MAX-IMS OVA MERE MAN lahaih v thhsglfl pommedr?un"?oebmmsooa' A \ e o ‘I m: kind, first clam or Ille- llevnlng Guardian. Ieunded II‘!- Charlottetown Guardian Two Oenll. onflict-Renewe Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ‘CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2s, i... €__ A A CANADA IJVER TEN MILLIUNS Quebec Made Largest ' Absolute Gain In the Past Ten Years — B. C. Largest P. C. Gain of All Provin- cee. _., orwawa, Ont., Nov. 2'I—(By the Canadian Press)—'1‘he total popu- 7'1 lation of Consda will be around ’. ‘Qf- 10,860,000, it wasanncunced by the _Dominion Bilreau of Statistics to- night, based on the 193i census re- turns. Figures for all the provinces have been announced with the ex- ception of British Columbia, which will be made public Monday. Que- bec made the largest absolute gain in the past ten years and British Columbia the largest outage gain of all the provinces. A redistribution of the represen- “' tation in the House of Commons will be made as a result of the census. The Common will still have ‘tionhthe same as at present. Nova Scotia will lose two members and New Brunswick one. On the other ~ hand Alberta will gain one and ' British Columbia two. The repre- lentntion of the other provinces Continued on page 12 (Canadian Press) ANTIGONISII, u. s1. Nov. :1. —John lleflernan, injured three days ago when the motor car in which he was a passenger tlkid- ded and overturned on the Sylvan Valley road, died today in hospital here. lie was seventy years old. ANNOUNCEMENTS, = comma EVENTS. MEETINGS. ETC "Reserve Tuesday, December llth for Rev. Moorhead Lezateh Lecture in St. James Hell. 10459-11-26-81. _ "Christian Church Afternoon Tea Bazaar and Pantry Sale Tuesday, December lst. 10500-1l-28-ili. "Loading hogs at York on Wed- ‘, nesday afternoon, Dec. 2nd. ‘w IOQSQ-il-Zll-Qi ‘ ' r __ "Reserve Thursday evening, De- cember 3rd., for social and Bazaar I, ill Clyde ENC!‘ Hall. 10525-ll-2l-1l "Wiltshire Club loading live stock Thursday. Dee. 3rd. 10530-1l-2B-li \ "ft. Peters Club loading live stool: Wednesday, December 2nd. . l0518-11-28-1i. "Attention! Hot Bean Supper in Wilmot Hail, Tuesday evening, Dec- ember let. Supper 25 cents. 10488-114741. "Annual meeting oi Long Creek Farmers Institute will be held in /Aft0n Hall, M00051. November 30th at 7.30 P. M. 10518-11-38-21. "Come to the Christmas ‘Iree and Entertainment at Hunter River, December 22nd, presented by Uni- ted Sunday School. 10500-11-20-21. "The annual meeting oi the North Wiltshire Tole hone Company will be held in the ell on Wednes- day. December 2nd, IOSH-ll-ZB-lii. ._....-_. "We will be buying dressed hogs, - Pr!!!“ olltNln Tuesday and Wed- ; _ nosdsy. December let and 2nd. Peter '- _ MacNutt 8s Son. Malpeque. _ ~‘ 10417-11-37-21. "Annual Meeting of Kingston Ivlrnltono oomrmv. Limited, will be hold in Kinreton Hall on aaturdev. Dvember llth at 8 P. M. George Beer. Seontsry. 10000-11-28-11. "men Baptist Church will hold their Annual Chicken Supper an ilssesr in Baptist Bell on was: v December 1st. S as cents. If not fine, 10502-11-28-21. "Hiring live and dressed fowl and chicken. dressed geese and ducks. ‘rucsday, Dec. lst. till I o'e'ock. All crops must- be empty. G» 2'45 membe s after the redistribu—_ PllPlliATIllN illlsix etc-w And Captain Picked Up BOSTON. Meal. Ila-The United Prui 001110811! announced "NM of s radio report today that the Captain and crew of six of the schooner 81a had been picked lip et 00a by the steamship Aztec of the Company's European fleet and taloen to Tela, Honduras. The report said the men were residents of Grand Bank, New- foundland. It oontaine‘ no details of what had happened to the schoo- her. The men will be placed on the steamship Ben Bruno of the Com- Ottawa Mayor Returned For V Second Term (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont, Nov. ill-Mayor s. a. Allen will continue as Chief 'Magistrate of Otawa for another ‘year. He was returned for a sec- ‘ond term by acclaniation today when Jldhichael A. Mahoney, prominent 'capital businessman. withdrew his