dresses. Pretty Prques Pique Vestees and collars a perfect accessory for knit- ted suits and wool- len dresses $1.00 $1.25 $1.50 Lovely lace col- lars and bows, soft and charming in of- fect, Peter Pan, Jabots etc. ‘ 75c, $1.00, $1.50 “ muzrs AN 0L0 oasss New!‘ a samcnou raoa nus GREAT usw range of beautiful neckwear which has Just been placed on sale to-day - - - will renew and give charm to any of your Some of the new ones are : - Developed in pleated or plain organ- die and organza, there's a group that will delight you at $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 Smart Scarfs iBeSmart..,' Carry a shower pmgf . . . they Will not spot YOU'LL BE INTElL ESTED in these _ ._. _. awide variety of the newest shapes as approved by New York. a Browns Navy Black" "REPEIi- ‘O-WET '7 $1.00, $1.95 YIHREE 0R FOUR new shapes in synth- etio leather will attract you. One particularly has clever ar- ragement for van- ity case and cig- arette case l " $1.00 We are pleased to announce that Mas. E, BYSSHE is visiting us again THE NEMOFLEX STYLIST is visiting in our CORSET Department again on February 27th and 28th to give the ladies oi Charlottetown the benefit other expert advice and experience. Be sure to see her. Mrs. Bysshe can solve your figure problems sud advise the correct foun- dation garment. See the NEMO FLEX models. There's s special fitting room provided. There‘ s a really nota- ble group of soarfs, Ascots, Chinchuckers, throw overs made up in crepe and satin, plain white and black and white 75c, JABOT TYPE white crepe neckwear is high approval t h i s season. uing modes at $1.00 and $1.50 $1.00, $1.50 having Some intrig- BANKVERNilR ADDRESSES SHAREIIULBERS EFirst Annual Meeting ' Of Bank of Canada Yesterday. l OTTAWA, Feb. 25—The slle o! the national income and not the volume oi money in circulation was the vital consideration with respect to prosperity oi the people. Graham Ford “lowers, Governor oi the Bank oi Canada, told the first annual meeting oi shareholders here today. A central bunk, the Governor said. could influence the . ‘ oi credit by using its power to aiioct the ‘ y oi commercial banks’ cash reserves. and when g country was 0i! the gold standard, as Cen- ada is, the central bank could ab- solutely determine. a. commercial bank's cash reserves. But while a policy oi cheap and abundant money was the orthodox contribution oi’ a banking system toward recovery, such s. policy, ii pursued too isr, might bring about an u. manageable situation when a revival developed, lldr. Towers thought. The national income could grow without there being any connection between such growth and the growth‘ oi bank deposits or note . circulation. The total amount oi money in circulation during a boom might-well be has than the volume available during s depres- sion, but enjoying g taster turnover. Only about 40 oi the 11.000 share- holders attended the mnual meet- ing and there was no business ex- cept the reappointment oi the bank auditors and the presentation oi’ the Governor's address. It was quite pecan this would prove the last meeting oi the shareholders under the present set- up in view oi the government's an- nounced intention 0i taking over Ownership oi the bank as well as control. No reference to any pos- sible actlon oi this kind was made in the Governor's address. - BACHELOR TEACHER SOLVES PROBLEM 0F CLASSROOM ROMANCE WIZNDSOR». Ont, Feb. zs-The problem or what .0 do about love- iorn pupils and classroom romance engaged the best minds oi North Essex Teachers Institute here t0- day. A bachelor teacher, Gordon Dufiin of Amherstburg, won the honors with his explanation oi the “love-test,’ a way oi determining i1 the tender‘ emotion is the real thing. Alter a bailled woman clement- ary school teacher had asked lor sdvice on how to deal with a bud- ding romance and two inspectors had stutter-ed and hemmed a little, Mr. Duffin leaped to his ieet and told o! his system. Case history No. One, "the little girl," Mr. Duilin said, "was seated at the front oi tho class and she kept turning around, waving her curls prettily. “I seated the two lovers next to each other. It was pretty bad ior two weeks-but at the end oi two weeks cairn was restored in that part oi the classroom. They wouldn't talk