l" l v as not; AT so l; ‘TEAOH ~i no smrily old at 80." is the dlc tum of William Philpot. golf instruc totnand club and ball maker at Prince's Golf Club. lyiltcham (‘mn- mop, fol- the last 28 years. Philpol is in his 80th year and is the oldest golf professional in the country. STRAWBERRY BOXES AN D CRATES Wooden Veneer. Latest design. 45 quart and lull quart, new Gov ernment standard. Send me your inquiry. 1 will save you ulllllry. Catalog-we un request. i! JOHN WIGGINS MQ-nuhcturol‘ - . Sackville, N. B. zap-sheath. illcnqlr SALE The undersigned offers for sale his valuable farm at ICape Traverse oolislsting of sixty five acres clear land with the best of buildings and within four miles of Port Bord-cu and about one mile und a half from Carleton Siding also within quarter mill mile to stores, churches. school and mill and blfltlkkllfllllfs shops. This lilarm is in ‘the highest state of cultivation and an ideal potato farm it‘ not disposed of privately will set up at Dllllllfi all" tion on the 22nd April. Address all enquiries -to GORDON McWlLLlAMS. Cape Traverse 21129742585131. _ HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENT ‘Benders for Material ‘Pursuant to the requirements oi the Canada Highways Act, Sealed marked “Tenders tor Materials" will be received by the Uudersign- ed until 12 o'clock noon on Mon- day, April 14. 1924, for the supply- ing of any or all of the following lIlIlhIilI-lfl, vim, Cement, Steel Re inforcing. Iron Rods, Sand, Gravel or Broken Stone, Corrugated Iron Culverts according to the terms set Iarth in the Specification for same which with forms of tender may be seen at the Office of the Provincial Engineer, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. "A certified cheque for $500.00 or ten per cent of the amount or the tender payable to the Commission- er of Public Works, Prince Ed-ward Inland, must accompany each ten- d» The Department does not bind it» lolf to accept the lowest or any tender. -. ~ L. a. McMfLLAN, ,~ Secretary of Public Works flliil-B-Wttabi. One of the best 50 acre farms on P. B. Island at Emerald Jct, adjoin- ing one of the best shipping stations l\ on-the island. few yards from stores. school. and cheese factory. 1i acres for seed potatoes, 9 room house, frost proof cellar, large barn wlgb cement stables, piggery, poul- tnlp. machine house all in first class repair: also new store 24 ft. square with glass front. If not sold by April 11th. will be sold on that day with stock, crop. implements. Easy terms for quick buyer. - FRED G. KELLY. Emerald. Ifll-C-IS-tf. y FOR SALE 11 handsome quartered oak buffet, lwbolld walnut bedroom suite, marble tops, 1 kitchen range, almost new, in first class order, 1 solid qiilrtdrod oak library table, 1 Eng linh beveled place mirror 14 inch 405m wltll a frame and several small articles. "rho above articles are a bargain at the price asked. Apply 26 Great e Street. - lif-imtlli. finders For Hotel . Property in Char- ‘ lottetown ‘Qilld Tenders addressed to the Mal-mull will be received lll. to ' THREE-iii; WILLIE N, April 1.—“One is not f spent in n pretty tough town in _ Northern California; a raw, reck- . less sort oi’ a place where. in the Some of llly boyhood years were lal luidnights murders were directly ‘attributable to the issue. THE OHARLOTPETOWN GUARDIAN ilEll mutter at One of the interested parties had l l a‘ I WILL SPEAK TO HIS EMPIRE King George will be the first British monarch to speak at the same time to all parts of his Dom- ‘ininna. When he speaks at the opening of the British Empire Ex- hibition his address will be broad- castcd throughout radio, and where radio falls to carry sufficiently well, the words will he relayed by cable to radio stations across the globe. For the British subjects will hear the voice of the King-Emperor. ' i will FilRllliiE ill GAMING (By ominion News $crvicc) PARI , April 5.~'i‘lle largest single winnings during the season made in thc baccarat rooms at Cannes in the Municipal ‘Casino in one evening was manic lllfil by Camille Castingliollc, an Italian, wLcn he \voll $68,000. stytelll lwas to play the ‘hank con- atantly. New Peepsight OTTAWA. Ont. April 3.