nomination. Thanksgiving g Day Accidents (Special to the Guardian) CHICAGO, Nov. TF-Tharlksgiv- lng Day accidents took upwards of 100 lives, a-survey indicated willy- Motorlng accidents led the list with more than halt the fatalities. Hunt- ing mishaps and home 9N6 01118917 a considerable number of the deaths. Preparations for Thank-H- giving dinners took several live-i through stove explosions and burns. At Hudson, Mes. August, DomInEOS 56 choked to death while eating. WWII ‘(Inspect New Port ' Facilities (Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Ont., NOV. 21-41011- ‘Alfred Duranleau, Minister of Ma- ‘rine, will leave Sunday for B8109 .' John, N.B., where he will inspect the new port facilities which were recent- ly completed to replace those d05- troyed in a fire early this year. The Minister will attend the official opening of the pori- on T098383’. De"- lst, when the ceremonies will be held on board the steallll Wilt‘ DIME, which will oven the W111i“ ghipping season. Suggests That Public Pay Campaign Funds mlwrrro, ont, Nov. 2'1. (av the Canadian Pressl-BHIWW“ that 01,000,000 be voted mnvlll! iroln the public funds to cam’ o". political camplignsvof both the old! parties was made today by Col. A. Ii- Kirkpatrick of Toronto, soda-wins the Toronto Women's UN"! M‘ sociaticu today. He blended roi- el- imination of large contributions to party funds. Col. xii-apatite: also suggested all campaign advertising be X11530 Al‘ legal, end said e book might be prepared at Ottawa before a gener- al election cimllllln. in "h"!!! 5°") parties stated their views. This book, he said, should be sent to every vot- Welhr B. w rreaefloton. ' ‘m’ , 10400-11-27-21 er in Canada and it should be bald for by the peoples of the country. l Gilli Kliiili sttiltttttn Til iti__Y_EARS lEighteen Year Old On- scribe A Four Days To Sub-flow MEN) Hundred Millionflilollars tario Girl Who Mur- dered M o t h e r ' Shocked At Sen- C e n t r a I Management Committe O f Service; III-life line Sunday and will arrive. in Boston. Dec. 0. ' tence. (Canadian Press) prisonment. room. I fro ' evil op her body. itlisl cums Will at sltiuui nrrlulsniv (Special to the Guardian) arrows, Nov. 2'1 - coins to be struck in the iofficiating at the 88. First‘ Of Year (Canadian Press) of the m, Beaver will is! b01011 hlmv Mr. Beaver supervised the 00n- struction of the new port 100114"! at Saint John, rue. - rams. New. sv-aaei Bert lllalrler, noted jritlsh ' ' . wee safe llfllht ti! W110! Vieet Africa liter- oomph"!!! the first eastward flight oaroes (‘to South Atlantic. lie dropped dewa at Bltlullfl on the Atrleaa coast. from NI- ‘tal, llraail, , terday to com- plete a flight of more than 1,800 miles in about I1 hours. said a message to the Ares- UORIGNAL, Ont, Nov. 27.—Daz- l Ied and trembling, with head bow- ed, lB-year-oid Lucia Goulet. of Rockiand, Ont., today stood in the dock of the century-old court room here, heard a Jury convict her of manslaughter and a Justice of the ‘Supreme Court of Ontario pro- nounce a 14-year-sentence of im- llbr three years the young girl hat) faced a murder charge, the killing of her mother, Josephine, slain in the family home at Rockiand on May 1. “Guilty of manslaughter" was the ' verdict of the Jury, and immediately sentence was pru- ounced by Mr. fJustice N. Jeffrey, she collapsed and ‘had to be assisted from the court later, there was a pathetic scene in the cell of the convicted girl. Her “sisters and her brothers and her grief-stricken father ‘lla-ollfld her in their arms and tried to console her. A quarrel between mother and daughter had led to the 111111118. Ml‘- Justice oorlarv belioved- The m" ther had‘ tried t0 take thfi I1" F???’ us. The crime. he said; was cunning and brutal- The mother was stabbed to 600th. forty-one wounds being found 0n The first Royal Mint as a purely Canadian instit- ution. will be made in a brief cere- moni» next Tuesday. One of each cmluclan coin in circulation will ho struck. Mn. E. N. Rhodes, wife of the acting Minister of, Finance lg machin- Report Expected OTTAWA, Ont, NOV. 27.