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' . .. ,,,,. 4. ,r . ..........»- ......_ ., ‘ V _ _________.-._.._._.._....__._<——.—~..-—-—~-2-W‘ The lei-sing Guardian Issued every Morning by IIIE GUARDIAN PUBLISHING C0 FROM THEIR OI-‘FIFE IN THE Oarneron Block BRANCH 0FFICE‘——Central Street, Summerside.--8. M. (aaavns, Agent. The Oulv Morning Paper in the Province. Delivered on the Breakfast Tables of the City, and all over the Province by noon. ‘ Terms--One Year . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $4.00 “ Six Months . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.00 Single Copies . . . . . . . . . . ‘3 C00“! Weekly Edition published on Thursday. Terms—Per year, _. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31.25 When paid in advance. . . . . 1.00 Single copies. 4 cents. Semi-weekly Edition, published on Tues- "days and 'l'hur.~adn_vs. Terrns——Per year _. . . 1- - - --- - - - 81-50 * When in advance, 1.25 Single copies, 3 cents. .‘tl\'6_‘.I'll§lllg rates furnished on application a. o. macs, Editor and Managing D1l'0¢t0l'- J‘ Po Business Manager. Choice of Occupation. Every year in thousands of families, says the Leather Manufacturer, as the boys attain the age when W9)’ 370 supposed to have finished their school education, the important question arises : What shall be the future occupation of the boy 3 The‘ qumtion is not so easily answered, and when- ever the choice of occupation has been made, without full consideration, it is too often found that the selection has been made without reference to the physical and mental fitness of the boy for the chosen field. The wish of the boy is very seldom consulted, and though young yet, and without mature experience, it seems but fair that his preferences should be taken into respectful consideration. Parents frequently make the mistake at this important juncture of choosing occu- pations for their boys for which the boys’ physical system is ill adapted. Weakly boys with narrow chests should never be put at indoor occupations. Some trade that will keep them in the open air is better suited for such. Then. again, too many parents look upon all trades as something beneath them, and erroneously teach their boys that it is more respectable to enter one of the professions or even toigo into clerking for a livelihood. All mechanical trades need to be recruited from the intelligent classes, and the condition of mechanics can only be ele- vated when accessions to their ranks come from well educated, respectable, honest, self-respecting people. Too many boys are annually consigned to other occupations, for which they are not fitted, to the great damage of them- selves and of society, and in which, after a long and one-sided struggle for more existence, which is‘ getting year by year more and more precarious and diflicult, they are finally lsft a stranded wreck, with the consciousness that the mistake in choosing their occupation has been the main cause of thdr misery and distress. Most of this is due to the false pride and prejudice against a mechanical trade, which would have ofi'ered a good field for the wrecked boy by intelli- gence, industry, and perseverance to have become a mag able to support himself and family and useful to soci- ety. Who can doubt the truth of this? If we look about us, we cannot fail to see that in all occupations the standards of requirements have been raised, and particularly in those em- ployments which are not included in the mechanical branches much more is now expected from applicants for tions than formerly. Look at the in- creasing numbers of these who are studying for the law, the ministry, or the medical profession. Count the