puti by a lot HAT money ha-ve you thrown away - in the last ten years? What could you have done without and suffered no discomfort or deprived yourself oi no real pleasure? Had you taken advantage of the Mutual Life insurance tcn years ago and compelled yourself to meet prclniuni payments, what a snug asset you would have had today’? Figure out with the Mutual Life agent where you would have stood financially today hid 3'0" taken ,a Mutual Liie policy ten years ago. _Y_ou would now have a valuable cash asset in addition to prc.ect ion. Profit by the errors of the past. ten ears. Talk over your finances with the Mutual ife agent and get his advice ap how to protect your future more adequately. He will show you _an interesting and easy method of saving and reaping ancial rewards. ' WMUTUAL Ll F El ANADA Waterloo Ontario H. A. EBERS 135 {tent Sires: Uliarlnttetown Hickey 8t Nicholson's BLACK TWIST CHEWING TOBACCO The Tobacco l ‘ith a Flavor Alllts ‘Own ':':-\ i Millions of Figs Used Yearly lllCllEY .31 Wlllclllll-Ttill TOBACCO COMPANY _ LIMITED. Charlottetown Manufacturers A Delight To All--- You could have more moneyby a compulsory savings plan Hot Cross Buns have been necessary to Lent ‘and Easier for countless Years-as necessary as turkey to 'l‘lianksgiving. But s0 delicious are they that they tire 110W 11 Ila-ll)’ habit in many homes. Place a ‘standing order with us f r a fresh supply of Hot CPOSS llllS straight through Lent. These raisin- filled, sugar-frosted buns are ‘a de- light to all who taste them, HOT CROSS BUNS Wholesale ‘and Retail STEWARTS BAKERY Kent Street Phone 211 - mid crepe kiuimiusuNewest styles. llnzclbroolt on Monday lMurcli 29th. . Central Guardian voo MUST READ Grin's up- to-date Fairy Tales on page three. POTATOE8-Oar\'ell Bron, are their cellar. Water Street. Highest market prices paid. raters-nut SILK iii7hii the new light shades [or Spring. Prowse Bros" Ltd. ' - 3353 NEW SPRING COATINGS have just arrived. Prowse Bros, Ltd. ’ " 8358 LOOK AT YOUR HAT. --Every- liody else does. Our new "ones for Spring are hem.- Proviso ‘Bros, 11ml. - 8358 GOOD TO LOOK AT‘; yes,~-and ,good uil the way through. Prowl-ion iiiew Spring huts, Prowse Br0s., _ FASHIONABG FUR trimmings lini‘ cunts lllrlisn Ltd, and Prowse 8358 JUST ARRIVED, Ladies’ black and colored raliicouts. Prowse lllflllk, Ltd. 8358 I . ._ dresses. LADIES’ Sltl-(il-IOSE, newest shades. Prowne Bi~os., Ltd. - 8358 JUST ‘lN-"*~lzlll.(ilefl' fancy silk ‘Prowsc Hl'Dl~l., Ltd. 8358 i l A LARGE ASSORTMENT of "Betty iirtnvn" flannel dresses. Province liPll-‘L, Lil]. 8358 LOADING LIVE HOGS — At ‘and ul (ihariotttilowu, the 30th. lllurry Jenkins. 8308-3-26-3i l FARMERS ATTENTION! We wniil. your liogii and Potwtoeo! (‘nil inn] see us at Easier and bu)’ ‘your ldtuiler [toast from us. We jhnve irliolizc Easter Beef. lllnltefiu ‘Old Stand in the Market liulirilnlg. Harry Jenkins. l 8367-3-20-1wk husband good-bye. QITE-B-IStLlhIm he‘, that you will miss." she did not. that man bad Which includes the whole oi’ Lion. , - ‘But it is the ‘being wiin possesses the lbody, by menus oi’ which he is temporarily linked world of material forms. that prin- cipally concerns us. however, before entering upon this higher pliusé 01' our subject, let us consider first wlint Science has to tell us of this world we iliid our-l To our forefathers the great test of reality was that ihs object of their brought within the ran-gs or their bodily senses. “Seeing ls believing“ surrounded