15, 1949 QM/c , Brighter g P" Breakfasts I i (suor FROM -. % eons 7x O (Continued frcm Page Thirteen) tremendous strength of the Im- perial resources in men and arms- ments, may not be led to put their trust in these. and forget God, the Author of their sovereignty and Source of their power. The tone of religious fervour la almost Hebraic in its intensity and seems to claim the same special re- lation to Jehovah for the British peoples as that enjoyed by the He- brews of old. Prime Ministers and troops from the Dominlons, Indian native princes and their soldiers, and many others from all parts of the Empire gathered in London to take part in ceremonies of unparalleled splendour. So overwhelming was the display that many had a feel- ing of awe and apprehension as to where this greatness of Empire would lead. Rudyard Kipling gave expression to this in his poem, IJLILI HUGE] BEBE CROS_SWORD g DOWN 18. Moisture l. A spire _22. One of an 2. Game of ll\¢l¢lll_ chance rwvle 3, Lnnd- (Brit) measure N0?- l0 4. Jelly-like expensive substance ClPl-lll! n. Unit of i vehicle length 25. Grate 6. External 26. Last seed syllable , covering of a. 7. Republic of word W. Africa 27. Blow upor 8. Seesaw 28. Put l1. German Rigel-h" marl") composer 29. Toward 20. Pronoun l3. Check ""199 21. Evcn tpoet.) is. Lair a1. Flowerlefl 22. Fishing-rod 17. Have on Plllllfl reel g3; Cry of a crow 218v We)’ 01' 25. River ‘ (Geri £7. Decorated ' letter at ‘ opening of v paragraph 28. Father ,30. Malt beverage 3i. Showy goldfish 133. Pollen- bearing iloral organ 35. Charge for services 36. One who plays a. bagpipe 37. Cost 39. Average 40. Morbidly tender _41. Branch of learning :43, Frosted DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-llere’: how to work it; '_ . AXYDLBAAXII- IsLONGFELLOW A“ 1 tt i l stands for another. In this example A is us Tkfrmiheethtirlee“ rliqkyX for the two 0's. etc. Single letters. apol- ~~phes th'e length and formation of the \\'ords are all hints. Each - the code letters are different. a c.,,‘ _ Quotation _ i..- urvuwr rrva KVB YV D1‘ VWR-WM l-IVIKTGVOIMOWR. Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A8 SOON AS EVER‘ WOMEN BE- LONG TO us. WE N0 LONGER BELONG TO _Tl-lEM_—_l[iQN'. TAIGNE. ACROSS 1. East!" l5. Substancl ‘ used in brewing 9. learning ‘m One of thfi Great Lakes 1L species of pepptl‘ l2. River lit.) 14. Division oi a play 15. Take ozit (Print l 18. A fish soup '19. Coin £3. 24. -‘ Yesterday's ‘ "sy, 34. Victuals.‘_ generally. 37. Greek letter 38. Fabulous bird , NAPOLEON mo UNCLE rm llv Clifford M=llri<l~ READY, UNCLE El-BY.’ l/M GOIN"I'OCUT TH’ - ROPE. AND INTO TH’ IMATER $*'.(@E€.' IXRKV! I WAS AFINID THIS OLD UCOW VDULD NEVER FtOKT; WILLIE. GUESS WE'LL HAVE ‘UCINB UP OUQ £113" ON THE RNEQ . s... u... n». manual! vim-nan "Re -l" and so produced one of the greatest poems of the last century. He based his poem on the Bible and it made a wonderful ap- peal to the British at the time o! its publication and is still often sung in times of stress and tri- umph. Stanza I. God has done treat thins: for Britain and has given England the power to rule over a great empire but she still needs God's help. Stanza II. The sounds of iri- umph pass but God still is the friend of the humble. W “Th; Educational Horizon ‘Tl-IE GUARDIAN, do honour to the Queen, may .11 be l ‘ “ " in this designation. Still stands-Is still efficacious. The general meaning of the passage is that_ a humble and a contrlte heart is still efficacious to win the favour of God and to secure His protection. Note the contrast; the captains and the kings are gone. but the protecting arm of the Lord la about us still. ‘ Far called, our navies melt sway —Our navies that have been sum. moned from all parts of the world. return to their posts of duty. Dune and headland-sand hills and high cliffs along the cnggt where bonfires had been lit. Nineveh and Tyre. They ha e completely vanished. They wer ancient cities of Assyria and Phoe- nicia once elebrated for their magnificence and extent. Nineveh was the capital of ancient Assyria. Tyre was situated in the east of the Levant. Drunk with power—losing one's head and so unable to judge the proper place power has in the life of ourselves and our empire. Wild tongues-unruly tongues that utter foolish words. Have riot Th'ee in awe-do not give reverence due to God. Gentiles. Includes here non- Christian and Pagan nations. Without the Law. Those have not. received the God. Kipling here frankly adopts, for his fellow-countrymen, the who -Word of Stanza III: Other great empires have fallen, so may ours if we for- get God. Stanzas IV, V: ' If we forget these things, boast of our own