In "BETWEEN TWO WOMEN": jnnnqum-“d s,‘ ' PRIIIIJI: EDWARD —- FINAL SHOWING TIIIIAY~3.15—7—8.45 FRANCHDT TONI -— VIRGINIA BRUCE — MAUREEN (TSULLIVAN PLUS-NEWS d‘ ’I‘lI.-\\'ELTALK as PRINCE EDWARD - THU RS. - FRI. - SAT. NOBOOTS BABLBIIT EVBRYBODYIS Fill]! The bigflbsr 7 reels of fl7 . . t ~ I entertainment to hit the screen Ill‘; long timel Patsysnd Lyda ltart the laugh-wave! And is it crammed with hit tunes, swing music, dancing and romancing! just look at that Carri “SIN; HTS ON I(‘L" Worst; _l_y\fw Lynne OVERMAIQ Rabi. ARMSTRONG ROSINA Lnwizizizcr: o 0 N A Lvii n A o u IIMMIE GRIEWS ORCHESTRA and ThoRhythmRusciTls rnaAvnLon sows 3.15 — ‘Hill ——-5I.0tl I’. DI. \‘.»\'I‘l'I{l) NY .\li\'l‘. 2.320 CAPITOL — Fiiizil Showing Totizty “DOWN THE STRETCH ” PLUS — CARTOON — COMEDY — PICTOIKIAI. CASSIDY core. IN tout-i; , _so"tii_ cons stiiziuo ADDED 1'. . z siooons . $ITR [All COMEDY i , __ ’ "%'o'fpli='iliilf. atom‘: iiiiisyi-iiirliiii. rooms ‘Niall lunyin.‘ 1- ~ ) ..- " ' t" czar. , PL It. cirv BUS SEliVGE TIMI“. TABLE EFFECTIVE TUESDAY. J.\.\'. ‘Ill! hour. First trip leaves 7.30 AJI. Lust trip 7.1m l2)‘. City Bill stop is at Whites Restaurant. Bus leave: Bnnatorium fifteen minutes to and fifteen min- l i i l l Bus leaves Longworth and Eshcr on tln- h-iur itml lmlI ‘l i I I l First trip 7.45 iLM. i utes after each hour. i Service daily except Sunday. Buscs arc warm and cmn- \ fortable. Route same as lust your. ‘ Special late Saturday evening service, lint trip li-iiving Sanitarium at quurter to ten. ' i l Basic Business O - . , ._ . . . “d Nzii.‘ ‘fort-i Slut-i. l‘..\it'lltlll.'.t‘ .<.:|l'i Condltlons so“ tlic Uiiiit-tl Stun-s- “its f. t-ti \\'l.ll tlie lilPhitllll til filming nwtiiis of lllttlltlllt! tin‘ l~w til p" .b , (Jlinrivs ii (in); 1m (A. P. by Guardian's Special Wircl NEW YORK. Jan. 2- Myron C. l t-ltp- _ ‘ _i'..i'. 117W! pitidwviivt- tut | Toy or. chairman of this Uléllfllf-i Q .l.>.,,.,-.,,. ,._,,,,,.,. y, ,1,“ h. 9T1 5 a 9 ; ' ' ' ‘ 'i\"lll('ll rt .- cult for most or us to believe thr- , “um N“, . current busmem recession is ‘new | whcc‘... l‘.liii“ll thin l-BYYIPOTBTY \'.{l,'\' . (‘tlilliflll Gerard Swopc. President ‘n! General Electric, also commcnlitlg on the New Years outlook, said Flylllfl‘ ('lil‘§.“l‘l£5‘iilii For Student Fliers “(Jity llospniil lot‘ “sock pl‘L‘\'lt)ll.$ to his death, dur- IF YOU MISSED THE IITTLE PIGS", THEY ARE Now. "'l'§l‘i FE | i ' si'i-;<'i.\i." 01F |’l;R.\ii\NljNT§ ’ .\l. _- s ".0 - $5.1m 2 r~ii.t.-n;it;.i, l’ nvt- ti-nl blnnit-ure l‘ all m: $1.00 ‘_ ltlmpress Beauty Parlor '29 Kuig Square Phone 1604 ., i._;.,-____._ Mil. EDWARD SMITH llfemoriam A .=...;l gloom “its oust ovci: the 'l'tn Alili; lions/t; and vicinity when.» la btuzttiie known that. Edward blllllll had llilimtd sway in the Otty llusliiltti Ull lJt-c. Uth, at. the early :i_c til o-l yours. Ali. l ‘inc ucctuisrcd had been in lllllliib littiiili tor the past two ‘ yours, ins contiitititi was not con- sidcit-d stitous until he entered the tioittnent, one itig ninth he received the best llifltllCtii skill iitid wilder nursing. iiu. tjitiri uillritt it othcrivisc, and he [lira-till unity on the above men- lltlllPll MZIUJIIUHIIHWI by the 16st rites til the lfoty Catholic Church. file ' . llflillt-illly Vlr-llfll by his \'tUl', lit-v. Mgr. Maurice I‘he n1 Mr. Smith “as a farm- cr and lilntrksnitih and will be Ji-viiily uiissvti by all who knew tum. ll; wits a kind, obliging and tit-until itctgiilioi‘ and was always lUlilly Willi a licipitig huud where- eici" i‘. Wlih llffPtltftl i-lc lczt s to mourn besides B. sormivitil widow time Gertie Grif- ltn) one ‘adopzvcl daughter, Helen POZVM‘, itlMl atircc sisters, Mrs. lsetnuzit Ititicnbr, Charlottetown; Mrs lxiltiil, Boston, and Mrs. Jnim p, , (‘ti\t‘lli.