} P Tum DOWN T0 EARTH! Wlll. lrono RICH SHORT TALKIES NEWS WEEKLY MUSICAL ACT NOVELTY REEL plfilblb In advance. 11b. 23c, 2 lbs. 45c, 10 lbs. $2.10. 7810-1435“. TURNlPS-Loading (bulk) Mon- y, Tuesday, Wednesday-Dump, cllurloltetown, City Scale . weight. POLICE COURT-At the pOllCC WARD TODAY at 3.15, 1 6r s.4.s raven 1a.. m. xilmr r a a.4s..zoe.s1uI4lse Back to Ham and Eggs! [[15 RITZY FAMILY PRE- FERRED (JAVIER AND COOK- TAILS -— BUT HE BROUGHT ‘this eolnmr. u reserved for Queen’! County new! of loolnl infer-mi but lil- . n wnrrl strictly BUY GARDEN CITY BUTTER hone H. C. Smallwood, Southport. chulomtown ALWAYS coon m1; A LAUGH-AND Ting our; 1s nls BIGGEST: COME IN AND BREAK A RIB! SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES on all lines of hairdressing for a. lim- ited time at the Elite Beauty Salon Phone 1329. T0 ATTEND MEETING-Dr. A. Clark, Superintendent of the m perlmental Farm, left this morning for Toronto to attend a meeting of the Canadian Livestock Association, which is to be held in that city. He will visit Ottawa. before 1'4“! ning home. a OFFICERS 7693-1-21-tf. J. ELECTED — Th0 FOR YOURSELF THE MA clruol T0-liAY PRISON BREAKS EVERYWHERE WHAT.‘ I8 THE REASON? STORY OF TIIE PENITENTIARY. ALSO TORCHYS BUSY DAY Bubble Blowers, Novelty NIGHT 7 d: 8.45 .. l THE CHARI-OTUTEIOWN GHARQLAN_ SEE INSIDE Pulsatlng Drama. ‘Men con- demned but who choose an inferno of gunfire-lighting, killing before they are killed. TINEE 3.15 ...... . 11c, 26c. . . 26c, 37c. SCOUT USIll-‘BS FOR ONT. PARLIAMENT Boy Scouts will once again ac: 7948444, Fm’ Insimmc‘ C°- as ushers at the opening ~ ' ‘he On- held their annual meeting Thurs- lario pyjjfi] w) - ~-~~,,-u- day evening in the Y. M. C. A. Qyy 15, Scout GrOUp of the sick Children's Hospital, Toronto, recently award- - ecl the 8rd Canadian Scout “V.C." the Cornwall Badge, died Dec. 31st. The medaLis given for exceptional fortitude and character, shown dur- ing great suffering, and high stand- ing in Scouting. During eighteen months in hospital scout Kinnaird entertained and instructed other boy patients in the most effective, cheery manner, notwithstanding the early certainty of his death. r ANOTHER SCOUT "VS." By unusual coincidence following the third award within a few weeks. the fourth award to a Canadian Scout of the rare Carnweli Badge, the “V.C._" of Scouting, was made to Scout Myddlcton MacKenzie of jvlcioria, B. c. Tile medal was given for exceptional, cheery fortitude during some twelve years of mlffer- ing following partial paralysis when 7 years 9g age. In spite of a useless. paining arm, Scout MacKcnzie pro- PAGE give; TION S Montreal Stock Market .\li\iill~'.ll Pouer . I Nnl lirmv _ Poul-l- lwlrp _ Qiii-llv." iHm-e Sillnrilliuzlll Sir-oi n!‘ (‘lln Willllipcg ill . . Pivotal New York Stocks (Cllinflllll Preu) Hindu Alllonl Fllelllil-ul .. Am llml i‘ Power Alll Null-hing , Au! Tel and Tel Anncnlllin . . . . .. Alr-llison Auburn Motor . i.‘ I’ It .. ' ulili oiuJ llelnivllre and Hlld . llllsllllnll ... (loll lliioclr-ic (loll Ffilllll iiell Motors North American Pub For N J ... .-.... 47% “an ma“: §_...._.S_all '.':.'. ' 4 l,‘;:{,'1;:;;:,-_ it“ "lllnllulldrlllvlo mm": (‘up "o" "'.'<'“'° 3525312 ‘Til’. thlfifalhliurfh‘ u...“ lliues .... .. no Vviljliilliflllié. . lVoollivrill . 1v. KICIIJIQB (Cnnndlnl Prue) i GRAIN “'l.\f.\'ll'l~.‘ivxlul»dliz,l. 511"” ,. mvlilil-‘H Mo: 2m; July 23a; Oct "shorier: 51w 299i; July 2555A; Oct CASH PRICES : .\. 1 hunk-foil“ So 1 nor ’ llul- 125a,; l\'u 3 llur 409;; ‘u’ .\0 5 iiliiu: Nu ll ditty; k 4-i- 5950; $0 ‘-' dllruul 4b lilo: Nu 4 durum " Ulllll: No '.' l.