-,-_~,._.,.,,...,,..,.,..,_- . i ir E. __ i l i f i l » . L_ _ i i i i 1 v 1 , \ ty A » . 4 .l `h'mnm”q':in»n"‘ mas nm I old.-ugglmuza / °f‘..‘:.‘.:=_:.°__°s._:°.‘:.-.__;.‘..':., ~ . |-~ IN! austadvludnatotah __ MlLBURN`S ` _ _ zfltam ii‘r_Q_vlvnl`> - ai' ici; his igigz §§§ 1 ldoetorcuu heuraacosnd #5 FEB, i _'$15 Figs ____,__...__;_ ; lili'I'lliE 'The Annual Meeting of the P. E. I. Grass Seed Growers Ass. held il St. M&ry’s llnli, on Thursday, July 5th at :egg $511 D. F. KEAYS. >Prasident. 6230-6-25-i0. ‘The Acadian’ ~ C. N. R. Goes On June 24th-25th With the change in train sched- ules effective Sunday. June 24th, the fest all sleeping car train "The Ac- adian" goes on the run between Montreal and Halifax for the sea- son 1928. Connections from Charlottetown with The Acadian (Train N0. 59> for Montreal will be made at Sackvllle, Train No. 39, leaving Charlottetown at 6.45 a. m. 8170-6-23-5i. Mortgage Sale TBUS lilitlce lhat under and by virtue of the powers ol’ sole contulrlozl ln a cer- tgln l0l`¢8’¢¥0 or Deed ol’ Trust dated t e twgnty- ourth day of .lunnary A, D, 192 » made hotwoon J, 8; 'l‘_ Morris Cilmllllly Lllrli-ted of the first nnrr llid The Maritime 'l‘rust Corporation of the eecond Dart there will he offered for sale by Public Auction on the prem- loes Nos, '76 to 79 Water Street in Lharlottetown. on Monday the fix- teenth day of July A_ ll. i928, at the houl' of eeven o'clock in the fnrcnnon, the following property, nunu-ly: All tlllt tract. piece or parcel of lanfl altnate, lying and being in ¢‘hnr|oth>_- town aforesaid bounded ua follows: On the Southeast hy Water Street, on the Southwest hy property now or inle- ly owned by W, W, Owen (formerly sed as Telegraph Office), on the ortheaat. hy property of Charles li. l:_ ougworth. und.on the Northwest hy th Robin lm le e I u _ Aieo all that other parcel of land in Charlottetown bounded all follows: On the Qlortllwest by Water Strr-ct, on the Sonthwi-st by property nf Ih- Blols Bros,_ on the Northeast hy pro- nerty of the Labor Union, and on tin’ Soutgeael by property of Bruce Stew- art Co Aho all thu- nersonal property of .T It T, Morris fompnuy Limltcri, com- Ilrlslng the m:|l:hlm»ry, plnnt equip- ment. office l'\~rnitnr<~. sloek~in-trnilc. bottles contan-ers, boxes, eases, cw eeucal, materlnm null supplies used in connection vrllh its business, home, nsratcd waters :md drinks manufactur- ed or in proccss of monui'a¢-ture. form- rlaee, tr\nlenlorlrs_ lrndc names, hook- rlehts, sud all other fixtures, utensils, goods chottolw effects and assets now mmed, or which at the time of such mls mag be owned bv the sold J, 6: T. Morris ompaoy Limited. Terms of sol-~ to be twenty DM' 02"* cub at the tin-s of sole, and the bal~ ance within tinrty days after the dnt( of sale, Dated this fourteenth day of May l - tC ti ,by “° “" “'.i`.'...'i.’.‘>‘i> ..°l?'ii’.5.’i~1$’.'iv. Th!! l' Att0\‘l(!yl. -o+o-oo-+0-HH-»++o+¢»v#»+°‘* '|928 _ EYES TESTED AND Glasses Fitted Competent service with latest equipment. E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR OPTOMETRISTS 142 Richmond Street vo.;-oo->-on »-ae-oassovooos--. Professional Card R.R.BELL BABBIBTEIL. SOLICITOB. BTG Cannon Block. Charlottetown. MONEY T0 LOAN . .________ ___-_. Dr. C. C. Archibald Graduate ol N. Y. Poet Graduate Medical School and Hospital Practice Umited io Eye, Ear. Nose and Throat fasting lyes and supplying Glaesel Office. llayu Building Great George Street Ollce Bears--9 to 12.80. L30 in 6.00 A M-ark lt. MOGuigan L B. A. IAI-l.l!'l'lii. BOLICITOII. ETC. HONEY 'I0 LOAN (bmlran Block. Charletiatown.l'.l.l. McLeod & Bentley J A. l!l‘N'l'LlY ' W. F.. BENTLEY, K. C. Bartlett and Attorney-at-Law Olin: IU Richmond Street KONI! T0 LOAN ohvlottotoru, P. l. I. McDonald & McPhee B. A. I. A- IODONALD I. I. Heli il /| . Z' Ap.