hlslllhltll lllrgm “Fnili-ii-iiitii’, Brought. . ... ilanli-Siangiil ' 93$: thing! took di meeriygood. _, . about “Fruit-d-tivee" and .35, After inking e few bots, wgarfslewdiaiesraadc/mn ‘pica, I em now entirely well" Madame ROSINA FOISIZ. pox, 8 for $2.50, else Ne. dealers or send poetpaid by nus t; RINDING ur Lens Grinding plant he only one on the l_s-, d—is daily en aged l_u nufacturlng t e van- s kinds oi lenses, used correction of defective There are no long sin weltln for VICE, is the motto our establishment. F. liutchesoil -- rnetriet I Optieill iessionai, Cards. n. 1r. naturals! to at noetoe seeeel n g PIANO TUNING ~ . " an uremia st.. l.McGuigan.BA ‘Wlaeney te Loan “°'~0wa,- P; El lelaml ..._..._._.__ . e. ' - ‘ MONEY. TO ' LOAN Qfilvlan. KL. t 0; rrleter and Attorney-at-Llw m Ne. 12 Cameron Bioek VICTORIA ROW A. Ma0D0NALD .Blrrlater, solicitor, Eto. MONEY T0 LOAN Ofllee-J-‘liiey Building. , 0. 0." Archibald _ uate on N. Y. Poet Graduate edicel Ochool and Hoepitei ties limited to Eye, Ear, Neae p Bayer Building. Greet George let, opposite Guardian Office b Hours-D to 12 a. In. May be consulted off heure at 116 i-iillebore 8t. lmer 8t Palmer ~ Nova ‘ Gentle lull Charlottetown, P. E. ean &'McKiIl1i0n DPlNALD McKINNON Barrister Attorney s1 I111" Thnriottotown. P. E. island orson & Duffy rrieter and Atternl MONEY TO LOA ltere for Royal sank of Oenedl 1.. A. Mchiachen ave arseuunl er-over u] _ onemiiuiehn r. s. l.‘ 1 ullicslulut cllllllii‘ 0),; -. COMJE TO THE IOEOREAM SO- cial in 1Stanley Hall. Monday even- ing June 1B. 1f not fine. W111 be held the following evening. .THE GARDEN OF‘ THE GULF ILLUSTRATED-Souvenirs of the Province-best illustrated writeup of the" Province ever published. Price thirty-seven cents postpald Guardian Ottice.‘ NDTIQI; 110, ADVERTISERS- Advertisers are reminded that ail display advertisements must ‘be in the “Guardian Office ibefore noon of the day previous to publication and lbefore 10 a. m. on Saturdays. HAMrMOCKlS — Provide yea‘- seif with a comfortable hammock such as we sell and take it with you when you go for a holiday or use it at home. We have a line new stock at right ‘prices. Carter and Cu., Ltd. WE HAVE A WONDERFUL dis~ play of ‘lpansles and daisies. in bloom, double Pollyhocks, and Sweet Wlliam, Aster. Stock phiOX. Petunia. Verbena, lSalvia. SW69! Alysum, ‘Kcchia and a host of others. Early Tomato and late. Cauliflewers, Celeryflabbagelirus- sle Sprouts and Peppers. This is the season to plant plants. Camp- bell ¢Bros., market handle our plants and they receive a fresh supply daily. 0r you can have them dir- ect from our garden. head of "Prince street.———.l. J. Gay‘ 8: Son. DAL OUlSIlE GRADUATES - Report- the P. E. island studslltfl in medicine and dentistry at Dai- housle University. Halifax. Medi- cine, 2nd year; J. Randolph Mur- chison. Clyde River. passed We" in chemistry; 3, chemistry 4. 111111" ‘ tomy and emihoyology; phyfl10108y l and 3; Materio medica; Angus ‘B. ‘Martin, Belfast, passed in 0118- mistry .".; chemistry 4; dimming and embryology, physiology 1 11“ ‘ ti; luuterizt lueditta; Medicine 3rd your; Foster S. Murray. fflrlnefll’ of O'Leury; distinction. standing 2nd in ills class in pathology. 1111C- teriology, surgery, clinical chemis try and clinical microscopy; 11111111" ed in physiology 4; nlateria luedl~ ca and practical anntouly- _M°111' cine 2nd year; E. B. Ellis, O Leary passed in wchenlistry 3 111111 1111911115‘ try 4; nluteriu lucdicn and Ihistolo. gy ‘dentistry; J. Clifford Fruinvol‘ Kmknwh paggog in physics. bimo- gy_ histology and anntmny. Geo. (ll-eon, Grzrhnllfs HD1111. 