-—A new peep sight will make its appearan- ce at the next meeting of the Dom- inion of Canada Rifle Association, according lo an announcement in the Canadian lliarksluan. a magaz- irue edited by lit-Col. R. J. llirdwhist- le, secretary of the D. C. R. A. The Department of National Defence has invented a sight of this base of the S. M. L. E. rifle. Major-General Ashton and his dc- uartlucllt are responsible for the lrlvr-ntlnll of thc sight base for thc S. lli. L. E. rifle. to which will be attached an aperture sight. it is reported that this base was finally adopted recently and that arrange- ments are being made for pro- duction so that a supply will be available for spring shooting. This "peep" sight problem has agitated marksmen front one end of Canada to the other. The base ‘s the invention of Major .11 White of thc ordaucc branch at Quebec, 1nd is said to be 'nlost simple in construction. neat in appearance and efficient. lt call be attached to 'he rifle in n very simple manner. 1nd has a "zeroing" scale, quite ‘lpnrt from the windnge scale on the sight, which makes it unnecess- nry inr any promiscuous moving of the foresight. WOLVES ARE NUMEROUS SFDBFRY. April 3.-—ln the last five wceke 20 wolf pelts have been brought into Crown Lands Agent Mnullennllnll office null the Govern. meut bounty olaimcll This makes 30 pelts delivered tn [the local 0i’ flcc this winter, ‘and a total of lmlll oak moulded $1.200 IZlVlm lll wolf IJOIIIIUOB rlll- ed l1 Period of over-production this district. Mr. Macllennlln slates that this is more than twice the number of pelts brought in other years. the Ontario Government Alex. Laa- e manen, a 16-year old fimy at. Nllirn It is a sign of health when the " ~ fl Thttrldly, the 10th, day of . . ‘A. 1)., 19M, at twelve o'clock. ‘ for the property on the corn-- 75bit George and Dorchester Charlottetown, known as kl Hotel" and having l9 I bathrooms and l toilet may be for the Hotel pro (It furniture therein. or ~ - JIIIIIDO made for be inspected ally pan. ally rallalll- not ‘ throughout. 4 Apply to The undersigned offers for sale H‘ er good cultivation. ered with hard and loft wood. ls ‘ went." The surrounding '1 legged Willie, judge of the country ' jury wooden leg; the rcst of phrase of the west “everything secured the services of a iuwyfll‘ country‘froln Marysville who 11055958911 B was given up to ranches and sheeplgreat local reputation. 1 imagine grazing, and when men rode into asi look back upon the incident town they were looking for trouble that reputtftlion was built larger on with the hair on. ibluster and bullying and ch99!‘ Olle oi’ our citizens was Three-‘alltlacity. He was one ofthose brim- ‘ ‘fire lawyers who could be heard six blocks away from the court- house; a great hulk of a man with a seventeen collar and the look“? c court. He had gained his sobriquet —glven in affection rather than scorn-because of a peculiar arrangement of his underpinning. apolilflXy behind 111B eyes l!“ He. lllld been a soldier of the Coll- time. fudcrllcy, had Threc-leggedwllllll; . He riled our Three-legged Win19 u mine ball had so smashed hlsdlhfflfe "l0 "m! W": We“ “M” left knee that the lower pelt of the .w=~y: and that nlude a" of “B WW"- liulb was useless. Instead oficrs luad. 1t. was liievllllble they alllpulllling the surgeons had patch. should clash: this water buffalo ed him up so that he mum walk with no more manners than a jung- with his knee in the Socket of nfle cl-rleutllllre 112d can‘ (éhltlslterfleldlu: thesllite jll ge. s lo ru DTOGTBB - limb wagged uselcssly behind himlflli U10 Diary-Wine 111W?" "W" A finelittle gentlelllall wllll our and more overbearing when ThrQQ-lggged wimg A nun-e wlsplThreo-legged Willie exercised strict n1 g ma“ with u grqygl ‘ohm; headland impartial decisions ill the um] a law like a withered upple_ hllliiflfil‘ of evidence. 