-` ii . ' l J _ _ _ il / W ` '=- f\T§<`Z-§`.lf._ i - .1 4 °7 .¢ _ /Y _ £1 UK ‘ li 5 _ -i “A`husband is apt to be mean if his wife la extreme." _/ f i-f “IT” CERTAINLY PAYS Bachelor: it certainly pays tc have a wife. Married: What pays? Bach: The husband. dl ==§ ;‘;=_ W" -f' lil. fs. 'ii A PITIFUL PLEA Canned Tomato (to an clc enemy): Aw come on and he : good eport and hustle around anr get a can opener and let me out! \\‘° lllin `\ _., HER EDUCATION WAS LIBERAL “Did you give your daughter a liberal education?" “Liberall Why, I spent nearly everything I had on that girl." "A *fn -1 // ‘ A '/////._ & sri; ‘ if! ' " f if “\\i\i ~ \ -\’»»~--_ Germany Becoming Overpopulated i BERLIN, June 23.--What is ns- iserted in some quarters to be the _opening gun in a new German cam- paign for regaining her former col- onies, or at least mandates over them. was flrod today at Cologne in a session of the National Colonial Workers Association. The General iColonial program of Germany was :approved by the Association which insists that the Rclchs League of Nations representatives should pre- Isent a claim at Geneva for trans- ‘ference of mandatcs over former German colonies to the Fathcrland. The Association is convinced that _international political and com- mercial peace is impossible until Germany receives the same privil- rfzes as other nations of prime ln- dustrial and commercial import- _ance. Germany is now becoming ov- rrpopulatcd. the Association reasons also contending that the nation inecds colonies for obtaining raw materials and markets for her man- :ufactured goods. _ l _ _ /3;” -.RQ i ` ' ~_..s.v_~.‘ Builttoweigh _ Quickly and 4 lor many years i ramnamcs Accurately J i TWO _ THE c1~1Am.oTTEToWN GUARDIAN - __ f~TUNl”_5f3f.1?2_8 ' oovno-¢ oaro¢oe0¢O0¢f0»9¢¢ _._.“_**‘4..¢q4O§ _, /_ 'fa' Rashes and Ulmoles °""“'° _ _ ;.' m sn "Jeillolls H.eal;t8,” soothed and h'elalf~db`\; ' A *°5f°¥ il' 30" _ ......~. .._=_..T... I _ °" 00[ha.Sa|\/5 _ NA'ruRAl.|sT um' I AIILDILLD BAIIBUUB _Hr speck", Conulbumd mths b;a;mye;y.weal, ` _ »~6¢¢»»¢»»¢¢»¢»¢¢s.-,_»¢<\ Gugpsprggp 0|p41,~|EN1' _ _ wvenooa 08l$oi&o4+`+o+o+o- MAY. 1938. (2) __ gm-| yon Llnpp, ‘better known to us as Linnmsds, was ‘born at Rush- ult, sweden. in i'l_,il'l. -His fathextwas a minister and destined his son for the some profession. but the Hum' shuts .n,r.m.0ymuv_§iw_v °r Hiehef scntcl at wexis, to his sreat grief- \-sccrnracllded him to make the youth e tailor or a shoemeker. as he was totally unfltted for the learn- cd professions. A chance conversa- tion with a doctor led to YOURS Linnc's taking up the study of physiology, at which he showed re- markable aptitude, pasSi!lB his tix' amlnations with great success. In 1728 he went U0 UDSBIR. E0 Bti-Bild the university there, with the equiv- alent of $40_ln his pocket-all his parents could afford. This W8-S 50011 cxhaustrd and thc poor student now endured many hardships. often de- pending on chance generosity for a meal, and, it is said. being reduced to mending his shoes with folded paper. He managed’ to attend the university lectures, despite his somewhat. cilsrcputable appearance. yet during his attendance he never heard a single lecture on his own particular subjects, anatomy, bot- any, cr chemistry. A peculiar coi- legcl During this period he formed a close friendship with Peter Artedi, an enthusiastic young student, though of very different disposition, who also was to attain great dis- tinction as a naturalist. The friends divided the sciences between them: Linnaeus was supreme in Ornithol- ogy, Entomology and Botany; Artedi reserved the Umbelliprous plants. Fishes and