at- tainments, and put our faith in military armaments 810M. “'9 build on dust and are heading for destruction. The poet asks God for mercy, for all our failings . and shortcomings. God of our fathers-our fore- fathers have always acknowledged that God is the source of their greatness and power. Our far-flung battle line. A phrase wiili the true heroic ring in it. The British legions have pene- trated to the ends oi’ the earth. Awful hand. Awful, inspiring with awe and reverence. Palm and pine. Syiiecdoche-—- palm representing the tropics, pine the colder countries. Lord God of Hosts. He is the Head of armies as He was of the Israelites in the wilderness. The tumult and the shoutini. Of the Jubilee celebrations. The Captains. The commanders of.the various divisions of the British forces who attended the Jubilee celebrations. The Kings. The foreign poten- iates, princes, and ' ambassadors, colonial and foreign, assembled to GEOM The following exercises review for you some of the basic defini- tions, axioms. and propositions that you have already studied; Un- derline each correct response. 1. A parallelogram is also a rec- tangle——True or False. - - " 2. The diagonals of a parallelo- gram are always cqual.—True or False. ' 3. A triangle has three medians- True or False. 4. Two straight lines are parallel if the interior angles on the same side of the transversal are equal-—- True or False. 5. Adjacent angles are always complementary-True or False. 6. A line perpendicular to one of two parallel lines is perpendicular to the other aIso-—'I‘rue or False. 7. The sum of the exterior angles of a polygon formed by extending Supply the missing word-or words in each sentence. 1. Twelve is called a -—. 2. Two oxen make a i of oxen. 3, A song for one is called a -—-. 4. A song for two is called ~——. 5. A song for three is called s -—. 6. Ten years make a —. 7. Two shoes are called a -—- of shoes. 8. Two oranges are called a —-— of oranges. 9. A hundred years make a ——-. 10. A fourth part is called a -—_ 11. The figure 0 is some- times called -— or -—. 12. When you divide anythinginto three equal parts you are said to ——— it. 13. When you divide anything into two equal parts you are said to --—- or He Ia wealthy. Nevertheless he is not proud. The meaning of these two sen- tences can be given in one sen- fence, thus: 1. Although he is wealthy he is not proud. Newfoundland has been called "The Gibraltar of North America?" Britain's oldest colony, and The Watch Dog-o! theSti Lawrence. John Cabot discovered Newfound- land. He sailed from Bristol‘ In i497. Newfoundland lies about 1900 miles west oi.’ Ireland. New- foundland was governed by a Com- mission o! seven, of whom three MISSING WORDS HOW SENTENCES ARE BUILT NEWFOUNDLAND A "ills language of the Hebrews, who re- Barded themselves as the chosen people of God and all others as out- side the pale of the Law, Reeking tube—smoking cannon. Iron shard, The shells used as explosive projectiles in war. All valiant dusk-The petition in the last stanza asks pardon for the nation that puts its trust in its military strength and its native courage, forgetting that it is God who gives the victory. That is brave men who depend upon their own powers and that of other hu- man beings. That builds on dust-their trust is is useless as the dust. Rudyard Kipling, English jour- nalist, writer of short stories, poet, and novelist, was born at Bom- bay, India, In 1865. I-le died in 1936. His stories are remarkable for vigour and directness of expres- sion and the accuracy with which they represent the soldiers‘ lives in India; his verse. for metrical dexterity, and in The Recessionnl and some of his ballads. for nobil- lty of sentiment and descriptive vlvidness. Kipling is perhaps the most widely read and most popular poet of the British Empire. He loved his own country so much that he wrote of the British Empire alone. . . . ETRY each of its sides in succession equals four right angles.—True or False. 8. The size of an angle depends upon the length of its sidem-True or False. 9. All vertical angles are acute angles-True or False. l0. Lines which make right angles at their point of intersection are perpendlculan-True or False. l1. All acute angles are equal- True or False, 12. The Hypotenuse lies opposite the right angle in a right angle tri- IIIIIG.~—TTUQ or False. l3. All triangles have three acute angles- True or False. l4. A triangle can have but one right angler-True or False. 15. All zooks are amorphous. This object is amorphous. Then this object is a zook. . —it. 14. Six is called an -— num- ber and seven is called an -— numbe . 