—-The N- port of Sir Alexander Gibb, British port authority who made a study of Canadian harbors at the request of the Dominion Govemment, is not expected to be complete until the iii-st o! the year, it was learned t0- day, Hugh Beaver, who assisted Sir Alexander in his‘ investigations and (ly Georgie Hambieten, Canadian remained in Canada after the heed commission had returned home, sailed today from Montreal for England with much additional information. The final rewft will not be made until Sir Alexander has ‘studied the additional matter that ‘ between Great Britain and i)" 9°‘ “Parliament of Great nritnln- I0 MONTREAL, Que, Nov. 2'1. (By the Canadian Presel-Anhounce- ment by E. W. Beztty, K, C., chair- man and President, Canadian Peo- liic Railway, that the company wouldaubacribe $5,000,000 to the National Service Loan of the Dom- inion of Canada clirmlred a day in which several large subscriptions to the loan were received. four days to subscribe $100,000,000 to the loan. The general manage- ment commlttee today announced thlt returns of subscriptions up to Thursday night showed a total of $101,000,000 or more than two-thirds of the $150,000,000 five per cent bond issue which was offered to the public on Monday morning. A further list of large subscrip- tions, not included in the total of 101 milligns,___was issued. Among It took the people o.’ Canada Just‘ Loan Report That The! Issue Is Well ()n its Way To Completion loan will be a new impetus to the revival in business which the count- ry as a whole is hoping for,” the Canadian Pacific Prcs'dent said. “It will put into circulation a large a- mount of dormant capital and will ndoubtedly heneiit in this way both the Canadian manufacturer and the Canadian merchant. "No sacrifice is involved in sub- scriptions to the loan. As has been experts and ecdrtomists in Qinada— this is the best investment on the best security that Canada can offer, and that means the beet security that any country in the world can offer. Your money will serve to help the country to meet pressing national emergencies and will be the you choose, with good annual in- these were T. Eaton and Company, $1,000,000; Imperial T bacco Com- pany, $200,000; Eastern Trust Com- pzny, Halifax, $100,000; Dominion Life, $200,000; Canadian Internat- Emt lflQr-ll-flrrbumh will have euoh a ready market on the stock exchange. they can quickly be sold by the investor lf necessary," Mr. Beatty said. “The Canadian banks are milking icnal Paper Company, $100,000; Trusts and Guarantee Company, $50,000; Mutual Relief Life Insur- ance, $25,000. ‘ In an tappeal tonight to all Can- adians to take e. share in the loan Mr. Beatty said that as evidence of the willingness of all Canadians to "consider the national interest as paramount in this emergency, may I point out that although part of Railwuys, the subscription of the Canadian Pacific to the loan will be £5,000,000." The loan, Mr. Beatty said, was "philanthropy plus five and one- eighth per cent-the kind of phil- anthropy in which the canniest Ab- erdonian may participate with a good conscien ." "One worth while result which we can expect from the expenditure of the $150,000,000 raised by the it easy for those who wish to sub- scribe, but who have not the im- mediate cash available, by offering to finance the first six months on easy terms. "I sincerely trust, indeed, I feel assured, that this issue of nntion- al service bonds will meet with a Generous response from all good citizens of Canada, whatever their racial origin, and that it will be the loan is earmarked to meet nec~ m-“ly ovm1ub,mb9d__ganad, nev- easities oi.’ the Canadian National gy “my he "ti The central ma. agement commit- tee of the loan Ptbflrted that in addition to the large subscriptions, ltion of information on Agricultural ' ‘zrgesgzeixuiek?igg’ysf°unty- Bud‘ e, heavy flemmq by pg-(vlge invest. problems and markets, and dlssem- y c ' ° ‘mmter- 3°!