...;."..;‘...";'a.....;. ill... ' rliheipeeoiiissa" euiIei-er, turns to "urn-wet m2 v _ LAND LEAGUE 3466 I Champion Provincial Horel Show March 6th, 1922 Land Leaglle- ie a beautiful Black Stallion 5 year; old, aired - your 30mm “n”; Anew Mn by Nathan Axwerthy, 2.00; hla churmun u,” superintendent. dam la by Direct, 2.05; dam of Indies and gentlemen: ' z°""'°°" 2°35“ “w!” ‘Mm’ To you in the audience tonight. l?" 9"“ lmmr‘ i and w you “new, who n“ on we Land League la‘ a beautifully platform, the frost of custom has Ml" 0"" Wm‘ m’ 5'“ °I “'9 wrung made m“ nnnnn] new and lepa, and a aure trotter. He lnony a monotonous and lifeless :‘£'lw"§:":.ll,°l'; u" '“'°" ‘t m‘ thing. To you. graduating nurses. " tun ceremony mm,“ anenncn m Mares at owner‘: rialt. $10-00 yo," “teem ' ' for the aeaaon. This is your grsdnmgon nlginn G- H. MYERS, V, S. D. V. D. For three dong years you have OWM" struggled. as it were. up ‘the steells M°"l"“" to s. big-h terrace-the terrace of ac- . complis-hment, and you are delight 5525430“- ed to look back, But you must look patioll of woman is the greatest forward, you must look to the fut- ure for further accomplishments. nlngle fact“. h, pmducmg our nurse of today. -Lii’e is before you, and more suc- A careful perusal of history will ceases areyollrs if< you will but achieve. qnnw _ . you that warfare has been Douhuess there were "mes l" one of the stimuli responsible for your tralnmg when gmdualm“ this evolution of our modern nurse. -"°°"‘°‘l m" 41ml"! “tllslalwe- "i" Witness the Crimean will", 1854-— day by day w“ have struggled m‘ i856; when one who had been shelt- aild now success is yours. No doubt cred 1n n cultured home’ heard me call and was equal to the lleed;§ at times you halve had m rbid ap- prehensions about the future. The when wnnn (lend nmtn nnd . pestil- nrfad of exailninatinins was evel be- ence nlnnnen n-n vlnmnn in ‘Hnmn, o e Wu’ m" you ‘we Md “Wm” Crimea. Ill those days there were pitai yesterday whcin the Silmlller-ll-LB to your ultimate success. IIow- “men in Englnnn who were slung side doctors and doctors from elk-level‘. absorbed in the duty of tilc into nnnnn by the nnnenln o, er points throughout Prince Coull-nhour itself, which after all is in it- wnnnden men mnm nentunnne non l)’ flllendet-l- Th6 DBODlQ 0f Pflilfle self the best guarantee of ultimate row nnn nnntn ' County are practically fortunate in gucceggl these h u,- h v ,1 , " receiving from these eminent medi- mm years, “n3 €nnllghtaylaiilpgllllllil mm,“gmiligsolilllgilfémllrliestiml; B 0 f I] . V8 name of "Sister," now applied to a Western ~ F --usw vleon eAPa roi- boya— 81.1011 25c and up at Sinclair's. 5804~5~88¢3i kl"'@ - . . aergailaeow. u it tails . ‘U’ the darkening walls." Granating nurses. you belon! to , noble order of which Flor- ence-Nightingale is the leader of modern times. You have a grand inhennf-tance. and you are compelled i The following is uis address to ! Graduating Nlrrcea at Prince Coun- ty Hospital (klmmencemeat Exer- cises on May 20th. i927 by Dr. J. C. Simpson. ‘l-wAn-rrzo - A Cook. Apply to hlra. Alhsn A. tacky. Btlmlnercide. 5820-5-28-21. -ROIIN HOOD FLOUR -.