Jillile Archdeacon of onireal Market . Silleilgllte r s ~l9sTn?$|I;Z-ovemsnt | "motion of the loeal r at , m1, m the first time in ten v H“ we index closed higher, to- olllllwnu. being .08. The feature " y wile the further rally in . “with closed at 295i» l ll U“ pniiltl, after ogening at , ° changed, Qt the ct ers. lio- ~.)°“,,.1snnc ended unehanged at ' mg Nickel at 5'6‘ u pacific closed 3S ‘ ‘ n suns! innfllflpaPfit loss digs Canad- ' rim-Electric Preferred which E, 41, a new low off 1' points. ‘» ‘ “y! ilctior tone was altogeth- g. ,,,,,.1; of a further timing up , q 1n New York when lunar- nm were recorded before the * 9,1“ volume hero was below ‘ Tuesdni- L,°',...11..-,- market for highgrada j, was active and strong today. “ n, issues were in demand, an‘: , tn t it would be rompt- aullgzllilllvtl “for. Public UtilitIlss and “m,” were mostly nactive, with I "pmlonla changes in quotation. . lax mons- Arm town , REAL. A ‘on: $111,352 _ is tregortedl: _ >0 aua an mrComlmny for 1M! pril rh-Groas in- against “M200 a iu the annual Light sud of $104.0 depreciation at revenue ,0 $83,218 inviting o: i, deducted dividend! Ialsi w Miscellenous v g .1 . ONTBEAL, April ill-Barley. Gal- fliua western no 8 U: oats ttanadian [atilfii no 3 d8; oats no I. r spring wheat patents firsts . seconds 4.50; flour bakers 4.4 . urwiuter wheat patent choicgzeii- hlta corn 4.50: bran ton ton 211.26: middlings too ; rolled osts hag 80 gounds 2M: i 1 no 2 per ton car lots 0.00: cheese ,. t ; cheese summer 12-12%.- itr no 1 finest 16%; sl fresh lals in rnrtons 23: eggs rash sau- i in cartons 22; eggs fraah firsts 1 nrlons 111-20: potatoes new no 1 x 1111a 150 pound 10.50-11.00" ; potatoes old Que and N. ‘B. . a mountains 80 pound bag 10-50. LIVERPOOI: {v a1 r1 “ti” a t - o s r a g tents iirsts 5.1 310:: slzscorfdr 4'50 rr bakers 4.40, flour vrinter wheat pleats choice 2.80-2.00: rflih car lots 10.00‘ irheesc summer 12-1 1,4‘ bu "M! "M: eggs fresh spec Wu- 23: eras fresh ilrlts bu 111-20: potatoes new no 1 I und 10.50-11.00: Lfooslilila lhohlliourslg . “to; . lit‘ W BI Ollli I Wises old Que 1mg N. B.‘ Iunislns R0 pounds 40-50.‘ -1 otat- O-ID : Elton cums son was: pear mom ‘iiiat Belfast, Ireland, have a lifliion picture theatre devoted to litnt pictures. principally for the Walnut also for those who did ‘It like talkies, is being urged by liilst Ayliffa, president of the M11111 Deaf Bnd Dumb Associat- llii. At a recent meeting he said iiili the "mongrel English import- li from America" could not be ‘lb-read by deaf people. who could M thus follow the story. The Ven- Dromore. M. w. s. Kerr. n. n- m!» "-1 in favor of the suggestion l g that it might be a sound . h.) Ui2l))(1\ Neutrljofk. l t-Ytuwlifatker 1 1 iiluctuuunu 37w’ Canprfl. ...".' . ~ war ... ..... , slf-"Blefg ...... ... ... ns ‘Tobacco B’ 1m Waterworks nacoiida Cop er" ,..' . lcla Top sane Ia By ..s Auto, m. ,-,_.. sauu i101 order . p - a n § ‘fleu55§ §0o§ 555 ss- hey bee Co .00 .... i... . on uek- ;... we‘ 1... I raiids ,‘.. Garlrotric 1,011.11: cam. Toni litigant-fit" I ' .- . on» .-- .-s . U ' s. ....- .- 0” ma!) t " " u'.'.'.€'.