with expressed their attitude. still the case with regard to the Dfflbllelfl. clfllllllhi! to be iiisplrull- “on. attributed everything to a Divine iac- (louse. selves in. itreut majority of men. Unqiies ably sight is u unosi lmportniit 1illy.»but it is necessary to realizmclims, Religion was recognized as that perception does noteud when the limitation» of the hump/n eye tire reached. Science now tells us. in uiimlslhkeuble language, the reiil world is hidden from boili- ly sight, is, in fact, spirit which. though u téllVelnpgp world he lived in required modifica- uii, our sense (Iffiflflsl are too grosnillml- to dliicei-n. u lump of iron, a nlnne iiccni more real than does “ll ll“ “"15 “M9 m llllilellllllllll l-lllfi Mr. Percy‘ Pope. (Continued from-Paige 12) buying potatoes every mild day nqflflfijzflfjgj ‘iglllliclzvglgihtlvg; After telll last I10 intention of marryl The doctor said to mo. "Pope, These glimpses into some oi‘ t mysteries ofThe body, suggest that ._ 4 _ future generations much more ilslll- 8358-5-26-21 we are not separate creations but do” m; material”, age“ themah; —— are parts of one grand scheme purhnges 0f11fe_ up with study could ’l‘lils tll u world ’|‘o the average ninrt a piece of ivoud run CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN wishes, she said. "Jamie, I want you to promise me marry again." "MBFPY: ‘my Wwnflll." he IBDlYBd- "lthings appear to us just as they have ino again, but l would no like m pro- She pressed him hard, get- ting more and more emphatic as she went on, but the old mun ‘helil out. Jflhally she turned 0n ‘him and exclaimed: "Then, I'll no doe." A-nd ln a fortnight she was about again and lived for years. promised she would have been dead in two hours." Crea- the To aid us, collection of carbon atoms. Their houses. their neighbors, their clothes, were just what they seem- ed to be. To (be told that they are one and all. essentially collections . of protons and electrons, owing theirdlfferent appearances to their different modes of motion. ls say the least confusing. So fat; as it ministers to our needs or our eu- joymsnts we welcome the addition- al power this zkiiowledgs confers on ‘man. but for practical purposes 11E 11S appeared to our ancestors and we have neither time or inclination to go beneath the surface of things. This commends itself to our com- ‘moii sense, and, properly interpret- ed.‘ common sense ls the most valu- able guide we possess. And in this case. common sense tells us that this knowledge though it affects our lives very materially, though it tells iis much about why things are {l5 they lire, though it increases our powers, though it will iiifsci. if he It does not touch our joys hind fears, ll does not mat- erlfllly affect our desires and ‘appe- tites, it does not affect our relations to our fellow men, it cannot-tell us unite purpose. lt simply endeavors to analyze physical processes and cannot tell us amythlng of the orig- inal beginning 0r of its ending. Thus it appears that physical Science has only u ll-mlted range. Thai long before it came into ex- istence man had to face the prob- lems 01‘ life. He felt that he was forces that he is could not understand. Seem and be ln every race and every the highest expression 0i‘ human wisdom. lt dominated and still dominates, rightly, the llvos of men. But when Science came upon the field it revealed that man's opcoiicepllon of himself and the (l! Thai. the method by which apt-his world was governed