numbers of doctors. lawyers, and min- isters who can barely eke out an 131- l istence. Scrutinize - the advertising columns of any of our newspapers and see the overwhelmingnninbers of thew who seek employment, hive to offer but willing hands -‘sod tat. ordi- nary intelligence, and wiry little edu- cation. Just look at the army of clerks and so-called bookkeepers con- stantly otferinig their services; indeed it would be more truthful to say beg- ging for employment at anything that offers. These are the direct conse- quences of an overcrowding in those employment: which do not require knowledge of any mechanical trade. On the other band see how intelli- 3°‘f'~ '9“ tnined mechanics progress. 1‘ ‘I not necessary here to cite exam- ples of living men, who, .1“, hug,‘ thoroughly learned a mechanical 'tru_1g, ‘The h"°b! industry. economy, imam, v 'vNaught reckshe of selves into enviable positions of busi- ness success, honor, trust and wealth._ There are plenty who, from small -he ginnings, have attained success. All work is honorable and ennobling, and those who, probably being idlers them- selves, profess to look upon the me- chanic with disdain, and would. if they could, deny him equal rights, should remember that idler: are always super- fluous in this world's economy, but that the good mechanic is constantly in demand, as he is the one who lays the real foundation of all business suc- cess, and that his industry is an ab- solute necessity to the capitalists. If these people who turn up their noses at the mechanic allege as a reason for exelusiveness that the mechanic is lacking in refinement, they should be told that it is partly due to the fact that those who deem themselves more refined have scrupulously withdrawn their refining influences from the -‘tne- chanic by not associating with him. But the mechanic is not excluded from true culture, and one can find as many true gentleman of culture and refine- ment among mechanics as among the so-called professional classes, indeed often one searches in vain for refine- ment among tbe latter. Much depends upon the quality of the material which enters the me- chanical tradcs, and if many of those who now make the mistake of studying an unprofitable profession should learn a trade instead and determine to lead a refined life, it will not be long before even this somewhat imaginary reproach is taken away. It is not necessary either to go from one extreme to the other, and that .11 should rasli into the trades, nor that the other great mistake he made of thinking that one mechanical trade is more honorable. than another and that every boy must pick out what seems to him tqlbe a little more elevated a trade. We plead for the proper training of boys in the mechanical trades, for their tholjughly mastering the whole trade and ‘ndt one branch of it. All mechanical trades odor is good livelihood, employ- ment, and fortune for those who have the patience, perseverance,and idduatry to-find if. Learn a trade 3 —~~<-e->-—--- “The root." [A poem translated from the Spanish by Vicar-General Byrne of Boston, and read by James Jeffry Roche at the pre- sentation of the bust of John" Boyle O’ ‘ at the Catholic University at Washington, D. 0., Feb. 4, 1892.] Behold the poet‘. give him light and liber- ty and room to range at Letthe horizon’s bounds up.oa'g3u.5...._ Freedom and grandeur are hihirthrighc, Hid genius is Emily inipirdtion; He dreams ofhnsel crowns, of gietory, Fame,‘and Tthe beautiful, sole objects of his lows; TlIe»&d'n fervor of a mother's kiss in chlldheod’s days Was sweetand soothing on ardant brow, And ends his mind with imhges and Drawn from celestial realms-— The morning's dawn, the brilliant