‘ 01's was being reported in all pro- vinces and the committee hoped that when final figures for the week, including today and Saturday, were lvlfllblfl. it would be shown that the subscription was well on m,- way t0 completion. l-EF F E [VS 0F NEW STATUTE ARESIIMMEI) llP (cow-hat. 10:1. s; the Canadian Prose) Press Stall Writer, who continues a series 0f 085106 reviews of the III- opean financial situation). IDNDON, NOV. flaw-Th! British Commonwealth of Nations opens in the coming week, a new chapter ll its stirring history. m peril-imm- ary ,course complete, the Statute 01 Westminster becomes opium" D"- l and with it, the last remalnifll anomalies in the we! of will 1W" minions will be swept aside- ' Any in the the tbmne in the future will I!- duire the assent oi the peril-men" of ail the dominions as well as the Act passed by the British House in the future will aDDLV l0 "l" “mufil ions except by their requeli» llld| consent. The Statute oi Westmin- gm- my; to give legislative edeot In the opinion of malifclfiiiicnt authorities, the Balfour declaration merely expressed a constitutional position already in existence mla the Statute cf Westminster merely wipes out anomoii which already have ceamd to have practical eilcct. Yet sullmrters of the statute-which secured an overwhelming majority in the British Commons-new. tire of asserting that it marks tne first milestone along e new highway of commonwealth relations. They say the old idea of a dominant Grout Britain new is finally buried and that a community oi nations, based 0n equal partnership, legally has taken its place. The first positive reaction to the Statute is elpected from the Irish Pipe State. Reports from Dublin DRUM all Free State Government W111 130N000! unilateral legislation in the Dell, repealing in that. Do- minion‘: constitution, the right of IPMIl t0 the Privy Council. rhi- “Wml the Dmvlsionto establish a illbreme Oourt a: the mo Slate, w the constitution reads= "Nothlns in this constitution shell impair the rlsht of any person to petition liis “.19”! All council, or the right of m! HUI“? i0 grant such leave." The right to appeal from tiio Irish N60 FINN“!!! ilwplrative for some WM- But one criticism uracil t the Wlltilliulter Statute was t etitwillglvethepowertodo leg- to the Balfour scour-Wm of WW- itr of statue. adopted by the 1m Imperial aenlereace l"! Wllll NU‘ IIO done only illog- tally. well said by the leading financial PM Iieie. ea e wetter offset, has 1 14 PAGES He who feels before reflecting, who reflects more than he reads, lives more than he reflects is the safest instructor of youth. MAXIMS OI-‘A. MERE MAN i LARETURN FRUMA (AWINTER FAIR? Minister of Agricul- ture Reviews Fea- f tures 0f Special L0- cal Interest At Bigi Exhibition. I . . t I I Among the visitors from this Pro- ‘ tvince to the Toronto Winter Fainl who returned last evening were Hon. ‘G. Shelton Sharp, Minister of Agri- Qculture; Mr. J. W. Boulter, Secretary ‘of the Potato Growers’ Association, fund Mr. Walter Shaw, of the De- , , Apartment of Agriculture. ' : Hon. ivir. Sharp reports the Fuir _a very successful one, especially in ‘the ilulnbvl- and quality of live stock ; ‘exhibits. Mr. J. Waiter Jones, oil Bunbury, this Province, i I was one of the most successful exhibitors, in Canada, carrying off a large number of first and second prizes. He alsoi ‘,made a fine sale of one ofliis choice 1 tbulls to the T. Eaton Co, Ltd. Mint |Jones intends taking his herd on to? tthe Central Canada Fair at Ottawa.‘ i The new horse barn, built since? |the last Fair adds greatly to the ac- l Continued on page 12 l - . I returnedtoyouinfive orten yeeraA c ‘ iNllllllliill‘ girtmgullun t , Organization Formed | For Compilation and 1 Dissemination of Agricultural Infor- ' mation. (Canadian Press) TORONTO, 011i‘... NOV. TF-Dth; cision was reached early tonight: ,that a Canadian Institute of Agri-t ‘culture be formed for the compile. i :lnotion of this information to farm_ or; of Canada. The decision follow-l ed a complete day of discussion by‘ leading agrlculturists, leaders of their associations, bankers, business lleaders and representatives of pro- vincial and Federal Governments at a round table conference. Definite decision was not reach-I ed as to what form the Asociation: would take other than that its l personnel would be almost oxclu-' slvely composed of farmers or lend- ers at their associations. To this end.