Amphibeans. Two years .of intensive but pleasurable study. and opportunity knocked at the young studeut‘s door. The Professor of Botany in the university, because of advanced age, was obliged to ap- ipointadcputy, and in 1739 Linnaeus was sclcctcd as the most competent. He had applied for the post of gar- dener thc previous year. but his of- fcr was rejected; now he was direct- or and had the whole gardens rc- modclied and enriched with many rare plants. Two years later he resigned to take up exploring and collecting. ln the course of his travels he explor- cd Sweden up to the Arctic Circle. and returned to Upsala, having tra- versed, by boat and on horseback. 4,600 miles at a. cost of 1l2 silver dollars. Germany, Holland, England and Francee, _were visited in turn. and finally he chair of Botany hav- ing become vacant at the Univer- sity of Upsala, he was chosen to illl it in 1740. From that time till his death in 1778 his career was one of prosperity. his time being occupied in lecturing. classifying and in writing scientific works. He was _the greatest of the reforming bot- lanistsz “he found biology a chaos; he left it a cosmos." Before his time plants were unnamed; clumsy idescriptions. trying to the memory, ‘and often omitting the vital specific distinction. did duty for names, and the only arrangement-if wc may call it such-was alphabetical. Lin- nacus gave each plant a generic and a specific or trivial name. and his industry is cvinccd by the many hundreds of plants in our standard ‘Floras which, bear his initial (L_) sufiixcd. This alone adds a lustre to the name of Linnaeus which the passage of two` centuries has not dimmed. _ _ _ Tournefort. about the year 1100, published e. work called the “Institu- tions of Botany," in_whlch were dc- ncribcd.»10.l46 species; referred to 698 genera. .He divided those primarily into two classes-herbs and trecs-- and further sub-divided them ac- cording to thc peculiarities of the corolla when present. Linnaeus. with truer insight, made the sexual organs, the pistils and stamens. the llmsls or ms elnsslacatlon, and nl.. rystom. so seductive in its simplicity, roused a sudden enthusiasm in the science which it would be difficult to describe. It enabled multitudes cf new students to discover the name cf u plant with the greatest facility. yet it was in its way, as purely arti- llclal as that of Tournef_ort. Like that system it separated. far apart. genera. which had the greatest nat- ural afllnlty. and threw into juxa- poxitlcn others which had no affini- ty at all. Thus the Gramincae (or grasses), n most natural group, were dispers- cd into the first. second. third, sixth. twenty-first. and twenty-third of the Linncan classes. The Lablates, another well-defined family, were disposed partly in the second and partly in the fourteenth classes. In short, it was not Nature’s method. F DIAL SCALES I Although these last, accurate | scales are extremely aeneitiV¢» they are so llnely and atronglY _ built that they will last for years. _ ‘ They have no sprlnal. Ind their large clearly figured dill can be read quickly and with a minimum chance of error. They come in many ltylei. but in only one quaiity- the highest. f "7lucaN/MAN PAIIIIIIIII' .......?