- . All line wholesale and retail. Hei- malill, Buulnleraide. ' i-Il-dit. Demons tor of the Gossard Com- pletes, f nt lacing corsets, girdles, clasp arounds, and combinations will be hereon Tuesday, May 31st. We would be pleased to have you call and be fitted. PROWSE BROS LTD. by t inheritance, by that price- less eritage to keep your eacutche- on fnee from stain. This is your duty‘. to your profession. You have a duty to yourselves. We are not far from the Tom Saw- yer etage today with its philosophy. ,"that' work u nslsts of whatever a dy i_a obliged to do. and play con- sists of whatever a body is not obliged to do." " " Ill lorder to be good nurses, you will be obliged to do certain things. You‘ will be obliged to work. Yoilr _ prohesion is an exacting mistress. anifyou must seek outlets for re- creation. When t-be burly-burly of the-day's routine threatens your mental and physical equilibrium. seek recreation in some-hobby. Aft- er all, what you are is the sum tot- al of your yesterdays, and you Will be carried over the crisis of life only by the inertia of the past. ii your yesterdays were free then you will be the slave of your yester- days. Your only hope ia that today is in your hands, and you nlny so use it as to compel your tomorrows. Responsibility will be thrust upon you, days and nights or anxious waiting, ill those trying oldeais you will have to draw on Yflill‘ liflfil. l" the crisis of life your only ilope iH in your lpaat. “Guard well the fires of youth, lest in old age you sit beside the cold ashes of exhausted pleasure.” Chance favors the prepared mind. Be prepared. All the trage- dies of iSba-kesperge are from tile single text "There is ll title in thel affairs of men, which. taken at lllill flood, leads on to fortune; omitted, all the voyage of their life is lost, 3». 1' ll ll - 511-.‘ v.10 .\.u: r! 4-."- -—INSTITUTE MEETING AT m- l’ / DiAN ‘RIVER. -'l‘be May meeting a! Indian Rwer Wolnanb Institute n held st the s1“ llinuse. The in ipg opened with singing Insti- .ute Ode. Ten members answer- Bd Roll (Jail. One visitor present. 319119!’ was voted for a new black- learu mi- the school. The zithol’ May was set as Eggday, on which day all the womell of the district would he asked m contribute eggs. Candy was to he made and sold at he play w be staged in Malpeqtle. 349601188 closed with National An- hem. The next meeting will be ‘lelil st the "home ot‘ Mrs. Wm.- Vlann on June 8th, Members please answer Roll Call with,_ "Uses of dewspapers." r...n...l L-a-s-t-i-lné-lgl Refreshment i J VSOWING AND PLANTING. —'i‘he fine, dryTng, ‘sunshiny days of Sat- furduy and Sunday has put the hith- _i,ert:> mid ilnll- damp ground in fine Iculldit on for sowing and planting- Thele will be much of the work doll.- this week. Tlfs "spring is Eastern Guardian ..*HERRING PLENTIFUL. T-hc herring has struck in on the North Sile and catches are nc=w he t"~h . $2311 yifidfie 3g “QM not. fines}. lquite favorable for the farlller, and ,ng nerningmai, "on, me Magdw llllrlnels are preparing to i-vzw and Inn qnlnndsv Pinnennen noweven .p‘.ant the biggest ever. complain or lobsters being scarce. ' c» NlPS-delicious Peppermint flavored gum in ‘ sugar-coated —SUCCESSFUL cumc _Afle'r. being in Charlottetown‘ for two‘ days Dr- F.A. ‘C. Scrimmer one Fl ille 1980i"! surgeons of America and Dr. Cashing an authority on infectious diseases and both of Montreal, held a most successful clinic at the Prince County Ilns; ..° T .——~. . -"‘GR°UN° Now READY FOR BlIPl-fQlisllipfiligfytglfisfllflfléxltbflalfg ‘llliilly marketed, considerably over 2,000 illlshcls Cobblers from a. field of less than six acres. (not quite six acres relllember), on ills new potato. grolvillg farm at St. Charles Station, is this year putting in 10 130F851 (‘nbblers at St. Charles, and l4 ash-s (in-in Mountains at Rollo ,Bay. ' ' IT PAYS T0 GET Tlli HHS A large prnpctlen of all the nerve energy generated in n normal body la elpended in the not of seeing. Eyes are often Island to l» defective