‘ \V Al) l. llllflllll N0 3 C \V L’. ford 10%; Truck 27%. MINING i (Cllinlllll Prue) Sloeln .li'il|(! Oil ... ... ... ... ..... .\_l.l‘Z Oll Alex . ilnule Mines . l"lli"l<lEi'e /.. ... ... llrrlllnlln . llilll (‘one . llPHVE-Y (lnlll Kirk llllll .. Kirk Luke .. Lllirv-lunll liar-asses... ... .. Luke Khoro ... Iillinrtlc _ won; wflilrah Mil)’ lib-.... uuly lulu; Out ~ Burgoyne; Forwards, J. Cudmore, J. _sT0cKs 501mg, QUOTA. —lst, Elmer Gallant; 2, Charlie DBIBhlI-n: 3rd, Norman Macleod. 3 Lap Race. girls i0 and ii. years old-lat, Anita, Huestis; 2nd, Mar. Jorie Moliison; 3rd, Rena Key. 2 Lap Race, boys 5 years old—ist, Frank Clwv; 2nd. Stewart Wells. 3 59D Race. boys 9 years old-lst, Lloyd Allen; 2nd, Jimmy Wood; 3rd, Urban Morrison. 3 Lop Race. girls 12 years old-ist, Ruth Rhodes; 2nd. Ruth McLeod; 3rd, Louise Leblanc. 4 Lap Race. boys l2 years old-l, James McNeili; 2nd, Cyril Hickey; 3rd, Gussie Arsenaull. 4 Lap Race. boys 13 alld 14 years old-lat, James Hogan; 2nd, Russel Ramsay; 3rd, Everett Phillips. 3 Lap Race, girls 13 and 14 years (Yd-lit. P288? McCailum; 2nd, Ruby McNeil; 3rd, Edith Williams. 5 Lap Race, boys 15 and 16 years old-1st, Keith Jelly; 2nd, Edgar Brown; 3rd, Elmer McDonald. Potato Race, boys-lat, James Mc- Neil; 2nd, Herbert Arseuault; 3rd, Bennie Arsenault and Gussie Ar- senault. Potato Race, girls - 1st, Ruth Rhodes; 2nd, Ruth Dodds; 3rd, Babe McDonald and Louise LeBianc. Snowball Race-Leonie Arsenault. Lineups of hockey teamsz: w~ K- s-r-Gbai, N. Price; 'De- fence, L. Simpson, C. Higgins; M. Rattenbury, P. Durrach, J, saun- ders, C. Johnson, BI Jones, D. Ram- SOY. S. H. S.--Goal, R. Muttart; De- .of widows, orphans, aged clergy ‘and bishops. and had come mm with the legal and investment firms, Machray and Sharp, with also had had money invested. A; a become known that the University had lost millions and the church $700,000. Anglican Church officials hac met and as an executive council decided that the Church in Can- ada would undertake to restore thl losses within the next three years. Canon Good was organizer for the men, and Mrs. McElheran for the Women. It was hoped that the funds would be restored within three years. In glle meantime of- ficers of the missionary society, missionaries in the foreign field, and those under the society m Canada were giving seven. per cent. of their incomes to make up the stipends of- missionary bishops in five dioceses. The bishops and other clergy were giving toward the maintenance fund in order that the work might continue as if nothing had happened. Archbishop Stringer remarked that since 1893 when hc had first gone into the Arctic he had seen a great change come over the In- dialls. Many had been converted and a number had been ordained Thirty years ago, when he hai preached in St. Paul’; Church on fence, R. Prichard, Lorne Monkley; Forwards, C. Steele, R. Sliilphant, G. DesRoches, D. Mclllllis, E. Slll- ilvan, W. Perry, A. Sullivan, V. Clough. Ofllcialsw-Referee, C. Montgom- ery; Starter, J. P. McPherson; Judges of Finish, lifayor E. W. Manson, Louis Campbell, Keilll Jamiesoll, Albert Sillipllanl, R. W. Robinson, Arthur Alien, Arclllv Sharp; Announcer, C. B. Jcliys-S. -__.__.______ i’ i one occasion, there were no con vcrts in the Arctic, but the lihkl nlos had changed. 