517's ,.'. w." -.,. ‘no {or l n us‘. - R an,“ i _ _,-<- -/ . \\ \\\\~\\ ‘v Qélnili-wrsiiiii lssunliicia cuuiiiii HYNDIAN & 0O. LTD, Provincial Integers Chm-lmaesewu Before Sir William Mulock, ex-chle! justice, and a distinguished group of purists, Mr. Justice J. G. Glllsndcrs was sworn into office at Osgoode Hall, Toronto, May 9. The newest hutice of the Supreme CoIIrtoIOntarIocameioToronto fromhIshosueInLoudomOnI. lie b well-known to . ‘ because of his service with the Royal Flying Corps. After the ceremony, Mrs. Giilanders visited his lord- ship! office and they held a conference as to what office color scheme will suit him best. This man arranged it O CAN YOU FIGURE OUT how you can spare the coat of a college education for your cilildren out of your present yearly earnings? The Great-West Life man showed this boy's father how so arrange it, and the annual cost was surprisingly small. What do you want most for yourself or your family-protection, an education, a retirement fund. continuance of your salary -, for your family when you are gone? Get in touch with the nearest Great-West Life oiiice or repre- sentative. Discuss your aims with a Great-West Life man. oi illustrations, Ideas, tony and layouts for the use of Guardian advertisers every month! This service ls ah-. solutely‘ Fre e IF you’re a butcher, a baker, I iiliiin” stick maker or any of dozens 0f ‘otllfl kinds of merchants, Y0" "l! Prim‘ 57 advertising in the Guardian with 0M‘ l!" Super Service illustrations and lsyvlltl that will fit your ads u» s T-wid m" tlleln doubly effective! ‘ "The Charlottetown varillli Phone I88 for I'll-flier Information! '74 unr- wssrws nan -la a fail Eastern Guardian .."l‘his column ls reserved fol-news of local interest but advertislngof a newsy nature may insertedsl 4o a word strictly payable in ad- vanes. ..'I. 0. 0. F. Anniversary Con- cert Montague, May lgt-lawbsdaall ..'SUBSGBIPTIONS t0 the Charlotlotown Guardian ma handed to their Rout. Archie ..'DON"l‘ ivuss the Big Variety Concert in Oddfellows Hall Mon- tasue. my laui. n-lsi-b-is-si ..'SEE JOE MORRISON. fain- ous tab dancer rel-form at Concert, Montague May 18th. L-457-5-18-3i. "E1911 911313;?" simian"- u . ley a “ e1,-46¥-5-13-3i. ..'PAINFIIL INJURY -— Mrs. Mort lviicLean of Montague, had. the misfortune of breaking her wrist due to a. fall she received on the floor od her home on Tuesday evenlnb-F. PERSONALS rim. H. J. Mhbon, yl_."r of the Rexall Drug Store, Montague left Thursday morning for Boston where new underlie medics-l be the singln of the "Institute Od ‘Bram was carrl ‘The Bentral Guardian TION LIFE INSUR- 14-8789-‘1-12-318 I'm! SALEl-BQ to Watches. Jews and E. W. Taylor, chmond Street. r101: our ' 'r Racket at The nligrsiidd?’ “m L-48l-5-14-2i. sru onn saw LINE f mm, Rackets at The Bike Shoo. Lr-igl-b-li-ii. ADVERTISER ABEB-EMHDED that advertisements for insertion in The Guardian should be received at the office not later than ll. AM. he previous day. ti sntrrslts Norton-Tile s. s. Colony ‘Prader will arrive here about the 21st. May to load live- stock and general cargo for st. Pierre and 8t. John's, Nfld. A. Plckard a Co. agents. . L-izs-li-lil-ii. FIRE SALE-New stock suits and top coats at half price while they last. slight] damaged by smoke. J. P. Mac herson dz Son. 155 Great George Street, Charlotte- town. L-4 75-5-1341. HA5 SUMIVIEB OIIAEGE- Mr. MacDonald. theological student at Mount Allison University, Sack- ville. visited his home in Hume River on Thursday. bee. on Fri- day morning for Riexton, N . where he will serve the Ko uac United