15. An unmarried man is called a, -—- man. 16. Multiply a number by two and you get — the number. 17. Two pheasants are called a -— of pheasants. 18. Ten years make a —-, 19. Twenty sheep are called a i of sheep. 20. Twelve dozen make a i. 21. A thousand times a thouand make a ———, H. Multiply a number by it- self snd you get the -—- of the numbe . 23. Thirteen is sometimes called a ——- dozeh. 24. A song for four is called a -—-. 25. Thirty- six inches is the same as —- feet or —-— yard. 2. However wealthy he may be he is not proud. 3. l-le is wealthy but he is not proud. 4. He is not proud in spits of his wealth. 5. Notwithstanding his wealth he is not proud. were natives (1934-1949). Corner Brook is the second city of Newfoundland with a population of abou-t»l0,000, The climate is tem- perate with mild winters and cool summers. The heavy fogs off Newfoundland are caused by the mingling of the warm sir from the Gulf Stream with the cool air of the Labrador Current. There is a regular mail and pas- senger service between North Syd- ney in Nova Scotla and Port-aux- Basques in Newfoundland. New- foundland‘: staple product is cod- flsh. The making of paper is an- other important industry. The climate and soil are both not suitable for much farming. In ad- dition, the fishing season oe- curs at the same time as ths grow- ing season and hence interferes with it. The fishinl is lood off the coast of Newfoundland. because the water is not deep on the Grand Banks which are like a shelf under the surface of the sea. It is also at this point that the icebergs from the Arctic meet the Gulf Stream and ‘melt. depositing their stores of fish of Newfoundland ood. llll It MIIQIII h r IMIIIYFI. I I-I Iil- Il. CIIIPIOIMIII. CHARLUI'I'E'I'O WN It ls a system of cultivation of lands with scanty rainfall, other- Wlle too dry for agriculture. The land ls deeply ploughed and the surface soil is kept loose, and thus forms a "blanket" or "mulch" which prevents the moisture from the damp earth underneath rising by Dictator of Spain is Francisco Franco. The first president ‘of the State o! Israel is Dr. Chan Weizmann. Rhodes-the largest island in the Dodecanese group. It had been selected by Ralph Bunche, acting mediator of the Palestine Truce Commission as the centre for the Egyptian-Israeli peace talks in January. Premier of Japan is Shlgeru Yo- shida. Premier of Yugoslavia is Marshal Tito, India's first Indian Governor- General is Chakravarti Rajagopaia- chari. President of the Elpido Quirino. The Goya-General of Pakistan is Sir Khawaja Nazimuddin. The Communist leader in China is Tse-Tung Mao. Military leader in Japan is Gen- eral D. MacArthur. Newly crowned queen Netherlands is Juliana. Prime Minister and Foreign Philippines is of the Fraser. President of Italy is Luigi Ein- audi. U. S. military leader in Germany is Gen. Lucius Clay. Premier of the Israelite nation is David Ben-Gurion. Auriel. President of Mexico is Miguel Aleman. The Gov-Gen. of Canada ls Gen. Sir Harold Alexander. The U. N. Mediator Count Fnlkc Bernadette was slain last Septem- ber in Jerusalem. Quezon City has replaced Man- ila as the capiial of the Philippine Islands. The new capital which lies about 10 miles northeast of Manila was named in memory of Manuel Quezon. first president of the Philippine Republic. The Karena. militant iribesmen of pro-British sentiment, are fighting for a separate autonomous state of their own. They captured Mandalay in March. Charles Philip Arthur “Prince of Edinburgh" on November 14, 1948. Prime Ministers of the British Commonwealth held a conference in London on October 11. 1948. Among the problems discussed were: 1. The effect of Britain's European ties on the defence of the Commonwealth. 2. Emigration from "Britain lo the Doniinlnns, 3. How to keep India within the Common- wealth. George. was born DRY FARMING ' CURRENT EVENTS Minister of New Zealand is Peter- President of France is Vincent‘ capillary attraction and being evap- orated. The subsoil is made coni- pact to increase its water-holding capacity. Seeds are sown deep by drill plough. This system of far- ming ls practised in dry regions where irrigation is not practicable in Europe, W. Can., W. U. S. A. Australia and S. Africa. vinces in the B. N. A, Act. 2. New- foundland will receive an annual subsidy of $1,000,000. 3. The island will be given nine months from the date of union to enter into a tax- ation agreement with the Federal QGoVernment. 4. A Royal Commis- 'sion will be established after 8 years to decide whether further Federal assistance to the new pro- vlnce is needed. 5. Canada will take over $63.000,000 of the island's $72.000.000 public debt. 6. Canada will collect no personal income tax in Newfoundland up to next July 1. 