1t was seventeen years after hp had first gone to thl AYCliU before ile had had n. con- version. They new have their own teachers, and one ordained clergy- mall. If fluids were not replaced the \\'0rk nlllollg illP Eskimos would llarc to he curiuiiecl ullrl discon- iluueri. It was fol" the Church to answer whether these regions in Northern Canada would revert to lloalllfllisnl, and other districts rc- Engiand. All had been invested“ whomthe University of Manitoba ~' result of an investigation, it bu: ' I Hull. The following board of di-| ‘mm "P" Yerrifcfed- Hm Gw- Arolrslvls: u NOW llAS uov E. Hughes, Presidant; A. c, Duche- gressed steadily in Scouting and on 'reachfng 18 years assisted in run- i main in ileatilenism. | During the last week the Arch- EMINENT Took Hugllcb vacuum Vipond . Court, Saturday luol-nillg u. mani charged with breaking and entering l" Mflrfioiil -- ‘ties Service (Continued from Page 1) Y ay‘a Wharf, and Magdalen $4.600; Pictou, I"'ands, SOCIAL GATHERING — An en- yable and largely attended auc- ion forty fives was held at the sidence of Mrs. P. McQuaid, ydl-ley St... 'I'llurscllly evening, in id of St. Charles Auxiliary. The l- ze winners were: Ladies‘ 1st ize, Mrs. F. J. lVlcKrarney; 2nd. rs. P. McMahon. Gentlemens, l . P. Gallant. At the conclusion the games a dainty luncheon u sencd by the hostess. FUNERAL SERVICES-The large lierldllllce at the funeral Satur- ai’ morning of Miss Catherine M. nmpbcll wll a worthy tribute to‘ memory of this est-liable young W. whose earthly career was "Eht to a. close at the early age l 25 years. Deep and sincere is l. sympathy extended to the sor- 8 parents and other memb- _ the family mourning a be- drlughter and sister, whose "able disposition and fine gifts mind and heart had elldcurcd er lo a wide circle of friends. The "a! proceeded from the home h" Parents, Mr. and Mrs. James 7mi>beli, to St. Dlll15l.£l.l'l8 Basil- lli, where Requiem High Mass was ‘hated by Rev. Terence Camp- P11 of Albrton, uncle of the de- Wtii- The pail bearers were: lean. u. Phillips, v. Maddigan, Wit Blanchard, J. Lonergan, bills Mullins, and Earl Taylor. its Campbell was laid to l-esl 1n i! Roman Catholic Cemetery at “Mn Ban, where other memb- l3 of the family are buried. Ser- at the church there were con- ?" bi’ Rev. George Macdon- Colds Go VERNlGl-IT err You Take This Famous Tablet in Time $311: run sign of a 001d, take unliis Laxative Bromo Quinine. It d Y rxpeis the cold over night Mdilhlls prevents the infection um hi; within the system. Mums Laxative BROMO .”..i°."..‘i“’°“" "°°““‘° l.‘ uga ecessary. a"; the bowels, ills the cold m 3:10 fever in the system, re- m a headache and tones the ufifzgm. Now two sizes-ace u," m“ all druggists Accept I borough, Ma Marlborough Hospital in Marl- ss, for her hospital work. _ TRAINING COURSE — Sergeant Trainer, Constable P. L. Jay and Constable P. L. Boudrcauit, of the L. Division of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, arrived home Sat- urday evening from Halifax, where they complewd a six week's course in the Mounted Police Training School. Constables N. A. Shaw, W. J. Monaghan and J. G. Lines left this morning for Halifax to tnkc a similar course. CLERGYMAN ARRIVED _- Rev. John Henry McGuire of the Re- dcmptorist Order arrived in the city last week and will be permanently attached to the staff of the Church of the Most l-loiy Redeemc . For the last two of Three years Father McGuire has been connected with the staff of the St. Alphonsus 59m- inary, Woodstock, Ontario. He was in the city for a short time a few years ago shortly after the opening of the new church. Father McGuire who is a native of St. John. N. 3;. has two brothers, Rev. Leonard and Rev. Austin McGuire who are also of the Redemptorist Order. PERSONALS Mr. George D. MaeKinnon of Sherbrooke, P. Q, who has been on a. business trip to this city left Saturday morning on return home. Mr. MacKinnon is a brother of Mr. J. J. MacKlnnon of Charlottetown. W. Keir Murray, with Maritime Electricians, Charlottetown, P. E. I., spent the weck end in town, visiting his parents Bic-Mayor and Mrs. W. K. Murraay, Queen Street. Friends of the ex-mayor will re- gret io learn that he has been con- fined to his home with iilnass for the past few weeks-Truro News- Miss Mary Hiltcheson, B6 Fitzroy Street, left yesterday morninS 5°!