'l‘hero began remember that he always wore to be lllllrlllurs around town of what we used to cull a Prlnceftllg likelihood of o. "shootilf bee’ Alllvfl. will the way lllllt llfliileéfilsturtiug; for ollr Willie's temper muumuuu f MAKES THE WUMAN A Novel Dress Parade. er grew old. "it is the frock which makes the woman," intoned Mad- llnle ‘Ratmirova in French as she spoke an opening prologue to the display. Frock after lfrock followed in magnificent succession. A cream serge suit for summer wear had a skirt hull‘ accordion pleated and hallf tiered. Two largo red squares. one on the shoulder and one at the buck below the waist line, were re- vealed when thc Aveairer removed her coat and showed the jumper from which the skirt was hung. Like a blacksmith's apron rwas the front panel of squirrel skins down the front of lln oatmeal serge house frock. - - The most wonderful dress phan» tasy of the afternoon was an even- ing frock in velvet, the. colour of the bloom on growing bllberriee. The bodice was of gilt brocade hung with gilt tassels. (By Dominion News Service), IDNDON, April 5.-'i‘llere have ‘been many bizarre and freakish dress shows in London, but never one with such an exotic setting as that in which a famous French mediate showed his wares a few days ago, A bare-legged girl in a sou. shade cl‘ blue‘ with a grey- blue wig showed the guests to low divans covered in golden tissue. They were then waited on by a sleek-haired mannequin attired ill vivid hucd pyjamas, who initiated; them into the latest fashion lll cigarette smoking, ullmely the sat urlltion of a cigarette with heavily scented perfume introduced from a glass phlal. ‘ in one come;- of the gold nnd rose salon an orchestra played softly in another stood Madam Rutmlrovn, a celebrated Russian actress, ultir- ed in the picturesque garb of Nin on de l'Enclos, the woman who nov- WIFE liHil lllslllllllll lluslllilripulll nuns Youthful Lover ipsEluilty. . (By Dominion News Service) She even dictated letters lfor him foot had c! wflssllns inside the ll-lle llllllwn to have certain bounds guillllent to us youngsters. llejlllllll i; never quit his homo without chew” CllllliiX came in the court room ing pGfllllilS~rSOlll6 whispered he'll one lluy when the judge ruled all first time hundreds of thousands of Imbit this way and hull tlle peanut habit in its place. _You trying to get before the jury; evid- night, lie hall all unprecedented run of l-uck. and played lbig stakes, plac- ing $500 at lllluost every__play. Hie For Riflemen Ready acquired zoulll always trail Three-legged Willie llown under the ‘ flalning olualulcrs that used to line Locust Strlull. by tllc wisps of shells and bits of red gossnlucl‘ inner skill he left behind lllul. Another (luulllltnclls of our judge; he never, spoke above a whisper. Perhaps a bullet through his throat in the Itebcllion had induced partial paralysis. Long year... after Three- leggcll Willie went to his reward i knew another judge in New York, Justice (loft, who used to sentence u man to the chair in just such a whisper. Well, once our towll was all torn up over a bitter civil suit brought- before Three-legged Willie's court: —sclue mutter of contested water rights which had lcd t0 vicarious shootings and what our town call- ed “hcll-to-pay." Feeling ran very high. The selection cf a jury was a delicate and long drawn out llllliter. in the buck country sever- evidl-llco. the bullying lawyer as cllce llpon which the success of his case depended. The mun was on his foot. eyes flaming wrntll, lllouth pulling with thc exertion nf ’lll:-l roaring protests. Suddenly his right hand darted under his cont talils and he brought out n heavy '45 revolver which he laid on the counsel table, the muzzle bearing directly nt the white hcnd of the judge. Plluoks as if this here'd be about the only law null evidence in this case," he thundered. Three-legged \Vlllie peered down through his gold specks at what meullccd h-im with its cold blue cye. Then he opened a drawer in his desk and brought out two old fash- ioned navy revolver; which he carefully ranged to cover the inw- yer. “And this will be the decision PRAGUE, April 5.