fet See” a até pa: fat has . eee ee ve i AST EET Se EE at LIMITED, will pay a reward of FIFTY ($50.00) DOLLARS for such information as will lead to the arrest and conviction of any person or persons found tampering with the Company’s “RIGHT OF WAY FENCE” or or found driving cattle, etc., on to the “RIGHT OF WAY’’ or other Over-Blouses, made from lustrous, high-grade crepe de Chine, de- Over-Blouses, made from tricolette, with round neck line; three- Eee ye ES gp REE Pink, blue and natural. Lace Panama Hats $3.90 Simister’s Dry Goods Store Beacon Avenue The Prettiest and Newest in signed with square neck, sash girdle, beaded in contrasting colors, and finished with hemstitching. Displayed in shades of silver, Copenhagen, navy and black. A pretty model, and good value at, each 1.0... 2.2.02 cee ee ts $10.75 quarter length, with Raglan sleeves and trimming of self pi- ping or two-tone embroidery; shades of ivory, navy, grey, Co- penhagen and black. Splendid values. See them. —Blouse Dept., 1st Floor ed DAVID SPENCER, LTD. VICTORIA, B. C. The BRITISH COLUMBIA ELECTRIC RAILWAY COMPANY, “RIGHT OF WAY GATES,” or “CATTLE GUARDS,” of the Company’s property. DATED at Victoria, B. C., this 19th day of May, A. D. 1920. _G.M. TRIPP Engineering Superintendent. Advertisements Under 10c CLASSIFIED ADS. This Head! JANITOR WANTED—Apply by let- Insertion. ter before July lst, stating salary 1 Per Line for Each No Ad Accepted for Less Than 5O0c. | required. Sidney School Board, C. C. Cochran, Secretary. 6103td | FOR SALE—A new 13-ft. rowboat. ! -———— -——— E. F. Lesage. Phone 42. 610tf: TO RENT—4-room cottage, rent| _ $10. Lately occupied by Flying | FOR SALE—Good reliable horse = Line as waiting room. Will sell | and democrat, in good order ' for $750, on easy terms. Apply, Stewart, Breed’s Cross Road. 6431 FOR SALE—Young Canaries, males, FOR SAbLK—Double corner, Third $5, females, $2. dard, Sidney FOR SALK—6-hole Monarch range |FOR SALK—Lot on Fifth street, 60 Apply Mrs. B. Phone 26X. WF. U. Copeman, Sidney. 5202td Mrs. Good Vhone 16. Goa- O4it | street and Lovell avenue; terms. CC. C. $450; | Cochran. tf Deacon, Sidney. - 4-8-tf! by 120, 2-roomed shack. Apply Misa Gherke, Third street. 4-15-tfd Wild Flowers of District Boschniakia strobiilacea, on roots of salal, near Keating. Mrs ©. Wood, June 1. Gray (Indian name “Poque’’)- Parasitic Allocarya scoulerl, DC (Scouler’s Allocarya) Wet, biggy. Fragaria Farm, Mra. ©. Wood and Mr. He Pruvey, June 1 Tiarella trifoliata, Linn. (Three-Leaved False Mitaewert) woods, Fragaria Farm, Jessie (© Mrs. (©. Wood, June 1. Zygedanua venosus, Watson (Death Carman) In rocky woods, Fra- garia Farm, Mrs. ( Wood, June 1. Ranunculus Purshil, Richards (Yellow Water Crowfoot) Fragaria Farm, Mrs. C. Wood, June 1 Menyanthes trifollota, Linn. (Buckbean) Saanich, Mrs. J. J. White, June l Taxus brevifolia, Nut. (Weatern Sidney, Mr. H Pruvey, June 1 Castilleja brevisectn, Greenman. (Yellow Paint Brush) -—-Kxperimental Farm, Sidney, Mr HH. Pruvey, June 1 around Rich, cool | In creok on In water, Lake Killarney, Yew) By the Experimental farm, is two-sided; technique and attitud@, The second is by far the more ing. portant. less when the right attitude is ng pations that were not inculeated. By meant the extent to which man, consciousness of his duties and reli tion to the group or community which he lives. may appear at first citizen of today is not a member of one group only. group of societies, industrial, soclah ° political, religious, etc. pearance of there arise conflicting. A ent tribes. : val in the struggle for existence cal¥_ was ; alty.” ‘ing down of this ; an empire. -conaciousneaa with a lack of laseg ; seen in two directions; | trial Society’ tells us that "A Bostoy ‘time there are possibly ten theugt Witt h an ELECTRIC PERCOLATOR? It and 1108 Douglas Street. The Educational