was by an orjflfllilbllillllfd order. That in so far tol whether nature embraces an ulti-' foot on the first step of an infinite ‘progression-a progression upon which the beast never enters; - a progression away from and above the beast. The demand for quan- tity once satisfied, he seeks quali- ty. The very desires that he has in common with the beast become‘ ‘exterilqgd, refined, exalted. it is not merely hunger, but. taste that seeks Sratlflcatlon in food; lii clothes, he seeks not merely coni- fort. but adprnment; the rude shel- ter becomes a house: The indis- crlminatlng attraction begins to truusmute itsell‘ into subtle lllilll-i ences, and the hard and common stock ofanlmal life to blossom and to bloom into shapes of delicate beauty.- Passing into higher forms of desire, that which slunibered in the plant and lltfully stirred in the beast, awaken in the man. The eyes of the iman are opened and lie longs in know. He braves the scorching heat of the desert and the icy blasts of the Polar sea, but not for food; ‘he watches uil night. but it is to truce the circling of the eternal stars. ‘He adds toil to toil. to gratify a hunger no anlniol has felt; to assuage a thlriit no penal can know. Out upon Nature, in upon him- self, back through the mists that shroud the ‘past, forward lnlo the darkness that. overhangs the future. turns the restless desire. Ht-flcflilt things he seeks the law; llc would! know how the globe was forged. and the stars were hung and trace to Qieir sources the springs of life. And than, as the man develops his nobler nature, there arises the higher desire yet-the passion of passions, the hope of hopes — the desire that he, evou he, may so-me- how aid in making life better and brighter, in destroying Willll. u-ud sin, sorrow and shame. lie masters and curbs the animal; he turns his back upon the feast and renounce-u the place of power; he leaves to others to uccu-inulate wcaltli, lo gratify pleasant tastes, lo bunk themselves in the wariu nuniililnc of the brief day. lle works for those he never sow and never can see; for a fume, 0r it maybe for u scant. justice. that can Uilly come lflllig after the clodi-i have rattled PRESBYTERIAN SERVICE. l‘ iiil h ,5 vii-c llev. ll. l in ldllioll. Hull, the service was nn impressive one. Al tlic twiose oi‘ the regular service l ‘/. a business meeting ‘of liinnngers was elected. Thou. James .1@_;:. Mi-iinlne. Messrs-i l Smith. .\l(3l)()lllll(l. \ hi” “(in lhc evening ct’ ’l‘ueiiduy. March ll. Stuvort hold ser- l~‘uirvteu' Quinn- u uniii-ber were present unil ‘ll .\ “Ills held. mimioiig other things (lone a Board The illonrtl consisted of the following: Burdette, Wallace Duncan ‘g Buchanan, Cant. S. A. Stewart, Jan \\'. Taylor. lirlinn Alt-horn uiid Jas Mr. “iullace ' hltrlniine lxras l'lt'l‘ll3(l chairman oi the Board minute to niiiiiiile. wiiile ho might fro-ii . i lEIIKth secured a foundation u time Materialism occupied men's thoughts. o,“ crude which “fight be erected a permanqwliich its teachings were expressed en! conception of the universe. For ‘filmed “llreme- ' ’ All [treat scientists realize-d this Further enqmry. how_liniitntion of their (iuliook. Fniy-alllmfll 1m"! “Qlmlllng "hm" a“ hwisphh. gag’ finch m, Uxygmh he Wtln enabled to utllizo the forcesil-llw" lllfi will" lla- thoiigh he ilcpeiuls for his very lire 0l‘_Nature, i0 change the form of upon the oxygen he hl-euhhes fl-On-plfllllfifl and mould them to his will. lint Science could offer un solu “uiflugg h, gel “Jung wmmut the fion i0 the great problem of life, Even scientists. until littelyntlll" ll ‘leclllred la)’ beymld the lllllll were dominated by this ncunc oiiml I the reality ni‘ inalcrizilisllt: forms. m‘ Y will what _ , When they succeeded in illsi-nvgrhand measure. lt could tell man no-yhunianity imcy hereafter broaden ihg most m- me 92 elements Oflllllll! about his soul. his ratlonalillllil "- lllghroml‘ its powers. it which u“; vjshh“; nnivers‘, is ,,p_.wlll. his reason, his moral sensedgrlllldel‘ Fphems parcntiy lllilllé up. they were led l0 "mm"- wera the conceptions It w“ concemedtllke knives, he builds for the future, mum nnalyzeihe cuts the trail that progressive gular session at 2 p. m. on Sunday l‘ iSoliool Jlimntle for the ‘Presbyterian services iii the Hall. ,yeai- will take up the work on the .i'i-om ihc homes of the Presbyter- ‘zvuil Mr. Thni-i Burdette. sedy treas- urer. Arrangements are being holding of regular 6 §'l‘he Sunday School will meet in re- lAprll 4m. Recently the Sunday s the person of Mrs. ller place will be hard to fill. The superintendent was James Smith nud the remaining teachers of lust above mentioned date. The Sun- day School of lost year was i1 spletuliil success and the outlook for the future is bright. in look- ing over the whole situation in re- gard to the carrying on of the work it 's learned that in quite ll number of communities of which this is mie where there are minor- lly groups ivith as yet n0 Presby- lcrluu clergyman settled over them was one 0i the satidesl features of all in that the Unionist clergyman do not know enough to stay away lc inns nmi thus let them curry on g_ g_(:,h-|-19,i.rnles us transcend tion to conceive of. ever. soon revealed the fact that-lmllmce- Huxley “Y“*_ these so-called elements ilTE lemeutul. alum, That the ""109. made up of particles the any but a highly iraincil imaginn-‘chlncry lion ltlmes smaller than an atom. An e ectron is about the same size as l, protoni bu! weighs 1835 "mesillne of connection between BB. These figures carry no intelligenti idea lo tho untrained mind, ‘ they teach one important lasso not] {hmdozmallze cnncernln smallest particle oi an elcmenLin-fand the Wm “m, assert” m“ he stead of marking the llmiln or rc-lfli“ search downwards is, in every in- ‘NW5 but. their work in pence. l PERSONALS l i i Cont. S. T). Murchison, Mr. .l. .l. Mcfnnls, l llfrs l). A. Mclsuati. (of liie f’. lii. under treatment in ‘(Wiiiuyly liospitiil in llio uvlinrlottetown. ileim and linlle Say This Over To‘ Yourself f; Wampols Grape Salts Protects E. R. BROW m‘ moi-mono“ onus-r cnAnLorrzrowu Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Illflllralltc at ‘ Lowest Rate Sgt. Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 90C NOOOOQ-O OOQQIHQOOQOOOQQQ - a Your Health i Two mlnutll n day keeps a l ‘ t 4 cold away p ii’ Add precious hours of health gnu comfort By rlgullr u“ of Wniiipoll ' Grape Salts It oluiiul the Mr. lVlali-olm Smith, Little Sands ,Wil.‘-l u visitor to the city yesterday. Belfast was il vlslloi- to the trlly yesterday. ‘ lCai-nscliffe ‘was a visitor to llic city yesterday. Mr. R. .leuklus,_y Cherry Valley "Whilst a visilorlti tho clly yesterday. Earnscliffc wns ll vliiitoi- to the city yesterday. i.