Zi,L'¥5 those wliose records fall within the realm lunch Office: at Sum L- lortlott _ In r 'Anoclnte Editor: R. Burnett. ‘ D. K. Currie. 5-_ _ _-_"_, _-,-,-_-_-_-_-_-_-_- _-; » - .1 -_-_-,-_-_-_-,-_-_-_-_-: ,-,-_~_-,-.-,- -,~_-_-; - -_-_-:_-_»:_»:;;:_~::_ _'T sA1'unnAv,`Aucus'1' ' me isis- _ q,;§:::,-_-:.>::.-f;_-_-_-:_-::::r::::.~:.~::f~ -:rf- rf: .'>.-f~=‘r~‘f-‘-'-’ “ ' -' “ `- `~`-' _ “ “ _ MAKING TRADE fi-“Even ina self-sustaining count-ry likf ours we cannot achieve a reasonable meas- i'1re'o‘f prosperity without drawing upor outside sources for business. The tourist business has for many years been a sourcf of considerable revenue to this province, 2 revenue which, with reasonable cultivatior could be greatly increased. Good roads, comlfortable hotels and pub- licity, broadcast publicity that would reacli the congested centres in our own dominior and in the United States, together witi the natural climatic and seaside attractions- We have would bring thousands of tourists to` this province wh-ere now only hundreds come. Our good roads still further im- proved and properly designated to guido strangers; our otels properly advertises abroad and kept up to the reasonable re - quirements of travelers; our countr; boosted and its natural advantages pub- lished broadcast; these are among the principal drawing cards for tourist trade and they are things that all should unite.- in realizing. There are scores of towns ani; villages in the maritime provinces thai have grown rich on tourist trade, town.- that have fewer climatic or recreationai advantages than this province. A united effort on the part of all-merchants, liotef keepers, citizens should pull together in ar. effort to make the province the leading summer resort of the maritime provinces. E1)U(".-\'1'1()N OR. 'i\I()NI‘]Y, “'III(7Il? A young man, in one of our larger Cana- dian cities, writing to a boy chum in this city recently remarked “A fellow is nobod} here unless he is educated or has money.’ This is a concise summling up of conditions to be found in other cities than the one re- ferred to. To find one’s self adrift in- 2 strange city without education and with out money may well be the beginning of' 2 tragedy. With education, a practical edu- cation, that is, there is ample opportunity in any city or in any country to earn a live- `lihood. But the real tragedy in the--h-umarr affairs of today is that money counts Where education does not. The world blindly fol- lows the successful man and his success is r measured by what he has, not by what his is.- This is a fault of our education, not the education of our schools and colleges as much as of the home and of society gener- ally. Society has, by common consent, placed the seal of its approval upon the man who has made money. Few questions are asked as to how he made it and black in- deed must be the social sins and deep in- deed the ignorance that will find no pardon under the cloak of material- wealth. This is one -of the misfortunes of m'odern progressiveness. Education, refinement. character, service are the real wealth oi the world, the things worth while; wealth can be acquired, and often is, without these or either of these, but as long as wealth re- mains the standard of success, so long will education, refinement, character and ser- vice take a secondary place and be fashion- ed for the 'sole purpose of making money. The goal set before the child as he begins his education is not to be educated in the true sense of the word but to enable him to make money. In this we are setting up wrong ideals. To live right, to render ser- vice, to make _the world the better for our having lived in it is the only aim worth striving for. This secured, all other things worth while shall be added. TIIE NATIONAL LANGUAGE An ancient legend, probably referring to the downfall of some prehistoric nation, re- cords that “the whole earth was of one language and of on_e speech. And they said, Go to, let us build us a city and a tower Whose topfmay reach unto heaven. And the Lord said, Behold, the people is one and they have all one language. . . . . . . . . (In modern parlance they are all tar-i red with the one stick.) Go to, ed them.” .¥nl‘5‘.,(P° Ui' in dlvontzvili 32.00 by Mall in` Canada of eifeminacy whose origin is lost the mists of' whose earliest recorded history .David - Solomon' it too tells of cial vice and some special weakness. And Prince ` of Connaught, about Augult ' received on r ’ _ ’ - Prince .miiur if-are only mi oi the yviws omcei-.