Value of Manual Training By DAVID JHOYLE, M. Sc. (All Rights Reserved ) Articte Seven , LARGE-GROUP CONSCIOUSNESS} We have said that social effictengy There has been also a continual in- crease in the number of new occupa- tions. If would be an easy matter Technical efficiency is ug to cimpile a list of a hundred occu- nN know fifty years ago. social attitude § t { iq In this intensified and increasing #- | division of labor there lie grave dan- i ger to industry and to civilization. The highly specialized nature of mod- The question is not so simple af,|ern manufacturing processes debars thought. Tht, | the worker to a great extent from an intelligent appreciation of the whole process of which he carries out a small part. In other words he is not all-conscious (or only vaguely so) of the large-group activity, the whole manufacturing process or the whole industry in which he fills a part. It may be answered that the worker is able, by reading or attend- fing technical classes, to acquaint himself with the whole of the indus- try or process. But in the first place, opportunities of wider knowledge are often to only a small minority of workers, and in the second place the extreme nervous exhaustion follow- ing upon eight or more hours of con- cehtrated effort at modern high- speed machine process leavea the average worker without desire or mental energy to spend his leisure hours in any educational activity. This modern small-group. con- sciousness is more dangerous to so- ciety than was the small-group con- sciousness of primitive tribes. In early civilization the destruction or failure of one group (by war, starva- \ Modern society is }, With the ap. within grou, standards—oftey, group two In primitive times the human rach, was broken up into small indepe a, The necessity for su ed for the exercise of two sets of vi . tues. Each member must rend@, obedience, mutual aid, fair dealing | courtesy, self-restraint, etc., to othe members of his own group. Towart, members of other tribes or group}, he must be defiant, hostile, arrogan 5 treacherous and ruthless. The atti_ tude within the group was social; taj. wards other groups anti-social. Thug, developed and_ strengthenéd ‘small-group consciousness and loyt Now, the essential feature of thi, progress of civilization is the brealy. enmity betwee, groups, which thus became interd@ pendent instead of independent. - W4, tion, pestilence) scarcely affected see this, for example, in the histor}-+otner groups of the community. of the European countries, wher} They could still “carry on.” In a tribes have become small nations @D% | modern industrial state, however, small nations became larger king). | these groups are inter-dependent doms or empires. (We see the 8am& jhe actions of one group vitally tendency in the modern movemeny towards church-unity.) Such (political) progress; Saxon becomes, English and English becomes British} Man becomes conscious to a large§ group slowly, painfully, through itt ter economic experience, man devel). ops large-group consciousness. Ong, side of the task of education is thy hastening of this development § large-group consciousness—which at far has been but the result .! t blind working of economic laws. In modern industrial society Wh see a tendency in the revergo diregy, affect the actions, interest and well- being of other groups. When the longshoreman of Victoria goes on strike the effects are immediately felt elsewhere in his own and other fields of labor. So complex and finely ad- ‘usted is the machinery of modern industry that small-group actior ts fraught with daner to large groups ‘On the reverse bide we may notice also the difficulty a small group has me:lin defending itaelt against hostile logical conclusiqn would involve us 19 7, Just put in the cold water and the coffee, insert switch plug. Sieht