to each other." WRECKING HOME ' AT WIMPOLE STREET LONDON, Ebb. 28—'I‘he home oi Elisabeth Barrett Browning, at 5o Wimpole Street, is being de- moiished. The mantle-piece oi the second- iloor room supposed to have been occupied by Elizabeth Barrett hsd been broken up to become s only pavement in the back garden; the walls had been stripped o! their paper many times; and only on the ilrst iloor did two early Victorian mantle-pieces remain. Since the time when Iflinbeth Barrett described the house es "dark and gloomy" and Tennyson wrote oi Wimpole Street ss» "the long, unlovely street" the house and the street have changed much. Two storeys were added in No. b0 some 50 yes-rs ago—their insecur- ity has made the demolition nec- esssry-e. window st the book is new since then, and most oi the old garden has become a large kitchen and servants‘ rooms. Bi*i2l)i)('i\ i BLOUI) ‘Recovery Move ‘S e t s I n i O n Montreal Market (C. P. By Guardian's special Wire) MONTREAL, Feb. alt-Downward movement o! prices on Montreal Stock Exchange slowed c. triiis to- day but recoveries o! a hail-dose: issues ieiled to give the remainder oi the list u firming tendency. Late rallies pared early losses still showed weakness st the iinish. Metals were steady to slightly high- er while textiles and liquors were National Breweries swirled e point higher alter dividend ’ ‘ “ and announcement the disburse- ments would be increased. The stock closed at. 48 while Canadian Industrial Alcohol “B" dipped I traction. Others were unchanged. Nickel staged n. rwovsry alter sinking steadily during curly decl- ings sud finished even with yester- day's closeoi bl. Norunds was 5i higher while Hollinger wavered but closed even‘. Canada Cement f ’ dipped toaslowufldbeioreilnishlngwith s loss oi 2% points at 88%. Bteel oi Canada was down a point on n single sale while small drops were shown by Dominion Bridge and Canadian Bronsc. Total sales were 32,896 shares; bonds $70,825. Warships Immune To Explosives STAMFORD. Conn. Feb. 25—(A. PJ-Luter Barlow, Stamiord in- ventor, said today he had devised a material possessilng shock-ab- sorbing characteristics which would make warships virtually inunune to explosives: Barlow, inventor oi s type oi depth bomb used in the Great War, declined to disclose the nature oi the material but said its use had been Mae-vied to him by one oi the leading chemists in the United Btates: Barlow said he was ready to ofler- use oi the material to the United States government as s. “lever” in eiiectln, world-wide re- duction o! naval armaments. The material, Barlow said, would “make possible utilization on mar- ine vessels oi armament comparable to that used by the 0.5. Coast De- ience and increase by l0 miles the gunih-e range oi present modern battleships." "The heaviest bomb." he said, "would do little more than scar the point oi contact. Fragments oi s. bomb or the shock oi the explosion would kill persons in unprotected mnes oi the ship, but vessels would be little damaged." .i.__ THINK CANADIAN IN BOOK MAKING (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Feb. 26-A distinct- ly Canadian atmosphere is lacking in the works oi Canadian novelists, B. Morgan-Powell, assistant editor- inwhiei oi the Montreal Dally Star, told members oi a women's club here. At the same time he ques- tioned whether Canadian readers were giving the encouragement they should give to Canadian authors. Granting that, because oi the small home market, the author tended to write with an eye on the reading market outside his own country, Mr. Morgen-Powell believ- ed the Canadian novelist ought to be able to write a book that would possess u. recognised Canadian at,‘ mcsphere and still have I. general appeal to renders. In this respect an American author, Willa Gather, had been more successful than any Canadian, having recaptured m her "shadows on the Rack" the spirit and atmosphere oi old Quebec. Boimd tests in dramatic liter- ature was being developed steadily, thanks to the spread oi the little theatre movement, Mr. Morgan- Powell noted. In this ell credit was owed to the Canadian west ior its pioneer work and the enthusiasm it metered, he sold. No great play bud as yet been written in this oormtc-y, though there were many good one-sot plays, among which Marjorie Pickthalrs “The Wood- csrvers wile" wls outstanding. The Excruclpatlng Pains of Rheumatism .