‘il(l, and one bt-ozlitr, Fietiering Iicemitiii, On- tlirto 'l'hc fnnorol was hold from his ltzle rtisiticii - on Dec. 8th, t0 llztizitiic Cvisicttwry. iiiid despite the bud condition of the ut-iitlicr and the l'()ti(l.\, \\'il.’i lolicivrd by a large roncottisv oi .S_\'llllJ¢'l'illlZll'ig friends. ‘inc scrticc nl. the church and 'gl'l\'>(‘ inn. contitit-ti-d by the Rev liriiiitith i\'l.i(.‘l'lll.‘l'50ll, parish iiliril oi ’I‘i;i"n:lit~. ‘tho pull bear- <i ‘it’ iblimsi-s. Wtiilzicc Owen, ‘liil i: hi. Ctllllltill), tletiiiic Bos- '\\'t-ll. llutrry Wiiish, Scott Cairns. ‘ ll-ailicl‘ Mullins. R. I P. Lirixcs People T0 Jun. 4 - (CP) - l Cunsua to 1 ‘tllllt.’ .r l..':i lfiiSllOllzilb it; for Llic ill; llllfllnll r~ cf lheriy’ and ill.‘ t-.iii,\ii.,_i ¢...t. o: s Ctill and e- t"i.illllll‘ _iit.-Yl ttt‘ \‘i\_. sounded t0- nigln by l’. M. 11171161‘, president .f ti-c t tilt: iiiifl lrror Congress of -, ill tits offelnl New ‘. viiiis lllt .».\ii ,'l‘. A \\'.-l'liill§‘. iigidizrt dcvcl-ipniciit tit‘ Pu illl mid C. niniutilsm was Ultlll-Lil i5‘ Ml‘ Dripri‘ with a re- Ol IXXPA. vi f“ was lvuriiivi hric "zlnv cnnsitttr- lion of llllll‘ b“ 1. .i~. won: patios 1 Will lllWlill ‘lift?’ v ill [I Aloutriii l nirciurtft fnriniy iii a rust. i-f llPIIllV | siiititirii ‘ F ATEQES F; li rat‘ lllt‘ font‘ lllllllV Norr- dtiyti "Norst-iiitii" will how n1‘- H A L x i-:=niiiioti:itit>ii for six to r-ixht. in» ._G0In;— swuclors flflfl sunk-tits. niiil “ill ' t l - brvn fliorr; [DAY JANUARY 14th be llblfl‘ o tciih "ill I In’ 'M°n_ Jim "u, such sIJlClItTFs n5 ‘ bombing, map t ' reading. navtct lion. sketching. Limit: igidlo fffiflilllll ‘v-aiion, and “.\p0i.' ng" 0r tt "\ _ from CIIABLOTTETOWN hvoorllanalzb Low 1'1"" 1'0"‘ all/n fro/inns Walked sound 7 I Train To Town . ,. 4 wrw “fizz: xiii: an": :1... ‘A; r G o4 m DA l 1112's 0N1.‘ I F pug/g; lq/ornmtion Cvfllll” w any Tit-kn Agni! ‘THE PAS. Man. Jan, 3~Tlic Pris northern Mnnifnbn miniiv: mat. trapping cr-ntcr. is 25 _vmn'.< nf mo: In reculliiiir iii» lllfilllfv of H!" lwvh recently Old-timers told how ‘For Pa: nnrrowlv rsr-npcd itcslrtivilon by llrc rmtl OIIlPT Imritlv-izts in flu‘ lfv 0f lho oaiiv xotzlt-rs Alfred lwfniilnltiv Il"‘*"l'll')(‘(l his visit l0 Tho Pns rnrv in I904 WllPh the train motor! so slowly "We cu- ‘ANADIAN NATIPWV Ill rti/rviv/ltv: ii ' inintlt-z" iliiii. titicinplctvment wzll still not be snlvrtl in Canada un- til cotnitlcss tliotisaiitls more have bccn rt-sfurvd to jobs. l. H’. H. liinzshnnt told of an B8- ' lt\li' will: ln- mndo from Hudson 13:11.‘ Junction to The Pus because flii- ii~ii irrtzn llltl(ll‘ only one trip a month xioi-th. He walked the ds- lnncr» in threr- dnvs with I ftir trooper. Chnrlcs Larose. it was during a Sunday after- noon in liil-l that a timber fire lllITiiiPYlfld to mm the town. A foi-‘unate shift tn tho wind saved Th» Pas from the flames. "anus, L , N. D. MacLean ' UNDERTAKER EMBALMER Charlottetown and North Wilfshire loved walking behind it for s few miles." ‘ Phone I49 l \ THE cuiiiztmrrrnww cosmsw Early School Days I R e c a l i e d B y i Sir Andrew Mcphail The following radio address on the "Old Bchool" was given re- centiy by Sir Andrew Miwphetl. lMontreal, over the N80 network- .5lr Andrew is s native of Orwell. P. E.I., and the “Old School" was .no doubt typical of the one which the attended when a young lad:- Laclies. Gentlemen: Invisible, In- , ‘ _ - _ 7 WWW 1-54°"1'3'5~ i -"’""“m°‘ i l H/jd/H"! ' cons-anemones urn in In this “I Remember Series,’ I UBANCE If". 