1111115911 with distinction in bacteriology, pathology and tilerapel\t|cs;,pas- sad in prasthitlc dentisll'y._i;enellli pathology. surgery. mfllerm 11111111" ca, Ol‘l.illiii‘0l1'lifl 111111 91101101111“ and anaesthesia. --- .THE OLD RELlABl-E-TRV 1T1 Miners‘ tube ‘ , ' l1 Lih IM~E.NI. YARMOUTH, N. S. FISHERM-EN AND CAMPERS . QUICK RELIEF PUT A BOTTLE IN YOUR. OUTFIT hilTEL VICTORIA Famed for It! eulelne eervlee. Elegantly turniebell, I roome with bathe. Make It your lerne In Oh-rwttetown. | 01.0., c. iiarris "Eye Specialist Office, Royal Bank Building, Chariot- tetown. Office Hours _ .9-12.a0,‘2-5. “g P110118 The imperial Cod Oil Fox Biscuit is the result of of several years lcul experience in baking, a fox biscuit that is said, wholesome end 18h food value. lt contains a liberal 11111111111? 117 11°“ “V” ‘m which idilldwleligédhfby leading chemists to be of great medicinal value. If 1'11"! your young foxes to levslop rapidly. K9011 111111111 1191111113’ h? 11118 Imperial Cod on Fox Discult and new milk . 4 The ilhperiaif Biscuit Co. Limited v n»... Y"? 11m.“ I preach . or cnn 1' SAVE the FOLIAGE and F-RUIT by spraying. See the line of Sprayers at CARTERB FRED end SEED STORE. A GRAND MUUCM; EVENT- Under the direction otVPrpf. Fish ciler in Heartz Memorial Hell, Tuesday evening 14th inst at 7.30 o'clock. Such famous songs‘ as the Trumpter (Airail: Six). Tile Greaadlers » '(l'Scil aan); Drake goes West, Indian (Love Lyrics and other songs; ‘eighteen vot-uilsts and ten pianists will take part. Pia no numbers wl include conlposl. lions of Beethoven, Mozart and Hayden. YSilver collection at the door. APPRECIATION OF THOMAS HlCK8.—'i‘ile annual meeting of ‘St. Stephen District of the Methodist church was held in Mllltnwn, N’. 15., on June 7. All the ministers were in ltttendunce. The attendance of the laymen was not large. The reports and returns were all of an encouraging kind. The following elections were nrade Journal secretary for the district, Rev. Richard Opie. Rev. F. H. Holmes was elected to represent the district on the stationing com- mittee. Reserved delegate to the standing committee, Rev. Richard Opie. The following resolution was moved by Rev. Richard O-pie, se- conded by Rev. F. H. Hollies, and unanimously and sym-pathethlcully carried. Whereas Rev. Thomas Hicks feels compelled for physic- al reasons to ask for superannua- tion relation; and Whereas the Rev. Thomas Hicks has given to the Methodist Church forty~six years oi‘ efficient, faithful 0nd suc- cessful service, including in its range the filling of the offices of REV. financial secretary, chairman of‘ district,» nlenrbership ‘in the gener- al conference, and president of the unnual conference; and whereas, we are indebted to God. and‘ place on record our high estimate of the life and labors of Brother Hicks. and express our hope that there may he to hlul and his estimable wife a calm, 1ileztsant and ‘happy evcntido to the days of life. 111141 that the twilight of this day may be followed by the dawn of the day whose glory shall never fade." The mover of the rcsolutlonnind the person mentioned Anglia-With i119 Rev. George ‘Steel, D. 1)., .0151. John. offered themscll/Bfi 115; "m" (inles for the ministry 01 1119 Methodist ‘church at the annual meeting .of the St. John District held. in llumpton, Kings County- "1 ‘i875. Earth of the filreewhns 11111811 thepresitlcntial chair 0f the con ferencc of N. B. and P. lE. l.’ Tllefifl three have served the church in this conference (one from 1874. two from 1\S7.-"li\l11_1~11°111 a break until the present time. .___@@+ ' .~ “Joanie-tor v 11.71111" 11115. 1'61“- bestebnd the delicate flav- bo made, with Bordeziis St. Charles or Jersey Milk-—-t116 11691 for sixty-three years. At your groc- er. ____-¢-0&--—~—- MADE THEIR OWN OhL WELL How Two 3.2."