\ir. .l. .l. Bethune, track-muster l. R. who has been ‘Prince convalescent mind iililu to return to his home lii Tlic .mniiy friends of Mr. Georize hlt-Nnugliltm. Wlni-iioe will regret. trimming, to lenrn llint lic in confined to hill home with nn attack of rheumat- for his speedy re- stltutlon of our bolllos and of the z Irritated or eonlllhd mom- hrnnn thoroughly, remove: 1 cxeau mucous, eta. 4 A Challenge W0 will make s lltllfl 4 wager with you that If y" o try on; bottle you will some o buck (or nnothlr. 11.1.... ORTHY l] UOG n. llT i 9-04 n-oo-wdo-on-vfiwwflow world B! lh creation dlstnct from the in wlilch he was placed. The Inn, . moon. and Bill's were merely ap-lllefe lmfllfllld he“! hurl . “panda!” of thquEarthi A lump tilint.” we all can learn, ' should lenpii, namely, that the eyoi slilid men scattered over the C()ll'll~ try llvemlleu llWily would not h.» Vlfllble. hul gathered into n regi- ment would as such bi-vonii- so. Th" 0H!‘ Build world and all ils forms are disappearing m 0m». vlfllvll w be replaced iiy invisible’ little electric charges, and it ap-' pears tiliiit our bodies and those oi‘ our fellow creatures must he con- ceived oi as enemy. ‘mind and will.) For ordinary purposes it remains l" "l" lllmlllllt just as it was, but|0 to understand ourselves We miifll needs tuko these facts liim uticmmil because we can turn such know-l l1 To ho told that light miles a second does ‘not seem in- but if we are told lhni electricity will go ten times around‘ “l9 will“ l“ B flecfifltl. is us much! as we can imake it carry a inesnngelm for us. We Rccepf. Having caught this glimpse of the world ibelnw us. let us turn iohi what the telescope, other mechanical methods of iii-int creasing the range of the eye have‘ revealed to us. We learn that our sun is only one of thousands of millions of others, many vastly, lflfiwl‘. that. are scattered through space. The nebulae which ap- pear to our vision as mere specks of light are‘ clusters of nuns an fur away that tho light which you an see tonight started on its journey bl to the earth from 700,000 tn 1.000.- 000 yehrs ago. And rememberliglil (ll! a second. llliil. 81 950,000, N. G. C. 8822. 1,000,000.) _ So fnr our glimpses of the com worlds about us presses home the definite and fixed. truth that we are" like . wandering aibout. the shin-es of bhe piles or additional opportunltie ant-can of Truth, picking up a peb- ,’ble here and fliers, zlhy the lmmsnlty til lll. children they Our forefathers accepted saw it. the Man was a ‘while we reullzs Isemngngly no llmll to what it.- at. o we must needs turn to Ite- HgI()|]..».(]|||- Scpjpnn-es. 10 m“. pron-moving to unheard music, with un- piiets, teachers for light upon tlic main Prl-“lo- problem of life. hmeasure 0f understanding we must Vllclllrlii’ "a! 0"“ lneeils let our soul reach nut into “i l" V" ‘the unseen, then knowledge iheiwhnm u thousand years arc but comes useful and fulfills its high-l“ ("l9 d3)’. "lii-l 011B ililY a" ll llloll‘ est purpose in affording a basis up- "and YPRP-K" that is worth while. ledge to account and prom 11y ipim, lmvelfi llllldlilillknowleilge so ns to Jove oi‘ leadership and power. spectrope ilflll things of life. about ‘him. be deprived travels at the rate of 186,000 miles‘vision:- I Of all thiit Nature offers, be it m ever _|o abundant. all llvl can" only take and only anouirh to anppl tlWBvBs do those oi‘ the beast. ofPlmY- coal, was [lump 0l' coal, not iilhflr; “if a mwn ol‘ Science seeks reduce these to atomic‘ These l-llmlllllls’ 9° .