\_-_- » ' PAGE TWELVE _ Reported Wo- melts Institutes, _ P. E. Island New Perth Nine members at- tended the June meeting of this institute which was held hr the Schoolhouse. Meeting opened with the Ode followed by Roll call and minute; oi last meeting. Ar- rangements were made for the school closin , and also ior making a comforter at the next meeting, which will be held in the School- house.- Ulgq-Kilnrose On May 8th, the regular meeting oi this institute wag held at the home oi Mrs. lack McLeod, Uigg. Roll call was answered by suggestions oi how to make the meetings more interest- llng and instructive. A very in- teresting paper was read on "Diabetes" and several other inter- esting readinga were given by the members. Mrs. S. D. Campbell _was elected Secretary- Treasurer, succeeding Mrs. White who resign. ed this office. $22.60 was collect ed for ‘the Orphanage. The next meeting will be in the form oi a Birthday Social, and will be held at the home oi Mrs. A. J. McLeod. “Glenmero" (Cherry Grove) Eleven members and eight visitors ettneded the May meeting of this Institute which was held at the home of Mrs. S. J. McAuiay. {The meeting opened on the usual manner, the new President making aiew opening remarks. Papers entitled "Kitchen Wrinkles" and "My Country, My Districtfl My Home" were read by Miss A. Malone. The change in the date of the regular meeting was report- ed approved. A card of thanks was read from the Sisters oi St. Nincent Orphanage acknowledging receipt oi Quilt donated by mem- bers oi the Institute. A musical programme, consisting oi organ, and violin music, supplemented with songs was enjoyed, after which lunch was served, and the t meeting closed by singing the Na- tional Anthem. Before adjourn- ment, a vote of thanks was tender- ed Miss Malone oi Red Point lusti- tute ior the assistance she render- ed at thig meeting. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Hudson Longpipe. - Borden On May 27th, eleven members and two visitors met at the home oi Mrs. Wm. Mclunis, where the regular meeting oi this institute was held. The chief item oi new business transacted, was the decision to plant the land to be used as a Park so as to be in readiness for next year. , it was also decided to start a “Fruit and Flower" Fund. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Eldon Campbell. Pleasant Valley. Twelve mem- bers and one visitor met in. the Schoolhouse on June 9th when the regular meeting oi this Institute was held. The new business und- ertaken at this meeting. was to have the School papered and paint- ed during the summer. lt was also decided to hold an ice Cream Social in June. Two delegates were appointed to attend Conven- tion. The next meeting will be held in the Schoolhouse. Central Royalty. Eight mem- bers and three visitors attended the June meeting of this institute which was held at the home oi Mrs. Fred McRae. The meeting opened in the~ usual manner. it was decided to buy an organ ior the School, and the Secretary was appointed to see that the organ was in the School beiore the Ex- amination. Roll call was answer- ed with jokes, the Sick Committee reported "All Well." The sum oi $5.00 was given the teacher ior J-r-prlsee-ior the school children. A gular opening, l...» -- very interesting demonstration?» given on ' "Gelatin Dsesertfl- by Miss Wkidsor. after ...whioh.a hearty vote th " » u x Neitlonel s ., '; m. win-l»: at‘. Mrs. J. W. Udals. . _ Rocky-Po 7.