1 "J1; you wiu have observed that all old - l ' ' persons remember the past with uncanny dlsttnetness, but fall tel remind themselves that they have already told it all. If they were to tell what they prefer to forget we would be much more interesting and free from the charge of gar- rulity. Tonight I shell tell you all I remember, and something l would prefer to forget, of the old Grammar School, that ls passed away forever. I remember and even see a sin- gle room in a strictly rurul district | with seats around the wall, uponl which are seated 40 boys, and the master upon his platform. armed with a bifurcated strap of leather, , the traditional symbol of his auth- E orlty. And yet from that schooli mmr/lc e010 2 WHY DONT YOU TAKE 1917/ You can check e cold more quickly when you free the system of wastes and also counteract ecidjryi Almost alwayl thou CWO conditions go together, each aggravating the effect of the other. To get com- plete relief, barb mull be corrected. Thar is why you should take Sal Hepauco. Quickly, gently, thoroughly, it: double action: l. Cleanses the lylfolll- I. Combine Acidity. Na wander you soon/mallet- terwhen you rake two reg- spoonfuls of Sal Hepatic: in -_......- A... ________ _.......k-...-»...~....... .. l jiiii cumi illrliln ‘this column ll unreal for rue at loeel Intense but Qdvnlllelng d a nun; nature nu: be lllerleo u I was: e word eumlr Iflnhiu ll n» “nee. CBAIWBLL m Photographs KINDERGARTEN Bil-OPENS in] ‘lnnlty Social Hall 9.30 January 4. children from 3 to 6 years may NOW FOR A REAL BREAKFAST svzth Robin Hood Porridge Onto ‘Ufuna, Silverware or Plain. PARTIES . having board end lodging accommodations for young men attending agriculture short , courses call Provincial Depart- i merit of Agriculture at once. , L-tSM-l-bll. CONFEDEBATION SUEANCE LIFE IN li-GTBO-‘I-IZ-IR PARTIES HAVING BOARD and lodging accommodat ocis for young men attending Agriculture Short Courses call Provincial Department Save 0n These Grocery Values oii sit: WEDNESDAY ONLY. SUGAR KRISP conii FLAKES Pm ROBIN, HOOD ‘ M13 PLAIN PKG. ~ -_ 23g QUAKER PIIFFED WllEAT Pkg- 11c 2 For 21o lttlLLEti OATS Bulk. Lb- Bt: 5 u» 21c TIGER Large 26 oz. Bot. FRESH PORK STEAK LB. 21c ,in my oim time have emerged 53 ipersons who afterwards acquired iuniversity degrees: B lawyers, l7 ‘doctors of medicine, l9 clergymen, 9 engineers, to say nothing of 78 licensed teachers. One family of , l0 yielded seven university gradu- it-ifes and two teachers. The financial arrangements of which now we hear so much. were simple. The master in the earlier days had from each pupil 20 shillings a year, and from ev- ery- family a bushel of wheat. This gn-mctice was held to be vicious be- critise the master might be tempt- ed to keep the boy in school when he was incapable of learning. ‘The . master was next taken to live with every family in tum. This was a guarantee of his continued sobri- ety. Finally, to induce him to drive out. of the school all who were wasting their time, he was engaged by the year at a salary that never rose above a dollar a day; but his board cost only 80 dollars a. year. This left him s. handsome surplus which after three years allowed him to pro- ceed to the university; but this was in more modern times when s. gentler type of master began to prevail. and e school of two rooms had been built, with a female teacher for the children and the girls. "Hearing The Lessons" It was no part of the old mas- ter's business to teach; his bust- ness was to "hear the lessons" in proof that they had been learned. If the lesson was not learned the boy W85 Whipped; if he had to be whipped repeatedly. ’f.hat was proof that he could not learn from books and had better betake him- self to some useful occupation, n. decision which the parents re- ceived with grsteful approval. The boy returned to the land or the sea where he learned the sky and weather, the quality of