a-o..~._.. l A .,___,___._._. - warn-t ~ ' WTHE iiiiiililiiiiliiiii iililiiiilili PHhGE FOUR Indiana, I. Chute: l. Islam; flee-Product. I. l. lunati- Ilordnr . that. Col. D. A. Iuellllol. D. l. 0. Illkr all Inulnr, . l. lunat- lnodato litter, D. I. can“. ' The GUAIDIIN may ha obtained from llta following’ agent: h Charlotte- own: A. Intro, Man; Valar- Railway Bonlattll. Maritime titallotaerl. (irnltol filroot. I. D. Taylor, Groltnn direct. Curler Q C0,. Queen Strut. Fred (iiuuiel. linnat (ieorln Ntrutl. Alu. lloPhorlon. Queen Pllrltatt. Frank .\. Kay's, m ulnar...” |m-~;_ I‘. J. Mcluull. lileNolll Building, fiututtterttitle. ll. A. Paquet, sou-la. W. .\. doltm-lon, Montague. NEW \'0|(l\ llrhultl Sea": tltuulo—i4. E. (‘on “m! titre-rt k rilxfh Avenue; t4. III. (‘or 41m lilroot A llmaalwayt 02nd Street. Ottpoaito firnnd (‘ntlrnl liq-pot; N. E.‘ (‘or Hm! first A 851th Atenue, t0ppnalfo lilniln-l Bros.) and llotallng‘; new; Depot. Barclay Street, Entrance Woolworth Building. BOSTON Ira. L. Doacotte, 2O flprlnl Park Banal, (i. Tuutlina, Kent Street Wont. n Duffy. llh-hmuml Street. . Phfllnla \\'l\ifl‘. I25 Ifllt AVE. h‘. ‘lvvnal, 4i Elm Avenue. Notes by the Way A Canadian Reunion was held at Oakland, California. 0n April 19, the proceedings at which were Recorded in the ivcll-kttotvtt nud widclyrttatl Maple Lcaf witlt which tnany Prince Edward island read- cre are familiar and under whose auspices tlte gaiitcrittg was ltelil. it-wau a notable assembly in which every Province of Canada was represented, as wcil as States of the (lreat Republic. .\i. A. Mc- ltt-ttis, editor ot the >.\laplc ,l.cat. presided. “Canttdlattsfl he said in his tipettittg address. "are itutottL: Old ltioulh Howl. M. Andie-mane. Sow Toll lloprenenfntlve-i graham Penal-l, Ina. Chicago Representative-JD. J. Pnwnr. v i MONDAY, MAY 17, 1926 i i ferred to now think somebody W1". indulging in terminological inexact» TOO MANY COOKS it is well known, and has bce.t ludes. "u" ‘he Pmmm“ 0f new»; the sydncy Boardiof 'l‘radcl illiti, ,w3ll|_ed to hear; ,t was tlte kind of news the govel-nnn-ttt wanted tltent to hear . And there you arc! Of (JOilISc it tvas the killd for some time, Provinces of lite .\ia.rit.tne their provincial gowrntttent have been preparing a joint briclf for prteeutation t0 the fcdcral gow-rtt-i Maritimei rue HUDSON BAV rottv grievances and suggesting possible. inont respecting certain r-tttetiics. The matter should b-‘i h“ mun“: rot Montreal’ is quhci .frauk about. the lludtsott Bay Folly! iand soul-c other llllligg in its prov-i ince. 1t says in a recent issue- | ‘The -l’mvince of Quebec watttu none of this mad venture, yet the iltrovittce of Quebec wiil- have t0 lcft to them. Atty suggc-stiotts or threats from unauthorkzttivt- sout- crs can do no good and may even do harm. Tho tvholc matter must b!‘ Diflvvfl upon a solid attd infertil- cd ioultdarou. pri-scitted authorith. _ . UH“, ,0 m? prop" umhorims_ Thmpay because it rs tntserztbly rcpr-c. Profiucia] whenwrlsentcd and miscrably' tiefettdvtl by liibcrai proptr sources from which the nec- KUVGTII lllfilllfi, igentry whose aim i1 is to use their or Cottscrvzttive, are the, power for their own ends, witctitnrl the protrincc suffers or not. Never-l should tzvillt‘ l ihviP-HS, we who clcctcri titesc sixty. “wary iuformaiiott and lltct proper fltiVifivfs as lo :t r . . - r~d l‘ ’S‘t‘fl,‘ f'0 n ~b -t:. 't watt- soittttott. (intrude and random mos- ‘ M’ L g ' m Q ' i M i l crlptttttts can only ten-d to further not Hui lnmd ‘l Hm“ pm") “U! . no even a -bi; of tin, to ituri into romplicatotts and prniottgtril attd i th Not cvcu a . littrlsott llay pit. usf les- tiiscttseion. Whcth-tr utcttts shall , , bi of tin. altd it is tnllliotls thati the Provtttt-tai govcrtt- 1 reds ttltd ltrogrtssives are ask-i » i deal tl'rP-t-l tvith ‘~‘.'