no that although vision ill atlll good, they are consum- ing twice or l-hree times their ul- Intted-portlorl of nerve forclnthna robbing other vital organs of fllelr nwilve power. A beneficial treat-clean,“ 1 mouth and teeth-aide digupionf cal me“ ll"! ""115 C" lllell’ klmw‘ on the threshold of your career. ledge and experience. This is the Y m k i _ _ fir-st of a series of clinics to be mznrcemgnfilnn ’n",:wm‘;,lnl(':nfr"','n_ rank in the nursing "profession in held here this summer by noted mgm to undress n) yon n new general, recalls it's historical. orig- nledicsi men of Canada. Dr. Scrim- words of advice and mm PM“ in ill religious enthusiasm. ‘ e u ‘P’ These are some of the influences mer and Dr. Cllfllllllg leave his mem as 0 n‘ r on ' y u g l ym" a mm in virtue of which nursing, as a hil- I ..“'NEW CREAMERY FOR SOU- "Rl . -'I‘lie Eastern farmers arc ."- ii iig with lunch satisfaction the _COIlS[lll.:ll0Il 0i‘ a new creamery ill 11hr town ot‘ Souris, the more so. from the fllci that the Company i; Smokers like Wrigley’: beam; Th, "m" |, “n”, nhyllgggl morning oil return to Montreal. n {in . ilillordera-often In remote parts of the body. Two out of every ton people are in tlsla fix. yet the real cause of their trouble ia often lint even suspects-d until a thorough ex.- amirlailun discloses the flu-ta. ll there in any reunion wiint- ever to suspect eye strain. the common sense thing to do In to have a lllnrongll oxnmlnniion umi GET THE‘ FACTS AIIOUT YOUR EYES. H. J. M-ABON OPTOMETRIST, Montague, I. I. I. I. l .;l"ler lilllll tile famous and Dflle u-ililiing butler maker o1‘ the (Le-ll [Pill (‘rcalnci"y, Charlottetown, ullii iu uliuul Iilllitli of the cream from tile East, is nivw slllppctl by tra-Kll. ..-*CHANGED CONDITIONS. — Nut s!) vi-ry many ye-Ilrs ago, the iilrlllul" klllcll ll-N mvll pink I'm hulisv use, nliriin llis nwil bullet. lkilled ‘is own die-cf, lnilde his own illlltWfhllr-‘lll fact. laverytlitllig llseil was 0f ll .i ir-wu manufacture or pro- duction, vAll ih as .-l llow changed, lthe farmer sells his n-ealn and and buys crt-alnery butter; sells his hugs‘ alive, zillil buys cured ba~ cull; sells Ls heel‘ alive and buys Public Temperance Meetings Under The Auspices 0f The Temperance Alliance of opening of St. Marks (‘llllrcll loukl place in Kellslngiilll on May 22nd at 3 p. nl., Rev. (i. S, Sprlggs ilffio- intlllg. At (evening service the Iter- tor lead prayers appropriate m lllt‘ occasion. 'i‘llcl"0 wile pri-sellt Alli 0X- t-eptlonnlly large null attentive coll- to go forth into the crusade against ilisenae. it may be superfluous for llii‘ to loffer you advice, as all lllli axioms of life Ilnlve been inculcate-d during your training; but it is a custom to lrlllke ii furlllal address, illlli my repetition of illesc lixionls is fur lllfi purpose 0i‘ lllilfi.‘ firmly illlpries- sing them nil your llllnds. tililt your knowledge may be oi‘ n more lilsl- ing and tangible nature. inasmuch its our school is smilii, there Is necessarily a mole inti- mate and very glsirable psi-stills] contact between doctors and nurs- es. This is, to my mind, an advant- —-ANGLIOAN CHU ROH.