... any; nearw Rich Reward For The Exercise 0f A Llittle ingenuity. Two barefoot boys. respectively eleven and twelve years of age. corned forty five hundred dollars in one week. according to the Oil Weekly of Dallas, Texas. by com- hining thrift and ingenuity in =1 telling manner. Much oil wa< coins to waste=ln the Northwest Burkburnett oil field because the nipe lines were inadequate, when the boys, who are brothers, saw crude oil from a broken pipe run- ning down a small ravine. Hitch- ing a donkey to- a ratlletralp spring waggon, they began to haul dirt to dam the ravine and succeeded af- ter much hard work in collecting a great quantity of oil. The owner appeared on the scene about that time and he ad~ mired the pluck 0f the youngsters He did not claim the oiltoutrigh‘. although it had been his, but offer ed the youngsters one dollar and a half a barrel salvage for it. The youngsters accepted his ofler and perching themselves on their new dam with stu-bs of pencils, checked out the oil as it was hauled away. llt tallied exactly three thousand barrels and the boys got their money. Pure, Wholesome Soils-Cold anti f " Sparkling 0f course, Bbda muet ap- peal to tile I teats-but it should also eetiefy thirst. Beveragee ‘ieerved at our fountain ceinblnq .theee eiq. manta. The? eoda le right, eyrupe are right end the vice ie ideal. -~ 1 '1 i. » 1~ ‘r . No matter what yeyghfegpgg, m drink may be 11011111111011‘ taln. THERE rsoiiallldldiifi-l}? ' . " ‘ ~ '41s " +1 .1 Johnson» lruiiggiletesw 11h. qogllty -.oi-._.;.usi.‘ ‘Cor. Kent and Prihepwrietl . THE. coureglng, aympathlzing. these iehlldren. use ‘lehment, neeggault l drive etarte June 16th. How be? . i’; E. Protestant _,CHARLQTI‘ET<5YI.N. channels . .~,vi..-'"ll Mothers Lov ie something beyond our ken. Even the memory of lt_ wielde tremendous influence in our iivee, directing, en- We are not aeklng you t0 Provide mothers for the or- phaned children of thle province-that but tile loea or their methere‘ ie eulilcient handicap to clothing» good lnfiucncee are whal; aii---A HOME ' MrsBianoharli hae prepared the plane. Tendereuare being received. Oolieotora have been appointed. The iAthletic Women. Make Poor Mothers (Special to The Guardian) lLONIDO June 111. - A cam- paign in the interest of mother hood and against the lll effects al leged to result from girls going in to athletics, has been started here A resolution was passed at. a meat lng of managers’ of girls schools u... 0 made a. study of physical culture, protesting against the present sys- tem of physical education tor girls as injurious to future generations. ‘A small committee was formed lo ie lmpoeeible: swift they on the subject. I‘ ISeversl letters favoring the movement were read. Sir James Creighton Browne, author of hooks on mental and nervous diseases, wrotez- "Physical exercise and ,training are as necessary to girls as to boys. Burthesc must have regard to physiological and deve- lopmental consideration. To ig- ‘nore sexual differences is to court ' disaster in the lGllg run." ' ‘iwomen who develop masculine instead of feminine instincts," ,wrote Dr. Arabella. Keaealy, " do - lthls at the costuof "the male poten- 0 h Itisl, which is transmitted by the lp adage "1119 ""1 your contribution father to the daughter in trust for the male line. Athletic women produce female offspring mainly and seldom have sons. Bllt when sons are born to 1theln, they are apt to be puny and deitcate or More Live’ i Stock Needed. advocates for more live stock 1111111! based their arguments on the. pro- fits derived from feeding roughage and grain to swine. right as far as they 81>. 