‘ lhgfihy meet- ing oi this,‘ tutiiwas held in the School, seven memberelcbeing present“ The meeting opened 1n the usual manner and It wps __de- cideq agtjeerve refreshments to the chlldrdmnt School oloomg. The next meeting will be held at the home oi Mrs. Nelson Currie. North River. The regular meet ing oi this Institute was held at the home oi Mrs. Harry Scott on June 4th, eighteen members and six visitors attending. Roll call being answered with jokes and conundrum». Reports oi commit- tees were heard, also letter read from the Department. it was re- ported that two schools had been cleaned. Mbs Windsor was pre- sent and gave a demonstration on Salads, after which refreshments were served. The next meeting will be held at the home oi Mrs John MacKinnon. ~ Kingeboro. Seven members and one visitor met at the home oi Mrs. Merril Stewart where the June meeting oi this Institute was held. Roll call was answered with "Dow-ts for the Sick Room". A report oi the money made at the concert, also correspondence read. After a. social hail.’ hour, meeting closed with music. Elmira. On June -6th, eight members and four visitors met at the home oi Mrs. Steven Mellick where the regular monthly meet- ing oi this Institute was held. Aft- er the usual opening. some discus- be held at the Marjorie Campbell. Alberton South. On June 2nd, twenty-one members and one visit- or met in the Schoolhouse where he regular monthly meeting oi this club was held. After the re- some discussion took place on sending articles to the Exchange. Roll call was sn- swered by paying a nckel. A social and dance is being arranged for June 27th. Two new members were welcomed. The next meet- home oi Miss ing will be held in the School- house. East Bidefbrd. Owing to an epidemic ofmeasles in the com- munity only iive members and five visitors attended the May meeting oi this club which was held at the home oi Mrs. W. D. McKay. Aft- er the regular business had been conducted, r a paper was read “Rural School hunch." Some dis- cussion took place on cleaning the school before the June examina- tions. Mr. Morrison was appoint- ed to see that the School had sign board placed on it. The next meeting will be held at the home oi Mrs. Shelton Sharp. ‘ O'Leary. Ten members and one visitor attended the May meeting of this institute which was held at the home oi Mrs. A. D. McLennan. The chief item oi business was the decision to hook a mat to be sent into the Exchange. "Supper Dish- es" was the subject chosen for the demonstrator‘; visit. The hem. meeting will be held at the home oi Mrs. A. S. Palmer. Soarletown. At the home oi Mrs. Earle Leard on June 5th, the regular meeting of this Institute sion took place on holding a W01 all‘! older twill ‘blot-her. bazaar. One new member was iborn ithin the same hour. l! Welcomed. The next meeting will -Prince Philip oi Hesse, while the THE CilARlfiTTETOWN GlllARDIAN m... " ' .- mwina are l9 reigning and Qi-ONe ales at Baroda-writes cunlillo-Oweo, 0.8111, qgkyr u; the popular laeliei ot anci- ent timoMWWW-Wll 1° Which-W" twins were horn to l T0711 0|‘ 1m- perlal house, one oi the 1W0 WI! always put out of the way in order to avoid any trouble shout the ouc- ceseion. Iilistory extending back even to the most remote times may he searched in vain for any authentic case oi the birth oi twins to any royal or imperial family until the closing years oi the laot century. 1n oplte oi the most exhaustive invowtigauouo, no dblinlte proof has over been produced of the truth oi maniong (h? believed story, according to which the mysterious life prisoner oi the audio iknown as "the Man in the iron Mask," was the twin brother oi King Louis XIV. oi Fro-ace. it is this that lends exceptional interest to the presence in New ‘York oi Prince Wolfgang o! Hesse, who arrived from Germany lby the United States liner America under the incognito name of "Wolfgang Wildhoi" oi Frankfort and has been staying at the Waldor! ipre- paratory io making a tour of the United Sta/tee, For the ‘Prince, who is 28, un- married and enormously rich, and served as lieutenant oi the Sixth Prussian Lancers throughout the war, is the younger oi one oi the two sets of twin sons oi Princess Frederick Charles oi Hesse, the youngest, most pleasant and best liked of the sisters oi the