~ or when his wmfudé nad langllage’ the langlllage of. discord’ Duke of Connaught, who ii; dearly bg. speak so highly, is new recuperatiiii )f pohtlcalfaclgmnss of lntferestg loved by the people of Canada, and from an operation which heiinderwent among the _various states of which it was ir reiurriirig. from 3 minion to _mari in orrier io enter-_ ins nsyrri riyirg composed. Persia, Rome, Spain-each had where he nwswtéd ii bww 1° the C011” ‘md it 1° °"1'=°f°1Y l1°i°`°‘1fh“*'"F itsone language, the language of some spe_ Mikado on behalf of the British Gov- sa-fe arrival will soon be chronicled ernment. . _ » ¢ o ¢ _ . U in each case dissolution, dismemberment, .,.,,,.ee ,,, Queen Mm., ,en buds, "f3-ll. . ' ‘ maids twenty-live years ago offered Mrs. (Col.) 11185 Md the 'M4585' We are toda in the midst of a world mrrarusiirmr isnrr urieriybr ine olive we iiiiiui im. who arrived 3rag'edy_ See a nation language 0cC8Sl0ll Of 118|' IHVBF Wéddlllg 8l1Ii|V° hit lWe9kl_h`0n:1 .’°1` 3 ¢ent111‘y has been the language Of Self' i»'§f.l1§rT§§i§rf 'iffL¢§fi§°§§i 33123 iri.'ifi."“'-'" ’ w° °°m° y ' ° ' Y 'shhess arr0san¢e.i>r1d@. devoluhns 51121- Parisi.. ri corrrrrgri. rim... or ir.. ly ll'li10 greed fOI` WOI'l(l dOl'1'1ll13.ti0ll. Thai, i,,id\,5maidg- are now the Queens of Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Harrison and nation is now in the throes of dissolution. Spain. Norway and iiiriiiarrir. fwflv. wlw have been °“1°Yi”¥. ““ We of the Entente nations are tfhe in_ Bl di _ G l :Juli E1 l_ Y C outing in Sours have returned home. ` ’ ' ' ' YK8 81" BHGNI . . H186 , . strument by which this _wreck is bei_ng_ con- M_ G” D_ s_ on Royal Canadian y It is now] awed that Lord K,,c,m_ suirnniated. Other nations have similarly magoons has ,been selected to c°m_ ,,,.»,, death. me ,,,,-00,1, ,im to me been instruments of destruction and sub- mana ,he tmp, which rf., now being ozririrrr, who was ii pro-German. Tire Sequelllily l'laV€ fallen l)€C3.l.lS€ they 1l’l i3l‘iC mobilized in Canada for service in Czar received a message tl18tKilCh€Y\- :ourse of time acquired one language, the Slheriiwrhir announcement WHS “Hide 9 _ . th,-u the militia department at Ottawa the Czarlna immediately informed the language of some national wee' We' have on Tuesday.. General Elmsiey is at Kaiser. with the result that the Hamp- our vices as other nations have had theirs. mem ,H England Where he and the ,,h_,,,., was s,,,,,, ,,, ,he Nom, S,,,,_ makin; a .and has hoop teen -mouths in which the (ianadlan w|,g|iim|d.,¢¢||,_|m_ have won-much renown. Thirpopuldi . . - .. ?~ 111 ~-fi _ze ,J 'T ' fi ` _rs l New I-Subscribers i but as a nation we have not yielded to a fniiririer of miiiiirj' in esrruiiriiorr ° ' ° :ommon vice although we have doubtless wiiir me imperiri r.iriir0riiier,sre rim y-eveued in them AS individuals’ rafhel- certing~ methods of procedure. He is tegday afternoon to join liter motheit' than as a nation, we are cultivating such ";a’;'§a‘:2"‘H’ee‘;;';1;":1‘;;;e’;o W ° ' °“j°y'“g the 5°” "em a fic-es as selfishness and part1_Za'nSh]p'a'nd gd in the South African war and has Hotel. perhaps others. Let us see to it that these ,efved in india, in are year 1914, Geri- ' ' ° Jr any of them do not become a characteris- srri simsiey .processed overseas wiiir Lisiri. Aiirrr corire who has been in jic of us as a people or as a nation Once his regiment, and in due course was`France for sometime, was among the .vc become victims of a common vice our “""°’“""“ "°e;'°’“““‘"“ me C“"“‘"-R” 0 . . ‘VI t d Rlil » loom as a nation is as _surely sealed as was ‘ 0"" e » - » ' and young/ son. who me exi>e<=ie<2~ in ~ Souris. ’l`liey are guests at the C-ox .hat of the nations that havebeen scatter- The Duke of Dsvmiriiirs pirrcirrirsii _ Ed. this week about 100 acres of land near Q Ottawa, on the west side of the Blue HODERN LANGU.-\GI‘lS ANI) Bl`=SINI‘]S?»