‘ =3} Z5 OTHER knows how shoes of . boys and girls are scuffed and worn, soiled and torn—that active, tireless little feet seldom rest from early morn till evening ShHdOWS fall. . tMother kno shoes wear out. _M_others who put ws how children’s Fleet Foot shoes on the kiddies in summer time will find them light, durable, economical. Fleet Foot shoes, with their flexible rubber soles and v " canvas uppers, give comfort and foot ' freedom, and for the cost very little. They are not Fleet Fleet Foot is on the sho tliif Fleet Foot ,was originated Dominion‘ Rubber System. mry pair. It is your guarantee of quality and value. wear they give, they Foot unless the name e. o“ and is made only by the The name Fleet Foot ls on Ml t mer footwear lor kiddies lil0lll€l"S problem solved Liv‘. Eastern Guardian ..*8i<l0P frotn i~iohuun‘s Catalog. JQUMMERVILLE RACES July 7. Particulars later. 6-19-3 '..“E. E. PARKMAN, Optometrist will -be at Harrington's Hotel, E!- Jon, Thursday, June 7th, from 1 till 5 p. rm. to examine eyes an it glasses. II*STREETS LOOK GOOD- They Mayor and Town Council oi Georgetown are to be congratulat- ed on the excellent work done on the streets the past few weeksmii ..'(‘OME ALONCn-‘SOIIHH this year will iall in line and invite the whole island to u. Grand Tea Party. Sourls-by-the-Sea is an ideal spot for n. 'l‘ea Party and it is quite u few years since the lust one, so watch for date and announcement. JOINSRED CROSS STAFF. -- Miss Mona Wilson, oi Toronto, ar- rived in Charlottetown Thursday evening to join the staii of Red Cross Public lleaith Nurses. She l ni- O OIIIS‘ The simplest way to end o com is Blue-jay. Stops the trium- stautly. Then the corn oosens and comes out. Made in clear liquid and in thin plasters. Tho action is the same. At your druggist MIilue-j a1 Maritime Religious Education Council An article on Religious Educa- -- - THE CHAELOTTETOWN GUARDIAN ___ ....-__- v, A SCENE FROM "THE FORGOTTEN LAW" At the Prince Edward Wednesday and Thursday boards, either national or provln- m- ,H“,'|g_ "This are; rovers some ma,‘ Thar” we” 20 G‘*"""al S°“'l10.0(l0 square miles and embraces Tel-am?!“ 7 niJYlY W011i sefleifll“ northwestern Illinois, a small par-l 108. l3 Girls’ Work Secretaries; 3 of Iowa, southwestern Wdsconsin Children's Work Secretaries; ' “my Mlnnegutfl," ? tion entitled “TunnelllnS 9'0"‘ Church Basement to Front St. b)’ Dr. P. i-i. Hayward, Gen. Secretary. and Miss MacMahon will leave this rlVlOfldllY) morning for the muntry. Miss Mary Mill is al- Directors of itcliltious Education: 2 Professors oi Religious Educa- tion; 1 Editorial Secretary and 9 i) The geologist, in explaining the zit-lion oi the ire and why that port- ion oi the earth's stiriarce touch PAGE save ~ 7Z2 self/e fir? fioflée Qqesiiozu- flluay: ask for CHAVSE l: SANBORPPS SEAL BRAND OBTAINLE ANYWHERE m CANADA Sold only in H, l and 2 lb. tins. CHASE G SANBORN. moi \i',)pll L; D IIONTRELL. orrsrz” Whole, ground or file ("and for Trieolator or Pieololor. 41 TO MAKE YOUR SHOES A BRILLANT WHITE, USE ready working in the schools in Princ-i County. ..*BOWLING. —- Dr. McDonald and Mr, S. Drake are holding the attention of the bowling fans on the Souris alley, where for the past few weeks they have been piling up high aggregations. The alleys this year are in splendid shape, and being underground af- ford n nice cool retrcut for pastime and exercise. ..*RECORD Fl8HlNG—’i‘tuesiluy was a record breaker in the lobs- ter fishing on the North Shore. Catches of 2,000 pounds were lauded by individual bouts. Wed- nesday also continued remarkab- ly good at Big [lush factory, Tues- day one bout landed considerably over 2,000 pounds. The fisherman will be buying automobiles this summer. ..’*SHlPPlNG-— —Schr. Maggie Deli, Capt. John Blazer arrived from Spry Bay she was loaded with produce by W. A. Poole & Co, Lower Montague and cleared for Spry Bay. N. B.—.