minutes the coffee is ready, steaming dot, amber clear; always the same. forces. To purdte‘this matter to te SIDNEY AND ISLANDS REVIEW AND SAANHGH gaziTTE, THURSDAY, JUNE 10, 1920 7 ™ ° M hy Not Percolate Your Coffee? will make that cup of coffee a real In seven or Hawkins & Hayward Flectrical Quality and Service Stores Phones 684 and 2627 RESTHAVEN SOLD? As we go to press it i8 reported that the Resthaven property has been sold. —— nnn | Church Notices ae ANGLICAN Sunday, June 13 Holy Trinity Church, Patricia Bay—Mattins and Holy Communion, 11 a.m., Sunday School 2.30 p.m. Tatlow Hall, Deep Cove—Mattins 9.30 a.m. St. Andrew's, Sidney—Holy Com- munion 8 a.m., Sunday School 3 p.m., Evensong 7 p.m. METHODIST Sunday, June 13 Wesley Church, Third street, Sid- ney—Service 11 a.m., Sunday School 2.30 p.m. North Saanich—Service, 7.30 p.m. TS. PAUL'S PRESBYTERIAN Sunday, June 13 , Keating—Morning service, 11 a.m. St. Paul's, Sidney—Bible School, 2.30 p.m., Evening service, 7 p.m. THE ORDER OF THE STAR IN THE EAST North Saanich Centre, meets on fist and third Wednesday of each month at Deva-loea Ranch, Deep Cove, at 3.30 p.m. Members visiting Mr. Mrs. | \ district invited. A. Barry. Layard. Odo Clara Loc.-Sec. Loc.-Rep. & A Nutritious Tonic For Tired Nerves . 7 ~ Rexall’s Celery e Tonic Will overcome run-down, nerve-racked conditions. It will nourish the nerve centres, enrich the blood and tone up the digestive organs. Take it now and regain your nerve force. E. F. LESAGE THE DRUGQGIST Phone 42 Beacon Ave., Sidney. ‘tn a discussion of the whole question fj Adustrial economics. It must j suffice to point out that (1) Small- citizen today is often a member §;] group consciousness tends to grov many groups—of a trade union, f»| and strungthen under modern indus. club, a church and a political part) |¢rial conditions. (2) The candltion as well as of a city, a provincs Oni) of labor make it difficult to briny His loyalty to the lyrg¢h, [about a large-group consciousness. group is often strained in his o.1(3) If industrial peace Is to be as- tempts to be Joyal to the smalle}.layred (and Industrial peace is vital group. He tends to adopt the ant#, to industrial democracy) then large- social attitude towards members Off} group consclousness must be some- other groups. As a craftsman, loya | how developed in the citizen. Groups to his own small group, he tends | of men, whether actual workers, di- adopt the anti-soctal attitude tov. ard hs rectora, superintendents or owners, industry as a whole, even sometimes, must somehow “get the habit’ of toward the state. “| thinking their ever act in terms of Its In the Industrial world particulax ®\effect on the othor groups, that Is, we see the full force of this tendengy, | on the large group as a whole. We towards the growth of small-gtoug| have already shown that thia atti- .jtude cannot be developed ander ac- group consciousness. The industrighy|tyal working conditions of modern revolution of the nineteenth century »\industry. This education in large- continues with ever-increasing speci | group loyalty must cotne, therefore, and intensity. Its final effocts arg,|before the worker enters industrial first, lu OM litte. We muat ‘catch him young’ amazing Increase in division of 18).) and fix in him the attitude of mind bor and occupations. Few are full} | gesirad. This ts the work of the aware of the extent to which divisiog sehool—the development of truo so- of labor has taken and ts takings) cia) consciouaness that is bounded Richard T. Kly in his “*Indusé | not py craft or creed or position or woealth,—the true social democratic consciousness that shall finally over- atop the very bounds of race and na- tionality and usher in the era of unt- tion. Small groups tend to inerva i in number and independence TYG, place directory of 1789 gives less (han twq