“€%'1’~1i:.;.vr-" ' - n s .st:1.._ocrol...m_'.'f' f,‘ Weatlnghou-‘o-“I-leczfl Th". ' EEiEFsSBe-aSES 8 so": gwstii vsnaolu Woolworth ..._... _., Y], I ‘rare mu savrin Tam Inn, the furious ‘MW!’ ohthmdrouabty cronies" of slohert 1 Burns’ poem is to be savedflansuaay stay on its origi- nalgsiti 41.1%"; Scotland. Ayr rowaoouueirhsavoted to con- tribute ‘eviioqltowara, the purchase biioe ofthejgbulldina and furnish- ings emeonsitiea that u-the pur- ollaaois madethe wow-tr wm bo dooded"to'A_'yr.' They are prepared be Iiiarl-nteeitbat the part‘ of the buildinc-uééubied as:an inn will be preserved-and used as a mu- aeum._J. llfisaorrisfsn Ayr archi- tact. has written the oounen that lie-expects w obtairrfunds from a undone society. and the Central Ward-Committee has asked the Oounoil to taha every step neces- msarytnkeepthainninAyr. INDIAIAB POLIOIWOMAN The-firstlilolioewomsn in Indie. has been appointed ..at Aliehsd. and already abs has loads on ar- fgfllflflflfghlfledlluGl are to deal withithe womenmembers of Gan- dhi's Congress Party who defy $110 iawdntpuraubhoe of the civil diso- har uame.~Bhe is a. slim young wo- man, alwayssmilingpehe has not yet been lllillllled with a full dress uniformybut. when she is on duty, she wears m stripes on her sleeve and the initials "W. ." “I felts-little nervous the first time rwent on duty." Mrs. Elliott seld. “my; goon got "over it. My hus- gma l, s sergeant in the runway polioe and from him I have learn- ed the three-essentials demanded 1mm member's of the force: cool- nan, oourelfl and patience." commercial -. proposition. and would “pygmy b, s. great relief to have somewhere 11p 6508139 mm u“ American laoruese sud the queer inflections-which 1t inflicted on people.‘ _ _ l "iial I‘ itieea leii: a 1 1 ossir leek . _ , Ora-yhk, Eéiffatui-‘ufi husband .3. _' rolfliill-Isook 1 Bell 11 Can Car Foundry Cour-Pill"... 12 b bedieaee oainbaisn. Mrs. muett is. .../....r,.. ....._.._..___-_-_..______> Yasgrocxllzvo B t} Montreal ' Stock Market Quotations 21 Courthouse Murals Arouse" Controversy Mmwatrxm, wra. Mull 31-4 ‘Spirited debate 0n art roses m Mll- waukees new $10,000,000 courthouse. Milwaukee invited the talent of the United States 110 make the bulldini artistically correct, Now that the builder and artist have finished their work conservative citizens are 20 wrangling with a. group which be- lieves in ultra-modern mood! in ' murals. i) Telephone ... Brazilian Traction L P B C Power A. C C Flllilodl’! Qockahutt Plow Co Ltd Heading the factions, although not Durtiulpating m the arguments. are: Civil Judge Adelbe v J. Hedding, 25 Francis soott Bradford, Jr., or New York, painter of murals, member of “i; the National Academy of Design. For Judge Hedding‘; courtroom, Artist Bradford painted a mural. It is entitled "Labor" and shows a 18180. barefoot woman walking away from the beholder. She walks just back of the Judge's head, bent on some agricultural task. Judge Hed- 111118 gave one look and the lady went nto eclipse. Over the mural the judge hung a mauve, velvet curtain, and over the curtain is a portrait of George Washington. "There," he announced, "is a pic- ture that litigants in this court can look at with profit." Theo the storm broke. The judge's modifications did terrible things to the harmony of design of the edi- fice, it was charged. Part of the lab- or element was offended, but part aided with the judge. “A barefoot peasant woman to represent labor in industrial Milwaukee!" this group snorted. "And we tuming out thirty thousand pair-s of shoes a. day, even with short shift-s! Our technical ILingdorn were ample for present re- 310F5- Tepresented b? 5- Wmnan :.*".1":.:11'-..1:1111:: ‘lii'.’l'.'.“'w‘.i“°'é'.lll um» u cu eu- uu u» u» Shswinigan Water P . ..- Sherwin Williams of Can ... , ates] Co of Canada innipeg Electric . Grain Market CHICAGO. AFN,‘ s ZrL-loflenced by reative strength own by the stock market. late rallies in graia values tn- day argey overcame early down- turns. 1 A good part of the when; trade eon- aisted o! spreading operations between the variou deliveries. Crop reports as to domestic winter wheat were of a more mixed character than has been the rule of l e. Wheat closed unsettle as yesterday's flush, to lower, corn unchanged to 54 up. Outs unchanged to l5 of! and provisions unchanged to seven cents dew-n. WINNIPEG WINNIPEO, April fl.