-Schr. Orila. Captain Petipas, arrived from Larry's ilivenN, S. and loaded Droduce by W. A. Poole & Co., Lower Morltague for Nova Scotla POFLHr-SCNX‘. Myra Louise, Capt. George Aubry arrived from Larrys Rlvfll‘. N. S. loaded produce at Panmure island wharf for Sculley Religious Education Council of Can- ada, tippeuritig in a recnt I881"! i" the Presbyterian Witness, 1111B cause-l favorable comment in tlll? field of religious education through- out the hiarititne Provinces. B8- couso of the considerable interest aroused by this article it is r8- printed below, in part:——- Altar a journey of sixty-iivehun- tired n-iles covering all the pro- vinecs oi‘ Canada, in the name of the young life oi the Protestant (‘b-lrclles, two tll-Hlliitll ilnprcsfilflilfl remained with me. Ono was that of the front street of an ordinary Canadian town, East or West. The barber shop W58 there. there was n slice shine par- lor, n game, perhaps of chance, went on; a drug store was well placed. u hotel lobby invited all and sundry; the corner store wink- ed in a friendly fashion; and so on. As l dropped into any oi these, lis- tened to the ‘conversation, will observcrl the curn-rnts of life, i always found it to be tingling with energy, vibrant with interest, effer- vcsclng sparks of vitality and deeply real lu the lives of the people therc, even though there might be plainly seen elements that were superficial or vicious. Tho lights ‘were bright; ened easily from the sidewalk; no one was formal or stiff; people laughed and joked; folks were there because the surroundings at- tracted them and met some inner Delorie & Co, Georgetown and cleared for Nova Scotia Ports.- Schr. Charlotte M. Capt. Flfzgep. aid. loaded produce and new port and cleared for North Sydney. She will return with a load oi coal for the Montague Ferry Co. A . ——~--~¢0>-__ ....-.-_... urner & Co., LttL, CharlottetownDistributors of Fleet Foot Shoes. B. A. A. McDonald Birmiflrl. Attorney, Eta. Money to Loan Ch... Iottotown y Building, n. STEWART, K. c lstor and Solicitor, 84 Grant George Btroot titers for tho Union Bank oi Canada ' on. cmrr ronic Diseases lmont In person or by mg" : Purdy Station, Woatchoo- tor Co., N. Y. - S. HESSIAN Ilfl‘. Sollelitor, Notary Public to. MONEY TO LOAN "0 P. E. Island timer & Palmer H. J. PALMER. K. c. Barrlotor, Etc. Money to Loan 0i Nova Sootla Building Charlottetown, P. E. I. k n. MeGuigan I I RIBTER. COLIOITOR. ETC. Money to Loan c" Cameron lloek arlottotown. P. E. Island Miles Garrison A. B.. M. D. a"! Tuberculosis lpoolallot llllton Road, Charlottetown llfltmom In lolootod Oasoo f. 0. Archibald , muiflll N. Y. Foot Graduate _ k lohooi and Hospital 0 llmltod to Eyo, Ear, Nose and Throat _ hm Iulldlng, Grout (mm - oDonald & McPhee I H. F. McPhoo rotesslonal Cards MONUMENTS AND H EADSTON ES REASONABLE PRICES gm - xzf/(Qgq At our new modern plant equipped with tho iatoot otono cutting machinery, we guarantee to glvo you work that will please. A poet card will bring our now designs and prleo llot. T I N G L E Y MONUMENT WORKS Longworth Avs., Owtown i _i__.____ Eye-Glasses From $2.00 t0 $10.00 From East Paint to Capo Boar lo a big tonrltory, yet right across thlrapaoo Parkman Supplies the Big Majority Oi Eye-Glasses Simply because PARK- MAN'8 EYE-GLASSES aro the FINEST PROOURAILE, and ho lo tho ONLY GRAD- UATE OPTICIAN (attend- aneo courses.) In Montague Call and ooo for youroolf his UP-TO-DATE OPTICAL PARLOURS. °llnoolto Guardian Oiiloc Telephone ION. Houro-ouizmvnuol E. E. PARKMAN MONTAOUE. P. i. l. i i AT A>L 4 1 4 _..__A_ PERSONAL tetown, was a recent Sourls visitor . .‘ lllessrs. ‘ (lOCK, Cfllilllliffllllll llllfll, i178 i Sourls. ..“Miss Mary McLean, of Souris, is home again from P.W.C., after completing successfully third year work. ..'Mr. Wm. Siiliphant, principal of Sourls lligh School, spent the week-end at his home in Hunter River. Hthir. Wm. Pope, lobster packer oi North Lake, was in Souris Fri- day or. business. ..'l\lr. George Sutherland, oi the Massey-Harris. was In Sourls Thursday. _ -i—-<vo->---- WELL PAID. Judge——lt seems to me l have seen you before. Prisoner-You have. your honor. it was l who taught your (laughter to play the piano. ' “a” Judge-Thirty years! undo: ngoaad in olcliooolooooo In. . KILL MOTHS r i Sprinkle I OO-QQO . Get ihe Facts; About Y0llll EYES Do you know? That we aro lllvlrm you Ger-vice equal to any fllvon in tho largo con- trol. Children and adults are being examined daily. A oon- oultatlon now may oovo your oyoa for tho mturo. 