.l': '-'--.ti Mural gowrmnou‘ w through m“ ill... oi us low mtvi w: tum tt trust ltoyal (‘ilmmissititt tvhicirittis iii-on pasisltg our ruin zthoy embrace us tltcsi- utctt who arc cltcottt- “fulfill” ii "SW05"!!! l0 illvfiflliiilil! iPattadtltus wlto have cxilctl titcut- only that. they may slraltgic. us to‘ tho gricvatlctss uttder which the ‘ hlarititttf-s ar-- being httttdicftppcll, 'l‘itcv _ cr and. poss-"iliy. its attimadvcrsfon upon which l H f ‘ x _ t - t‘ - . A-t‘ - t0 formulate their Clisvl they haven!“ I; l 0 '\ o o u mg ‘In’ d llll(lf‘.l'i3Ak‘t‘ll it and It will be best u) (H h“ mflwfld m “e mm Q _ of these leave it to _ fear that, if they conltttuc titcir un- is for [hi-titsctvcs to decide. have plenty material men lttl-tttliers a wltuicwttttc for all cottccrttcd lo tin-tn. holy alliance with the Progressives. _—_""’—i for tin-fr own ends and to the de- triment of titcir uwtt province, they may hc asked to come home. 'l"itis partly at least, for AlNTfClPATlNG Al. a rite-cut mm ting of the Sytl- "my iwmmii" "up N S‘ Board M. Trude‘ Mr. L) Dliti- feet ttt ciutngo in the ‘libvitrtt- chi-rte, One of the Liberals s°m°b°liy i“ went down to ticfeztt in The“ is ‘mite a perceptible citiilttesg in the air illlPlll lust who PFOKFIIIIHIN‘. mp evidently kicking. gctwral election. and who scents to or me Vie," once balttty and invigorating when then mfornttxi the Board that the Taril‘ itave changed ‘some the ‘ibetteficeltt ntie" was at tho ticfeated, Liteigitl of its Iboncficence I for which h~- wits (‘omuttisslon was scbedttlcrl to trislti ' symmy “mm!” EDITORIAL Novas tho. Board i lit-ply authorized to state that the ilc also informed, that he was alttltorltzt-l the 'l‘ariil' Board would put on a 1Il'f)ll‘.l1'i.§l.l'll‘S and the Mayiiowers urt- lterc Now that. the iterring. lob» l'vn ditty tons-ufvgttttril iltcgslccl tug-Spring may be expected along at dustry. Ilc ntado flu-so staIctttt-tttsciattty time. itc stlifi, on bcltaif of tin- Khtg gov-i erhmqng, if lite wtoailu-r of the past iwo m view of .\lr. ('ilrl‘it"ti gtrattge- days is cotttinucd the 24th of titty to arrive on i-tttticipation of the Tariff Boards may i"! QXDBCIM m my.) schedule time after all. sltnsibio prwtpic in Nova Scotia ttnd intentions rt-spcct, nttttty iT-itcrt- are ice ‘banks in ntauy elsewhere began to wonder what - ‘ _ _ places along the roads which. ti‘ the Tariff Board had itccn altpotltt- _ _ ll‘l'lll0Vtd-flil(l it would involve little if the Ktttg government] ed for. work-would vor sltorti make had changed its mind and itttnnd- y y Overseers tlte roads passulyic. cd enacting a protective duty which it had persistently refused during its five yeam tenure oi‘ office, why ail the fuss about the Tariff Board? ‘Was the Tariff Board to be tnereiv should see to litis." M-ayflowcrs, the tus, the our wild trailing arbu- ioveliest and earliest of flowers appeared last a ruhbr-r tsiantp giving its ctt- wcfrk itt the ‘Charlottetown utnrkot dortwntont. to thr- fittdingv; of the 1-0,. um first “me "m, 30,150“ n King govcrttntottt? it looked very was unusually 1a“, b," “Om. the .. of life." ticath.“ istateti retrcntly in Parliament, the La .\littct'\'t' i'.\ alt infhteittlal pap-utulttbct‘ of Canadians our best citizens here lu California. ‘fhey are successful in every walk "Oignified ladle: pant middle life, handsome matrona, charming young women and girl; and stai- wart men crilvfltl the occasion by their presence." we are told. A-ntottg those present witnsc name-s were published with" their former places of residence were 1H front Pt-ittce Edtvarti isla-ttd. 4Z5 front .