ir, p. .3 I ,tl r ¢ “__v`YY I _ T www -www", cn i n General Representatives-AllAd\u1isinl Aallll if In NIU iv il' t M ln* .‘ nu hm - un’ .n Canadian Blah 00ll\l!lll\0ll"_l_0BOQ ' - n SPI-._ I'-eprsaentativs-leash l.liarthrar D’ curl '°"i*z3‘||\ I. A is 1". .°°`.h,.` ' ' M mn _ dw, L°“d°“' E°‘h°" 1”* “* '"8" ` When yon want the fin- est candies in the world, remember we hue them. life carry an ample stoclc- o Moi_r’s Ganong’s i Nellson’s Gibsons Clark's fancy candies. Our stock is entirely fresh throughout. Choc- olates inlbulk and in half, . one or two pound boxes. | J. G. Jamieson DRUGGIST 1 'lhe Eye is the Window oi the Soni you either ply a small penalty in money now or a large penalty in eye strain later. If wisdom guides your choice we will be pleased to have you call and con- _sult us. G, H, Taylor jeweler Optician , `il'EW KING GEORGE HOTEL Wm. HONBOUDQUETIZ. Hgr. Private Baths ilunqing_W`\tsr and. onxla Dé§:;H‘l¥eél‘.¢;l‘!iar|:`"l;o|ilga;’n l rooms . s u s I."‘~.~ c N U .xolsn iso ' smear. n.s“ vs Camerons Home--Made 1 Bread “ls Good Bread" p Punfy your- blood. build u your bod n using Ri-Dxall BloodyTal¥- , lets,a standard preparation _, that is working good 1 cures in hundreds of cases 'J his preparation is N0, sold by us with the nn- derstanding that if it is- "‘f;-'fnot satisfactory, your :none will be refunded. “__ One lim 5oc, six boxes 0 for $2.50 'The McKin- non Drug Co., The Rex- --J. n gsr ' a rev R - - - ff mums 'russnaxn APRIL 19- legs _ ~ _ '°' 'M' °‘°"'“°°"‘°m° '° :liaaloner of yeati'-| ments are not evil in themselves; WHITE PLIGUE. cbd, may be nouns vial all-sony en- posite results. .But the Public has a right to make sure that they shall We are indebted to Messrs. Hynd-'one in every ll" l>0l'l0na at ons time 11°* lllllfl-I1 all 0t|“°lu°l\‘l ‘lm Nu' man & Co., Ltd., Provincial Mana-for another has had oonlnmp,ti0n. ¢l°“| °||°|'“ °l ul* °°mm‘““t7 "° :owing m th’ Hguux E' “ml gere of the Great West Life Assur-| This all llwvi D01! powerful are l°"-'ll °|l""‘°¢" lllfl °“m“°° th’ ‘°' B ance Co., for n most interesting re-'the natural defenses of the human °l°~1 FW” “ld Vl"'“°°~ wh’ 'h°“m port on the havoc the dread diaeaseframe. A healthy human body mn th” not N lil'-llllcd in lll°Wl#l Wlllt tuberculosis is pla¥iu8 in Cenedaflltllt 81111 0V°f¢0ll\0 till! invader-even 19 10"” ‘nd °| l°°d "°P°"t' md in S’ B" mt"“h°d “` Bud” 1*” The loss of life throughout Canada the grim tubercular germ. llll'-°l‘°lfl”K $54!" ll* th' °'-“u°" Arnongths0enadllavllU,0I'¢l»¢@g` . F. oosln, Prices livers Islam. ...___ _ ~ tm Hon. Murdock UGKIIUIQ, Oom- ay morning for Ottawa, Q basins” connected with his dspartmllt. , Hrs. Dutly, of Charlottetown, is, ae- wisz . ieiting her sister, lliaa liden. of the irchdale. Mrs. J. H. Hickman, Dorchester, eek. Among her guests were Dr. nd Mrs. Blanchard, Charlottetown, from pulmonary tuberculosis is ovsr| There is a theory emanating from f°m °l ll'-“lllll °3°l'f~ "hl°\l ll- ll 5005- :nd M,-_ md gg", Mahon, 8,000 per annum, and on the wholehtha great investigator lletchnikoif 1°’ “Wm t° 9/'1mU'° nd im“‘°"°7 It “"'“' population the death rate from pul- that in the course of long evolution is 1°' um” "lm h°v° l'h° '°u“° °l monar tuberculosis l 1.76 er cent.iNature h rself h l Ollfll lf- l`|°°~l’¢ *#0 “Um ul°m‘°1V°° y s p e as evo ved Toxins, or Y n which is higher than in England,fself-vaccinating processes, rendering ill N19 Mft" ‘Nl 9° ‘“° °°“°”' which is 1.14 per cent. The death individuals immune against this dis- 'nl' i”°tit““°“ °‘ ° P'°vI“°mu °°“' ter Cassel Mrs Ijemieux Mrs Ir- rate in all cases