—Tlie I'll-l gregalion. Tile choir perform- sil efficiently. A serllluu appropriate to the event was ‘preached by tllc iiector- iRev. (I. T, Spriggs, laklllg for his text "Luke 10-17: "The Fing- dom of God ‘is Within You" cin- phaaizing the nature and the local‘ ity of the Kingdom of God. It was essentially spiritual, and can he es- age which you have ovel" your tablished essentially by co-opera- sisters in Ialger institutions. where “on with the life of Christ. Theisuch a personal contact is not przlc~ Rector and his congregation are to tical. ‘ = be congratulated on the splendici It is not mypurpose tonightto give appearance of their House of Wor-iyou anyoutilne of the history of ship. The east window over thoiuursillg as it llasovolved throughout communion table ilears testimonyitlle ages. Suffice it to say, that of tile highly artistic work of theisince life began, there have been illanltarlan instinct, has grown ill- to an order, worthy of the dignified llnnle of "profession." To stloll ll profession you, graduating nurses. are being entered tonight, Your title ulrrles with it responsibilities and duties. To some oi‘ these I would ‘now draw your liitelliiilll. (iraduating nurses, your first iiuty is the performance of service to so- ciety. lll your private. capacity you lnny become a great blessing to hil- manity, ministering to those ill sol"- row, ueed- and sickness. Take as your motto, the Golden Rule of liu- manlty as announced by Colifucious and you will not go far astray. “What you do not like when lioue to yourself, do not do to other-i." tTherc is no higher mission in life than nursing the sick, but filers is n0 more ‘responsible position and no profession more trying on ones capacities. ‘There is over the dung- cr tlfll! the fins edI-ZQ nib $J_\'ll1]\illlly will be dulled by the endless train Ill shadows and in miseries." Jiluitivate the habit of duilll-r" tilings well. There is u stllulgl- nu- titheais ‘between the iiieiil illlll tile real, that is between lilo ('ll[lli('ll)' 0i‘ the human mind i0 couu-i-re. ideals, and the paillutir illcilpiii-iiy of, humuu effort io lii'lllt~\'t‘ tin-ill. We are commanded lll illl filings to attain tile unobtainzlbiv- 'I‘llu cliiiuls of perfection uru always lIll]ll‘I'llllVt' Strive then in llttalll tile IlIlfllIllilIl-i able, and you may ‘perhaps Ililili above the common level. and CVOIIi though your numcs miiy uut. (‘('ll(l,' down tile corridors of time, yen; after all you_will have the greatest} satisfaction in life~—tllz- sails-foothill, of things well (loner. g And now. farelveii! ‘Tonight you} pass from the silelter oi’ your "Al-i ma Mater," and we wish ynu (ioii-| speed ill your wentllre. _"Yet, illll Thai Spring should vanish with‘ tile ‘Rose, Tilat youth's sweet si-nlliell lilnll-l it eweetena the breath and Ifllkfl the next smoke taste better. The kiddiea-well, juat take them acme-and see their answer. / “After, Every ,Meal ’ ’ iliiiileL as. IIIIIKP it-to one, a worry, a care. or all annoyance, to another n daily llllli usefulness. (lriuiilating nurses, you belong to than she expected. "illtli. great army of physicians and _ Mother scnt little Harry; 10y. ulld a life of much happiness his smaller sister safely‘ kindergarten. Ht: was back "Well, dear," silc said "ti Nlllllél‘, Mr- .I. EVZIIIH Inglis. Thcrethose who have ilevoteil their time; ill-lasts, sisters and-nurses, all over ‘real Mar)’ llke ll lllllfi lllil tongs.” __ _' Prince Edward Island . will be held During the Week Beginning May 30th as Follows: Monday May 30th: Tlgnish ‘i uesday, May 31st: _ Miminigash Alberton Coleman Canoe Cove Wednesday June 1st: Wellington Tyne Va-ilsy . Clinton DeSable Thursday, June 2nd: Cape Wolfe O‘Leary Margate United Church . South Rustico Afton Hail French River .. Kingston P-m. 2.30 p.m. 8.00 p.m. 8.00 p.111 8.00 p.m. 8.00 p-m 8.00 p.m. Friday, June 3rd: , 8'00 Wm‘ t Freetown Cape Traverse Cardigan 8.00 p.m North River . $00 n'm_ St. George's . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1.00 p,m, 2.30 p.m. 8.00 p.m. Saturday. June 4th; Cambridge Annaridaie . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 8.00 p. OTHER MEETINGS WILL BE ANNOUNCED LATER Ian's Heavy Service Oxfords SUPERCEEDS BROGUES ' "ire five lxirts, the centre. showing the Shepherd and the Lamb, ou each aide is represented lilo .\:.cell~ sion of Our Lcrd and on rcnlo right and Iclt arc fllsrl-lyl-‘il St. Pcter and St. Paul. The whole pictul-lzation emphatically l-x- " presses the lesson that this scene -.ll the life of our Lord is iutelldcd .0 teach. and cannot illll to iutelr lify the iIcvotion.——Y. -—THE VILLIAN FOlLEDp-lli ' die Strand Theatre, Keuslngtoll, on Wednesday night, the Mnrgate Dia- matic Players presented their very - realistic drama, "The Villian Foil- ed" to a numerous and appreciative audience. The play is a comedy drama in four acts, and is replete with thrilling situations. The caste was well ‘balanced and the interpre- tation was easy lllld lliltlllal. The audience followed the deuoucmeni with close attention and expressed latisfuctioll with generous op- pluuse. The bill showed the fol lowing castez-Blld Wheeler, home from the city,‘ Roland Thompson; Pat Flannigall, a Green Irishman. John Howard; Otto Gllckenllelmer. J. Dutch Policeman. Heath Mayhew: Jasper White, a Suspicious Negro- Clleater Howard; Aunt Hannah. Bud's Mother, Mrs. Gordon Wood- sille; Jelusha. Jane. Alrlra. Ami Boggs, nn Orphan, Mrs. Jos. Wood- silie; Dora Burton, Heiress, Mar- garet Plllmun; Iiarvey Barton. Dora's Cousin, ‘Stanley Thompson; Uncle Eli, Bud's hither, Turner Glydon. Not a dull moment inter- vened, and the audience were gratefully pleased. The highly dra- matic situations were well staged and the audience was not slow In (iisplaylng appreciation. Specializa- tion would be out of place when all "performed their parts so efficiently. The specialties were Vocal Solo. Mrs, Parker, Sllmnlerslde, and an aboriginal number by a native" of the dusty tribe‘, Noel Le Beau. T-he instlumelltai music by the orches- tra, under the guidance of Mr. H. Campbell, Long River, with Miss Cousins anil-lilr. John McGregor, who plllycii banjo and Mr. Mnyilew ‘ell-her whole or ill part to nursing ,less. As Sir -Wiliiam Osler has said the elf-a the sick nnd caring for the help- “Doctors and Nurses are stage ilC-v cessories of the great drama of hu- man suffering." Woman, llus in suc- cessive generations played the part ,of nurse in the great drama of life, ‘Witness the deep seated animal iu-i stinct of the cave dwelling mother, cooling the forehead of ‘her sick child with water from the brook, and‘ you hove the same spirit, which tempered through the ages by the benign l\lII€IICB of Christianity ‘has given us our nurse oil today. Truly, as a profession nursing is of recent date. As a humanitarian Instinct it is as old as humanity. It has reached the" status of a profes- sion in virtue of several stimuli. The first factor we observe as responsible for this evolution of the profession is the "Social liberty of women," characteristic of the present age. Until recent years womulrs sphere in society was con- fined to the home. 1-Ier office was to teach the heart. but not the mind and she who strove for intellectual superiority was severely criticised and even condemned. The home will ever stand as the highest throne to which woman can as- cend; nevertheless, her social em- ancipstion has opened to her new channels of endeavor and useful- ness. Probably this social emanci- —<Miss-l Mary Mclver, "teacher, Calnpbellton, Lot 4 spent the week- end in Bayside, the guest of her ccusin ‘Mrs- Alphonsus Browll. N -~-Messr.