\'ova Scotia and long lists front other Provinces. Rcltresetttatives Ht‘ Prince Edward island hailed from ‘Bay Fortune. Souris, Kittkura. Eldon. New Perth, Georgetown, Rlotttagtte. Cltarlottetotv-tt, Sutu- merside, Tryon. _Souris East. Souris \\’c.st. Annattdaie, Hampton, llon~ shaw. New London, Meircsc, Wood Island, St. Peters Bay anti Brat-it- icy Point Road. Brief addresses were delivered by Canadins from different Prov- inces including J. l’. Hood, former proprietor and pnblislter of Titc tluurtliatt, while vocal and instru- mcttlal jltlltilf: and tlitltciltg gave t-n- joyment and zest to the notable rcuniutt, Front their forntcr itonu-s in lite Atlantic Provinces thesi- absent oncs arc divided by timn- r-ililtl of ntiles of tiistattce, but still "the blood is strong, the itttart (lanadian and itt their (ircattts they see their native land." A shade of sadness and regret must ‘always accompany auch re- minders of the vast. -iitiilih"i":~i cl solves from their uativtVla-lttl. As and their idoscttttdattts now residing across the border is equal to one third ttl the ltrcscnl population of (fattadat. .»\nd itowcvcr paittfui such a state- ment must bc it is increased by the fact that since the prcsettt yea:- began immigration ltas failctt off atnd the ()ill,li()\’i' of our itative popli- iation itas again increased after a brief period of dinttnation. it is the fortune of Canada to be located beside a country which ha: prospered under a policy o. protection for its every industry. It. is the policy of ottr present rulers to reduce the very ntudcratc protection which has hitherto ob tallied in this cottutry. Cut after cut has been made in the tariff rates affecting the products nf the farm and the factory. Nut tin- most ardent free trader ltas vett- turt-d in argue that ally one of these (iUYviTwztrd clta-ltgcs of titc tariff ltas given a"tl;ty's wages or ctttplttfvlttt-ttl to u sittglt- tfttttauiitttt worker. ‘lint ouch of lllvtltt (‘ltiitlgtts has taken away the entpluytttmti and the vcry tnoatts of living from tltottsttttds of our native born sons and dttugltters. It la a policy that if continued mutt lead to national disaster. it is a ltolicy that Ilus already peopled New Etigiattd with lttitlrl- reds of titousttnds of Cattadlatts attd every border State across the CG-Ililflclil flltd tnuny interior Sttitcs front Niaine to California with the very life blood of the Dominion. it is a policy ul‘ national suicide with-h if tint reversed must lcad patriotic citizens to despair .>f tnahtittiitittg a (‘anttdia-lt Dominion under the lllritisit flag ltt North America. It in a policy carried on by a Government half of whose Minis- ter! were rejected by the people at like ’: iikc it to Mr (Ynrrin who inttocottily and prema- ii 1mm”! loss welcome with lbs itrcittlt of Spring. lurc-ly let. the cat out of tin,- bug. King government ttltfl, in order no doubt it is encouraging to note that The cat ctnltarassttd the the City Council is awaking to tile; nccctssity of more rigid (tbscrvttttcei of traffic laws on ottr streets. Ai this line i awaken not only the police but par-i cuts to the many dangers on the, One of the ‘greatest dan- to give ‘Premier Kittg an opportun- ity to dcny ll a friendly Progressive little noise along ntayi nntmbor was induced to ask it‘ Mr. iurrlo was authorized by the gov- ernment to make such a statement. Of ooume ‘Premier King. in reply to “tre"““' the question. said that hi- was not "m “m! 0'!“ M‘ which Viirfi!!!" aware shat Mr. Curr». represented m!!!“ be h“!!! '°“P°“‘!“‘!°- i" 31°; habit acquired by many children of the government in this matter. New the “m, people "formula ‘stealing a ride" on any kind of “m womeflng why Mn Curfle vehicle that utttyibeavallaltie. The‘ made “ch n nnemem‘ ‘h’ h‘ cit"id .in Jumping off. is almost in-L made it. an he allotted on {he atttlt-Ivmdmiy '1“ 4"!!!" “f "U"! "I'll 'ovo1t by an automobile, a danger [which the aatiodriver cannot guard againwt as the child jumps right in- ority of the government and why Premier King denied his authority. in fact many of the sane people re- i .» _ if‘Xl>l'Pf*-“t¥d will of the tttajority oi’ , ‘a to the track