noon- dsy sun. The solemn hush of night's 3 station; -hour, p The of God, the zephyrsighing in palms, . i The gleaming-and the sinner I Speak to maoddhaiphqgipid l-ove, pale but his woods in the . . Are veal all with thoughts of him, On the d&nt flute of glittering sand irsviifntone for him _ their solemn 3 of prayer. Bathed in the "light ;lIe lifts his head aloft, His eyes aglow Aiwith irifptuée, and his heart aflame,‘ , I Yearning to tell she world . His message "and I the feelings of his heart, ' _ The Muse bestows upon his head a harp of melody attuned To sing the high conceptions of his soul. He loved love, andfsang the bliss of loving. in ‘i ’ But leveidillllrbod the placid tenor of his mind. * 0 love! art indeed the crucifixion of the < 2 ~ Then came ”._ of sorrow, But even frth ,, auisuiering the poet dm; ht in‘ if .. I nkind Themes rang ' _ , _ fill Ins . From deepest gloom: lashes forth The poet’! gllelibll 51.! ll 9 noble heart, Humani entirequick _ pulses -in the do ’ 1|;-ofound_of, posticseul,W He is hnman1ty‘s " voice. - lliefaith, hishopeisthere. ' '_ For it he sufi'ers_ and for it he mourns, To ithepays, in uielancholy mood.‘ the ' tribute even of despair,- Martyred at length in his behalf, he mounts to ven. _ , Thus does thepoet ‘ thepsthoflife, Theproe Qfpeifect 'nes_sis notice on, .. . ." ‘ Even when disowned by fortune and for- . got _ men: L _ His pale brow, beneath his laurel crown, Annointed is with heaven's own kiss. joys of earth; Riches and fickle pleasures‘ ' ’ he eontemns. The ‘tone of history will ‘leave, for him . - . - - One glorious inscribed with charact- ers of bronze ‘ That envious fate herself cannot elface. Leavehun’ his dreams, his hopes; his as- P“‘t3on5’.h‘ 1 ,.:. Toward idexever be his flight, Pointers for Advertisers While you are hesitating about advertis- ing dune other man is seizing the opportu- nity you ueglect. He will “ get there" while you ponder. ' Learn to advertise and to wait. It costs more to advertise poorly than to advertise well. One is paid for out of your capital. The other pays for itself out of the in- crease it brings to your business. It don’t pay to strive too hard for effect in advestismg. The speaker who tries too hard to convince never succeeds in convincing at all. You reason that an article which requires so much eloquence to make itself appreciated must have very inconspicuous and hay‘ merits. .4 ja-1: The first money John ‘V-sDBlD8liBl' mad says tradition, was thirty dollars. He made it dliug something or an- other in the dry goods line in a wheel- barrow. What do you suppose that he did with that thirty dollars ‘I He put it into an advertisement in The Philadelphia Ledger. . He now pays a man 812,000 a year to look after his adrertisin and gives him a big stall" of assistants to el him, and I don’t know how many bun red thousand he puts out in buying space in news- pa rs. ’ _ me men start where \\ anamaker ll now, Sto advertising, An end Where he was when he started. Mo1uL—Put the first money you make into an advertisement in the GUARDIAN. “I haven't time to think about adver- tising just now. I shall have in a month or two. ” No doubt you will. You won’t have much business to take u your time if you postpone your advert ing. Your competitors don’t postpone. “I shall have to wait till I have made some money before I can risk any of it in advertising.” W hat on earth do you suppose people advertise for ‘.1 To spend money or to make it 7 If you don’t advertise, you'll never make enough to advertise with. “I can’! afford to advertise." Then you can't afford to do business. “I have found advertising doesn't pay.” Then'you didn't know how to advertise. It pays others. Mak