‘ Montreal where she will join her mother, Mrs. W. A. Hutcheson. who has been visitinfl "er dauzhter. Mrs. .1. a: Harper for the port month, They expect to relum to their home in Cilarloftetown the latter part of February. Mrs. B. Waller of the Rare Ma- rie Hair Dressing Parlour, has re- gumgd from Tnonto. where she attmded the National Hair Dress- ers Convention. She was ficwm‘ mittee ls planning a part folrBoy Sc:uts in the inaugural ceremonies at Washington, March 4 next. TOTEM POLE CARVING FOR BOY SCOUTS Full-size totem pole carving has been taken up by Ottawa. Boy Scouts under the Donlinionh lead- ing exponent of the Pacific Coast Indian art, former Alrcraftsnlan Abolit of the R. C. A. F. The first pole completed will be el".""‘""l at the district camp site. yQUEllEC LIE-GOV. ASKS r LKIUTS l TO EXAMPLE FRIENDLINESS That French-Canadian and Eng- lish-Canadian Boy Scouts would, as true brother Scouts, 5st an example i0! stressing those things held in ‘icommon rather than racial differ- ences, and so help make Quebec the greatest province of the Dominion. was the hope expressed by His Hon. ILL-Gov. H. o. Carroll at a recent ,Scout gathering in Quebec City. 'His Honour presmtcd the Honor- ary Silver Wolf to Col. William Wood, for many years President of the Quhbee city scout Association. NEW ARCHBISIIOP OF ONTARIO A STRONG SUFPORTER OF BOY SCOUTS The Rt. ‘Rev. John Charles Roper. D.D., the new Anglican ArchbishoP and Metropolitan of Ontario, has for many years been a strong Sill)- porter of tilt‘ BOY 5°°\1l'5- 5 mm“! of the Executive of the Canadian General Council, and of the Domin- ion Boy Scout Medal Board. ONTARIO SCOUTS OF MANY CHURCHES The 193': Boy Scout coll-fills rrlwrl- for Ollltl"? shows 338 out 0f 516 Scout Gl‘f‘l[)5 sponsored by church- es: Angll an 172, United 70, Pres- byterian 46, Roman Catholic 21, Baptist 13, Greek Catholic 1, Friends 1. The greatest increase was in United Groups. Interdenonlination- al community groups and ‘units sponsored by hospitals. Canadian Legion, I. O. B.-E. Rotary, and Lions ciobs, etc, make up the bal~ ance. A SCOUT "V.C." PASSES Scout waliaze Kinnalrd of the Sinclair and tho latterb daughter, puny“ on mum by he; pistol‘, MrsJi/iiss Catherine Sinclair. Special meeting-Social Hall. FAMOUS FAMILY DYING OUT IDCNDON,— Feb. 4—(C. P.) Through the d"atll of Alfred Mu- die, at 89 years of age, tile famous irumlly which first taught Lolldon the circulating library habit is left w'th only one member-Arthur O. Mudie. More than 90 years ago Mudlo's Library started in Cheyne Wallk, Chelsea. It moved f0 Bloomsbury in 1844, where it has remained, but at different addres- ses, ever since. Many famous au- thors of the Victorian period owed a good deal of ~their popularity to Mudrs. It put into circulation 3,000 cop’es of George Eliot's "Sllar Marner," and more of Dieraelrs "Endymion." Livingstones “Tril- rels" were brought by the firm into prominent notice. and later Still Stanley's “In Darkest Africa." Nowadays Mudles have a host of competitors, of course, but they also secure new subscribers in plenty. ROLLO BAY EAST INSTITUTE ‘the members held their January meeting at the home of Mrs. An- drew