1 1 Minard’s Liniment, Lumbermaws: ..‘l\lr. R. Nicholson, oi Charlot- m out on Front Street. Obendorif and Mur-i in two vital and strategic points—tbe i and experimental way. need, meeting it in a way that ltnany oi’ us have condemned but [few taken the time to study. _ The next scone was a gloomyl ‘church building, dark andunat- ,trnctlvc, usually on a side street, 'and in the basement thereoLquite oiten glomnicr than the building itself, l often found a group of the, finest people in the world, even‘ though they were no longer young. nlct to consider the interests 0f' Sunday School work. in other! _WOl‘ll‘i, they were there to consld-i Ier the moral and spiritual welfare! of the children, the men and women‘ The greatest task that faces the; Church today is to drive a tunnel; of tommtlnicution between these‘: i igloomy, unattractive church build- ing and the forbidding. unreal ltype or’ religion for which it oiten Islands, on the one hand and, on the other, the bright and attrac- tive front street with its power of representing and appealing to the deep common impulses and desires of people. Religion is oiten set in a clolster oi intellectual and for- mal self-conceit while tho soul of the ordinary person has shrouded itsclt’ in a cloak of assumed indif- ference, and the two, outside oi hospitals and funeral processions, have but slight dealings with each other. 'l‘he two must be brought face to face. Channels of inter- influence must be opened between them. Paths of experience must be prepared so that these two can stroll up and down in a nor- mal, satisfying, and unhindered fellowship. These are chosen sayings stirs- ly, but—and it is a terrific "but"~ how can religion be made real and wholesome in the garden variety of human everydsyness? We have preach-i-iled, and orate-i-iltarl, and wrlte-i-lied and exliort-i-ilretl tothis end, but we are slowly lcuruiug that the only way to bring religion and the soul together permanently in experience, is to bring them to- gether in growing and maturing experience. This is the task of religious education; the work oi the Christian religion and life. Some years ago the Protestant Churches of Canada realized that this tunnelling operation was too colossal for any one oi‘ them work- ing separately and grout enough to ilclrfantl joint and co-oprrrltlvc effort. They tlecldcd to cooperate in the forming of joint boards for the promotion of those phases 0f religious education that could be carried in common. They bet!!!“ this rlne years ago in a tentntivo As one result. there recently was ht-ld in Toronto a llflthllrinfl that expresses a larger Yllfillllllre oi co-operation among the Protest- ant Churehes than any 01118!‘ group that can be named. The Sunday School Boards oi the vari- ous denominations have so much in common that it requires two weeks oi fellowship and rlsnntns in order to get ready for the work‘ oi the other iiity weeks in the year._ Under the auspices oi the Religi- ous Education Council of Canada.| there assembled for a staii Conier- ' once during the week oi April 16 to 22. tho employed nsools In all of Canada iesponslble for religious education. either national or pro- vincial. with the exception oi two who were prevented from attend- ll. J. MIMI OPTOMETRIST Montague, P. l. loland 4 l wwbflfinuow-ow n+0!- ing, There were fifty-one em- ployed and nine lay workers. 