1W1 111919 ‘mer should keep more live stock lparent to .live stock system had been lnaugu were a spiendldherd of dairy cut- tle in grass almost to their knees could only give a bare existence to were‘ boarders on I have noticed that many of the cattle, sheep and These arguments are all is u greater reason still wily a far- Even when prices ofdgrain und hay were above lgiie average, it did not puy to sell then‘: as in. doipg so you were lessening the ability M, your furnror in other words dilnin lshlng your capital. account, and the ultimate outcome will be that capital will shrink to almost the vanishing-point or‘ to where the farmer will not be able to "raise enollgh to maiqnrain himself and his family; then what would hall- pen the yo-ung people, seeing noth- ing but slavery ahead, leave the inheritance which should be theirs and emigrate to seine industrial centre and the old place which grew such splendid crops when first cleared will be lelt a wild. (Now the farmer who has some thought for theluture of ills farm or estate; he ‘who wish I toacon- tlnue in business. on e, er lie farm and leave the soil in such il condi- tion that a sun or heir can con- tinue to make a living on ~it has one course left to him, namely" sufficient live stock. ‘ ' Generally speaking there was ll time when fnrnlcrs made a good living and some money on selling rtl-w nluteriai but this source ni~ ways left lands poorer and less able in Produce (crops. All this has changed‘ and to be a successful mun today, the farmer must prod-lice the finished article and follow a system in which eve- ry possibie bit of fertility cnn he replaced back on the land. llf the farmers of this province would realize before it is too late that their salvation and the sul- vation o succeeding generations lies in a good system of stock farming, they will he making a long stride toward greater pros- parity. Actual examples of the above ar gument would be s. comparison of districts where stock raising pre- dominates, with sections that have been selling raw materials. Let anyone drive through the section for instance where farmers have taken up dalrying and allowed it intelligently; the fact is quite ap- the observant person that the soil gives good returns {or work expendetland is not only vested capital but also make.’ the owner independent. On the other side of the question as an iilustrn tion, the writer had the privilege only last season to have a look at quite a large section of the pro- vince and l nm sure that l passed through districts which, lg .1 good rated when co-operative dairying started in this province, would have ‘been a credit to any country. but today are pdorer than ever. I distinctly remember of noticing one farm where one could not help but see the effect of keeping good live stock, in a- field near the mad whereas the farms on both aides and in fact in the whole section one or two mean looking speci- mens of live stock. The milk 001W llllparently would only give barely enough to cover the bottom of a good sized psii; in fhct they starvation rat- ions. - the 0a inquirinz I found that his 1.573111 m) {IQ .. <'o.-.m':~.' v- l‘ _ hep-of today to maintain h , @ ‘hod keep abreast of , . “two tthovuld get heav- not clan‘. ' not. 1 gin! the good farm and _»'_ re h'im hod pinned his q stock and appearances "tfi y fdot that he was on nee that. will iced the toliultlmate success. ea -‘ uat continue togget yieidliletltll at present. How e, except by feeding es of the farm on the . menting this with - “Ill! Wind's propur‘ rota- M/llether is it profitable or g ‘UIIIB to feed all crops not thequeetion, but e able to pay dividends on the in- a] generally emasculate or of inferior type. The cultured classes who are mainly afflicted by athletic training are failing to provide sons of the fine physique and the manly talents and initiative which have set our Anglo Saxon race ln the van of evolution. Miss Cowdray, the principal of n girls‘ high school who moved the resolution of protest, said that the cal market for live hogs was wit !giris who had been trained to play out any new feature to note yes< hockey, cricket and football