Church as student tel‘ for the sinnmei- months. POULTRY CLUB. ORGANIZED —iA BWB’ B11 Girls‘ Po - The present membe clulb is thirteen, and the following officers were elected: President- Bernard Shea, Sec. Tress-Norman Hardy. Adult Directors- Raymond Shea and Hudson Prldham. PERSONALS Mrs. J .W. Mannie has returned to Moncton after a short visit here. Miss Mary O’Hanley of Charlotte- town ledt yesterday for a month's visit to her home in st. Peters. AUBURN W. I. The regular monthly meeting oi the Auburn Women's Institute was held at the home of Mrs. Ambrose Callaghan with eight members and several visitors present. The meet- ins opened with a short prayer and e." The minu of the previous meet- ing were read and adopted. Ro call was answered by each member giving the latest hint on house- cleaning. The members decided to subscribe for the Institute News mr the ensuing year. A short pro- ed out. ‘ “M of owo readings and etc. The next meeting will be held in the school house in Jilly; roll call to be “Ways and means of making money." Refreshments were served by the ‘ ‘ ed by Miss M. Calla- ghan. A hearty vote of thanks was tendered the host and hostess and the meeting adjourned by the sintlns of the National Anthem. Use Mlnardfi for bites. W0man’s Victory Was For Authors NEW Y 14 -(C'P) Joseph Bell who has re- sided in Mbntamie for the pest two years has returned to Murray ' Barbara-I". ' uriounu wouxsns 1 IN Mnrnva TOWN I GERALDKON‘, my 15-? —Publiclt Ont-Midi (or) w um w“ nowest inoo ted ml ‘has gratifiemiilcials, but they are . . bout the del- I . Ont. given beg-lupin to w s uge or Jgb-seekg-ylt has disclosed. "It/s nloe to see Geraldlolfs pro- gn” zed," commented Mayor mte, Draper "but every- time newspwpe twin‘; alnyi-lggl mil-aging we e a real: a - edge of ‘floaters’ looking for 10b5- snme of these have been absorbed and others have drifted out but iguana beginning to feel the el- "Bi-sing or of the town I have to bear the runt of the panhand- ling. Most of them are sent around to see me and I have had as many a, seven o, eight asking for meals in s, single evening. The situation is becomln serious." other ofgficinlg pointed out that semi-e osmium was mcormrawd manifest fieishts used to rumble through at 3O miles an hour s0 that passengers on board usually stayed there. Now trains must slow down to 10 miles an hour inside the yard limits and it is easy for men to alanine,- off. There ls no re- lief problem in Ceraldlon and none is wanted. they said. TO SAVE DUCKS -(OP)—Duck's Un- limited (Canada) will ‘pend I100.- ooo year. Work will be done at Blg Grasg marsh near Gladrtzne. Mam, Water en lake, south of o. and isrellgwgfluhss marsh near - "l - 9 restoratifln and we , areas. pre- and prairie f'rss years in a Charlgixig World," Har- Peru and is buried . founded in l9l2“Poeta-y, ORK, May In her hook “A Poets Life-Seventy achievements are died in Pizarro, there. She aMagszlne gubllshed in Chicago. At that t e there was almost no market for poetry and few maga- zines would publish it. Miss Monroe writes with meticulous care of this daring adventure in ublicatlon, with its attendant worres of fin- iusnce, misunderstanding and critic- riet Monroe's chronicled. She of Verse,” m. The glory of accomplishment has long since been accorded her, and the facts of her editorial work of 24 years are set down in document- al proof, where searchers for the truth of poetry development in Am- erica may find it. Always a fighter for justice. Miss Monroe won a law-suit which es- tablished “an author's right of pro- -srty in his