7. Canada will extend all Fcd- eral services to Newfoundland. b. Canada will start collecting cor- poraiion income lax as soon as union is consummated. 9. The is- land will be entitled to six Scria- tors and seven members of the Commons. l0. Provision is made to reduce the~voting age of New- foundland women from 25 to 2i years. ' KILLOBN-(i-RANT WEDDING In a setting of apple blossoms and red tulips, a pretty wedding was solcmnizeri in Si. Ivlnrfs Church. Montague, at nine o'clock, Monday. June sixth, when Miss Helen Grant, daughter of Dr. and liilrs. T, \'. ‘Grant, Montague, was united in marriage to Dr. Leo H. Kiliorn, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Leo Killorn. of Saint John, New Brunswick. Rev. Louis Dougan, P.P., officiated at the ceremony and celebrated a nuptial mass. The bride, Riven in marriage by [lier father, was charmingly at- ‘, tired in a white slipper satin Eon-n en train. Her yell of embroidered tulle illusion was worn with n Juliet . cap edged in seed pearls. Sim wore 'a triple strand of pearls and mi"- ried an arm bouquet of American Beauty roscs and while i-arnaiions. Slic was attended by lier sister. Miss Joan Grant, who was becom- ingly attired in a gown nf rose crepe with matching accessories, and carried an arm bouquet of yel- low roses. The groomsnian was Dr. J. Alex George of Ottawa, a classmate of the groom. The ushers were Dr. Malcolm Beck and Mr. Raymond Grant. The bride's mother wore a two- piece taffeta dress with matching accessories, and a corsrige of gar- denias. Appropriate hymns were beauti- fully sung by Miss Maureen Brown. The nrganisls were Miss Peggy Beck and Mr. Buddy lilecKcnzitx Aficr the ceremony the bridal Newfoundland‘s Unirin with Can- ada. Terms of union: 1. Newfound- land will receive the 80 per cent capita grant provided for the pro- parly proceeded to the Poole Hotel where a reception and breakfast was enjoyed by sixty guests. race NINTEEN When It’s Time To Eat, It’s Time To Refresh 11.11: far i.’ eff/fer way . . . bar/i trade-mark: mean the Jame tiling. 5r Authorized bottle! of Coca-Cola under contrlc! with Coca-Cola Ltd. J. 8i T. MORRIS, LIMITED CHARLQTTETQWN PHONE I91 redgabardine suit with beige nc- cessories, and a corsage of Taiis-. man roses. The out-of-iown guests included Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Kickham of Souris, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sigs-. worth and Mary Slgsivorth of] Charlottetown, Dr. and Mrs. A, R. ' Grant, Dr. and Mrs. Vincent Grant! of Summersidc, MrgL. J; Killormj Miss Blanche Kiliorn, the Misses Ircne and Gertrude Power, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bishop, Dr. and Mrs. T. E. Grant, and Dr. nndMrs. N. C. Grant. all of Saint John, New Brunswick. After the wedding trip the cou- D0 YOU KNOW YOU CAN FLY TO AMHERST OB TBUBO For $16.45 (I passengers $8.15 each) OTHER POINTS JUST AS RE \SONABLE PAUL'S FLYING SERVICE ClrTown Airport. Phone 1800 For travelling the bride wore a . . . . The department ' of fisheries ple will reside in Windsor, Ontario, . where the groom will inierne at hashjwjed Home“ to three bu“ the Metropolitan General Hospital. m um’ 1°‘ whales this ye“ m northern British Columbia waters, AND IT'S A CHAMPION IN STYLE l-OVPCOST MILEAGE! odlusilng brakes 0 Vorlobla “astra-Iovarogs" steering I Studebaker‘: the '49 stand-out In solid money's worth New Studebaker Champion l-doer sedans, Z-door sedans end Starlight coup" o New decorator-fabric upholstery 0 Newbedyeolors 0 Seli- ramlc vision 0 Ssoti eantsrod between the oxlss 0 low eantsrof gravity 0 Glare-proof "block light" instrument penal sllols 0 Automatic overdrive, automatic hill holder, Cllmclltar hool- Ing and ventilating, white sldswoll tires and wheel trim rings or discs optional at extra cost en oll models. Studebaker: wheel ratio Pano- ltudebakos ltoriigbt soups STUDEBAKER T. G. 219 9T. GEORGE ST." Dealer, oewii Morass UST a look at the streets ‘ind high- ways and you know the new Stude- baker is a top favorite car with dis- criminating Canadians. Day after day, more and more new picture-gas-saving, flight-streamed new_5tudebakers—the thrift stars and Studebaker Champion o-deor sedan wwaaaaeswew because Canada knows value! the style m. HI today's Few ears! Stop in and treat yourself to a close- up eyeful ofa '49 Studebaker-it's far and away the most for your money in ' any new car. . MADE IN CANADAI Studebaker Champions ova built in Canada by Canadian workmen oi Sludebokefs modern plant in Hamilton. Ontario. into the motoring lludsbskss Champion convertible IVES _ rnoiir m1 Stimuli-refill I ' ‘s canary ROLLIN I I949 IS A