materials, the fertility of soil and cattle, se- cure that he would never be un- employed, never an object of pub- lic charity. that he would live in his own house and dle in his own bed. In short, he was educated. This Grll-lfllllfil‘ School was a simple affair. Although there were 50 or 60 boys on the roll no one was compelled to attend. A par- ent held himself acquitted if he gave the boy a chance. and allow- ed him the option of school or going to work‘. and on a going to farm there is useful work for a boy after he has attained the age of four. One who found the school tiresome was free toslip out and wander the livelong day in the woods, by the stream. even as far as the scit. regarding sweet berries, the trout, the mink, the wild ducks nest, strange plants and flowers. He must be careful to return home with the other boys. Although no one ever “told on" another, his truancy would be discovered and he was put to work. He had had his chalice. But even then he was free to choose__his_work. In every port i Seventy Years Old Sztfcgtiaird Liberty. lever Losl Day's Work As the years creep on little sick- ncsst-s and ailments become harder to shake ofi than formerly, and evidences of a breakdown appear. Now is the time when aged people need s tonic, sut-h as Milburn’: Health and Nerve Pills to help them t maintain their hoiiith, vigor and energy, mid to brtu-e up and in- vigorate the ucrvous system. Mn. A. C. BHJGAR, Palermo, Ont“, writesz-“l am seventy years of ago; never lost s day's work, missed a meal, or took any medicine in my life, but last. year I had l nervoul breakdown; had headaches; no tippe- tite; hid from people; nnd was in fear and anxiety; had to have some- one sit beside my bad st night until I went to sleep. licli could not be worse. I begun taking Milburn’s Health and Nerve Pills, and from the first I became calm and collected, llllI to-dny’! feel the some n I did years ago. Put up by The r. Mllburll Co. LIAI- a {lass ofwateriGeta bottle o Sal Hepstica today! of Agriculture at once. L534-1-4~2l _i_________i__ were ships. At the age of 13 he could run away to sea. In a few years he would return and assume his place in the school where he was received with immense re- spect. He had discovered that ed- ucation was the thing needed (or him. After one or two winters he took to the sea. again. By the time lie ivus 21, he would come sailing into that same port, mag- ter of a square-rigged ship, with a negro in the cook's galley, a par- rot in the cabin. and a monkeytn the cross-trees. The attainments of the master of a. grammar school according to the Act of 1826 were the Latin and Greek clas- sics, Mathematics, Elngllsh, 511m- metic and Geography. Th; mu- ter did not feel obliged to teach these or any other’ subjects. It was his business to keep order, w make sure that a boy who assayed any subject had really learned it. To help the beginner, to teach him, was as unfair as to help him in an examination. ‘That might encourage him in s. wrong ovum. No Classes, No Tests There were no closes, no tests for promotion. A boy must prove that he was one of the few cap- able of learning. If not, it were best for him that he were driven out of the school before his senses were dulled and his mind stupe- fled, and left free to find his own vocation, which he invariably did For this purge the master had his ewr ready instrument. The problem of religious educa- tion received a nest solution. The Shorter Catechism of the Church of Scotland was s standard tout-i book, difficult of mastery by Cath- olic children, especlally the doc- trine of the Trinity which inspite of our efforts to instruct them still remained to them a. mystery, although by us so completely un- derstood. Some