°l°“fll' 9x”. and motions because ilrefisell- "Re" l" mmlemw" ‘Vmli m he has learned u, vrecognlzeiwbat. we were considering of howl . - Jman powers are developed, offeriis met with ingreat loss by rllllld um] pyggenmm. motum_pur_ the undoubted ‘truth that ill0flllL| u t h mm“, v ‘the (lean! o, one o, ltslenchers mlflcles so small and “loving as snchlforces and motions must accnm-illllgilirigrtiileailtec on us o ow l l "(liver o,‘ puny them, and constitute the nzzc- »_ _ b_ l _ t l‘ munuesluflnluwllll the beast have l con e mac A" Mo“, m-fhere and how, he h; exmbmng thmilllll relinoil and the elxtsiiit tolwlililzli hydrogen weighs one eighteenth Ofpmaiinegg of hi; Qgncpptland gflyHVe have been contrimt ng o l a minim, billions H8 Ought,” leflgbetlng ‘himself as a laughing stock than the smallest visible speck thutim future generaumlsy can be weighed rm a delicate chim- mfl ba|ance_ Bu, we are newton, tremendously larger and wonrlcr- m q _ that this mom o; hydrogen‘ 3s l.“ fllljlly 115378 comglex lllliiifl we iniagiint s Braces. also the case with all other atoms. e ' an m“ ‘use mlmh ‘mum - is made up o‘, a ‘nucleus ‘jomposmvwonderful and much more cnm.;ure there is an impulse. ivhacever of their Science tells us that the world is 0f a proton or protons with one org?‘ 21,2“ g3 h?“ all)’ W911i‘ B lluhillei- 0f electrons revolving ' ‘ y» a . about it. A proton is a million mil-‘ly an elmome "t a" the m“ ‘Dmceded him. So far as the lmdles' can reveal it. there is an unbroken tlic of this or how it ill yniust grow ever clearer. Amid the llellllll‘ or the “nlvmfle- miysteries that become the inure l that there 0m- poets and religions To reach n which to rent our thoughts. Man ffllllll sleek the iflcivnce of life or Fne n88!" is that ho vlllllty. his ambition, ‘his greed for c8888!- lt is essentially necessary shei- purpose in tuln to a vision of the slgnlllcancellu ol‘ drama. he sees being enacted Cause which brought them into lie- No man can baar m lng but he may use any knowleil gnicfforts of qnltc ordinary people to - gains of the-m to serve his owlhllfilp their fellows in time of dan- . > The gplrlt, of lovelger and distress; in n fire, in a 00L _ selves with what we can obtain is active all around him, ‘even inillery disaster. in n shipwreck. aye,’ ___._. of such inspiration. he without effort and are not used to the centers taste of the ibeautlful Mid the per- fect that we fill our lives with silly d new. what the following orge caught in care for, of can make of additional sup- tliiin new wants instincts art their of coni- The) east never fines fur- the, n his but not ‘is the wlrootp are in the ground, but whose l i I I g [he QmOHOnVLOIJIllOSf. branches may blossom in‘ the heavens. - l uplift oi‘ the race. the process of the suns? Consider illeury Ward Biz-seller's picburo of upparenb and work steadily towards higher ma; excellence. waste, it is circuitous, slow, with something of retroaptlon; but the unfolding of nature by this mills ‘hm-n, and m“, .,but as to the can“ and latent tendency to gn townrdsi Wm, egectgwpa better future, leavsns the world Sclencg can m] “s nothing, Hemlike yenst. and develops it as well. “he” Spencer guys’ “But one trunqThls is the spirit of the ages, the advantage he tnkes of ‘ that may crush under foot the lily nuilil)‘ IlQ-"lFPH. an shin llft his eyes to the heav- the roan wilhoul. trnrlnir ens to obtain Mi attitude of soul the guflpel 01' purity Mid B that will enable him to discern a that they are the common Day ‘by day nil He must in thought creation are offered We should lry to sec inidlvlne spark in his life something of ng things here depends