‘ lake- “ml l““’“‘l`S erecting R Summer Higher faculties of imagination and intei- n its re ort Jublished recentlv has strong ng of culture and the development of the , ectual comprehension, the committee Sea Luke, which includes ii sniiill trou-l home on the property iii the near fut- _ . iii'e. At present their Exceilencies A committee appointed by the British wiiir urs msrriiiers of iirrir :ami-1,. and Zovernment for the purpose has made an the We Regal Staff- fm* “P°“‘““‘g f“"‘ exhaustive investigation into the teaching S“"""°’ ”"""’ ““d°‘ “““"““ ha" “E , ,. _ _ ,_ ibout 12 or 14 tents and' a large miir if modern languages in Great Britai-i and ,wee whmh is ,med as a ,lining ,,,,,.,,,_ P l . ~ ' * ' y urged the wider teaching of these laiigu- A mort enisyairie concert was giver iges in the place. of the classical languages, Yip ti? Hugfflshflt Itlhfm £f;i‘;fevf;’:§; f ' ' ’ .FRC ey GBC 0 l S ` Jatin and Greeek. Although pointing to ml auto Dames going out from _lie value of such teaching in the broaden-_ C, to ,waist _,,,,,, enjoy the de. fy ighfful affair so happily arranged. U U li Genuine sympathy is being extend- lwells particularly upon theimportance of Pd ‘° `M'“' A' A‘ ”°'“°'°"' "nd fam' mowledge of contemporary languages it O, her second son Lien, E,,,e,_, ly -in the death in -action on Augllil- from a purely utilitarian standpoint. After the 'war there will be intense coin- iiercial rivalry. The British Government ind British industry are already preparing 'or this in many ways. The cost of the war nust be made up, and one o_f___tl_i_e__vv__ays_<>_f__ lnaking it up is through commercial profit. lifter-the-war commercial problems are iccupying a gooddeal of the attention of the British Government. The committee _- 'eporting on the teaching of languagesi strongly urges that knowledge of modern! anguages is a big factor in connection with this commerce. And undoubtedly it is.'Be- fore the. war, Britain and Germany were fivals forthe trade of South America and lermany got the best of it because the Ger- nans went to the trouble of learning to :peak Spanish. The Britishers endeavored ers. As showing the indifference of British industry to the language factor,7the com - 'iittee points out that British firms doing business in foreign countries in nearly all 'ases depend in the matter of intercourse vith their clients upon foreign clerks and agents. he educational systems of Canada in this -- 1. li - Auld. Mrs. Pomeroy’s eldest son Lieut. Clyde Auld is also iii France attached to the 10tli Canadian ‘Si€S€ Battery. , ,__, . . O U I Miss Knox, Principal of Havergal ._C_ollege,_..who_ has been spending sev- eral weeks in this Province, visiting Bi-ackley Beach and Chniiottetown left yesterday on return and will spend two weeks at Metis, Quebec. be- fore returning to Toronto w-here her college opens in September. - I 'l U Mr. and Mrs. W. A. 0. Morson :ind Miss DeBrls'ay left yesterday on their annual outing to -St. Andi'ew’s By-The-sea. l a ui o . Lieut. Tom Roger’s many friends are looking forward to liis early ar- ival home on. ii furlough with liis par- o blunder along with the use of interpret- There is room for a large improvement in egard. The study of Greek and Latin un- '$25 5#e*&§G854ii**SiiL¥8`¢.$5¢93%i74¥!éii}‘ ¥¢\¥%8l‘$¢%$*5i-%%¢R°$$‘-9’¢%5‘ jg iinuii seiecrioiis foii Q if GUARDIAN, READERS *%‘»%# -.-___ Furnlshod by- W. I. Louaol PUTTING AWAY TH-INGS PAST _.__- lrove thyself liist; and oh, such joy sim-il thrill thee, .loubtedly is a valuable training for the stu- iiea and faiier. of you erin-ir of England, iiiink of 'what sire As never yet such selfish souls was given, Wlimte’er thy lot, ii. perfect peace will find thee, And earth shall seem the ante-room oi heaven-." The last thing for one in bereave- ment, eeeking comfort, is to be idle.‘ Then the grief feeds upon the life it- self, and wastes and wears it oiiit. But when in our sorrow we tum -away from self niiseries of love for others. our hearts iind comfort. Thus, and -thus only, can we learn to live without one who has been everything to us in the pasit. ‘ 1 In ii. great Ibiittle, the commanding officer, leading his men dn an assault. came upon the -body of his own son, lying on the iielJ2nf?r/iffri/hmzfqg *i `i : /-1. -i-it '/2 ,r ,, 11; ;~::\i\»»».\ *E* \ \~ \ sg / if if ,, ,_ In Dinners Enya".-sian lsnmiu - ‘ »-fr--»~/-» f -W -- ---_-,,! / E 'ri-we Onnesr Iusuimncs Aosiecv-~ ' O ff *yr--'" Judge by ins PAST, what ine Fur- i - URE offers your faiiilly, you men with- i_l_ ,/ v9 out Life Insurance. ‘ The poorer a man may be, the more 07 his fiiml needs rotection; e rch fl me 9512-UL A good Policy to meet the Succession Duty -_-fill has saved many an Estate from sacrifice. 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