of the parents made protest to the parish priest, but Father Phelan, or Father Doyle, I forget which-was awtse man. "Let them be," he said, "they will learn hard words and long sentences; they will not; un- derstand it; and for their religion, I will attend to that myself." In any year not more than three boys were considered qualified to profit from ‘books, and one of these may have come from a. dist- ance attracted by the fame of the school. He could secure lodgoment in the house of a relative who suf- fered from a. deficiency of boys , HELP APPRECIATED — Among .tlie liberal donotlons rcci. ct for lthe Santa Pat's at Christmas was one from the Estate of to late J.H. MacKenzie, MacKenzles comer. NORTH WINSLOE SCHOOL -- Ilbllowlng the splendid program at the annual Thrlstmss closing of North. Wlneloe School which appeared yesterday Samw. Claus appeared and with happy greetings to young and old distributed gifts candy and apples to teacher and pupils from a. heavily laden tree. A few remarks were made by the teacher was Fischer Harper who thanked all for their cooperation tn making the concert u. success and the singing of the National Anthem brought the evening to a close. rent of the world. The master makes the school. In his history of the “Pioneers" Malcolm Mac- queen offers the deeper reason for the conduct of masters and schol- ars. “Una-emitting toll," he writes "is alien to the Highland nature. Work on the farm makes less ap- peal to him than work in the mysterious forest, on the changing ocean or in other ceilings rospon- _ uive to m emotional end imagin- ative spirit; "his sensitive end sup- erstitious nature tinged with a brooding melancholy demands change and diversity." The Scottish universities were filled with boys who had the 1n- sttncl: that through the school was an open door of escape from man- ual i011. That iestloss spirit drove them over seas to Canada‘ where they might follow a. free calling. One of these was cut sway upon the shores of Prince Edward Is- land more than a hundred your: ago. His only possessions salvaged from the wreck were a. Gaelic Bible, a copy of Horace. a Greek dictionary with the words trime- lsted into Iatin. which was slight equipment for life in the new world but adequate for opening a‘ grammar school. These boo ks stained with seawater are yet in a safe place. This castaway was bound for Napanee where he had a cousin in the same business. He continued the voyage on foot, the only meme of travel, a thousand FRESH GROUND SWEET PICKLED JUICY JAMAICA 17 oz. Tin 17 oz. Tin cointizn BEEF LB. -i- TOMATOES riliiifihis its CANADIAN HAMBliliG STEAK LB- 130 2 Lbs 25c ORAIIGEs Large Size, 0oz. ~ 29g SWEET rumors w. m 2 Lbs 21c 3 TlllS 29c EACH 10c STORES m: .')y/,,.,_- II 19.1w. f.» Sfiop' miles, but for some inexplicable reason he did not. like the ancient Ontario. He walked back another thousand miles, and opened e. grammar school. The more modern master kept himself apart; he enriched hisown inner life by study, reading, end meditation; he was a. model for the young ands stimulant of their ambition. He dressed himself in the full pomp of his office; he disdained any approach to the modern scholastic garb; hat-less. brown Jacket, soft shirt, grey trou- sers so wide that, u the late Mr. Rogers said, he must take two steps before his pants begin to move. ' There was in the town an acad- emy later transformed into l. col- lege by Alexander Anderson - I pause to utter a word of reverence to his memory. There were three rooms and two assistants; the one. John Gavan, had learned his elas- slcs in Rome; the other who died before he was twenty, the son of a poet, had written a sonnet which is now to be found in the literat- ure. It was he who opened our eyes to the beauty of poetry. Em- erging from this college the chosen scholars found refuge in the grem- mar schools where they Blight 1m‘ three years and continued their studies until they were ripe forth! university. The hierarchy of loom- ing was unbroken, and the muster was only second to the minister or priest in power and glory. All this ts more than nfty years ago. 