upon what. activities; y wants that are and therefore upon his The only use factions and aspirations. s is fitl to multiply. But not so with man. things are a; if they did not exist but staggered N0 sooner are his animal wsntsao at lies nefni-elsrllsfled FOOG he Whfltfl first, up doe; beast; shelter next, as does the Mast; and these world i ductive airlse. tentlon. lie toils in (hey advance, when it is titllfl, and there is little cheer from mun, and the . stones nre sharp, and the ‘brambles. thick. Amid the scoffs of the; present wnd the snecrs that slab: into desires lilghcix, mounts! his supersensuous contnctfimthbegkllltlsl- all“! h‘: stall; “ml rlgelll .. - , , ~ . 111s eu s o . l1(.l8|lf. tlie nleii that they hail at with G°d~ Here- “ellgloll- llowevlilghlillse: o‘. me 121a," Rm,’ with me. l»! the yearnings of the godwlic would aid in the process of‘ (he suns. Man is an uiilinnl; but he is iin lie ivliose mystic earth-tree, we have in common Have we a desire, ‘too, to aid in “ln inorganic and material nut-i t may be, by which things unfold It is with immense All crea» ion, is on [he march. The stars are . ___ __ cc . . 1.. - nnly reveals t-ho outward surface of allyategiounb ti", {more may are Qzliiivliiién Ilili: ‘iiiilcgshiilylltoyinhlivglfl-il creation lhcre rises a lilllllvl’ "U little calf, within whose ‘small- thliigs. That the solid WOPl(l1.l/l)()lli‘thguogne all‘, t’ erteivim lremam lug The wholo vegetable klngdonijlhfli stretches up lulo lln- lllltitWll nos» lllfs us. in iill its forms, lu lint all“ eve marshes cgr trill! y. flllt0lllc is Moving onward and upward‘ The up)“ which, grep liy slop, hi- can All that man was, and ts, and Ill! rhythmical dance of ilillnitculiuiilly[Mme rand MMPIIHTG I? 1:! a" mammal khhgdmh, ‘um, keep; gtgplllllfllllll and. by tho q-Vllr iucrl-nsliii: buronic. small particles, themselves lflVll-Lwhlch u" 1M}, rovmllangy [mm “nconscmus or the gmpeiiingchhhtgifuiuein-i, nttaln to the nssiiriiiii-i- Aloui unset-u, that comprehend! iilile, ibnl. whose molinu en muslin Th,“ wmle 5E peulfe" 1 tMun us if he hoard the music llllll lll‘ l5 llllllllllli; ‘lll-“l illelllll! lll“ "kl" ill apparent to us. Just as a thou.“ What Physm“ Skiing: ‘Exgitqlgnlél. drwisny and ufm- Um jglng 1h the The iglimpstws w.- catch, in our And lfilill-l the tracks by which the it, strange procession and struggles ouil-mlllfllllllll lflillueuls of tlii- ili-i-ih-r may and tibward also. | _ “it 13 u ggrhhge “mm-h of cfgnuoinJhtiflllfi in reverence lo the llliglll)‘ I lseen banners, to sonic grunt cll_f'3l‘- thus? u”ll0 Wlll 0P0“ l-'ll"ll‘ “lllll-“l l“ When ll. shall flllnlly nii- llfl {llfiflt-illlu- _ i I .- a d h. n o‘; m‘ b4, n Ts of dim y npprocinlc lltll. we sue iiil ll")! Lamp n ‘l g l 0 “ha, H" h 5mm] portion of Ullllr-PIVIPN and Ur i-liilhi- a GOD M111 ‘hltl oWh ‘m7!- ‘the Thnl. heaven is cvcii now open in llt our vlnitiu ll‘ wi- only have eyes to iscc and in n worldyThnt. in our essonllal nature. we higher slit- quick with life and motion, Pur-nrn, here and, now. spirits living Thou who alone are knowledge It'll win innehn pose is manifesting lint-if all uhoiii.l1<‘r<~ ln u spiritual world m’ which The Umef him. actively in his lollow belniti-i may "he his and lnnmniiciitly in ihc WhdlllufflllillllllPTlLLl side. _ stratify his order undbcuilly 0f Nature's pFUaWOTld "l "lY*‘l*’l‘y "iiil “'°1ld'-‘l‘» “ill-l ll? will“ 3"“ o‘ God‘ o‘ mo?’ it depends upon himsolijtoo often nil the like wo make u!