F. Peters, with seven mem- bers and five visitors present. Meeting opened by reading, "A Club Woman's Creed" and the Roll Call answer was the payment of annual fee. Minutes of last meeting were Icad and approved. after which a discurcion took place concerning ways and. mean; of raising funds. Members finally dc- cided to make a patchwork quilt and have lottery on same. The mu- sical part of the program consisted of piano selections by the Misses Margaret Peters and Minnie Chais- son. A dainty lunch was served by the Misses Margaret and Sarah Peters and the meeting adjourned by singing the National Anthem. Mrs. Jerome B. Chaisson kindly invited the members to her home for the nexgmetiting when mis- lswer to Roll Call will be Valentine Verses. N. lljicloLean UNDERTAKER EMBLAMER Charlottetown and North Wlltuhire Phone I49 . f0 D_UCE . (Canadian Prel!) ’ .\l0.\"1‘ili-i.\l._ ll‘ l. fi-lilrgs mllin- illlllell liloir upward lrr-llvi on the Montreal prolluco and dulry market lust week. , . lligilt urrivrlla enabled the egg lurlrket lo hold the om- crnt gain re- onrliori burly ill the week. Receipts fo- liillPll (LT-ill oases us compared with SflSi) rust-s the previous n-eek. (‘ar- lols or lifill of fresh graded extras were lplnloil nl: lilo rinse of the wot-k nt L‘! rents for oxlrna, 10 cellla for firain, pulleta at 1S cents and seconds at 17 cents a dozen. Some odd ables nt huif a cent under these levels were mnorled. " Butter l-nnml ll fraction no i grass mnkc finishing lilo week at '.'0'-', to 200a cculs n liiliillll. Volume lllllflll_ receipts being 1H2 ilnxell. Potatoes llcviinrli fire cent: n ‘bug New Brunswick green mountains lell- in: at 75 cents per 80 pound hag. Prince Edward island green. moun- illina at S0 in 5.7 rents per Si) pnnnrl W3! hug llllll nt 90 to 95 rents prr 00 pnullll llllg. (‘ileese held steady, current n:- rrlpln n1’ Ontario whin- lleing quoted at 0 eellfa, (‘olorell at 10 cents nnll early make at 10V, to 111,1 events ll pound. llreeipls for the week were S15 boxes. EXCHANGE (Cnnndiun Pro-all .\lO.\'Tlll‘2A , Foil 'l—~llI'lllSll mill fnrbilm exl-iulllzu lll l-oL-lllnn in the (‘nlllulilln dollar, as eonlniioll ily the lloynl Bank of Culluiln, closed irllluy us follows:- Argentlne, peso .30SR. Arlllirrllio pnunrl 8.2120. llolgillili lu-lgn Jll-"Jl. liruvql mllrviil .0$'.lfI. (‘iliun llnnl: Ron! ilnllzl Czechoslovakia rrrm-n .0” lmnlnllrk krolll- .1503. Flulllnll filllnnri: .0180. Frnllce frnllu Milli. France franc .0101. Germany roil-ilsnlurk ARE-i. fireut llriluin pnllvni 4.0.775. ilrorce lll“lli'lllllll .0067. llflllllllll flor-lll , . IIIIIIKHYX pellgo 0. . Illillll rupm- "IT". llllly lire .0 Jnpnn you . . r .0100. Now Zonlulni “xliilll .".'.”.’i.<. Norway krone 07. Pnlunll zlnli .1 llnumunin lrru .0073. South Afrirn pmlnll ~i0i.“.T. Spnin posloln .0974. Swollen krnue 2N7. Switzerland frnllv ._ United States ilollnr Iiflflllllllll. RIIEUMATISM Pour Mlnnrl‘! into a wII dleh. Rub ii ‘nsenrgenlly in lben lpply-lf lcrvtdlll lo lone . . ndooen you'll get nlleil MlNARETS ‘liliiii ill’ Piiiil” 2°93. i=3; percent 19:‘ 1lr\\'l'0l<-1\ . (‘an kirk . (‘up Ronyn ... (‘out Pat ... ... . (‘illmn Jar-k liilln . Kirk llunt . Kirk Town flake liinron Rlnlroblc Night Hawk Pawnee Kirk Preston _So Keom ‘ S’8 I DE HIE Siiilfliil SPURTS The annual ice sports of the Summerside High School were held in the Crystal Rink on Friday ev- elling and were a great success and very well attended by parents and friends of the children. A feature of the evening was a hockey game between West Kent School, Charlottetown, and Sum- merside High. Tile game was a