hundred occupations; at the pra. +f and" Most of this Increage, too, hie} An ing versal peace. taken place in recent years. ; pn ny Hui how? Group-conscioumnces ts veatigation into the making of any rink? gurely a mattor of growth. We can- one article discloses that the ma a |not hammer it on or plaster it on of (for example) a hand rake I8 Ayla must be ainerienced-—4t must be among sawyere, turnera, ten vided Rilived. School activities most be aners, truckimnen, straighteners, binds. First, the child ft. group-activities ors. borers, sanders, moulders, triiil Plmast arow fn amall-group sonecious- Thin tendency to dividff pj ness, and second, (ant more import. what was formerly the work of oO ant) be muat grow, (by experionce) lin the habit of relating the activitios Thera, ete man among several is woll iluatrald Renovating Parlors 4 Berquist Block, Beacon Ave. ‘ Sidney Phone 6958. Res. Phone 928 Evinrude Motor George Horrocks Distributor for B.C. 1205 Langley Street, Victoria. Daily Freight Service Victoria and Sidney | | FREIGHT AND PARCELS WARKHOUSK AT VICTORIA: Phone 1665 Chrysanthemum leucanthemum, Linn. (Ox-Eye Datay) — Experimental Farin Introduced) from Europe Mr ff Pravey. June |. deasie C. June 3 Trifolium tneanatum, Linn. (Scariet Clover)-- Growing without cultt- | vation at Experimental Farm, Mr df) Pruves Hrasstea avensis, Linn (Charlock) A weed tn cultivated ground Sldney Jessie Co) May 22, Mr Hi Pravey, June d Siaymbrium officinale, Linn (Hedge Mustard)—A weed in waate} places Introduced) from Europe denste (oo May 27 Rhinanthbus khyerallve, Chabert Cibattle Pads I grwaky placen, very rare June 3s. Jobn Lopthien Hosa gymnocarpa, Nutt) ¢Simall Wood Hones ln thickets at All ay. Sidney June do Jessie © Gendelia Oregana tGuer Past: On eapeced peck perits: from the wharf to Al! Bay Jeanie © ) June 3 In the manufacture of shoes, the fl «{of his small-group to those of other tshed article being (he result: of t and larger groups Handicraft will work of over a hundred spectalis' front cutter. back cutter, tip cutt@ cutter Tintng cutter, erimpa fucine ste aeeee naman “i fy ‘a fy j these directions ) {supply the means of growth in both Brethour & Shade Sldney, B.C. Sin Ob For example, if the district ts to have o public rest and ‘ Sidney Phone | i 0 WE ARE PREPARED TO HANDLE ALL CLASSES OF q | (Continued on page 3) | i Duncan Storage, 535 Vatea st. | q Ce] When Custom Interferes The constant use of a word often makes it standard, but custom should not be allowed to inetrfere with efficiency. We say ‘Hello’ when we answer the telephone, not re- alizing that it is not the pro- per way. You help your own telephone service when you give the name of your firm and department when answer- ing a call. ——— B. C. Telephone Company Tools For the Toilet Such as Brushes of all kinds, Combs, Nail Polishers and Manicure Goods of every de- scription should be high class in order to give adequate ser- vice. That is the only kind we handle. No matter what you buy here and how little you pay for it, you can rest assured that no better article is to be had * anywhere at any price. EMPRESS DRUG HALL H. W. BRIEN er Phm.B. Dispensing Chemist 912-914 Government Street, Victoria, B.C. rer Baby Carriages, Sulkies, Go-Carts Like. new; Gramophones, Sew- ing Machines, Records (large selection). gains. All good, real bar- assured. Baby Carriage Exchange 625 Pandora Ave., Victoria. Satisfaction On and After June 1 or Reduced Rate Tickets over the Saanich Interurban Line TICKEPS CAN ONLY BE PURCHASED AT THE DOUGLAS STREET DEPOT (VICTORIA) inquire about them when next in town LPLLPLOSLSLTUUTUUHUWENTIOM Commutation B. C. Electric Traffic Dept., Victorta. Sidney Leather Stores All Kinds of Leather Work Made and Repaired. BOOT AND SHOES REP ALRS W. HEARN Saddle and Fourth St Harness Maker and Beacon Ave Shamey.