suffer terday. prices being steady under‘ ed at child-birth. ‘Sometimes the a fair demand for all offerings‘ child suffered, sometimes the mo- whlfih were not large but ample to ther, and sometimes one of them meet all immediate demands and died. Eighty percent of the girls a, fairly active trade was doue in she hadknown who had been train selected stock at $10 to $10.25 per ed to become gymnastic mistress- 100 lbs. weighed off cars while the es had been incapacitated for mo- trade in heavy hogs was slow at therhood. . $9 1-0 $9.25 and sows at $6 to $6.25 A girl has a large store of vital The deuland for small lots of tires and nervous energy Iwhich she sed hogs was steady to fiii actual could draw upon if normally deve- wan-ts and prices were unchanged loped at the great crisis of mother with sales oi city abattoir fresh hood. That strength was a de- killed stock at $16.50 to $17 por posit account, but if she used it as 100 lbs. a current account, as a boy could There were no new 1181/8100 afford tovdo, her children would meats in the market for smoked pay the bill. she ‘believed that °1‘ 9111911 11191115. 111B 16911118 being the Victorian girl was a better n.0- a111°11F9191111y 1111111 11 111111)’ 11-1111" ther than the modern athletic girl. trade. 111155111: for local consumr- iMliss Radmar, director of the tion and for shipment to country d'Egv1]1e_M1ch|1u Schgq] of phy. Points. There, is also a B0011 sical Development, said that the movement for export account and feet were the only part of a girl's 111 00115911111181108 91001111 011 5110i body that need be made strong. A are not unusually large for this woman‘s body should be elastic P9110111 01' 1116 yeflr- 51119.9 01 8 10 and strong chests and big muscles 10 l-b. hams for domestic account mean; inelastic chests and 50.1185 were made at 36c to 38c Der lb.'. Drill apparatus should be done 10 ta~15 lbs. at 33c to 35c and l8 away vffllL to 25L p, at 30c to 32c while Wlnd- v Mf5_ Roggr watt, pleadad go; w‘ ‘sitcom! boneless bacon sold t e teaching of poise. "Let us so at 4180 o 50c per lb. and breakfast ck to the Greeks," she said, "to grfldss at 33c 10 350 D91‘ 111- T118 the system which was the most trade in trimmed loins of fresh Wendel-gm eve.- known;- llork continues good and the man; - ket was fairly uctive with sales at -—<*>-——-—— 28c per‘ lb. and trimmed shoulders HONOR G953 To JAMESTQWN at 17c‘ per lb. Tillers was no further change in the market for lard, prices being about steady at the recent decline] noted with a moderate lyusincssl passing for local account in Cuua- , (“an “fined grades a, 11 L20 ppr The Pilgrims irave been referred H, m 20 |b_ wood 1mm and nu m in us the virtual founders of the 55 n, boxem ‘notion m the sense that they first qqw receppm of‘ provisions yep-proclaimed the principles upon terdny wem 20,16 packages lanhiwiliCil our government is based. 591 boxes hams and bacons am] Woodrow Wilson ln hisWHistory 164 packages finned ma“, of the American People" speaking UpppUAqA, June 8 _ provisions of the Virginian Assembly which hardened a “me m “n9 Wm, lmgsj luet in the chancel of the clrurch and as a result of some expo-rt buy 111 31111199191111 July 30- 1619. 811)‘!!! ing. At the close prices were un|_ “W9 100K 111191! ‘V1111 11111118 9111111- chnnged to 7c highen Future “no. lon upon it as the first represen- pmmls were: tative assembly in America, as to ' the beginning of liberty and self givernment in the English ‘colonies but the colonists themselves seem to have taken it very quietly as if they hadexpected it and looked upon it as a matter of courts in the circumstances. lln the year before Sir George Yeardley had brought Jrom Eng- land a. document which Virginians wercthenceforth to regard as the Great Charter of their liberties, n document which