-Abaenae of any trade worked for export and low- er quotations tor wheat at Liverpool had a depressing influence on grain prices hers today. Values st the closa wg’%ice:§ “$31.. r1 tu a ay c os t - u y a an October at em. ' . Bulk of the grads was local and fliuetuatlona were held within narrow imits. Broomiiall reported recent nr- r vale of foreign wheat in the United at the same 1111111111111 I 111111111111 DELHI, April 27—Nes:t b51310 YOU m u huirv Hindu all done up like the grand high potentate of the Plllllub don't mark him down as prince or maharajah. He's probab- ly the barber, says Gordon‘ Sinclair writing to the Border Cities Star. If he's all decked _ out in a 40 yard turban of imperial purple or cardinal red he may be a taster or lteilor. If he wears snow white with The half naked man carrying a big umbrella down the roadway is a twice born Brahim, mightiest of ‘the mighty. To him even the prin- ces of the blood pay cash tribute. No Hindu can be buried, burned or betrothed without his consent. He's a bit peeved if they get born wlth- I out the high sign from him. Yet ' he looks like o. floor mopper in a i 'I‘urkish bath. Ten days ago I saw Gandhi, half naked 1n a gray jail. Today, by way of contrast, a. regal figure in scar- let and sold eased himself into my bungalow and announced with . due soiemnity, "I am your barber, sahib." 1 He was more erect than a pre- war Prussian guardsman. A huge bristly beard stuck out from his handsome face. He resembled Abyssynials modest monarch who claims to be king of all the kings. - "Barber?" I asked in dismay. "Yes, sahib. I have been assigned to you. I am ready, sahib." He un- strapped n brace of leather cases 1 Decline in sterling also proved o qnoperiy designed scythe!" hmmu“ w "DNL In New York Mr. Bradford is re- Cash wheat and coarse grains con- tinued their indifferent trade with prlc- ported enjoying the aim-m 8,9513% He remarked: "Art must stand on ss_ generally unchanged to a fraction its own feet." altlilighwhost, May 81%: July 04; 0c- tober 00 --bariey liiay 41%; July 41%: October iii/SA- "The feet of art," the detractors exclaimed. ‘“I'hat',g just it-the feet of this woman are out of all pro- portion to Judge Heddlngu head. or to the woman's head." John Mesemer. county superin- tendent of construcifon, developed considerable blood pressure when ___,_ he heard about the judge's curtain. wrumrm assent He would find out about iiphe sa!d when‘ our, as he rushed into the judge's cham- ggl)? --- --~ "*6 35 bers. He found out-got 1t straight from the man who wrote the state's boxing law-that the courtroom is V the judge's domain. If he doesn't ' like a. picture he covers it ulf. “Furthermore? said Judge Hed- ding, "people who don't appreciate n03 ;noii track 02% no 1 dur- On wtiyqgnoscwflld; a! 1 feed 817a: no 1 feed 30%; no 2 feed 20: rejected 26%: track 35. Bnrley-Afaitiug grades w p row ex i1 c w 40%; 2 row ex 3 c w 48%; other grades no 8 c w 41%: no 4 c w 382d‘. no ii e w‘ 80%: no 0 c w 355C111"! 