NW.’ lllllll Bl08d[l_l_ ‘non . k. fi‘l‘baw'.ereawondssaIl:fieeoves-y no fllji The Ilfilflflcll lmasou. galliainnriuearromthehloed Thflhhmnnlhy IMFCT P. E. ISLAND. TOLL LINE STATIONS. Annanrlal-:, _— Mount Stewart, Montague, Brsdalbuie, Montague South Side Bruit Wlmrf, -Murray Rive. Belle Creek, Hurray Harbor North Bedeque, Mun-ay Harbor South, ’ Morcll Charlottetown, Crapaud, North Rnstioo, §=-re-...... Bed ue. cw . Cardigan, eq Orwell, Dundas, Peaks‘: Station; Emerald, Pownal, Eldon. Pinettc, lllilli Freetown, Rusticoville, Flat River. Fort Augustus, Summcrsidc, Stanley, ” Grand River Bridge, St. Eleanors. Georgetown, Souris, St. Peter’: Bay, Hunter River. South Port. Kensineton. T1100 Mil-sl Laird’; Jill, Victoria, I Lot 40 Station, Vallcyficld, newer Montague, ‘ Vernon River Bridge Little Sands. ' Webster's ‘Corner,- Malpeque, Wood Islands. -4 1 lies ANGUS. Manager. in menus: in, was OTICE isls V __ 4‘ tionwillber " K‘ day, Thursday the pi-esent,atohoir ‘ A ‘veofioes,-between and-1o’clockin't afternoon, -by ; RICHARD J OHNSON. M. D. PETER CONROY, M. D. Superintendents of Vaccination C'h'town, Oct. 31--mwf’tf cHARLo‘r1'E1'owN, P. 5.1. Tms house. longkoown to the ublic as the House; has, lace, undergone extensive improvements in the future he knownsa~the..Queen Hotel. _ .Not'.on‘ly isiuozpczaop ‘ he- rsyon'a’fis_st-élassmenu and the 3 caref.al.s.tteu.tion. - pleased to meet our old as me! favor *‘ P. P.‘ anémnnnn ‘ Proprietor. cnrsn sciur entranoe'andotberwise,and"'will in the. 0..." iiS'I.¢'liI«.‘.DSiMEN, llllll SEEII llA'l‘AL0lillE F011 ’92 In I making up our Thir- teenth Annual ‘Seed catalogue we have had in mind the ‘all- important fact that customers’ interests are ours. We can in no way so well advance our own interest as to look after and protect that of our cus- tomers. Our business will not grow unless our customers are pleased, and to please them we must in every case guide them to select the best varieties by offering no poor ones, furnish a superior grade of stock and at a reasonable rice, and deal in such a man- ner that allwho purchase once will remain permanent cus- tomers and influence others. We do not wish an order un- of it. It would ruin our busi- ness to take money Without giving a satisfactory return. Thatwe have been successful in our efforts to please our patrons, is shown by the fact that our business has grown until it is the largest in our line which has ever existed in this Province." , Our Catalogue for 1892, is the finest we have yet issued. All who wish to have it will please send us their name and address at once. Geo. CARTER & Co Seedsmen, Charlottetown. 39. 3:.,':.s?i’il5”:.°.3x‘l w o.£Ineo under the ects of dis- :r§'¢OlI_Ofl.' ‘ Sim lo”, N one Ills ' , -..o,m.$l'.l'm..:..¢ ' . s or tonal. Bo Nob almuoma Fully)‘ esyored. Improvementseen the first day. How u enlarge and strengthen ‘dour. Men testify from 50 States Foreign Countries. Write them. Book. ex lanatlons and proofsmaueflfsealedltree, Ad ress, ERIE 318310;]: 00.. BUFFALO. N.Y. s so I T- --—-3-roe Qo Oesitslper ‘bbl IN LOTS or so BARRELS.” .1. r. muses, Upper Great George St - Ajsvné PREVENTATIVE -—-‘FOR La” yvo:Kr-ow I no family hav- ing Ozonator rid I-‘Ink! W1 ‘L. filth |.‘A'GRlPP,E. Thisis the written statement. e-ofthe Dominion 00., ollonsreal. ’ . r. nae. nsviss‘, . omggm, is agent forqthem" r show any- one desirin .inforxq‘s?ation.an‘d“’lp.t'ioes ‘ the a paratus can it his-Store",-Ilorris Blue" Charlottetown, Jan. 15. mtcom sects, ‘-—.sr'—_, - . ' ' .4 -- ” . , . - ' - s-, . , . __ _,. E DI RLOTTETOW}-, MARCH, 4, ~ Charlottetown, - P. -‘E. I. less we can please the sender . Wu: Uxosvsuersn Onoins a.