unpublished manu- script." The standard of try publication was deemed arbi- ry by those whose poems d not meet her editorial favor. but she held to hea- ldeals despite all criticism, and the years have prov- ed her a wise editor and a pro- phetic judge oi poetry. nnrmmET-"itoni niorlimnoon Kathleen Allison. writing in the London Daily Mall, tells of how her children halve planned her fu- tin-e for her. In ten years I am coins t0 "i!" motherhood. writes Mrs- Allieodl. My children have arrapged this. It was Bridgett idea. Bridget is rising eleven and full of eascr grafltude to s. working mother. 1 gm u; have a galaxy of luxuries wh'cli include a cottawe bv tn?’ sea complete with scrvanis "lent by Judy. Judy is now seven and he! not the least doubt about having servants to lend in the sildod fu- tu re. ‘lwelve-year-old Jeremy says‘ diseases. A .>w; l --li,\\. i '-»\‘- n Iaze "Wllel you retire from us, . N Ar-Ji . lil '\H MARKS" l HI‘. (QHA 50% Off Silverware. selection for w J tlon or corrosion. ...what heaps of things you'll be able to d0." ‘ Children may say wise things. lch of us has not met the parent who goes on too long? Wlm does‘ not. know the moment at which t0 retire gracefully into a detached and unposseslve friendship Who continues to sacrifice and give up for able-bodied young people who are profoundlv embarmsed by this state of affairs? I shall let my three off their warm young promises when the time comes, but I shall retire in good order, 1 hope, when Judy l: eighteen. Motherhood. up to a point, is a Whole time Job. It is not. a life- time ob. Hotels and boarding houses are flied with lonely women who have discovered this too late. "After all I've done for them" is written large on their bewildered faces. ‘There are innumerable things I want. to do when I am‘ forty-five. Things for which there is no time now. I shall lei-am so play golf and the piano-accordion. There will be time and opportunity to practice both 1n secret. I will travel modestly with chosen friends. I will go on conducted tours 1n spite of what, superior friends may say. I will nit on plat- forms as one of the commit- tee.....I have always wanted to do this. 1t there is any special alri- prentlceahip to commiltcedom l shall serve it. I will embroider a set of gros point chairs and leave them to mv daughters. I shall always be interested in clothes. As my income will be a lot less than it is now. I shall have acquire a few of thoze fashion tricks which make for cut price chlc. 1d A self-made garden and bOOks with- out number are listed for my re- tirement clays. HELL BE A MAN Jeremy will be s. man. He may sit at a city desk or under a scien- tlsi-‘s lamp. He may drive the plough in s. far country. He will be busy with cars and girls and the shape of his collars. Bridger and Judy will be carving careers. falling in and out of love. experimenting with hats and make-up. My experience cannot help them .. .. t _e only wm-thwhile experience l; ones own. I want to retire enou not to rush forward and save t em from mistakes, or even from foolishness. Life has shown me that people who are never allowed to be iwlifih when they are young invariably get their own back in middle age. I wam, to be the kind of mother who can say to children WhQ have been foolish or even badly .. "try again." And without emotional s/ppeskg‘ and an 1 sold you so ex- reas . p! hope they wllllove me. I how even more than that they will like me. children often feel that they must love their parents. Liking them a with’ of ohoicfi. m‘ In years my usbflid will take a three