. PRATT a solv St. a Peters ‘L DADDY- MOTH as use enclose AH‘. AT Lkifl’ ems “" AGREES wrru ME-VVE .‘ BEEN Tatum‘ Movm’ won six MoNTt-lei- Benin lee .... -=I . AFTER ALL- MAGQIE HA5 TO w" "55 Vein van-all wsu; l-M GLAD YQU REALIZE. rM Rial-Fr AN’ ‘rum’ MOVIN' tern-re. Tl-HNG "To 0o - YOU? WHO even film: YOU ANY IDEATHAT YOU Have. A "rl-toual-rr t u THE MATTER? arr cu-r on rm. GRMN YOU-