of the oncoming aufnirmh. t-nnnd" titc polls only a few tnonths ngo. A Govctttttttcttt exists in uattrputintt of power and In dciiattce of thi~| i the people of Canada. it is the policy of a Government that num- bers among its supporters every Bolshevistic. Comntunistit: and An~ uexatiottist element. in the lattd. Let him who can deny tho in- dictment! This is no time for the friends and upholders of dec- ent and honest government to Riwltk with hated breath and wills- Dering humbleness. it is a time for plain speaking exposure anti removal of the wrongs that are rampunt—faise prontlses. the den- trttctive uteatturen. the corrupt intr- iraimlng, the official malfeasance that have been proven to exist In the high places of the land. These maieflcattt agencies are working powerfully to depopttinte and de- .\ mu cnantomrown-cuaanim what Bohr of! Quilts ‘Baluatfl- BvMJI-D GOITRE AND STOMACH ULCEH One of our observant pitysiciattu tclis us that he has been noticing that the sevcte type of thyroid trouble. or goitre, and ulcer oi‘ stontucit, seem to occur in the saute type of people, in fact often occur together in the some indivi- dual. . ‘This type is the itard working fellow, who takes life very set" iousiy. This physician notes the absence of titese ailments itt the "light hearted folks who take things easy." New our leading research men believe that water is the big factor ct cattsittg geitre, and infections may produce a serious type of goltre. Our resettrclt nten tell us also that the cattses of ulcer of the stomach are, first that a portion of the ntttcons tnetnbrntte of the stontaclt does not seem to be nour- isitcti by the blood as well as the other portions, and second that the iigestive juice of the stomach act- ually irritates this poorly uonrislt- ed portion and scts up the ulcer. Now witat itave titcse twp cott- ditiotts to do with one attothcr witen gottre is title to a lack of iodine in water or perhaps infec- tion. and the stomach ulcer to irri- tation of a poorly nourished part of the sttttttaclt by the stotnach juice? 0f course a simple explanation would he that these people inherit a "ttct-vutts“ (lispositiun. Now as a tnattcr oi fact the en‘ largcd tityrttid is a very cotttmott condition, and gives no trouble in the majority of cases. Ulcer of the stomach is not u common cottdiiitm but many cases of “iutiigttstiotfl are uttdottittcdi.“ dut- io uicct‘, Ill fat it has dict-u learnt-ti that itt e cry itnttdrctl ca ‘ wltcrt- lili‘ patient ltas (iivli otltct‘ ztiitttettt, flvc ulcer, healed or iffilll Siiilll‘ simwctl stomucit uttltttztlctl. New why docs this ltard work- ing, serious tnindcd individual ltavc either ulcerated stotttacit or goitre, or perhaps both‘! Ikies this ttervottsncss. due to the thyriod substance making the body processes work ion fast. ilttcl‘ fere with regulating the impulses which go to the stotnach to inakc ‘t function ltrupcriy? This may be so. but titc ntnjor- ity of physicians are of the Oilill- ion that the i-tttvttrd force that utakcs him work hard, w rry ltard. cat irrcgttiariy and uttwiscly. in- tufficiettt sleep. a lack of cont- mun scnso (exercise, so ultderntine his system that it can easily bc itndcrstood how a portion of the stnntitclt, suhjcctctl to such altime- catt give way undet- the strain. and aiiotv the lrritattittg stomach luice to damage It. Now peritalts we can't citattge ho disposition of titis type of in- dividual. btlt keeping i-n mind the views of our research uten. it would bc wise for him to cat slowly, get plenty of rcst, attd some (lill|_\' ottt- door exercise. O+OO O40. O O00 Daily Selections FOR Guardian Readers . May 17. 192s Si-IPAIIATION-“l am the Lord your God, trhicil have separated you from titltcr lteoltle." Lev. 20:24. PHAYIGI! Nifty W4‘. Lord, be in -itv world. but not of it. SPRING l Spring. Spring“ Spring! .