$2¥.i2 It ana, Quebec. Moulnai. Otnwl. Toronto. Windsor. ‘ru.a4p|_ loin. Calgary. Vsngouvs. Viuovla _ li0l`|(iE ' All stores at Morell and Bristol _will be closed every Wednesday at ‘noon from semi Including Juno 27th until further notice. (Sliced) ` _~ ll. ll. COX, _UQUAYD I--008, P. W. HQIWIN, 1. w. xulwls, snow, lt remained for Jussleu to formu- late in his "Genera Plantarum" ‘ lllcs. differing essentially. both ln pcourse and character. from these two systems. His divisions are not founded upon the consideration ofa finlllv Orson. but upon characters prescntcd by the sum-total of all the organs of a. plant. Aceordlnglyeach group of plants is disposed in such a manner that it has a greater aflln- lty for that group which immediately precedes or follows it.. than to any other. This method. by its accord with nature, has dominated all text- ‘ ____ books to the present day. _ and gives no authorities.. nor dee- plants mill' same name differ- ent or one have na Cow- the the Celandlne the reaeonLin- as the invari- .'.‘£‘ .‘.'.‘t'."‘“" iency without. CN! as and `. .\\ s '- .........................................._ ___ _ - .;. e; . ._. .lI:!:.lI.'.I-.21-nn...-»-...--..-. _ __ _ _ g _ ---___ f ' ' "'“"" ' ' r ' ...-. ................. .......-::°;:::::;::"---- . . . . . _ ................ .. . ===;;;:::.........-..............-...___ _ _ -.....¢.,` .. . _,` s .X ». . WW \ i i .‘/ ::::» .. .- |- 1. in -- |- .1 .i .. u .. ... n .1 .\ -. ~. .. in u u |- .- lu is I. ..- .- is ri; :::2!5`2II1:!:2ZZZI SCIII IICCCSSIUCS. 1. 2. 5. 4. 7. 8. 9. 10. _.,- 0 \\ `\‘» _ . ,.;. ¢,0 » 5. _ 5. A Monthly Cheque foryou 0 when you are old. HE investment which will make a man ' independent in his old age is not a matter of CapitaL It is an investment of Income, or rather of part of it, that will do the work. Few of us ever have Capital for this purpose, but all have an Income of some sort. Investment from Income is purely a matter of Thrift. Not "tightwad" Thrift but a careful, methodical planning of onc’s Income to make it provide for future as well as pre- Here is an outline of.u/bat true Thrift im/olves'.' Make a Budget. Keep an intelligent record of expenditures. Insure your life. Have a bank account. Make a will. Pay your bills promptly. Take more life assurance as an Spend less than you earn. Share with others-Thrift without Charity dries up the Spirit. For particulars ofthe Imperial Guaranteed Income Policy which will assure you a monthly Income when you retire, or should you become disabled, write to our nearest office to~day. No telling when you may become "uninsurable." _ T HE IMPERIAL LIFE ASSURANCE co. or CANADA H¢ad0j'ice - -.- » - ~ - TORONTO Branch Ojice: 70 Prince Street, CHARLOTFETOVVN -». 313 '.9' gl i ' - -1 rf- ' W I I » ' Own your own home, eventually. l u -- 1| n n in n n n u u _ u an u u u u u n investment. u u n u ul u -| lu n n n n. -1 rl an u ». sl ,_ .-: ‘ . _.;. . . /I /0° 0,* I s n ....... ............................................ ..... ......................-..-. . - ::::::::.......::.--....__._-..................... ........ .................................-.._. seed was procured by the kindly cf- Ottnwa_ The packets which came to mc were from thc Botanical Gar- dens at Osl Moscow, Paris. and forts of Professor John Adams. Of the Morel bears a higher reputation as li. delicacy than thc mushroom thc continent of Europe many var o, _ - Lyons. and each bore simply the letles of the fleshy fungi and their name "L81”lX 0i1i‘0Daea. D.C." NOW way to market, but lack of exact all the parties to this transaction, knowlcdgg has prevented us from thousands of miles apart,and speak- _nfinzmg them hem ' To remedy U18 diverse IBDBUBSSS. WGYB Sure Of this, Dr. Gussow. in collaboration what I required, whereas if I had with Mr, w, 3, 0d¢11, published asked for “J\1nilJ¢i‘" il\€l>0P\l1i\l` mis" 11927) a work entitled “Mushrooms nam for the tice on P E Island. 1 and Toudstools," which ou ht to be und commands a higher price. On iiliCl|liN Siill Auction Sale at Eldon on Wee iuesday. June 21th at I o’clock sharp of farm. stock, crop, household ei." [rests consists or no-ses. eatin. I pigs, hens. etc.; 1 choice team hom!