li ri? ‘- .` ,Y \,‘\ »4§i : 'iii F r , _i 5,, . i A ,i 'i i l hifi . t i . Vi 'x \ _ 1 5,. it _ Nl; .\V .1 ..- 4 -2' 3' 3 _. - r, - : ».. .=_if. fr., 1~"' ry \" lit lk l. 1”* i _ yr-._ "4 ‘,. ~, _J I i - . ,_ -1 Vi »\ ki .it xt. u v _ “I . >- \ - ~)I',v., , a ,i I ff'- _ _ I ` F* Af i, 5.' -fl V- i is . ii- t, if -.si _i_ ‘i',..,§i_ .._1 .i` .wi 1., v ‘i 2 "i ; . .1 ' ,\‘_l i ‘. I . .i 4’-_ , e.\;=~;-r.°‘.l- i - " .I -l -.,-: ig, i ,_-».¢~.~.4; _-:$1 _ .;.-.:i'.`.l .1. _ ,il 4 1 1,1"-f h,§f; fa. . .-_-.'f~.-f~ ' / 1\_PAG1ll‘lI‘0UR ` f Z ' g THE CHARLo'|"l‘ll."l'owN Gl}.irtDIA`N, M 1 g '_ g ___‘__' MAfv5,19-28 Does Your Back Ache? Tlfen your kidneys are out of order and you need Gin Pills G_in Pills stop blickaches by acting directly on the kidneys and the blad- Yr._ They soothe, heal and strengthen i e inflamed organs. Thousands who have used Gln Pills enthusiastically recommend them. Get Gin Pills today at your druggist, §0c a box. National Drug and Chem- ical Company of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Canada. ' A ` THE KIDNEY5 in Real Bargains in- 'Silverware See our window to-day for special ' bargains in silverware.. This is a wonderful chalice to get some small silver dishes, either for bridge prizes- or for your own per- sonal use. These piece.s sold :ls high as $3.50. Your choice to-day for $1.00. W. W. WElLiiE|i LTD. Jewelers Since 1868 ctor 0 nl¢ y O io orne Fox Trot Jean Goldkette and 21161: His Oi: hestra ` g Vocal llarrington aii\l Bersch 216515 "" s with “Sleepy” IIall’s Banjo 9.' , Together Waltz \\‘aring‘s Pehnsylvanians Instrumental I’-alll \\`hiti>m-,\n'.< Concert Orchestra Vocal Franklyn llaur 21213 35883 21220 f“ amona” The “theme song" of the Moving Picture-film “Ramona” ' Waltz Paul Whiteman and llis Orchestra - 21214 O O I O Mississippi Mud Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and liis Orchestra 21274 _\» _` , .’_,,/;;- _ _‘I __ fav- @- . *~ @- ii?"- Rotsry Education Following is the address given by ti Mr. Percy Pope before Rotary a few weeks agoz- ' U G. A. Studdert-Kennedy-writing W one of a. series of studies upon the W significance or life-entitled mf- W firmations-was' striving to get n t starting point. This was pro by his-_ little sou-who. running fu S from the Garden cried "Oh: Daddy e come here." The little fellow t/ook m e purpose in life. Save as a man makes no demand upon his inaivld ual initiative. 1h_ the production f objects of material desire, the ef. o "`” flciency of the madhlne is many mes greater than the effort.; of ncrgsnlzed individuals and if ealth and all that wealth can buy ere the most valuable regard that could look forward to, we ng(-ll e like no further thought but just vided press on, But wealth, power, po- itlon, cannot be accepted as an nd. Beyond these there is it div- him by the hand and led him to recognizes this his soul will remain where a hedgehog my absolumly hungry and his life in the end prove motionless, which is one of their a methods cf avoiding 'une attack of . their enemies. “Ia he dead. Dad- h 1 did so and the hedgehog drew away. failure. What are the chief rewards of le. Arc they not comfort and dyu? "Take R suck and tickle contentment and ho\v are these tn |him." said the father. The boy °¢.§“‘“°“- The "Ck 01 money m HY Subject one to great prlvation, i“You see that he is alive." said the' but the P°bS@SS1°H 0! H nalatial re- ifuthcl uwhen he is touched helsidence. recognised social position ‘shows by his movement that hc is’a :conscious of the fact." m nd wealth sufficient to secure nie cst efficient service may be cori- ; This gave Smdderhxennedy the sumed by dissatisfaction, while the suggestion he needed. Life mimi- -man in s cottage who is .able 10 Sat- lfescs itself ln the individual being 1511' hw essential needs. if love and fconscious of touches which he re-If iccives from the World without-as heerfulness flourish in his heart. lay enjoy a sense of well being and n _ ibeing twkled _,md ¢he,measu,~,, ofltrue comfort in much larger mea- llife is, by what, and to what extent. 5 lyou ale susceptibleof feeling tick- ilcd. To one man a primrose by I [the river's brim. st, yellow primrosc \ itc him and nothilig more. To ranothcr it awakens li vision which 'stirs his soul into consciousness of the marvellous beauty and co-ordin- ation ol Nature.