of recognizable tllber-'ease, which by its very universality '°“mp m um i“t°"°t' ot °h dun culosis is about 50 per cent., orlwould, if every infection materialized, "°“ld “°t b° ° bm b°‘mnm" 3°" every other sufferer dies prematurelyiwipe out the race. Mrs. Montlsambert, Ottawa, enter- tained at a second luncheon on Wed- esday when her guests included Lady Davies, Mrs. Frank Oliver, Mrs. Wal- l . , `. win, Mrs. Bichrieber, Mrs. Lyons Big- The following reference to -Mr. A. of this disease. As the Hon. Mr. Dal-i We thus approach the safeguards Hom' B, Johnson, formerly of Charlotte- eon pointed out the other any, 211 of that sllsctnnlly combat this prevalent '“_" . town. is taken frcm H llvbllc el- that; it was hereditary, Passed on in unfortunate families from generation most daily danger of infection. It is medical authority that. thousands of every thousand deaths here are caused'svil. It is seen that though the dis- F°l” B ll“mll°l' °f Y°°l'l “nm 5 l°" _ by tuberculosis. In these clrcum-:ease is universal the safeguards pro- llwllflll 08°. f-ll° W°l`k ‘lf tl" Ll" ."3 Assocntlon ol Ahbams with stances a few facts from the reportrvidsd by nature are equally universal. 3¢°°k “nd Hum’ °f A“im“1° Bnn' kindly sent us should be appreciated. | A healthy vigorous body--good fb" °f 01° D098"-lll¢ll¢ Of AKl'l°“1¢“!`tl Tuberculosis is entirely a germ dis- food-sunlight-fresh air- temperate Ht »0l5f-“W3 W3' °°"i°d °“ “nd” °“° ease. Until comparatively recent living-go far to give immunity 1|-gm head. The work embraced a ver? t"°°° BW b°ll1Z DlBll¢°fl- T110 0lll¢0l‘I times there was a widespread belief Tuberculosis. But even the strongest °¥¥°“9l"'° mid. lllV°\Vl“K lm °xP°“dl' change'-The -Mobile-Bayview Grow- main headquarters at Chicago, has been organized for promoting the welfare of members in the vicinity of Fowl river, where fig and satsuma are J. H. Standeld of Ohicago, Ill., resident; A. S. Johnson of Fowl onla b ll l t W" 0' 1* “lm "°““““’ °' °°““‘°°"' iilvsr, vice-prsslasnt; R. J. Biniora oi w s nwse o presume upon their strength. There should bs the methods of dealing vr-ith those who such part as may be, by monetary Rev. Dr. Fullerton in the sermon, notes of which we published yester- day, touched upon two svils with which we are all more or less fam- iliar, gossip and evil-speaking, and profanity and blasphemy; and also a third( the seriousness of which is not yet so apparent to the general com- munity as it is to those who have the welfare.of youth more particular- ly at heart. Gossip and evil-speaking is a short- coming as old as the Old Testament itself, and certainly dates back to the time of Abraham, the father of his people. It is one of the weaknesses of human nature to prefer to speak about people and personalities rather than about books and the thoughts they contain; to deal with the con- crete rather than tho abstract. Were `we all of thc same disposition as the old Scotswoman who had a good word to say about everybody, even Auld Nick whom she commended for his diligence, there would ba little to dcprecate, but unfortunately talk about persons usually, sooner or lat-. er, develops into evil-speaking by in- nuendo and otherwise, andtherein all the mischief lies. Gossip of itself is not harmful and affords 9. pleasant pastime in every household, club orl coterie where men and women are' wont to foregnther. Most of ,us love to indulge in it on occasion. Pub- lishers tell us there is no more pro- fitable part of their business .than the lives and autobiograpllies of more or less prominent personages whose dia- ries have been