-In sure or . -4- 600 bbls. Slack Lime E highly recommended; Cod Liver troubled ornfi ' 7: 3E3<><3fPf3 20 my per cent, E: I ,‘ ,__ ..,.,,,."* and see them. Before alteration, we have some large lots of Boats five minty at tremndafi‘ * ous reductwns, from 20 to 40 per cent. 678 Pairof Infants’, Boots, average price, 45 cents,‘-I now 25 eente We have these Boots separate, and will be glad to show them. 0 I n 606 “ Ladies’ Strong Boots, laced, 1.32, “ ‘F 1.00 95 4;, u ._Dongola, lllllat & laced, 1.88’ n u L 1 50 60 “ “ , Kid and Goat “ high price reduced about 80 per can 287 “ Men’s Boots, custom and factory make, 25 tom per cent oh‘ i ~ 86 “ Boys’ “ 1.45, now 1.125. This heavy line we have stony] ' . 80 “ Missesstroug Boots; laced, 60_ cents a pair. 1 «E Y It will G-OFF BROS I w S?Lh1JCl£h. Reading Room, Gymnasium, Educa- tional Classes, Recreation Rooms. A LARGE, -well lighted, comfortable Reading -Room, where the following Papers and Magazines can be seen :- .;MAGAZlNES:-—Amcrican Garden, Am-l steur Work, Blackwood, Chathcrs’ Journal, Cassclrs Family Journal, Century. Contcm Dorary, Fortnightly, ‘Nineteenth Century. Chautauquan. Eclectic, Good-l Words, Har- per's Magazine, North American Review, Outing, Popular Science Monthly. Review of Reviews, Sundayat Home, Scribner. , ILLUSTRATED WEEl(LlES:_. Harper’: Weekly, Punch. Penny Illustrated; Queen, Sc’ ' ‘fie American and Sn lcmcnt, London ’ ":3, «Grip, Illustra C London News, Illustrated, Youths’ Companion, Young Men's Era. " EQJCATIONAL PUBLICA‘I'IONS:—- Eduaienal Journal, Kindergarten, Popular filucator, Canadian Magazine of Science and Industrial Art, Educational Tunes, Educa- tion. Teachers’ Institgtr. 7 I Under the terms of afliliation between the C. A. A.andtheY.M.G. A.,all members holding full membership are entitled to the use of the Gymnasium. , Information regarding the Educationa Classes on application to the General Secre- Tickets admitting to Gymnasium, Reading and other Rooms, $5.00 per year; Reading Room alone, $z.oo ; Boys under I6 years o age, half price. You are cordially invited to all and look through the institution. Visitors always wel- comed. _ C. A. MAFIT, , , Janos General Secretary. n n e on A roiiaiiiiii ds ion» the if . Id onebeabletoteettheentlrolot a’ .*’*~ % op: wsiild be I pm. n°’..‘.’.‘£ l'om”°’° °““"‘ ""’ “""" Qfi-E.Hl‘!GEB.' H WE have in stock a_;f_ull line of § _, all the best Cough Medicines now g in the market, including suehwell-~i known and tried'Rci’nedicsas-- . I Fcllows"S1rup, Ayer’s Cherry. " Pectoral, Al1en’s Lung sumo, . SyrnpofRedSprncc Gum. Sl'urp’s' ‘ . ,.Balsam, etc , etc. Also, c in Char!ottotowu‘by 1-. Wine of Beech Tre , and Elixer of Terebene. which are Oil, Emulsions of diffegent makes, . and Pure Norwegian Cod liver Oil, on draft andin bottles. -2 ii‘ _Ehav_ea<lveniseillnallosrloealpapres . for mauy,yesrs»that‘wchsve-the lar thecllclpfllg, " tbebeltassortmsuto crgoeitoiy, China andGlamwas_ein -1-.2. Island on lot at 814.00 per suit, made to Order. - .nvIN';1:EB. . i L03!->T:Do:Nf T E-oven. andthntwe sell -. thananyothcrflouseinihisfrosiaec.‘ ; , hasncveryct bccnoontrsdictedr Wehave‘ Elegant in Des , 1319 in‘ Gonatrud-19D . Tone, _Aeknow ” tho ' rbdl? . . One GreatPiano 0 Nearly Fifteen §..........°".% » - I EVENTY-FIVE Suit Th puuuomou Goods $13.00 and sang . We do This is the biggest bargain we have evsroflued the s3"Call Early and get your choice. ' JOHN Mo.pHlOD &’O0. “‘m“"‘.'."‘” W7UpperQueenStreet.Olitown ————- IN -9--— in rns ', -‘‘-‘‘‘9lf,;Q§;tsraW¢(aniflrrlR<‘‘‘'WVr.r'{6.»W-'‘ .: .1“-‘f"‘ ‘ 4‘ . W“ M V‘ V‘ . m~,k jg-zoxm *1‘ ' : -<6-'m-‘W:-«~<*a::=x2“='= -gum-L-M N4,I"'iVé.6oe01?la ~ g F ?i as ,3, E: E _ .,.o..ao.'9i.. s. a Illrtfl $ 7 ‘he “am "to B, magic 2 ‘es’-I