- l And here another thought pre- fscnts itself. It is not the real lwcrld that tickles ns. It is the ipictllre of it that we build up in -cur imagination. A gentleman. found himself, in the latc war, sl~ic_ by side, as at comrade, with one 'who hc had thought that he knew? He pictured him as all outcast from Lllu slums of London. _An incident ui-curled :ind hc founti that this outcast was capable ol` displayinll heroic courage and unselfish devo- tion on behalf of his chum, for greater than any he felt liimsc!f| capable of . He had to add this im-, pression to his mental picture of the man, and while it did not :ilu r the facts which hc before knew, il di'd give new color and open up new possiliilltics to the man as h»-i formerly conceived of hlln. Onci man sees life, and to hiln its salient.; features are money and the power that money gives to satisfy sensu- ous uppctites., llc feels the mov- illg power of thi-. picture, llc thinks lthat it repleselits the real wol-lil ll\ which he finds himself and hc acis accordingly. ‘ Circuli-lsiances bring to his. attention facts that hc had ‘formerly overlooked -the_loss of .1 loved one-the hollowness of the 'lldulation which is offered to the lpo:-:sessors of riches, and his concep- *tion of life as it whole is changed. l We see life but in part, as ill ll iglass, darkly. If -we would act iwisely we must needs walk hulllbly. ,daily striving for the deeper and iwider vision. A mail, given a heal- ithy body; a comfortable home. wholesome food, cheerful conversa- tion. an interesting novel, a game of golf, a rubber of bridge, an oc- casional dance-All good things lil tlu-lnselves-niay find life very plea- sant, but he is only consciousof on-1 gpliase, a very small part of its rm-| mcnsities. He has a Soul, he has a Mind and these relate him to il larger world of deeper reality. -which. whether he seeks to know fit or not, will sooner or later forcel itself upon his attention. I 1 What we need today is li keen<.r| isehse of true values, to enable us :to reach out for a better idea of the .significance of life as a' whole and :not content ourselves with attulniuzg ,to a knowledge, however intimate, ‘cf what is only a phase of it. ; We have of late enjoyed listening _io a series of valuable addresses 'having to do with our Farming 'In- `dusfry. They brought to our at- tention many pertinent facts that 'may prove to be of grunt utility, not -merely to the farmer, but to all ,classes by arousing a sympathetic Jinterest and a desire to lend a help- Iing hand when opportunity offers. lBu_t they did more than this. They bid us to recognize that farming is ure. = Frances W. Bourdlllon struck to he root cf the matter when hi- viotez- ' The mind has a thousand eyes, And the heart but one, . Yet the light of a whole life dies. When its love is done. Love, sympathy, fellowship are the things without which a mali‘:: lifemust be bare of comfort. ln the ucononlic machine oppo:- tunity is given to those who develop cxecutivc ability to reap great re. wards, but until it is recognized that the machim- exists for hunlrlrl- ity and until in all its workings thc idcill "not self bilt service" is lnlui-: thc dominant note, it will not pro- perly .fnlfil its functions. The one thing' that we must milkc our chlof aim is the development of that hu- mnn sympathy and affection which can alone link men together and miikc the world xi fit place to dw( ll in, It is not tho money that Hcrl- ry Ford matic that gives him the place he holds in nlen's minds to- day, it was his effort to bring about propel relations, between himself and his employees and bring coll- tentmcnt and' a -fuller life to the latter. Money ,und the power which it bestows' upon its'posscssor only fulfils its propel' function when it is used nnselfishly to make otlle-rs happier and the world li better plate tc- live in.,W It is lilcng this line that Rotary is cndcnvoring to lend its member-:_ As the tension oi llfu increases. as we_ are being led more and more to specialize, our work tends more and more to convert us into Power wor- shippers rather than Good worship- pers. ‘ Waldo Frank ill endeavoring to picture the modern American dc- scribes him as follows:~ Having speht his day and his life at grips with an uncomfortable world he lilpses,»at the twilight of violence into as violent zi lust for easc. He is dog tired. The tough way has hardened yet exacerbated him. It has used his sensibilities. not fed them. Having no intrin- sic yaluc in his labour, save its con- tinuance, and hence no comfort in it, he looks on comfort as a thing apart: yet, as his labour has con- ditioned nerve and mind. Comfort to touch him must be at the same pitch. He loafs, drinks, gambles in converse mood from that in which he swcated in the saddle, but with the some intensity, the same obsession. He has strained hard lil work, now he collapses hard in ease. The Puritan, with his wilful hoist into those ascetic rigors which so well met the, pioneers necessity. provides a clue to the American lust for comfort. We may say that the early American had a set of ideals and an axe-llc had use for the axe, and none for the ideals. but the axe demanding ever. to be used, gave naught to the user of inherent value, it i-nervated and it tired, Losing thc value of his dis- platcd ideals and in his present life ilchicving nonc beside them, he 0 ° Y 'fl 'ici ‘fijij I lbut a section of the mst industrial 1 ~\ -F* ilnachine to which we must nee