ex- Kaiser, other set oi twins are the Princes Richard and Chrietophere oi Hesse, who attained their majority last year. These two batches of royal Hessian twins constitute the only known and authenticated cases in history oi dual birth oi Princes oi the blood. Rich In Romance. Prince Wolfgang comes from a branch 0f the House oi Hesse, the dynes- g ‘ that widely printed and popularly‘ annals oi which are particularly rich in romance. indeed, it is not , Until" Relieved. By “Fruit-a-iivee". ha. o o ' holssiuor "e vendor resale res-rd "Fruit-e- " 1 . l" 1° "I" 90 tell what it hudone r0317... a ‘i ‘Mu! "m"! friend and After years of suffering they appreciate th ’ knit treatment in relieving them of pain and mnzgziflr“! Aa Mr.“ P. R. Boieainot, of LaBroquorie, Mam, wrote: _ PWors oi th]; “Mmaoment. 0170i‘ thrgg ya". Ihadtogiveupwork; nflarmsweresolwolleuandlwqmmk If“! - e would never be able to work on the farm any more. But one day I a cousin came to see me and advised m9 to take " Fru“..;flv“n no" I m ' in ood health. 1 rest well and do oi my work. 1 can recommend "irmugufer. for Rheumat‘ good remedy". that made me suffer so much and I thank you for this "Frult-a-tives” is the wonderful medicine made fro t}, oranges, ilgs and prunes and wales-and is the only“ nonrigid? $221M. m; discovered f0l Rheumatism, Pain in the Back, Lumbqo N W“ Headaches and other troubles due to the improper action oi‘ the getqmuh‘ bowels and kidneys. on. 25o. and 50c. a box-at all dealers or from Fruit-a-tivee Limited 0m“. I a brunch but rather the parent stem of a dynasty that can boast oi descent irom the Emperor ILo- thair. who reigned in the ninth century-and through him from Lothalrh grandfather, Charlemagne —ond is now headed lby the -blind Landgrave of Hesse, celebrated as a composer and as a phiianthrop lst, an uncle oi ‘Prince Wolfgang. The ex-Grand Duke oi Hesse, who lost his throne at the time o! the monarohisl debacle in Central Eu. rope following the dethronement of the German Kaiser in ‘November i918, is merely the chief oi one oi the junior lines. The parent stem, that is, the one headed by the Landgrave, and to which Prince Wolfgang belongs, reigned as sovereigns at Cassel un- til 1868, with the mnk of Sover- .-__, elgn Prince diilector, that is, one c: those rulers in whose minds the election of the Emperor of the w called Holy Roman Emrplre, which embraced all the petty sovereign States oi Central Europe until the beginning of the nineteenth cen- tury, ‘was supposed to rest. But oi more immediate interest in connection with Prince Woli- gang is the fact that his mother, the former Princess Margaret of Prussia, is the most popular of all the sisters of the ext-Emperor, Willi whom, ihowover. she has never been on iparticularly friendly terms. it may be recalled that the relations oi the ex-Kaiser with his father and mother were revoltin-gly un- iilial, arousing universal indigna- tion abroad, and even among his own countrymen. Distress or pain in the pit of the stomach (especially about two hours d If you are in leee than perfect health-e If you suffer from any of the symptoms detailed belovif-m r then this meeeage bringe encouragement and hope to you. ‘D0 YOU SUFF ER FROM: I _ .1 '9 . head; Sleep sometimes disturbed bylthem, this is owing to the vague and‘ reams or nightmares; Emaciution Health and Happiness Are Your Birthright the misleading character of the ~ symptoms. Consequent- after eatmUi Chronic ly they spend large Dyspepsia; Spells of indigestion; Sour Stom- ach; Heart Burn; Feel- ing like a heavy weight drown around the waist; Difllcult, uneasy, ‘distressful, or painful digestion; Biliousness or Bilious Colic Spells: plln in the right side or between or under the shoulder blades: Shifting, Shooting, Sit- ing, Boring, Burning sensations, or pains in was held and was attended by nine members and three visitors. The