‘ a committee of agriculturlsbs was, selected to prepare n charter of‘ such an organization and lny ten- tative plans for its first efforts. The step marked a. definite Bil-i vanca in the conference of indust-I‘ rial, banking, commercial and trans-‘ portation leaders invited to meet under the auspices of the Canadian, Ohansber of Commerce today and Continued on page l2 Canada Well Fitted For Conference LONDON, Nov. Zia-Canada is particularly fitted to be tile scone d‘ the next Imperial Economic Con- ference, the l-lotlse of Lords was told by Viscount Ellhsnk. Its size, world importance and strategic p0- sition within the Ellllllli‘ ore fac- tors that give cnllruin n command- ing roie to play as llust to the con- jercnoe. ‘rhe conservative peer in-j troduoed a motion whit-h congratu- |conienence in Ottawa, but exprggg- LIEUT. GOVERNOR Annual Subscriptions Delivered $0.00- BI Ill dzlllithil-Tigor I Oluldl and U. I. l. “.60. I __.- T0 VI-SFAZBQSTONAF I G H T I N G TOR nunma uls HONOUBRFA G A l N CHIEF JUSTICE MATHIESON WILL ACT AS ADMINISTRA- LEAVE OF ABSEIHE. A Dominion Order-in-Coun- cii of yesterday grants leave of absence to the Lieutenant Gov- crnor of Prince Edward Island for one month, from November 28th instant, and appoints the ‘struts out Japanese Dispatches Report H e a v y Fighting Going On lion. J. A. Mathieson, Chief _ , Justice of the Supreme Court, Near Tlentsln- administrato- of the Govern- ment of the Province during MUKDEN, Mgnghurlg, Nov. 27 such absence. tA.P.)-Jap nese dispatches frol- llis Honour Lieutcnant Gov- Tientsin said heavy fighting was crnor Dalton is planning to leave today on a visit to Boston. going on there. the Chinese streng- ullznvd by reinforcements, using trench nlortars, machine guns and lillfantry rifles in a heavy fire on the Japzinece concession. MUKDEN, Mnnchuria, Nov. 27- ‘(A.P.)—-A Japanese expedition. cm- blrcing all arms and heavily mun- ‘ itioned, moved southwest from Milk- i MISSI eYARIVIOUTH, N. 8., Nov. 27. (By he lthe avowed purpose it is stated of icxpunging the last traces of ‘Chinese regime from the map o! n toward Chinchow today with the , Manchuria. the Canadian PrcssJ—I-lomewardi (Comflihtt 1931' b7 ‘he Asfidw“ in borrowed boots and the clothes) in which they were token {ram the‘ water on Wednesday night, six sur-A Press) CHINCHOW, Manchurin, 2..~.\' commodatlonforhorses, being up-to-llvivors o! me Gloucester schoonerlu ,A_Pv,_Ch1na Wm dflend “s -—‘—*_“i—"*—’“_"immh and 131mm- satled 1mm B58. | lest military holdon southern Man- igon tonight on ' the steamer y“- 'churh to the lest but will not take mouth An equm “umber o; the ves- zthe offensive against the Japanese, scls crew, who left their homes on K551191111 Ylllli! Chen told the AS" Tuesday for the La Have nshtngtsoclated Press in an interview io- banks, had gone to swell the North dov- Atlantfitfls long roster of the dead. They did not live to share "Marshal Chang's orders are tn the resist any Japanese offensive a- Thallksgiving turkey that was to|giinst Cllillcliow," said the Com- hinge the day o, bright gpQf, in flg- Imnnder of all the Chinese troops orous weeks on the hlnks. They did not even live to shout outside the great wall, "but he will make no offensive movement in the a good-bye to their follows. Whenidlrlection of Mukden. the steamer Gypsum Prince loom- ecl out of the fog oft‘ Bocaro light to crush into the Edith and Elinor the smaller vessel went down in less than three minutes. "'I'llerc‘s no hope of their being alive,“ Captain Simon Theriault: srtid when he came ashore from the dim-aged Gypsum Prince at Digbyt this morning. "The weather was fairly warm when the thing hap- pened, but it has turned cold since. The men for whom search prov- ed unavailing were, Ernest Giilen, eph Rose. and Gus Foley, oi Glou- caster, James Brothers, and Youlig Lavance oi Boston. Mlnlt-‘Y Cioodlck, the engineer, a