\nd all the world and i ‘faking ltattds to sing! fhn old, culm sky ilcudy with clottds, the lake suddenly swift, awake! Winged insects whirring; New itttrn plants stirring“ Spring! Spring. Spring, Spring! And cares we'd grown to know, That used to tour attd sittg, Melted like snow! .ikt> witttttl-‘s icc and sleet That. vanish while the sweet ifitiwtirs, with clean faces, \'nw take their places! Spring! spring! Spring! Spring! New ltopeu and hearts as ltlglt As the great glistening White clottds that fly Across the raimwnnlttttl blue. For this new goal, New thoughts a-nd yearning: new! .\ new. bravo stiul! Sprint-t! liaily Lessons In English QOOO-OOO i z i By w, t.. Gordon f onwwoo-oo» o++o4+4 worms otflrt-zu MISUSED: Don’! any "vie are going to p91‘. ntuttetttiy arrange it." This 15 a Wilt iniii-nite. Say "we are going to arrange it. permanently." OFTEN MIRPRONOUNC-‘FID: address. Both noun and verb are itccented on lust syllable, not the first. ()i~"i‘i~IN MISSPFJLLIGD: nucleus. SYNONYMS: history, hlogfflphy, record. account. chrntticle, mem- WORf) STUDY: "Use a word three times atnd it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary b)‘ mastering one word each day. To- day's word: INSGRUTABLE; that cannot be searched Into; incom- prehenttlblo. "Her inscrutable face WM deep in concentration.” i yottaw,.-~ . . Why I Left; College Condenaed from MoNaugiWa Monthly (January. 26.) Bertrand Ellis. tl left college because the mctt in the tierman class had to be told. after three months of clnssworktn proitottitce w as v. They took tier- man in order to fulflll a require- ment oi’ the college. The profes- ‘isor tuttgltt it as if it were a course to train the memory, rather than, as a study; which would itt time lead to the beauties of (iertttatt lit- eratttre, no titentiott of which was made. l really wanted to learn the (iertttnn language, yet 45 minutes of cacti class hour were wasted ,while some men were being told toj pronounce w as v. i 1 left college because of the ele- mentary Jdtystcs course which re- quirements forced me to take. The lfllitlfilliify work cuttaistetl i-n fol- lotvittg certain instructions in a tuanual, in reading from the ntantt- al just what physical law I inul proved, and in memorizing that law for the next examination. That done correctly, I would receive an .\ and be called a good student. A certain enterprising student formed what he called a. Tutors‘ Union, composed of particularly brilliant stitdents. The tutor of Chemistry (which cottrse had the reputation of having the most diffi- cult fittai exam in college) guaran- teed that any student who attenti- cd his three reviews before the‘ examination could answer the qlles~i tinns so as to pass the cottrse. Atty, student who failed to pass httd his! money rcftutded. Thus do final ex-i itminntintts examine the scholar» ship of the students. i i Thc most. thoroughly educated and iutclictrtttaily active person uni der 25 years of age whom l have known left college during his soph- omore ycar, tiisgtlsted and even dtatefttl. lie was one of three mettl- hers 0f his class wito had i-Ztlittttzii the record of the mark A in cvcvyi course he had iakctt. lliank. l sitall call ltim. vomited with Zero. an- otltcr of the distinguished titreci perfect students. Blank would read Latin ]l0l3ll‘_\' with all the fervor of a lover of Siteihty reading “Tint I:1-i dian Scrcttttdc." lie read and stud-i led cuttuiless tuttitors not ntctttiott-l ed in class; he loved his Latin and‘ Greek as did Petrarcit. Zero. on the other ha-nd. studied carefully several hours each day on the as- signed subject. mctttorizing the meaning of each word attd all ap- plying rttles nf syntax. Jutlgittg by the college's standards each was an excellent student, one iltligflfiti as the other. Yct in reality om- was a lovel- of learning. a scholar. a searcher, tvltilc