‘ We diseased uricsoidwhichistheeeussofthlsirritet- in heurnti disodrs o; the llwlclad Ofllitlinh‘. ‘ and painful trouble. eurnstim leaves in its train’, distorted aging smoked limbs, crippled hands, and e tlllepslnsnd sgonyisvdhnostun- bearable. Burdock Blood Bitters purities the blood by driving out the uric acid. Get rid oi your rheumatic pains by using 8.3.3. Nazi Sterilization Plans Held Futile IIIIOVAL OI‘ ULUII IOII OUII I03 $NTAL TIOUILI SCIENTIST llYl — CALL! SOBIMI QUAXIIY. "' Insplteoithelierillsstlon u- mosthslismillion in - some number o! unlit would be iound to exist ones more in that country. ‘Ibis is the view exploi- edbyDnnLiber, lecturer in mental hygiene at tbs Polyciinic Medical school, New York City, bl- iore an overflow sudbncc in the Auditorium llhll, Montreal, under the auspices oi’ the lriends oi the Soviet Union. the dQWlOPInent o! thou abnormal- ities endangering society. It those comes were not removed, ed out, Germany would have to [o on sterilizing" right along, for the unfit would always be with them. Those causes he labelled largely economic. They might luvs accum- ‘ulated through the centuries, but combined with environment they were reepo "‘ ior whatever so- cial maladjustment existed amongst indi ‘ ls, he declared. Hnce the social revolution oi the Null was oneinnameonlynthere wlsno deep change in the economic lilo and all the evils oi society irom which most countries in the world were also suiiering were bound to recur in Germany. Whatever eiiect the sterilization oi hrmdredl oi thousands had. thensrore, was only for a short time. Aside irom the social and econo- mic drawbacks oi the mrillntion program, Dr. Lcber tiued. it was extremely diiilcult in condone the drastic remedy groin the viewpoint oi’ genetics. Scientists did not ‘en- thuse, anywhere out oi Germany, over such s. step because oi the ex- treme dlillculty oi drawing s line of demarcation between the normal and the abnormal. ‘ Everyone was normal in physical health and abnormal st the some time and the some applied to men- tul health. It was impossible to say where sanity ended and insan- ity began. Between thctwo these was s diiierence only oi degree, and not oi kind. As tor the ment- M . Paging l ALL Contest Enthusiasts ! joy the fun. l fireside. FIRST PRIZE . ma... m- u. SECOND PRIZE... ;.- vruTImvl ‘Round the World The Charlottetown Guardians greatest con- test starts Saturday. All may enter and en- Every one will have equal chance to win a cash prize, by globe trotting round the world from his own $10.01; Piciiifis of World-Wide Interest. Clues to location, and correct sn- swers to every puzzle picture shown-simple yet intriguing, ‘fascinat- ing. Here is justs hint of the good times in store for every reader oi . this paper. Make sure of your copy on the opening date. Watch for the First Puzzlei TliE OIIARLIITTETOWII GUARDIAN Contest 5.00 ally weak as , ’ and none could tell what normal intelligence was. All tests to that end were simply arbitrary. Heredity was a more complicated siiolr than most people thought, and there was nothing to prove that week minded persons gave birth to idiots. As a. matter oi isct, he stressed. some oi the greatest gen- iuses have come irom mentally ae- ierior people, while mentally sc- ccmpllshed people have sometimes given birth to quiet insignificant oflsprlng. Figs From seeming Thlstles‘ Many scientists were now qua- tioning what Germany's sterilisation program had cost in unborn gen- iuses and wondering how many idiots would be born irom those now considered mentally iit, Dr. Liber said. Turning to the question oi the habitually criminal. he noted that even there it was diiilcult to come to any deilnite conclusions. Crime and mortality standards changed with tip times and what was a crime today might be looked on as normal tomorrow. The speaker concluded with a denunciation c1 the state oi medi- cine as practised in Germany to- day. science was rolegswd to sec- ond place, he regretted, and Nani princip‘es substituted as the pars.