'I‘o illustrate the quality of’ those two old schools I cannot do better 1n conclusion than to re- peat to you the octet of a sonnet made by that. literary marterflfmn LoPsge, himself not yet twenty years of age: ' "Westward I chanced to look, ere yet the night Fell on a day of clouds, to note what sign, If any, on‘ the horizon might out- shine Of e fair morrow; and there met my sight Astonished a long line of silver light Off in whose soundleas sery depth! vine Peepedthe faint stars, end drew those eyes of mine , For hence, as native to some orb more bright." and would find him useful. Those three were set. apart, and upon them the master lavished e11 his care. He offered two forms of education, his undivided attention and his undivided neglect. He was of like Mind with Luke Moggs. "that boys should learn nothing bread by.” At the age of l4, these three had read six books of Euc- lid, Algebra to quadratic equa- tions, quite difficult Latin, and the new Testament in Greek. lsuch trivial matters as IEnglish. ‘Geography, and l-listoiy theycould search out for themselves, if they so desired. even Shnkespesre—lf they were sufficiently interested: the Sabbiiths were long before them. The school was only a part of llfc, not the whole. It was well known, however, that there were schools in the town of quite u different kind, in which the master was a woman. Those schools were crowded with boy-s and girls. Having nothing else to ‘do and nowhere to g0 they were lmmurcd in the school to keel! them out of mischief. There they remained until the boys were too old or too indolent to learn s trade, and many of them became casual laborers or Joined the un- employed. They had to be csjoled into doing their lessons. and than was a horrid rumor that when a. big boy refused to be punished the teacher took refuge in tears. i To keep them from mutiny they iwere said to be entertained by talks and stories, by childish ex- periments in chemistry end not» urll ,““ fy, by reading print- “Htz-siiiifi" EXAMINATION fitting and Qnnputng Giana ' Ito. Ii. J. MABOII UPTOMETIIIIT MONTAGUI. I l. l. Olin Omneotol With IIQIAII ed words. set. u tasks, which we were content: to do by eleelth. The attempt to nuke the rural school iconforin with the city school is the cause of the decoy in rural education, lust as the failure to make urban life conform with ru- ' jral life is the cause of the present ‘economic distress. l The Master Makes The School How, tt may be mod. dd ouch e school erln in thet secret piece neural in the ew- except what they got to get their i l l CANADIAN DAILY NE jatisfjying THE INNER MAN . . . is Big Business i? Canada's annual food bill is more ‘than 600 million dollars—22.33 per cent. of the entire retail trade of the Dominion. This enormous sum ‘is made up of the laily purchases by the indiiidual house- wife whose task it is to supply tempting and nourishing meals to her family day after day throughout the _voar. Because of the tremendous variety of good things available and the well- known brands from which to choose most women make their selections from the advertisements appearing daily in their local newspapers. Experience has proved to their satisfac- tion that these newspaper advertisements sre reliable guide: to quality and price. W SPAPERS ls.- £8 _P.'8 $82 3E5 141E-