letter regarding the W. l. Ex- change was read and plans made to send some work. The next meeting will not be until after the Convention, and will be held at the home of Mrs Major Lowther. M'“' r On June 8rd, nine A complete meal and ve- getable coureo, all cooked ready to heat and serve. ~ decided to have a new floor laid in members and eleven visitors met at the home oi Mrs. ord Wright where the regul o thlv Institute meeting was eld. The members planned to attend the Annual School Meeting. A pro- gram commlttee was appointed. The next meeting will be held at the home oi Mrs. Ernest Wright. Armadale. The regular month- ly meeting oi this lnatitute was held in the Schoolhouse June 3rd, four- teen members attendlng. The lowed by roll call and reading of minutes oi last meeting. ltwas decided to hold a Pie Social in the pose of raising funds. it was also the School. A very nice luncheon non and Mrs. D. J. Mclnnls. The next meeting will be held in the Schoolhouse. meeting opened with the Ode, fol- School on June 20th for the pur- was served by Mrs. Allan McKin- Chopped figs added to the cereal right side, or around the waist line below ribs or under shoulder blades. e(ln some cases pains are felt more in the left side.) Inter- costal Neuralgln; spells of lick headache; Colic; Ccnsti Goa (in a few cues larrhoea) Blues; Piler Yellow, Sallow, Blotc ed or Itchy Skin; amounts of money {lllll take most every kind of medicine they learn of to relieve somctlung ' they have not got. They doom thomst-lvos to one disappointment after another and gventuall lose faith Ill all medicine, They tale Ill kinds of metlirmc which docs them no good because it fails to reach all the Liver-Gull cause of their suffer- ing, misery or distress. Great harm can come from this practice of doctoring s mptoms. Gall-Trou le is hard to recognize ‘because the symptoms ore so indirect and mislvad- lug; 00% of the oople who have Gall ‘tones do not even suspect it bad complexion; Gas on Stomach or in Bowels; Fermentation of food generating poisonous gneee in the Stomach and Howell. and ab- sorbed through the of memory, energ ; Vitality all gonz; Gloomy, de reused feel- ing; irrito ility; lang- our; constant desire to si h: poor circulation; co hende- send toot; ll MARLATTS svscirlc c/Yéver qaily“ to give @8111]? An Emilent Cleanser for the lathe lyetsrg Iv i-h b: m amou- J. VI. I COR abikli-IOIATOIIIS Uneolicltelteetlaeooielereoehelbleehlts until they have attacks of Gall Stone Colic. and these attacks some on only after the Gall Stone condition has bEen long present. ( ivor trouble that has blood, causing Anee- Cg" Sign“ A d‘ ' ‘ been long neglected) mia, P ll Sell c . ppon icltee ; th sum, Pozroalood, i231 Kidney Stonee Bladder Trouble 4231...". dnfiiystctifiifboii: is never experienced ‘as the Gall Stones he till"! for years, or for l e, and never attempt- "'9 one e through til! , ell t. if the Gall :3‘ Stone condition were as in Stomach crowd- flutteri heert ; , irre tee; ity; diny e no the heart, causing pllpitation, c ted to ; th D to light or eley colored saute; negme Ga.ll Stznersid’) .. “eekneeer general or special debil- lle; Yellow Jannlllee; sooner treated relief (although some seem to geirfweight could, o; course, be much easier and ler or nervous Consequently the old saying m“ quickly accomplished. Thll i! “l-‘air, l-‘at,_l‘orty and wh NOB! folks who have ‘Gall-Trouble in the earlier stages or later oases we urge Liver and Stomach "mu..." ‘m: t."'r.::i"-:..Li%£i ll D ll‘ \ in literature which will be sent i0 vmlm dill . heavy feeling in the o! Gall Stones, don't know whet ails you flee no request. For Sale by HUGHES DRUG c0., 1.11).", Charlottetown, P. E. I. i - .. i- llbout twenty minutes before it is - 1 T'J.._.l‘.T.-"_1ml-ia.l,'." served le a change. it la elpeciaily good in cream of wheat or oatmeal. v ~»wwr»~-»,,~1;.»~t~;._,