- mount consideration. This was s crime against the health oi the nation, ho considered. As contrasted with the situation in Germany, he pictured the con- dition oi Russia. There, he laid. medicine was completely sccislined and ‘every citizen was entitled to irce medical consultation. New re- search institutions were being built all the time and the most eminent scientists invited to work in them. Greet. vmlress in the prophylactic end oi medicine had been mung and ls n result psychoncuios‘ had more or 1cm disappeared, removing the necessity ior sterilisation. COLD COMFORT HIRING. EflAnd-JQP.) —WhQ to 1on8“ their sundsv ivlnt. Those living in the new houses have only electric stoves. SCHOOL IIOKNIQI IIITIII Eastern Gleanings Mr. Aeneas Campbell, Black Pond, was l. visitor tn Bouris on Monday. Mr. Donald I. Campbell, Red Point, was a visitor to Scuris on Friday last. Mr, unset McAulay, Priest Pond, spent the week end visiting iricnds at Red Point. Mr. Michael Mclnnis. Red Point spent the week end visiting iriends st Gowsn Brse. Mrs. J. A. Chin; who has been visiting in Charlottetown has re- turned to hel- home at Red Point. m. and Mrs. Albert Whales, Black Pond. attended the "filly" which was held in Bouris on Tues- dsyllst. Friends oi Mrs. George Robert- son, East Baltic, will be sorry to hear that she is sgsln confined to her bed. - Messrs. Neil Mclelian and Albert Campbell. Red Point, were visitors to Little Harbour on Saturday evening. m. nugri Campbell, nod Point, attended the iunersl oi the late Companions for 50 Years lilo ell Mauls, "IMO! TIIPGlWlIOweei-swell. You wevvrtirssitle estislylqu ihveglstresultsirontioss twellIp-bottvrtoiseeeeul sbettereuro. BRINGING UP FATHER 7' i’ ert oi Boston, and one daughter, “ Ills Bessie Iillls Geldert, oi Bog- inn, Mrs. Geldert predeceased her husband some years ego \ Ill ‘In _ .v.,li II A. I ‘Ill-ll ~ H. Lraliliilllll: ‘i.’ is I v {ilmnmnli m . Hon. John Moi-Mn. Bowie. 011 5"‘ urdsy. w. sci-pert cnmpbsll. mo Point. l; spcndln l. (cw. days in Bouris. the Ilflst oi hi; uncle, Mr. Peter McLellsn. - ' Mr. Pete McDonald. Sourie. spent a iew says visiting at Red Point. the guest oi w. Michael Joseph Mclnnis. ' The many iriends oi Mr. Chesim‘ McNeil]. Red Point, who had the misfortune o! cutting his hand last week, will be glad to learn that he is greatly improved. FTIQHdS oi Mr. John A. Campbell. mdrointwmbesorrvtohvfl that he is confined to his room. Mr. Campbell is spending the winter with his sister, Mrs. Peter Melnnis. Iir. George McDonald, Kingsboro. who has recently recovered irom a" rather serious attack oi la. grippe was g visitor to the home o! Mr. Charles Chins on Saturday 1118m- Quito s. number from the ecst- ern section attended the iuncrel o! the late Hon. John llicliet-n on Bat- urdsy. The memOlT °l n‘! ll“ ggngtm- will live long in the hearts oi his many friends. in the cast- em part oi the Island by NASOTL oi his many acts oi kindness and friendliness during the sixty-seven ' popular obs 1 “C oi "BLACK r sr" at your favor- ite tobacco shop today. ‘x y l '. 9??! 3 ;..._.-. . years oi his business - "‘ in the town oi B01111!- A very enjoyable evcnifll wu gpent gt fllellbllld Oflfltllillll-Y. Campbell on may. Februs-f! 11¢ . wamzboovmncrmorcml unit put on s social entertainment iniorm oilottomd dsncins-El- cellmt music woe XWWW l’? Messrs. Louis Momnis. Pete Mc- Donald. Guns munch!» w! Jm Miller accompanied by We M"! gmpbeu and Mr. Pele McDonald. Bcuris st the emu A very 111W- Qtinfl specialty was step-dentin! by m. J. McKinnon, Monticello- The cnthly meeting oi the Clill- olic Women's 1M8“ m‘ m: unit met st the home oi m. J0 C. Campbell on Monday evenlnl with a iull attensdnce o! mew“ Meeting opened with a D117"- 3: lowed by minutes oi previous mm mg which were read and sdw Discussion on raisins 1W“ place, and it was decided ihbi i: oi the members would ti" hoqgg to plmy games. and til; t msinder or the cveninS WW1 spent in amusements. Lunch Ill then served by m9 “Mu”- “gap by her daughter. M185 Hell“ ing closed with a P111?"- Mr. Attrss oomvbell- 14"" 5"‘ b01- hsg secured the services oi Ill J. McKlnr-ion ior the winter mm .WHEN 0L0 FRIENDS ' to lie! lilfiilfiiiisilPiniiiiiic io- BAOOO to any man who chews. The)’ all acclaim the nut-like flavor wil lasting goodness oi the Island's my‘: g -BY csoaoabicblm“ N —r M E/ET tobacco. Get l b?" i l Ffiiilliiumilnml ti.