months gather - oliday. The children have arranged this too. We shall start a MW Kind Eduard’ dill mo, be fsv sisort debut . .. as a grandmother. NIW RHINO TOWN GROWING RAPIDLY Git. MI! lb- KLiIi l'i."l"t) W lvwg UAiqnAN Z-YEAR GUARANTEE If this PYREX Measuring Cup should break from hot liquid within two years, lt will be replaced absolutely free by any Pyrex dealer in exchange for the broken pieces. Transparent-You can see to measure quarters, thirds and halves. Accurate two-way grsduatlonr-Can be read with cup held in either hand. They read for either cups or ounces. Smooth lnslde——Graduatlon marks are outside. Easy to keep clean and sanitary. Cool handle —- No burnt fingers, no matter how hot the liquid in the cup. Always bright and new — Resists fruit juice acids and vinegars. No discolora- MEASURING CUP --and label from a tin of Magic Baking Powder - any size. We pay all shipping costs . . . times! A measuring cup through-that you can use with hot liquid without fear of breakage. Clean,‘ sparkling glass that canno rode. Always looks" new-through a life-time of service. Accurate, con- venient-a joy to own! less than its actual value. Complete list of inflredlmm on "fl- Mliic Bakinl Powder is free alum or any I MADE IN caivana ' replaced the tliud of carpenters‘ hammers in this mlnillg centre. 175 miles flurbheast of Port. Arthur, and Qntarfosneivest; incorporated town 1-‘ ‘Paging to Lake a mUClLTll ap- "T 880 homes and business igs were being erected in the a barren. rocky mining . ct.’ Today steel workers are ~@-*-Dletin a l00.000-gal1on water lower an laying pipes wnici. .. l. carr running water to residents, W ere formerly pedemrlsns trud- ged through ankle-deep mud, they now walk dry-shod on board walks that border both sides of Gerilri- tons streets. _The walk". were quietly built. and laid down overnrgni on the orders of Mayor Foster Draper - and his council. Citizens were lur- prised when they arose the next morning to find they could lay aside their rubber boots. CARDIGAN SCHOOL Report for ADYiI of Cardigan School. -Gri1de X.-1. Teresa Murphy; 2, Aline Ryan: 3. Dorrnda McPhee. Grade Inn-l. Leah Brothers; 2. Kent. McDonald; 3. Jean McDonald. i Grade II.—1. bfarlon Mc- Enchern; 2. Bertha Sullivan; 3, Alban Sullivan. Grade vn.-1, Edna McPhec. | Grade VL-l, Helen Ryan; Teresa Rvan: :3. Jackie Muc- Donald. Grade V.-l. Arthur Ryan; 2, Annie MacEachern: If. Dunstan Murnliv and Mary Sullivan equal. Grade IV.—l, Marlon Gallant and Ernest Macdonald euua: 2. Irma‘ Matheson: 3. Windsor Buchannan and Waller Conahan. Grade III.-l. llllllan McPhee equnh; 2, MdDonald. Grade II. Ji".-—l. Hattie Walsh; 2, Geraldine McDonald; 3, Earl Gul- lant. Grade I. (SrJ-l. Lemmie Shep- hnrd imd Walter Foey; 2, Clare Stienhnrd. Teachers-Principal, Helen Dona- hoe. Intermediate. Bernadette Lewis. Primary. Dalsv Aanew. (Patriot please copy.) IDNG TRIP MADE MOSTLY BY AUTO MELBOURNE, Victoria. May ls —(OP)— A Canadian and Austra- lian have arrived hem from Enl- Land in an automobile in whch they made most of the l7.000-mlle jour- ney. ‘RED. Kidd of Canada and J5. M. Cameron of this state boll ht the car in Lotidon and traveled acmas Europe. the Near Blast and India to Ceylon. From there the ca,- was shipped to Fretnantle. Australia only trouble enroute was within a few hundred miles of sydnew, YOUR FEET HURT‘? ruoua m Horace J. A. Brown Chiropodist — Podiatrist l4! Gt. Geo. Si. fllsriottetown A You've wished for it a thousand And hero is your opportunity to get this measuring cup for only 25¢—far CONTAINS NO ALUM lnurndient. (Alum is sodium aluminum sulphate and la never used in Magic Baking Powder.) IOU fill BOO t dent or cor- All you do with 25d and cups lusts. "1 yrwfimitt... ....."':'..