411 and took out enough instruments for base hospital. "Who assigned you?" "Your ser- vant, sahib." "Well, he's all wrong Baron, I go to the barber shop.” His majesty of the shears smiled one of those smiles which say. "tut. tut, my child; Santa. Claus won't come to bad little boys." Then h said: "a. misunderstanding, sahib. You see there are no barber shops." As it turned out the rajah of the razor was quite right. If you crave a head rub in this dis- tant land you make an appoint- ment with one of these wandering shearsmen and he comes to your room or, if you are hard up, you is India's richest poteniate. Not only can you get yourself tatooed, shaved, trimmed, operat- ed on, fitted with glasses. teeth, ‘trusses or turquoise tiarns but you can get almost anything on earth made to measure while you squat among the holy Brahmince bulls. High boot; m; example. Any white man going m. to the jungle with. high boot: Plays 11001183’ from a mausoleum ;I had been advised to wear knee high leather if I Went to Banal-e ‘and since I plnn to go both the;- and into the Bengal tiger country thought it worth pricing knee boots. ‘while I waited for prices ranging from $5.50 to $8. The leather seem- ed good. As I explained they were m: use in the snake belt the mer- j chants shook sad heads. "No good. sahib. The cobra strikes too high.” heifers and the | 0ND QUOTA TI Venetian FULL 60c 1i COURSE TURKEY 0R 011111111511 DINNER Saturday, April 30th. FOR MOTHER'S DAY We have a splendid assortment of specially made for Mother's Day. Get yours Gardens only in ee Chocolates, “Always above the knee?” “Yesf * sahlb, if he is up and ‘eady, gets you here"- pointing to abdomen. "If not ready, he you here"-- pointing Just below the hips. he the gets to the leg So I didn't buy any knee boots but did see some of the tough go- ing the lowly untouchable has to put up with, While in one boot shop- if you can call it that- a girl of twenty or so, filthy but good looking, came to buy a pair of sandals. This was a. great luxury to her but she dare not under any condition enter the sacred pres- ence of the shop. Oh. no. that would contaminate the place. Word of it would spread far and wide and before the merchant could open again he'd have to buy a cow and give it to the temple or kick in with many rupees. So the girl shouted out her de- mands while the merchant pre- tended not to listen. Then he sort- ed oui: a cheap bit of junk, told the girl to lny her money on the side- walk ancl tossed the sandals out. An assistant scurried out t0 pick up the square coins. Whether the sandals fitted or not didn't matter a hoot. The girl will probably have them stolen anyhow as she sleeps on an ant-covered slice of side- walk tonight. When I barged back from the bazaars the baffled barber was still waiting, but this time he was joined by another imposing gent squat at any street comer and have the job done them and then. Bombay, Calcutta and Madras have their barber shops but here in the plains there are none. Practically every corner in the, art should not be obliged to tolerate it. all the artists ln New York not- ‘ withstanding." Jan 11-15;", May . . . IIIIMEIHIRIAM Mus’ Joann Emmy": Following the recent attack onl "road hogs a! the air" by the Earl; of Onslow in Nairobi, East Africa: may pass a law protecting game from pilots inconsiderate of wild animals. Lord Onslow applied the] term quoted to airmen who swoop- down from the clouds and stamp- _eded herds of game. Wing Com- ‘mander l-larris conducted expert-l ments from various heights. Hei ‘conclu’ ‘- that a. stampede produc- ed by high-flying aircraft will last much longer than that produced by low Jlylng. He failed to see any-. Death at all times is sad, but it is doubly hard to bear when one is taken in the prime of life and full of hopes. The whole community of Morel] was shocked to hear on Monday momin: that Mrs. Joseph Sinnott (nee Elizabeth Kearney) had pas- sed to her heavenly reward on Sunday. April 10th, at the Char- lottetown Hospital. The deceased had entered the Hospital on Wed- nesday, March 30th for treatment and although her case was serious no one dreamed