the fithcr was n grind. a tnemttrizcr. dllauk and if studied itigctltct" once for a final examination in Zoology, Tho cvcnittg was ltassotl in the discussion of all the won- ders of that subject. but ottrtalk itelped us none in the preparathtzt for the examination. Suddenly we realized that tve would be confront- ed with cold questions which must be answered with cold facts. We itegan to study the annotated out- line ntatie by Zero, the grl-nd. it enabled us to attuwol- the questions satisfactorily. lint as lllattk said to mo, "This study pl‘ Zoology will mean to 90 out of 100 just a lint. of ten questions which they answer- ed. Having attswereti the ques- tltmu they will put all titougitt of Zoology forever from their mittds." I knew a professor who (lefied the traditions of pedagogy in or- der to tench nn English cottrsc as he wamed. He attnounceil that there would he almost no tests or exams except the filial. which the regulations of the college enforc- ed; that there would be nonc but voluntary recitatlons. The fact titat some men refuse interesting learning did not worry him. it Wit-H their loss. not his. He said that he would offer very entertaining tuaterlal for the clans to do with us it chose. Consequently the cottrsc was tho must popular ofthe ldttglish cottrses. Moreover, more study and reading were dotttmmore interest was evinced, more thnttrzitt was instilled in that class than In any with which t was acquainted opening speech was: - "I happened to think nfa book In college. Often the- professors Y 'MAY17,1926 vvvvvv v1 x Is A ilnivorsit Education Ninth EORGE HANNY thinks it is. ' knows that a great majority of the successful men of today are college men and that a University education fits a man for a head start on the road to success in the modem business world. When his son Albert is twenty, George Hanny is going to send him to University. He is going to give Albert the advantage of scientific training. George Hanny is just an average tum He Hanny has never felt the strain sf caving, and he haa been par-um“ that even if ltodiethitiaplam f" Albert would be can-led out. Ha left nothing to chanoo—-lto mad; sun. ‘ What ueyour plan: for that boy of yours? Whatever they are, Edna- don is the first consideration. You can, like George Hanny, make sun that your plans will be fulfilled, 0m- booklet, “Child's Endowment,” ox- pialna how. in avenge circumstances, but a North American Life “Child's Endowment,” taken out when Albert was a baby, will provide the necessary funds. Mr. a Please and me you: booklet "Cltlldfi Entldwntmt" Namo__....... ..........-..................,_,,___, American Life Assurance Company’! ntigltt appeal to the students‘ nut- urnl curiosity and love of learning which, strange as it may scent, hc recogttlietl. iFfliitflVillg one of his classes l indulged itt a racc across the catntpus with about l5 otitcr men l-u ilu- attcutlti It) l'('i|f'ii library dirsl. Such a rat-c astonnds you, no dotthi, but I nttsttrc you timi- mtixt, uttdcrgradntttvs could be thud-- to display such rattler (rilliilliiliitlill over almost any .~l|lltjcci_ of study. 'i‘ln- unHPKc with-h l t-tltt-ttflcd ro- ceivctl tuucit publicity iitrottgit an action witicit shtick-ed the old-tim- ers in educntiott. it altpuittictl u cotuntlttcc of scnio ' to study the legcs attd to fovtttuiatc. u report to the ltresidctti making rccmttntetttltt- lions for ciutttgc. 'f‘itc iturdeu ttf this student report. wits that ton much “ladlittg" armtscd illt: tibsiiti- ttcy of u-ltflcrgraduatcn. The respon- sibility for his ‘eductttlott, it said. sitoultl he placed on ihc sitouidtirs of the student. himself. That sittdent report ccrtnittly found lite germ of the trmtblc. When education in rnnsirlcrotl as two letters nftcr a lttttlfsi name; when cdttcaiitttt is culcttlatcrl in hunt-s and (zrediis attd pel- ~ Witt-tn tsducttfiolt is cottsiilcrtttl a. strictly rcgttiitr autl rnuiittr- i" it!