D1811? wlmty man. Alex Stack, Paul Pitts and Jim Powers, of Newfound- i; land. and Oscar ‘rividol, were “v- ed. ‘They, with Captain Theriault, owed their lives to wreckage torn loose by the very violence of the impact. Government's invitation to hold the Pd "l9 Ohinon "stress cf economic conditions throughout the Empire demands tile Conference meet at. ille earliest possible date." “We merely hope to hold this cor- ner of Manchuria until a turn of eventr-pcesibly through fluence of the League of Nations —enables the Manchuria to return to Mukden." the in- rightful riders oi’ General Yung received the As- sociated Press correspondent. in his military hntdquariers ilidden in lb maze of narrow, diriy streets. It is tucked away in the heart of tho city and is not distinguishable from. the air. It, is surrounded only by a chicken wire fence and is housed in a dingy, one-story brick build- ing with dirt floors and walls pap- ered with California newspapers dated in 1929. The General spoke Cilincse with animation and his words were in- terpreted by Herbert W. T. Wu Pud, former student at United, States universities. There were only 20,000 to 30,000 Chinese soldiers outside the greni wall, according to General Yung, and no reinforcement-s had been sent since the conflict began. The only Foreign flrgs visible in Chlnchow were six tri-colors over the French catholic mission. It ll normally a city of 80,000 inhabitant‘ wilo declined to a few thousand! following the Jnpitllerle air raid or October B. Record & Forecast of the Weather ..\l "‘ ‘()l(i)i.l)(i|('.\l. (into, Ont" Xnv. ‘J7 - MINHIFM ANII PEI! \‘ ili-‘l’ lvl-i, Tor- Dawson Vnlu-(-\l\'0r l-ltllimutttll “A our 520lov- llnllfi’ ltogilln \\'inl\l|\t~g Toronto (lilnwn hinntrslll Quebec .. Flalnt John llnlifnx (‘hnrlniicittivn ... . FORECAST.‘ Ottuwn nml l'|t||rr st. louvre-urn \'n|- loyn—_\lndornlt- smlthu-t-wv winds‘, mnslly fuir tin-i i"l\llll'i' rill-l: lltt-"Flllll scattered slttnufllirrit-s, ‘ Lower Si. Luwrenrr Vnlley-llnilvr lite to fresh !l(Illi||\\'|'~‘t uintis: Pilfill‘ cloudy and rniht-r v-uitl. t (lull and Nnrllt llliore—.\intlt-rnit> to fresh west ililll soniltiw-st wilt-ls: part- [ Iy olnluiy iillll rnilir-r t-t-lll . Iarltlmr Provinces-Mntit-rnit- weal-l erly winds: pnrily t-imltiy llllll rather; cold ‘ I l High tide this nfitlrnotln lli V2.42 and ‘ tonight at H. Kills iitwe (W0 Acts: our. rah HOME AND ONE FOR service ittto 4m: Sun sets this afternoon at 421i eml rieeu tomorrow morning al 7.10. llnet quarter moon \\ Qfllifliilil)‘. flee. lated the National Gill-eminent 0M. i101 hm. Summereide tide eighteen minutes ‘its acceptance oi the flwldilllntor than Charlottetown. 0.1.’) lull. and 2. (‘All FERRY SCI! RIIPLIQ Week liny.-u—l.onrr~s Borden flail) nmi 11.40 a.m. Lam-g: Tnrulcutlne tlnily: 10.30 a.ln p.m. HREil-T ieasure t-The oom- ed iodaythai l tariff pro- enioys from duties. Chamber oi Laval Gov- t a proposal of two per s, four per manufactured t on manu- . l was not lfidence. and life 0f the '41 down ap- eputies fear- : cost, of liv- spaper com- v days about eat Britain. declared the id "made a g high dut- ss a friend," said, “but l make mis- . intends to far as pos- sr 0wn con- lducts hit by istry spokes- exports to high French Y a few items ~ the French momentarily cent Super. after Great gold stand- ‘cent 50 per neesures in e. were among l of the tar- i the Cham- HOOI. lt. tyan, 2 Anne "d 4 Leonard . Murphy 2 ills Agnew, 4 Jlan Walsh. iaeAulay and can Sullivan. een Ryan, 2 vine Byrne. e Viclrerson. on MacEsch- laid. 3 Bern- iaret Gallant (equal) 2 y Agnew. ity. She bore ch cheerful- t even those she was suf- r illness was reconciled t0 put all her zc frequently was held on >m her fath- ople‘s Ceme- tied and was‘ Ramsay, as- wn, Rev. Mr. sweetly ren gged Cross" e six of her Iutch, Irvine ennedy. Pres Jderson. Her brother Ken her memory. NA By tFace i Cove, N.B., ery nervous, not sillc tc with pimples ng and un- Ztln of Bill‘- . do my own lave entirely ‘lmllybyfbe . . .-...-_._._..s. -_.;\~,_,; _W__erIWK!II1§>W-'Wr,vi_cr<@-- _--_. .- .-.. furs-g; i;