°.":"...-."..:l:r.."““......"n*. ‘mm liqulss. g‘ enclose 26c and a wrappc from a tin of We Baking Powder. any also. Our sole reason for making this valu- able ofier ls this: We want every woman in Canada to try Magic, and find out for herself what delicious results she can get with this finer baking powder. from your grocer, and send the label But send your order right away. This offer is good only while the supply ORDER BLANK Magic Baking Pozdz, Toronto, 2, Ont, Bur 5. ' ACTUAL SIZE is get a tin of Magic the order blank below. This afar _|oo_l _ while so u um: n» m not-um n/Canodo only. nly dPYRBX ssfislods. sad Maaaapd Protestant Orphanage Collections Continued East Baltic per Lorna Kldson 50c. each from: Clarence Chlng. Willie Chino, Major Young, Theo- dore Robertson. 30c. each from: George Jarfls, Roddie Kidson. 25c. each: Chester McNeil], ‘I7- ler Chintz. Alexandra Robertson, Hilda Fraser. lVfrs. Willard Chlng, Nelson Stewart, 15c. Total-Mm. East Baltic per Homer Robertson Mrs. Elsie F. Kennedy-fie. 50c. each: Mrs. W. S. Robertson, Kathleen Robertson, Clarence Rdb- ertson. Total-gwifil.“ pee Young People's Union. Bedeque, Bedeque Indies‘ Auxiliary, L-490-b-l6-1l HAZEL GROVE SCHOOL Honor Roll of Hazel Grove School for April. Grade X-l. Louis Bafznall: 2. Catherine MacLeod; 3. Jean Pound. Grade VItL-l. Georgie Buch- anan: 2, Melvin Pound. Grade VII.-l, Annie Pound; 2, Dorothv Baimall and Thelma Nich- olson: 3, Stephen McConley. Grade VI.-l, Helen Pound; 2. George Poun 3. Waldon Bertram. ra e .- . Marjorie Buchanan; 2. Vivian Craswell and Ora. Pound. Grade III.—l, Hazel Craswell. ROJIRh Pound. Grade I.—l. Helen Bagnall. Tcuchor~l3arbara Pound. UMBER OF UNKNOWN RAOI MELBOURNE. Victoria. May l4 —lCPJ—- Traces of a former civl- lization have been found lll the centre of Papua. E.W.P. Chlnnery told a meeting of the ‘Field Natur- alist; Club of Victoria here. with latest scientific Instru- ments will give the prescrip- tion which allows vou so use your eves without strain. Avoid the headaches and *4‘ " of even slight eye- strain. Know so: eyes. consult G. F. Hutcheson Grade IL-l. Mcrrll. Nicholson: 2. Were desoendan f imlmg" Twe- B9110‘!!! hi1“ oknev: nothing 0g the vuartz cluneheads and sacred W!!! 8 stones found ln theil country - 1-; ~~~.—..~:;—_s ilhc Papuan Civil Administration De. pertinent. -__.. W EYESlGllT EXAMlllATliili fitting and Sitlgcfilylll] (slung ll. J. MABON OPPOMETRIS’! MONTAGUE. P B. I. Oifiee Connected with , Drugstore ProfessionMaIWGYds —_—~~ ~—~ —_: D. F. liRfilllBhlli Chartered Accnmtant l-ldl Richmond Sircel Phone 47. l’. 0. Bu: l2- Mcleuil a Bentley W E. BENTLEY, K. (Y. J. A. BENTLl/i‘ ii i‘. C. I‘. BENTLEY l.L B. Barristers and Altorncy-nl-law MONEY T0 LOAN‘ I itlARl'l‘l.\lE Ad|uslriu=ni Bureau CREDIT - Lf()l.LE(,"l‘IONS Mummies and carvynqs had b53511 , CREDIT REPORTS found similar to those in BKYDI. PERSONAL LOANS although the present natives re- Peardi-n Buldz- (Ihfiown semhled Hindus of Malaya, Mr. Phone 121s Chlnnei-y thought they 1N Fred it A. Large Barrister. Solicitor. etc. A Successor to I). Edgar Shaw. li Provrse Block. l2‘! Grafton Money to Loan Collections. Real ’ reet. I Charlottetown. P. I I I Alex. W. Malheson Chinnery is attached to ‘i’ aaaaisrsa. sotrcrrols. no. ' loner io loan Ollee: It Great George Street. M. Aiban Farmer aaaaisna. soucrros. no. noun 1o was lallksfCanaslallildiiig, Cbasiettett Oolleeilsm i“