kept with a Pepysian life among a certnin class of youths. “Mullins”- says Kipling of one of his characters in ‘Soldiers Three,' "was a very young sergeant whose man- ners wers partly the result of innate depravity and partly of improperly digested Board School." There in a sentence that master analyst gives the gist of the whole thing and sup- plies the explanation of much of the loose talk-to put it mildly-we hear on our streets. The “young bloods" the rev. doctor complains of are not representative of the youth of our Island, nor are they at all numerous. But they src vociierous and forward, making up in noise and publicity what they lack lu numbers, and si stranger to our city may be pardon- ed if he should judge the rising gen- eration by the specimens of this class he hears and sees about our streets. This profanity and blasphemy is characteristic almost exclusively of the early stages of manhood. Aa a rule boyhood and adolescence are ln- nocent oflit; and in the riper years of manhood one learns to despise and repent the use of language unparlia- mentary. Tolstoi, it will be remem- bered, blames this period of life for all the sins that flesh is heir to. Al- though all his life the most outspok- en and truthful of men, yet in the first stage of his manhood he often found himself profane and seized with a strange and unreasonable tendency to lla in the most desperate ,fashion, lying in matters, too, in which it was the easiest thing in the world to punctiliollsness. Gossip is innate in- most of us: a great thinker and man this in common with their lesser brc That paifrin the back lids caused by diseased _kid- neys.' Geton the right. road to health by using Retail Kidney _Pill8, a greparatfon that is fully ‘ glsranteed by us. Mon_ey‘ f R if diesstieied. Price ii they moved. It ie clans ';Men- anvennanr hulls: Poor women have. but two; th°r¢',l 1°' I* 5°! 5°°' tht” b°x°° fm' "thins rw! "W" W- “"1 °°“““‘ through welsh they can sam-iss detect him. He nscribes the falling to a vain-glorious desire to appear appear to be something other than sas find the peace and tranquility of their neighbothood, or the strsaea ably more than half a million of dol- to generation. This is not the case. strictest cure to avoid preventable in- 'an' Consumption is not hereditary. The fection. Avoid ill-ventilaeed places A°°°"u“3 t° th° °“““°" '°p°rt °' predisposing causes may be-mr-Bgrczas much as possible. Use the uemggt the united Branches for the yeas' end_ frames, weakly constitutions. But care in regard to the milk supply. lllg M8l`¢h 3155. 1913 llllli lu'-Wd' the other membul every case of Tuberculosis is caused Avoid close association with those ture” m°"° °" ‘"9 ‘u“““°t un” 0' by direct infection. Therefore theisuilsring from the disease. In a °”°"-5 5"’ °°"'i°d °”° A 'nn °r3“n` immense importance of isolatiuglword, the attitude of all who are in- ind 5Y°t°m is in °l’°r°"i°“ t° prmect every known case is all 01100 alipsrcnhlterested in improvement of the pub- tl” U" 't°°k °' thi’ °°“““’ ‘mm or, if isolation be lnlposslbls, esac-_llc noolrb should bs: dimes. not Only suerdlrs serine* tive precautions to prevent spread ofi (1) To prevent the entrance of the its i“""°d“°u°” fmm °b"°“d~ mit by _ the disease are urgently imperative. 