made of their colony a little commonwealth. iSc the Jamestown colony was the first to have an assembly and a written constitution and it also was the first to have "trial by jury" an endowed college, a school house, a school for Indians, a min- The Provision. Market LIVE HOGS STEAY UNDER FAIRLY GOOD DEMAND. MONTREAL, June 10 - The lo- Virglnian City Was the Scene oi the First Representative Assem- bly lln the United States. OPEN HIGH Mess pork per bbl. \Juiy _ $17.50 17.60 Lard per 100 lbs. July . lSept $9.90 9.02 10.20 10.25 Short Ribs per .100 lbs. iJuiy $10.20 10.25 lSept. . . (10.40 10.40 Cash prices elosed:— Pork nolnin- - 111ml $9.05. Ribs $9.50 i0 $10.60. ' LOW CLOSE Mess pork oer bbl. and of women who claimed to have‘ draw up and circulates. manifesto . or work lust 1t) t asrick of WRIGLEY$ < j l between your ' , ‘_ v it's a wonderful heir i '1 in daily tasks"-"-angr" l; srortsasweil. ‘ . ., l-lazertie . disaoreer " __ and herd j- i pieces come easy. ' ; for WRiGLE-VS 1 elves you comfort and noise-disallow, ,;, the zest til‘ t‘, __-. means eucoet ' ‘iéfie- Lu]; 1.1.», a areal deal for 5c 1 The .1 _ ' i i: Flavor SEALED TIGHT’ ' _r “=18 KEPT RIGHT" ' f w uT1cE .'. Magnet Cream Petrie Mfg., C0., Y Box 485, Charottetown j: H. R. Archer, General Representative 1 ' Milton McLeod, Agent . 55 Prince Street, Charlottetown . EASTERN STEAMSHIP Lmrsj INTERNATIONAL LINE; f; RESUMPTION 0F‘ FREIGHT AND PASSENGER IERVIOI D svr. Jolllv AND BOSTON COMMENCING MAY‘. Steamship GOVERNOR DINGLEY will leave St. John ‘ day at B o. m. end every Saturday at 6 p. m. (Atlantic Time: a , 1 t. r Th This Wednesday trips are via Eestport and Luboc. due Bulb! I ' urs ay. ‘ _ ,1 The Saturday trlpn are to Boston direct. due Sunday t. i. . FARE $10.80 STAT'"""‘I!S ' ' - Direct connection at Boston with Met‘... “ Line Si. ere I York via the Cape Cod Canal. _... ‘ 3H; For rates and additional information apply to ; " ' ‘ l. U. UUIIRIE, Agent. ister. a church; to have a marriage ceremony; a Thanksgiving Day; a hospital; a library; a courthouse: a ostoffice; u Masonic temple children. reached when an Jmportentj tion had to be decided. ' .1 11.1 an was the first to Christianize Anna1'___A“na hem! me " the. negro, as _a southern writer aha" we keep n m m‘ h '. i points out. asked the father. rust-p f.‘ moment's pause, as severe maids wrestled with the tous question. At last .' ' WISE LITTLE BOBBIE The family ‘werzhaving mousse for dinner-a rare treat for the July $11.50 11.00 Lard p61‘ 10o lbs. July 9.82 cs2 Iflent- 10.10 10.10 Short ribs per 100 lbs. - July 10.12 10.12 Bent. 10.35 10.30 form, cut out and mail it. No T|ME To ‘£65 Th. Gllilflul-ll. “This palm- says lthe worid'll 0l'l~ ly last another five million years" "By jove. An’ l ain't had my demobilization papers yet!"—-Wlnd day an 6 days or over. sor Magazine. 9mm!’ m Dena“ AD ORDER FORM Yon do not have to come to the Guardian office with your went ed: jnat eeeitlih l! yon went to Buy-Sell-Bent-Hlre, the moot logical place to advertise la Bate; 10c per line per day, 9c per line per day for 8 days or over 8c letters count as one word. ‘special Rates-Furnished all 11'1" Count live spaces to a line. Groups of five tigurd, lei ' Address fomue part of ed and must be oaltl,eor.,_ .W_r1 , . v l ‘. ‘It ed. 75c for one week’. Biteatione. Wanted we ‘we v1 r yer-week. , _ ‘<1 . ‘ . 10 Per 6e_nt Dieoount for Oaeh I p‘ Babe Rtlth _ é --. ~ i has nothin on Z . , i Posrlbllsrlas 1, ‘ Ftlzesrmeldormmflakes “MW 1 ‘iheyite both m i 1 ‘- 5 at 1191116 plate 1 some. m. ed ' _ tlmoe u...» .. ’ "38)’! for which 1 enclose S‘ ‘ . Addreer If’; ' h < - ' l, . . The , Guardian Want Ad ilept. l, _ , ~ .nl n ---~- 11 farm and farm rlgiht must plenty livg ates . _ ' - ‘tel. irate on erif 1-5 “sags...- tT..,....:_-. . ;.". rhvhe 1e: .43. , 1 v. .