0f these, about. one-half are the em- ployccll oi the denominational boards of religious education and ANCIENT ICE FLOES CAUSED livinll in the fertile valley oi the middle went may rich crop yieldsjfzit swine, excellent built-r lu the iact acres were revert-d with ice. lProfessor William ii. HiLLs‘ oi‘ the geology department oi Northwest- ern University, who has made study of the subject, concentrating his observations upon Ohio. er that the iarnler living in doors op- _ Lay Workers. These are the eu- gitiuera in the task of tunnel-mak- ing. ‘ ed by it should yield to man an abundance of crops , said tlmt the pressure exerted by the glaciers 50.000 years ago crushed the rocks ‘and mixed the dirt. as they rolled southward; henne the many soils. “-lt is remarkable," said tProiess- ‘or Hurts-speaking of Ohio, ‘to ‘notice how, surldenLv, the tall corn will out! and be ucigbbored by stuntcil stalks and shriveletl ears. "And this its on account of the fact that ltundretis of ceiltnrites ago some rocks oi a ])iil'llt'lllill‘ lmrd- yness, nbln to withstand the on- ward swoop oi‘ the ice-fields from the north, tlt-ilectcll the fields, thus leaving the area which the rocks appeared to protect, tmplncizlt '01, 'l‘hat, in my opinion at least, at-cottnts for ibosr- 10,000 square -———<o§—-~~- men solL GEOLOGIST THINKS nvaivsmtisfidiy imp-Farmers their and that more than 50,000 yearn as) their rlttribute ‘This is the gist of the finding ol‘ 21 Comparing the glut-iatt-rl suction ni the tl0illlllllili and tln- drittlvrsenmilus oi r-omptlrativreLv prior soil. urea Professor titans found the soils lu tile two differed. in the glaciated land the soils are more diverslfed of better (nullity, states. lllul or, ‘ we geologists say, the drill loss urea." Professor lions stated that tl-r: dcnnlrrulitm lllltlllflcll the healthy grain and the sickly", stunted grain was so distinct as to form a WPll- tit-liner] litu- showlng the boundary he "With ‘illls asset ll is llitlc wond- the Easy to put on. DIriea quickly. Gilves a perfect snowwhitefinish. Theideal preparation to keep Canvas and Buckskin ‘shoes smart. Sold by all best dealers. BOSTON ‘BLACKING COMPANY, MONTREAL 11-42 this view, tirofesslug themsttlvss nply t unable to account for the driftless, "Onlr l2?" said the tourist. “l area; others, he said, went so far thought itwvns tuore than that." an to question the existence ol’ thcl ‘it's novler any more in these strczillctl drlitless area. lpurts, air," answl-rctl the boy. “it. ———~<°->————- ‘goes up to 12 o'clock and then WHERE TIME IS LIMITED. colnnu-ncrell ngain nt 1." - _i-¢o>i—- WOULD ECONOMIZE. 'l‘ht-. tourist Iiassing found that‘ his which lmd stopped. Staring a littl-- boy stirnding outside tin- (‘llzltt-zltl, hc went up lo him "And will you treat me nice nf- nnd tor we are murricrl?" she sighed. said: . llcr chuck tcnrli-rly pressed to hls’n. “Wm you tcll mc the time, "Oh certainly: but not as often sonny” as l do now," he responded cauti- zone which zieons ngo had l)(38ll‘lJt*i\\'l‘l?ll thc glaciulcl and non- covered with ice should iind him-lglat-laltetl laud. self better off than hisbrothet‘ of i’rofcssoi' Huas explained thui the drlftless area," says IProfcss- many zluthoritics do not hold ti» spoonful lemon juice or vinegar. makes 2/3 cup salad dressing. "m." ~"*'"Inoooaotfl"‘“' 1 mi 1 ‘ sputum-nun. CARNATION MILK PRODUCTS COMPANY, LTD., e10 “Jilst twelve o'clock." W118 tht ously. More Food Value in Dishes Make your dishes delicious and richer in food value by using Carnation Milk in salad dressings, cream sauces, desserts, etc. Twice as rich as ordinary milk, Carnation adds a wonderful new flavor. For Carnation Milk is just pure cows’ milk with about 603.‘. of the water removed by evaporation, sealed in the container and sterilized—nothing else. Takes the place of cream at less cost. Order several tall (16-oz.) cans or a case of 48 cans from your grocer. Try this salad dressing recipe below, and write for the free Carnation Cook Book containing other delightful dishes. NO EGG MAYONNAISE DRESSING V; tonspoonful salt, 2 tablespoonfuls Carnation ,Milk, 1,1.- cup oil, ‘A. teaspoonful paprika, 1 table- Put salt and paprika in a bowl; add Carnation Milk and mix thoroughly; add oil slowly, stirring constantly. Then add the lemon juice or vinegar. This recipe JOHN STREET, AYLMER, ONT. Carnation Milk “From Contented Cows” Inda In Canal: l! CAINATION III-l PIODUCII COIPANY. Lllltd AYLIIII, dnr. Conlsuoorho at Aylnor and loriulolt Ont. the other halt of cooperative