'tuberculin bacillus into the body by Dl`°V°“¢lllS *-11° “Dwell °f i1\f°°*-l°“ Bl: in St- ‘7‘““°° 9”* “"0 ‘lt W1“4°°‘ It need not alarm the uninformed-,avoiding infection. (2) To fortify `l'°8¢lY °llSting among (Zlnadian herds although the statement is startling-fthe body against infergtiou gg umm. and flocks. In this division regula- to learn that every one of us is in al- ed, (3) To try to encourage proper f-l0ll9 U8 Blll°l`°°d £0 3031 Wil-ll Bllflh diseases as hog cholera, tuberculosis, rested with nu tho weight or sound are already l..1o¢¢¢a_ (1) 'ro tan, zlsnders. dom-uns, manga. snthrer. sheep scab and rabies, any of which people contract Tuberculosis and are support and by agtive ug1s¢an¢¢_ in uncontrolled might cause very seri- none the wiser. A great European the expanding 0| me public campaign ous losses to the forming industry. 3\l1'E00l1 l0lllld f-lltlf ill UVB huhdfedlagainat tuberculosis, such as that or- Th” mem; lll°i7e°uQ“ dlvismu “ek” Bl1f0DSi€8 96 Del' Cent. Of U16 Cutieiiganized by the Anti-Tuberculosis So- UY Wise l'°K“l“l-l0lll» “fried °“t bY showed evidence of previous tube-rcu-'¢ie1;y_ an extensive, well trained staff to lar infection. Another surgeon corro-\ The Dalton ganna,-rum her, should prevent diseased or otherwise un- borated the finding by a record of 92 help to focus our Bttenuon on gh, ,-e_ wholesome meats ‘from being sent per cent. out of 1,452 autopsles, allime,-1181 measures, and it is not likely from ons province to ,another or out showing that at some period of 1ife,ibnt the Anti-'mborcnlosls society or of the country- It 92110 °°mr°ll °P°- the individual had contracted the dis- imedical Assogmgion Wm ,now intgr. rators of food canninleatnbldahrnente case. . Roughly. it is esevrwfl tlwhsst ln the lnntltntlon to ang. to maintain tl1°l1° f°_°*9l'l°° 1° °_*-ml' __H_______A________________________V_V_;:_i___i_i___V_ tary condition `iil`ld '£¢lfp`t`it`iip" ’ only sound goods. During the year re- ll0lllLS MID MRNHERS 0F Cl'lliRLO`ITETOYffl. ported le ls shown uint 6,151 cm. cassea of cattle, 241 of sheep, and 2,832 of "hogs, nl well as many por- tions of carcasses and 12,702 lbs of poultry were condemned. The report names the diseases and conditions responsible for these rlosses. _ The work of the Live Stock Branch is shown to be of an entirely diner- ent character, In s. number of ways efforts are made to throw light upon the paths of theistock ralaers and to encourage the extension and improve- ment of the live stock industry. Re- ference is made to a comprehensive investigation of the market conditions affecting wool and mutton carried on by a commission. To improve the light horse stock of the country bo- nuses ars paid to owners of Thor- oughbred Stalllons used for service. To assist dairy farmers in ascertain- ing where high producing 'breeding stock may be secured, a Record of Performance has been established for pure-bred dairy cattle. The report just issued shows that 801 cows en- tered for' test for this record during the year. In addition to' the report of the Veterinary Director General and Live Stock Commissioner, the volume which contains almost 500 pages including many illustrations, embo- dies 24 appendices including reports of odicers and a number of publica- tions thet have appeared as separate works including Report No. 4 of the Record of Performance, Bulletin No. 15 of the Live Stock Branch, the Report of the Third General Conven- tion of the National Live Stock As- sociatiori, the Report of the National Live Stock Association, the Report of the National l dlnel-ent from what he really was Record Committee, and others. The of aiiairs like Gladstone, an essayistiand there can be no doubt on th; _"ning price ol tm' blue book is ax” and publicist lik'c Lord Acton, haveipart 0! anyone who kno" annum! at 'ony Gena' but provision has bun Chicago, Ill., secretary; W. K. Hul- vsy of Chicago, treasurer. The