that death was near. After receiving the last rites of the Roman Catholic Church she resigned her will to God and said “Thy Will Be Done." Her genial disposition, wiliing- ' ness to aid those in need and help in all charitable work made her a popular and respected figure in the settlement in which she work- ed. Ber passing is a matter of ain- ccre regret to all but particularly to the members of her bereaved family. Eurviviag besides her sol-rowing husband, are six sisters, namely: MILD CURE!) Promo r. nlams-1....'13c-o¢rlb- MILD CURED BACK ROLLS . .~ me. no lb- rnssnjronx SHOULDERS — .. nous» ron nossrmo - - j 12c. per lb. I Fresh r k are...» 2 lbsiufor 86c. - - liaaiberg Steak ' lee. per lb. _ Fresh, Pork Patties , iiceach Sister Mary Bernard and Mrs. J. I’. lfolnnis of Springfield, Mam, Mrs. John l‘. Fisher and Mrs. Arthur Kenny oi’ numford. Maint. lbs. Joesph R. McDonald of Pen- mulr Island, P. I. I. and Mrs. Thfla. mas ‘may of Greenfield, P. E. I. also one brother, John Martin Kearney on her old home at stur- geon, P. Irl." xer funeral, which was largely attended .was held on ‘Tuesday, April ma to st. Lawrence chute-ii. where Rich Mas of Requiem was Qglgbnkd by. her pastor Reverend Joseph Rooney, and thence to the adjoining cemetery where all that was mortal of a loving wife and sister was laid to rest. there to await the glorious Resurrection. Jhandi Chow bazaar sports a curb ' barber, doctor, ear cleaner. and chemist. You can get a ice 011i 0f! while you wait or have a glass eye ,i'ltted in no time. I saw a man 89¢ Eflg t0 m9 PLANES MUST RESPECT GAMEN! glass eye toclr. , and a second one newspaper men here from seven- end of a diseased of get the rotting finger nipped off with a 111111‘ scissors. An open sewer ran along the road where the anatomists were doing their stuff, and if there was one less than a billion flies to the square yard I must be first 00115111 'to the Nyzam of Hyderabad, who | thing abnormal in the behavior of game when an aeroplane was over- head. Wlng-Commander Harris added thnt he favored 8 111W Dw- hiblting deliberate chasing. in silk and fur. This boy had a spiked head and a long pigtali. Not a short plgtaii like bull fight- ers wear but a long one so that when he dies the goddess of crea- tion can reach down from her place in paradise and jerk this man quickly to her side. "I have come to look over your clothes," he declared. lt all looked like a and since there are teen papers I thought they pulling my leg. "Well," I said, "The way things are looking you'll be able to look them over any day next week in the nearest pawnshop." "Pawn shop, sahib?" “Yes, pawn shop: where men who forget to say no have to leave their clothes." “You mean sell them, sahib?" “Call it that if you like." "Ah, so, the god's favor me. You have clothes to sell." I gave up and unloosened the only Hindustani I have learn- ed. The inst word rhymes with jell. well and nell. It worked. W6 1'6 Bermudas Are Not Coral Isles HAMILTON, Bermuda, April 26— The popular supposition that the Bermudas are formed of coral has been exploded in the latest book of Dr. William Beebe. “Nonsuch: Land of Water." Although “living coral, 1n small and large heads, is indeed abundant on the submerged reefs" of Bermuda, says Dr. Beebe, it is only a. “veneer of encrusted life". Bermuda. ls really the peak of a long extinct which rose from the sea floor, the alternating periods of raised and lowered ocean levels, due to the ice ages, alternately exposed and sub- merged large parts of the mountain volcanic mountain . lowering of the ocean itself, and yet this is exactly what happened. Many years azo in the Pleistocene