‘ ilhitwlvti for the palictttis H0011: when cdut-tition lwups its 001i (lust- witich plight interest you mcn. it itas no cottcrcte hearing on the tuttterittl we are studying today but you might like it." He would then MAY iii-You are genial. clev- er. witoiehenrtetl, intellectual and discriminating. You like society and are much happier when in the whirl of ttoelal life. You ‘are liked much better by the opposite sex than by your own. Beware of leni- Oilfly. and never allow yourself to make a spiteful remark. Your birth-atone is an emerald. which mama success in love. Your flower is a lily. Your lucky colors are red and are careful to select oni can of alkali and are made the only safe kind to use. our window VINOLIA CASTILE soar _ i‘ ' Von can depend upon this brand o1 snap lather-a well and in excellent ' "I" W"! Nlw» to bflleve t: n u». but brand made Pntce.’ 20 cswrs PER POUND u“; THE WIHITE .1. c. .14 MIESON DRUGOIBT proceed to’ tell us sotttctitittgtii‘ this grctttcst praise on tho ntatt mo!‘ and 0111,.“ “hp-h he titougittidt-tttigittgly nieltittriltts facts fruma iltc Uf it. oilucaiiottal systems of various col-i Head Office Toronto Canada Charlottetown Branch Office 140 Richmond St. Charlottetown - P- E- i- YY YYYVYVT who should ignore them attd dcvoteti- icntion to the men Wit" i1"! ‘mil!- Wliil till book, facts to be forgotten as soon Colleges are afflicted as they are tvriltcll down in attswcl great American irwit. the ticsir-zlor the salvation of others whethcror to lists of questions; witcn educa- need to b: MW?- tion is cottsidcrctl in such lights, tt~tt tltey WW1 0“ young men will rebel against it, —-—~—--—— wiii cry out against the laiseness Something About Our Mail Order System Sometimea you find it Im- possible to come to the city l to purchase your drufl W.“ or perhaps you have I 9"‘ acrlption and cannot cont/iii‘ lentiy bring it to our store- lt, ls for people ouch as 1°" that we have established a MAIL ORDER SYSTEM it matter: not what W“ d" lire in our line all you have to do la to write 0" Phil"? we guarantee to deliver tit! goods when and where W“ want tltem_ etvs, us A "rem. AND Fi-ND our FOR vouttsELF nu: 2 MACS DRUOSTORE 149 Great George 5"!" Telephone 316 The cuiirt- t-tittcaiiottztl syslcltt itt_ this country is littst-d nu the faisci, assumpiiott that young ltcnplc ltnttH, ktttnvlcdltc. but. liiill they tnltsl be educated evcn if they luust be hog; ||i‘(l in the ltructess. l know, as one oi tin-tn, that the tattriusity and tittgt-vucss to learn ttttytitinlzncvery- thing, art» as great in them as in cvcr-tptcstinning babies. lint the salm- cbstittttcy and ltcrvterttunoas, which t-itttracterlzos the hnby mttkoi the young mutt scorn what he real- y wattts \vltott it. is forced flown his throat by his t-idcrs bccttttsc. thcy say it is good for him. lint \l‘ll(‘il it is assumed that. young mt-tt art- t-atttttr to k-uutv e\et‘_\'- Iltituz: when situl_v is shown in its true uud alluring light; when ln-| structure any, “Herc is thc most] fuscittatittg thing in tho world. no offs ltave a good little tiltdhtg ottt all about it".~whcn instructors fettch with that attitude, men will flock to their lessons, if tucn dc not wish to learn. whyl " sitould the college break its heart;_ them? (Yoilcgen now davolei "Wit lilttf‘ and ettertly to the men l river i SOAMP SELECTION i la one of the most important 1mm" Who tuust he forced, while they es of our buying. We Y 5°39! which are free from ex- from pure materials. Such are Just now we are displaying in Spring Cleanilil I“: ' . We ill tvttoou wiilclatmninezrxos-I irw Albion ma. Alarm PM 8 dvi . I ace nay-mt’ Yo.ur order VllllJilV. f!" but attention. & Co. .4 It Wear: well. ‘for the toilet and bath. We DRUG STORE A. PICKARD .-. /“'-’H°_N“ I40 . ‘It vvvvvv‘v,,\_