close one and ended in a tie- Both teams played excellent hockey and some clever play was seen. The game was good and fast all through providing plenty of excitement for the fans. In the first Pbriod Darrach scor- ed a goal for West Kent and in the second Period Prichard evened the score for Summerside. The third period was very exciting and early in this period, Johnson scored an- other golll for the visitors. The home team getting very determined, made some good rushes, but only when tile period was almost at an end did they manage to even the score, Steele saving the situation for thcnl by running up the lcr: with the puck and in a litllc nlixup in front of the net, shot the lluck home. Tile game ended in u tie, the score being 2-2. The different races and Ollie!‘ sports provided plenty of fun for the spectators. Al! events were run off very well. Mayor Manson upen- ed the proceedings, and a!l@i'\\‘i\i‘d5 congratulated the children on their fine showing. The program and winners: _ Reilly Racc——W. K. S.: J. Ration- bury, D. Ramsay, T. Simpson, B. cmbhe; s, 1-1, 5,; c, Steele, R. Sil- qloa-onggdi-usg Basis?- s. 35 3-2;: $4§$ F prehensive view of conditions and needs beyond our own borders." The history of the misslOrl work of the Anglican Church in the west was reviewed from its inception in 1820, when Rev. John West, a Hud- son Bay, Co, chaplain, began preaching in Western Canada. The mission work had been built up little by little. Bishop Anderson, 9h! first bishop had been succeed- ed by Bishop MacRar, who had been succeeded by Archbishop Matheson. The speaker had suc- ceeded the latter a. year and a. half ago, after having been five years Bishop of Yukon and having spent thirty years at mission work in ‘the north. Reference was made to the fin- ancial disaster which had over- taken the work in Western Can- ada. in which the Anglican Church had 10st $760,000 in church funds. This money the saving of which had been begun by Archbishop MaoRae had been for the support was remanded until Tuesday. mm, vice President. a w Ritchie I SCOUTS Ining a. Cub Pack or Sc"ut Troop 1 pond "q sill}. ,__’; ...: 2%’ wright Hal- i ____ lbishop has visited various congre- N_ Mcxenzh,’ E s_ comm h a with the latest addition Afghan WhCIICVEP his physical CODGltlOr gel’... .. ... . us‘ éiéiaiaééé‘ w“, Gal. a, 2. “Bu: ye one moth gations in New Brunswick. He will oun REGULAR $10.00 Pim- Tanmn and D, J H A3,.“ Audb j permitted. l..- Illlll . l’. (.105 burdens and so rum, m law-spend the secular pm of thfl ro- LANENT WAVE ‘vlth rm 1e . . . . istan, there are new ninety-four q, 0111M _ _ 301/, gyplunqp _ "a _ ‘ c nlamder of this “.001, m Nu" 8 tends‘ tors. G. H. Holbrook Secy~Treas i = ,__ _______ |of Christ In IIIITOClUClIOII lie fliliranleed. fOl‘ $2.50. Mason's - ' ' were“ mmmms “d "ms “f m .: . . -. .- ,... m. u... .. . 0mm, ‘t m t h . l swim. and will than leave for aut sho . For a‘ intment call . Bums“ Empire i“ “m ' ' ‘ l W! 7 ‘7'C"P°°' ' -- 1U” p on a um“ bemgs Quebec. Montreal. and Ottawl- F“ Y P PP° - compares TRAIN NG-Miss . ' runner-rm -‘ generally in Canada and elsewhere m. veoa-z-z-n. Manon E Newsm daughter o, w -°°¥“° i“ N““°"5~ I 0 < yum-ml. 118 Wm hummus to Name howl a noted figure who h!!! carried and Mrgsamuel iqewson of King‘- v v MONDAY ____ “Tlnlrlgigbniqkv ~ m0 much more peep‘? are now depmly y the gospel of Christianity ihto the STEAMSHIP SUBSIDIES. —The U- 5- 500"“ "i W c“ . ... . . . , - w" wl it“? ifal‘ north lands of Canada. Arch- ston. Prince Edward Island who fi- u..4\. lntelmediate C. G. I. T., r.g (Canadian In") 4-3, em; one upqn gnome,- than ‘Q1111. , , role for Mail Subsidies and Steam- cqmy entered the Trammg school INAUGURAL I m“ meetmg_slmal Han 11am] . 