-l Willard McLeilan and Albert McDonald. Grand River‘. were among the prosperous farm- ers we noticed hauling fertilizer from Summerslde Ias-t week. N —.Mlss Hilda Gillie arrived at her home in Arlington on Saturday, af- ter completing a very successful course at Mt. St. Bernard Academy alld receiving her Anl]. degree from St. Francis Xavier University. Antigonish. N OPSIIIYQTHIE which you will he calli- ed llpon to witness. “Great suffering humanity hangs upon lhc Crux-ts." It is your duty. your privilege 10' allay that suffering, not only by sue- dicsmenis and placclmus, bu: with a sympathetic heart and loi-iill-Z hands. The lifo 0i‘ n nurse is not made up of great sacrifices or dut- ies, but of ‘little tilinga, lll wilii-il smiles and kindness-as, and smiill obligations, given llafblillillly are what will the heart and secure colli- fort. . You must exercise n talent for silence. Sacred zoilflilcnces will he yours. and “You must keep ‘your mouth lie it were with a bliille." as $ir Thomas Browne says, "Think not silence the wisdom of fools. bill if rightly timed the wisdom of wise men, who have not the infirmity but the virtue of taciturnity." 0r as Sir William Osler says. “Taci- turnity a discreet silence. is n virt- ue little cultivated lll these gilrlu- 1on5 days, when speech has taken the place oi‘ thought." Suchthcn is your duty to society. Graduating nurses, you have a duty to your profession. The escut- cheorl of your order has been won by fearless suffering, toil, sacrifice and death. iShall any wavering yours blot that escutcheoll? The very richness of such an inherit- ance compels you to ‘hold up the honor of your oiler. Do not falsify the best traditions of an ancient and honorable calling. "—And can you cravens be, Who heir this mightly blood bought legacy!" From humble beginnings, amidst pestilence and the wild despair of war, your profession -has grown and flourished. By charitable devo- tion. where strong men struggled in the service of their country. woman in virtue of her tailors has given you a legacy oi’ which, you may well be proud. Your profession along with that of ours has gradu- ally emerged from the imperfect alld unorthodox practises of_t-he pnat to its present status, based on scientific inquiry nlld experimental proof. The ninteenth century pro- duced three famous persons in llscript should close." On ilellalf of the Doctors, li-i mo‘ aflsllrr; you that your work has llPflil H". worm ,0 whom in given the asked 3.9a to? llllinislry of consolation ill sorrow, ‘Maw,’ refilled vnw qnmfnlr _ I _ _ l llleetl and sickness-r Ill all clrcllm- ‘Hsgustedly’ we canned ' ' l’ ' lf" ‘ml m“ whlllml“ stances, be true in yourselves truel rum-it cortiial. I‘o each of you, yourho your nigh mm“ . - thor most of the Icy . . _ _ i; and true to; , nolk will be vcly much as you yo," renew mnn‘ n Transcript... - 1 the y anil-gelltlcluan stuff, all’) ' V results in our ranches this spring. The ‘ranchers, llfiilll foxes and are ordering in large quantities. machine recently installed for this purpose. ‘ It is refill? for feeding and only requires the addition of milk t0 form a properly balanced diet on which the Young f0!“ Imperial Puppy Food Tbs popular “Imperial” product is giving excellent l it, report splendid progress in growth of their young; IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD is first baked as "a biscuit from our scientifically prepared and testedPupDY F _ formula and "then ground into a coarse meal by ‘a Silecllllzlj Eastern Guardian ..