above are also members of the board of managers with Charles Line, chair- man, and Theo. Well of New York, Flags were flying on all government. buildings, in London Friday, in hon- or of the sixteenth birthday of Prin- cesa Mary, only daughter and third child of King George and Queen Mary. Artillery salutes were fired Castle. The young Princess, who was born at the Palace in 1827, .re- ceived congratulations from Royalty throughout Europe, but otherwise the celebration was one of the quictest and most personal character. The Prin- cess received handsome, but useful gifts from the King and Queen and her brothers, the youngest Princes making the greatest secrecy over their offerings, which were bought out of their very modest allowances of pocket money. Intimate friends of the Queen say that the Princess, who has been very strictly brought up,and inherits much of her mother's sound, common sense and domestic simpli- city, has already proved herself “the man of the family," completely out- shining her more reserved and older brothers, the Prince of Wales and Prince Albert. (From Yestcrday's Evening Guardian) Sunset magazine givlas an excellent biography sketch by Mr. Albert Jef- freys, of Mr. Lauchlin McLean, a for- mer P. E. Islander and now a suc- cessful civil engineer and contractor in Washington, N. B. The irrigation works built by Mr. McLean in the state of Washington, among the won- ders of the west, have been discribed in a former issue of The Guardian. Mr. McLean is a native of Lot 16. The Morning Alberton of Calgary, in-giving a detailed description of the big fire thsrs, recently, tells of the immense loss the McLeod Bros, for- merly of Hunter River, audered in the complete destruction of their place of business, deals at some length with the coolness and heroism of Miss Passmore, book-keeper with the firm, and also of this Province. It says in part:-One oi the coolest persons in the crowd was Miss Passmore, book- kseper for MacLeod Bros., who had been hastily summoned. With smoke and flames issuing from the back basement, she made her way through the door which the firemen had burst open and recovered an armful of books and papers from her desk. Later she told the firemen the exact location of the safe in the cloud of smoke, and remained as near as pos- sible to the scene until she was sat- isfied that nothing more could be done to save her employers’ pro- perty. rss auto) Sir:-As the automobile question is again before the legislature it id for the people to give their opinion on the subject. I was surprised to hear of some of the Summerslde merchants waiting on the government for the repeal of .the bill. It is surely to their disadvantage to have them run as some of the nervous people are already filling out orders for Eaton C0. Let us sec whom the auto would benefit. Not the farmer, but the wealthy city msn who wants to tour the Island for pleasure and the pat- ent mediclne man who can bring his automobile from the mainland _and scatter circulars and pills in all dir- ‘ all Store. 5 2 ldrtf ` ~ . - , , 1 h \ d 1 |- u plym 09|” 1,-ge g actions. Does the tourist come hers to ' ___ . _________'_ _. on-en, their pnbllsnsa letters and bro fha ‘;’;‘,f;‘k;‘“l:“F°'th “:‘1h°°l;°';*°1" °' °wh;P _W;,°,°,_ mm to H; 1-me ln automobiles. No ns corner f`f1_ffI'.::";.*-;-T.-;-'.£?is_-- -_ rrnnhlss snowlng they were not above ° °” ° ° “ “‘°“°° me, 0m` , c th Pm, u here to escape them and mt his over- "`_"“°"" "A _ “i” the sniormsnc of tba tlttlomcls tba.” "'°"“"' ““‘1 "1°'l"‘°”‘Y l' *ml*-17 9 °°"\ ° ° 9 °°‘ °‘“ 'trims mv" in fl" Nm “<1