1o my i bishop Stringer has had a {emark. P illbvi-‘llmns Boniifilns "l0 ffll- ‘Iv A“ ' f ‘ ~ ‘in all" "a '“ m 1' A ‘m .. ' able as well as strenuous career in d i; y g . LOO-Trail Rangers, regular mect- H" If" -,.. . . ill Q lndsy h Swim-L u b _ wing: Charlottetown and Pictou or‘ enlfin Nurses F050!» 1185 At the direction of Presldent- in _soclml Han. _ vii ‘ism’ l~,,fk',.‘,.g 1s com,“ m em h are e_ me “finish-y of the Angling 000. Charlottetown Victoria and l!“ °°ml> Jed her tra ning at the Jest Roascvelt’ n,“ Inaugural Co“ B I ‘up P > - H u I18 more calla e t an ever be C1 h g ’ ' school and ha; now any-red me vac-Committee of Stewards —l .,, 1;“, 9% arms fore of taking a broader and com- “i” ' ' Five years before the Klondyke i gold rush, graduating from Toron- to and then from Wycliffe College, this young clergyman who stand! six foot tall set out for Herschel Island, one of the farthest North mission posts of the Anglican Church in Canada. This lay 2,000 miles north of Edmonton. When in i896 he was married and his wife went north with him, she was the only white woman. inside the Arctic Circle, the post lying 400 miles within it. The Eskimos had no writun language and. had little idea of civilization, He prepared an alpha- bet and finally translated the goo» pels into the Eskimo tongue. He ministered to all sorts of people in his vast territory, doing much travelling in his wide diocese. Nat- urally enough he encountered many hazards. In 1909, along with an assistant, he lost his way and their rations ran out. Advertising Rates- Enllern locals, 2o. per word; ings, Cards, etc, 4c. per nam or 4o per word. Other rates Minimum Charge for any cents. ltATl-Iz-Zb per I0 . three in- sertions for the price of two, strictly payable ln advance. Central Guardian locals, Events. 2c. per word; Clal-Ilfled, 2c. per word; ln Memorinm Notices, 70c. per inch; Lists of Floral and Spiritual Offer- per inch; Notices of Thanks and Appreciation, 70c. per inch 004-090-0- vrvv Payable in Advance 4c. per word; Western and <> Announcements and C ' g P e; Letters of Condolence, 70c. ,1 on applications. j, advertisement twenty - five ,, 0 _ rrv To Let For Sale FOR. SALE -— COLLIE PUPS. McLean, Clyde River. 7939-2-4-31. II. T0 LET - FOUR. ROOM FLAT, unfurnished. Apply 177 Kent St. 7930-24-31. Female Help Wanted WANTED BY FOR SALEP-SIIORTIIORN BULL, age five, weight about fifteen hundred. Alfred Woods. Albany. R. R. 1. 7026-2-4-31. FOR SALE -- THOROUGHBRED Newfoundland Pups. The child's faithful companion. Reasonably priced. M. Sullivan. Ki korn, P. E. liphant, E. Hickey, Dull Mclllnis. Won by W. K. S. l-ltluiiiNl l Lap Race, boys and girls '1 years and under-lst, Gordon Beers: 2, Pauline Todd; 3rd, Lloyd Allen. Island. 7911-2-3-31. FOR SALE - SEVERAL bred brood Bows, nice incihllluul: 3 Lap Race, boys lo and 11 years Charlottetown. IVELL _ due to farrolv earfy and priced to sell. If interested write 130x 399, 7933-24-31. CARBOARD SUITABLE FOR ilOUsI-IK lining out-houses, etc, 1c per luull. handy town, ull improve- sheet. Guardian Office. tf. lucnls, Apply Guardian. 7937. FOR SALE — AUCTION FORTY- ' ,. Five, Bridge and Whist Score M‘S"enaneouS Cards. Guardian Central Job "" " “ Prlnteng Now 14L IOIIN AlfillED McDONALD. PRO- vincini Land Surveyor, Hermon- ville, (R. 3, Bouris)’ Lost I LOST-BLACK FOX- CHAFED ON both lips, Plcasc notify M. Cor- bett, East Royalty. 7955-11 Wanted WANTED-OFFICE DESK AND book shelf. P. O. Box 352. Tel. 1976. 7958-2-6-31