*NOTlCE—The Annual Meet- iug or the Kings County Exhibition Aasociatl will be held in the on the piano was goniL-Y. 0&- PERSONALS --<‘*~ Men tired of Broguea, the fussy tlpa and fixings, ‘junc- ,tured with innumerable holes are too ornate, and out of since excepting with heavy tweed clothes, for Hunting o.- Golfing. England who contributed more than any of their contemporaries to the relief of Illlrnall suffering alld dis- ease- Lord Lister, the inventor of antiseptic surgery. Simpson, the thrive most successfully. V _ IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD and IMPERIAL, FOX i —I)r. NiuDougal-i, OYLeary, was a Slater’s Created This Heavy Service Oxford For Street, Business or Hiking-to make it English calf- "il" II imlwrtedlor the uppers, this with oak-tanned double soiee and a plain tip gives you an ideal shes for any cc. caalon excepting evening wear. ‘ visitor to iKt-Jllfillllglflll oil May 21th. K. , -—M-rs. if’. L. Morris of Murray Ilarbnur was a vilsitor to Kcnsinx- ton on Sunday. K. ~-Misi Kathleen Brown, teacher, The Shape is Comfortable and Pleasing The Slater reputation insures you wearing satisfaction. Price $9.00 Per Pair for. Brown or Black. 8K B! . MlTEll FASHIUNABLE FOOTWEAR mlnlatriltvr of the e Mt. Pleasant and lMlfig Patrice Cal- laghan, teacher Port Hill. were vis- itors to Summcrside 0n Saturday-N -——Mr. Joseph D. McLelian, Grand ‘River spent several days in Char- lottetown. last week. —-Mlss Elsie Murphy, teacher, Bayaide, spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. John M- Murpby. Kinkors . _ -—‘Ml". Harold Brown, IPort Hill. has purchased the ling property oi the late Frank McNeil, Bayside, N wonderful increase. money in shieep, Mr. Burke has ol- l (Jourt I-Irllse, Georgetown, on Tues- day June 7, 1927. D. P. Meklnnon, President. 5809-5-28-21 - r ..'°‘EASTEflN KING'S EXHI - ‘HON-The Eastern King's Exh bi- tlon Association will hold their an- nllal exhibition on Tuesday, Oct. 4th, §927.——D. F. Macaulay, Sec'y. Souri. .‘ 5816 5 28 3i mtsl-IEEP RAISING. —.‘VIr. Jack Burke of Rollo Bay and St. Char- les, purchased last fall at various sales, sheep to the nllmben of thir- ty. He has ‘bad splendid lurk, twenty-eight strong, living lambs. Considering that man of these cheep were old ewes. hfs was a There is sure so gone lain cream pnoduclng on a large scale, on iris new piece at Si. Charles Station, ilsvdlg pur- of and death she worked with instinct- lve delicacy, gentleness and chival- ry. Even human misery which responded to her sympathet-i tilscovoiei- of chloroform. and Flor- ence Nlghtingaie, the founder of modern nursing. The last named stands out as the greatest pioneer bf modern nursing methods. Her services in the Crimea can never, be overestimated. iAlnong the un- happy, emaciated victims of buns-l er and disease she was indeed a "ministering angel." Amid scenes loathsome disease, pestilence in t-he lowest sinks oil she found chords ic touch, Iiongfeilow has immortal-i iced her work in the oft quoted Ines: "b0! In that hour of misery, A Lady with a lamp. I see Passes through t-lle glimmering from Mr. Albert McNeil, the ad- aiotc. _ --v~;_.... last winter. chased ifIVQ additional miloit cows l l .- 4 '.i,lt gloom, And ilitll to room, l r from rooln "'~ -'-’i,lil-'v‘_i‘ll.l"i. ‘sé will en young foxes and adults and their libera healthy. vigorous foxes. Orders promptly filled from‘ fresh stock. ' I IMPERIAL BlSiiiiiT Phone 721. l , Charlottetown} i‘: n Exclusive Maritime Ageptg fgp. " it: "Hill BISCUITS contain the nutritional roiling-amend of " u s