ago, great wind-storms carried away deposited it as snow over all the northern lands of the world. Little by little, as more water piled up on the land, the level of the Atlantic Ocean sank and Bermuda Mount- ain came nearer and nearer to tho surface. Fixially, when over half s. mile thickness oi ice had formed, the level of the sea. was lowered over two hundred and fifty feet, leaving Bermuda high and dry." New York Curb and made possible the accumulation of crumbled shells and wind-blown sand. Dr. Beebe has for several years been the director of tropical re- search of the New York Zoological society, conducting his investiga- tloru; from his station on the island of Nonsuch, one o1 the Bermuda group. While the principal purpose of his work is a, study of the fish which inhabit Bermuda waters, Dr. Beebeb lively curiosity leads him in this book to follow up many other bypaths of natural history. "Bermuda is undoubtedly the apex of a. mghty volcanic mountain," writes Dr. Beebe. "A recent deep boring, made in the hops of finding fresh water, foiled completely in its purpose, but provided absolute proof of ancient volcanic activity. ‘The first three hundred and sixty feet showed limestone such as we find everywhere today in Bennuda. For the next two hundred feet yellowish clay-like rocks represented decom- posed vofcariic tufa. From here down to the extreme l‘mit of boring, four- teen hundred feet, there was noth- ing but volcanic rock, and this un- doubtediy extended down to the very ocean floor. “Here we have a geological con- undrum," continues Dr. Beebe. “Twenty thousand centuries ago, let us suppose we have a potential Ber- muda. submerge-l a little distance beneath the surface of the ocean. How can we make this into ‘isles of rest’ without raising the crest o! the submerged volcano or adding coral or other material to the surn- mit? The only logical remaining pos slbility appears to be absurd-the New Features-New Refinements New Riding Qualities-New Vi!!!“ T. G. ‘IVES Limited A C‘IIIIIII_IIIII (“If Electric Bond and Share ..»a . Imperial Oil . . . . . . . .. .. Int Petroleum . . . . . . , . . ..-. "ADVICE" I When life for you is at its worst, And your poor sad heart is breaking ' Just stick your chin up in the air, q And try your hand at baking. When you find yourself inclined is weep Just grab a broom, and sweep ant sweep, And while you sweep stick up you chin And soon you'll begin to grin. Keep smiling as you go along, Don't let your heart grow sad, Just fill your heart so full of song Try doing things for those you lovq Try making sgmeone bright, And you'll be blest from heaven above, And win out in the fight. -—Rornn Wright. f ONSTIPATED? Take Nil-NATURE‘! IIIIDT --tonight. Your eilmlnatlve organs will ha functioningprop- eriy by morning and your eon- stlpatiou will and with a bowel action as free and easy as no- turo at her best-positively no pain, no griping. Try it. Mild, sash, Mlreiy vrgrldblt- at dnqgiur-only 251: FEEL LIKEA BIILLION. T111 ,, m {nears - m Si RlVE THE NEW FRONTENAC SIX and prove to YOUR satisfaction that it is more comfortable . . . quicker i" iqk-up . . . smoother in flight . . . faster on hills than any Zugomobile you have ever driven at anywhere near its price. 1f ever there was a. car built for today's travel plus economy, it is the new Frontenac Six. ~ Your Durant Dealer will give you a driving demonstration. Sold and serviced '_~ Durant dealers everywhere PBODUCT TORONTO (Leasldo) 0F IDOMINIOIQMMOTORB Lmiran CANADA anrnoluzan DEALER r011 cnanhomsrovvs, P- E- I- vasi; quantities of water, drawn up e_ into clouds from the oceans, and" You'll make the whole world glad.