‘ ,mat.sriiil thinit-‘i. ‘his sensuality, his ‘how far he appreciates u. flfltl u-huuruch ucw inslirht into ll h. to bend (live lui lily" llshl. Mrslve us who! Hells pDWPFS to minister t0 our cnrili. kuoweth in Eternity. before i Man finds himself‘ ll. trying to express. the marvels lead his thoughts hack to ilieland. goodness nlno in the hciirt of humanity. We sci- it in thc heroic We are so inclined to content niir- HBlfllh defllrfli- of vice, his being he calls desires, af- 'l‘o many of us the most beauti- Ahs most true, tihs most ‘I101? fa: as they command our nt- ten expending its powers in main- ‘Model is 1812" Look at this a young man Don't you admire his easy-fitting suit with its soft roll lapels and English trousers i’ Of course you do. Frankly, we’re rather proud of the new FASHION-CRAFT models for Spring-they are just a little better than ever—even for FASH- r ION-CRAFT-and thafs saying a lot. The one shown is in ‘the famous S.S.S. Tweed and sells for we Henderson‘ & Cudmore Smart Clothes for Young Men f O “Nknhings o; me map, in, bow our 'l‘h.‘n. without lIlOVlhg“ known the joy of wings, purpose which reveals ilsi-llf in 'l‘lii\ llgiers strength the 883188 80¢- Hwy, \\'e nrc beginning io And in llii- hovel can consort with kings, i\\’(~. S96 self-consciously only ihi- Thi- lil-"Yeuly bread. the beautiful. to Taadvurpofl‘, may (iomhmwfi m". “v96 lllniinrs Llnhnnrif-rellrvrn hmdlnk wectnt-snlls lciuliilit iin onward. q “We 594* ln-nuly in lhc inorgniiit: " Qf1“'0l"lll: to his gnzvlanrl the birds, atiil we sw- beauty qulckenlnitliit rho expense of their own lives. and developing the souls of those who respond to its vivlfylng iiiflu- which is the most sacred thing in insipid things. provided [hgy encefbut if he does not cherish the the animal crmllon, without which own soul helnfancy would ‘be impossible and Hgnrylcnflinot discern its operation in the no ‘race of higher belnxii could sur- souls of others. rm- what a man is and what alof the family .ali of whom unem- an wlill be as the result of his llfelbers are tied in bonds nf affection and mutual asslatnncc ‘and we hope EIthEI f u l‘ ll a C Q 01' into actloinfoi- the time when all mankind will "We see ll. in tho vrlve. become one family, not competing I'll-IMO. wl-llih one another but glrelcblng‘ out ands of holp to each other, land mutually ovensaminz the dlf- we win be ficiiltles of ‘material existence in a iiptrlt ‘ln most. of up the Life love." . the Vrinlciple. which ‘might be building Emerson nay-iv: "An there lg no up a soul rospomilvs to all the _ sci-eon Or cefrlniz between sit/Bil. ‘hi! repro- highs;- nnd purer influences, i; too heads and the infinite heaven; so there is no bar or wall in the iloul W‘ ‘l mil mining life on a much lower level Where Mun f '- ‘ Man known not whence he cums or whltlrnr he 4s going. but be can M! John Mnsrfield wit: ffz-d his know that, routing upon the anlm- . ' , God the Ollfhe ‘beglnn. planlms roam: world which envelopes us. wry, willi what darkness do we cloak thy 118m, lllltlE‘l',~;l8,lli]_ What dusty folly gather l..-.-o for food. n ‘licnrt to lit-light. ‘We are living lii ll UN‘ 800d- lny, slur, “'0 ll’ N’. Ycl. lliulp within. llll‘ ”'“’T'“_*>__W ‘We use ll in llll‘ floivi-rs nlifsviiTfi mother love We have a good stock of this good all round coal on hand. which is suitable for We soc it ln the institution H 1r o vty of m’t Mid nnmin to deliver any quad..- required and gnar- antee satisfaction. 01!!‘ . the effect, reason-and-