- z excellent much son. youu: v=*"“- All machinery, wagons. slel¢llS~ quite different. e ' . . v g should have received S0m0i»hil15:‘in the library of every naturalist. -- of about 170 species, the majority of We have both Larch and .lunlperiwhich arc edible. These are well here, but thc former is a tree (Larix' illustrated by 128 large plates. Two Americana. Mlchx) with deciduous colored plates figure the two dau- lcuvcs of a tender green. and a gerous specir§-Amanlta. muscarla small cone. The latter arevarietles lL.) Fr.. the “Fly Toadstool" so of .lunlperus communis, L., and J. common here; and A. phalloicles Sabine, L., and are low straggling (Valli) Fr., which has earned the It gives a clear and succinct account ing crop. Terms at sale. MALCOLM R. PITMAN. J. A. MaoDONALD. Auctioneer. 6204- 8-23- 3L liamess etc. All households effecte- lf farm does not sell. will sell ll'°"` ` Allmlnleirhkir Eetltc 0f ilu’ \ Thomas McLellan, Eldon. Bellini- llke. (It is these Juniper bcrries'[ which give the peculiar reslnous flavor and diuretic quality to Hol- lands Gln.) The plants have such a different appearance that one falls to understand how our “rude fore- fathers" confounded them. The European Larch is a prettier treo with longer leaves and a cone about four times the sim of ours. A wind- break at Bunbury Farm shows that it takes kindly to our climate. There is some confusion in our species of Amelanchier, accordingto the Botanists. _'],’_heso plants flower ln May and are known to ‘us as “Indian Pears." Francis Bain (1890) says we have A. ovalls, A. canaden- sls. and A. botriapium (6pelt thus) criptlons. John MoSwain H800?) gives A. canadensie. Torrey and <:~=..°°“ is asc rr. a _ - cies listed by Moawaine is A. alni- folla, Nuttall; which ml; saidwbyétr. Britton to Nil! to ee rn Canada. 'l‘w__n:;t.thcs; v_v__hlch I car? fuly exam ` _ p ng were _ Canedensls flnlgmdic, and A. Bot- rysplum (L.f.) .C. these agreeing rr '.2'-....'*°‘°i"‘._.....‘.. <.rrf::"°~ ere e ra ht- ened out hecei but as the plant seems to vary with its environment it will takeeome' time and research. endofllaywemay 3 S shrubs. and their cones are berry-ltitle of “Death Angel." A variety of information as to cooking the fungi, the cultivation of mushrooms. and flrst~ald remedies in cases of Ama- nlta poisoning make up a valuable and readable contribution to this branch of science; the first. I lmag. ine. to be published in Canada. It is to bc had from the Klng's Print- cr, at Ottawa. at the remarkably low price of $1.00. _ I have eaten at least six varieties of fungi other than m_uhrooms without any particular "qualms"; but then. I know people who cannot eat clams, strawberries, or even mushrooms without being reminded that “one man‘s meet is another man's poison." _._.1_-- British Columbia Mouldingo and - Sheathlng mt an-Ivor anus mm vnnwwf i '0noflllIoll‘|0ll ' B. 0. BIOULDINGB AND slIlA'l‘lINO Amertel_ pattorl. L. M. POOLE & _ oo PAOLPI V Illllvll PP"_"f' ' iam instructed by p. m: . _ household effects. _ 35. _ ifgit sit gin’ r lima 'ma mul in lm. _ in mom n l - r Auction Sale of Furniture Rev`.\l. Ha ter to sell by public auction at his home 68 Baytleid Street. °“ W°d"°9d*1y. JUDO 27th. oomme__nolng_-'at 1.30 _ _All his household furnl1;u're=-llapndceffeoto com- Pflsmz Pari°r. dinio¢r°°l11_‘-»a‘rl'¢ligl_;,\§tc_hen furnish- mga. 1 valuable organ (l(u¢||}"' _' y par- lor sul e, Capitol Favorite _ 'Q7 now). carpets, mate; curtains, dleh_n`g,' andlii . >{ 't `. I .1 K _ _ “fm '~' .‘ _ .,,, .. __ ._ ,_, ' ._ . _ .1 _ 1 ‘,_ . 6232-6-25-ai __~_»_;_ ____ __ _ ur _ '.__, ~..'.\-__ _--,___'_ ._;,q`__`._."_\1_ . ';_.>_-._.~__._ __ _ _ _ _ ._..g_, ._. . f _ .. ._ ,___;_a,_ ._ _ _ , ___ ____’/____ ¢___:_=4._. ____ . __ _ _ _