-Sellteuce of to leave behind to prove that she "l" ‘"°"'d bY long coat mus was u constant be'lb"'y°nd whim n‘ w“ dangerous mldeath has just been passed here on was unaware of his intention. Hilda Hanlllka, “a beautiful woman lSlle dictated these letters in hel- of demolliacltl character," fur pcr- llllnte, while ironing a party frock. snarling ller niuetccllyeltr-old in a letter to Ills parents Johann .. - -. - = - - - . l I _ , ‘once culul llllllsel, oi the drillk inadluulsuble polllt after point of cousm Johan“! newly m km m‘, was ‘nude to My that he was shoot‘ husband. Iicsely who said he loved ing ICuptlliu llallnlka ill order to gleiidllllllillikréwllltlx-llofifiéxflltillCetl to lllflfewilfilttililiu iiigilndfrotnl Cfilfl bolldlalglil. "s ) . le nyu c wo llcs wlcl it was revealed at the trial tll:lt'were not dictated] asking that his l" Bt-‘fiililffi eyfle‘ ‘ilillllllktl. could llu'i'.'lvolll'll(l horse be well treated and no Wrens. lie was profoundly Slrlfllllill. lllel-e Slmlilil ‘Elli lllllslc, "Wllicll red wllcu she told hilll alflcr two l love so much," at his funeral. years 0f married life. that she lvrue The other letter was dictated by desperately unhappy and that her the lwolunn herself.- husband was a "brute, and wouldl lAfier the murder, lbefore attempt not consent to a dlvorce. ing suicide, the boy went to a pho- lFor _six months she filled thenogruphens, so that his people, Lolvlielsilrcks-sl:oynlglthhetglasesoof gfilélylllg-llfilight have a picture of him alter 1 < -. e was oil-c. until the moment came wllcu be exq l-lo wail, however, arrested and claimed: "Th9 brute ought to brqcollfcssed to the murder, although killed! ' ‘denying that ills cousin hall ally- ...".l"i'.‘..lli.‘i.li’ll‘i.°“’f.‘ll “ll.2°.l"°‘l§£l§l'-i2‘ii° “l l“? “l; Th“ g?“ time and place for the murder \Shc.hllls btlexlullsltltltenllsedkfo xElgcllEyxyveyars lggignliilzlzgsgicllrzlde tllllrtpflohtllnun lilxlorllrlilfllllllrisonnlcllt lf(ll‘.(-30l]l])ll(.‘ll)$. ADDRESS AND PRESENTATION friend who has clldelrrcd hlluscll‘ to AT NORTH RIVER those with whom he has mingled as of thc court." he whispered. , (Copyright 1924) Breakers Ahead For Tokio TOKIO, April 3.--While the task of rehabilitation in Toklo is now well under way and the physical chaos wrought by the earthquake disaster may be removed compara- tively soon. Japan seems destined to experience a serious economic nlld industrial depression during the next few years. liowcvcr, a period of temporary prosperity is generally expecetd to accompany the reconstruction per- iod. The material loss of the disas- ter hns been placed at $500,000,000. and such n figure represents whut has been wiped out of existence and is not recoverable. 'i\he effect on the economic life 0i‘ the Japan- ese people is not an unmixed evil. for the simple reason that the loss creates a new demand and willie this demand exists there will be cir- culation of money and plenty of work to lbe done. Development after the earth- qunkc showed that the economic life oi" the country has not been paralyzed by the losses of the dis- aster: At lfirst the financial world was afraid of panic, bllt not a-bank 0i recognized standing has been re- ported closed. A score of smaller banks have not re-opened, but they were facing bankruptcy before tile earthquake. The money market is now apparently settled. Insofar as the ecenonlic aspect is concerned, it is fortunate that Tok- lo was never regarded as a great producing centre. it is a big con» sumptlon market. and the loss of the city represented the loss main- ly of commodities, which means dn- creased demand. ln a way the loss was welcome, ae it definitely end- which appeared to be reaching a serious point. Whatever prosperity is coming i0 Japan as a result of the cartil- Some New Rulings In Maritime Hockey Assn. (Canadian Press) TRURO, N. S.. April 3. ——At n meeting of the Maritime Amateur Hockey Association held here this morning lls preliminary to the meeting of the llinritlnle provincial branch of the Amateur Athletic Union of (lalladn. held this after- noon. it was decided over the sporting protest of President Walter C. UlShOD-OE Dartmouth. Alulltcur Athletic Association nnll by a vote 5 to 4 that for purposes of sport Dartmouth is not to be regarded as part of Halifax. On the announcement of the vote, Mr. Bishop left the meeting, declaring the ruling would drive Dartmouth out of aluateur sport. It was also announced that the M. H. A. would have complete con- trol in future of hockey throughout the provinces the jurisdiction of A. W. Covey President of M. H. B. A. A. U. of C. being limited to thc ls- suing of amateur cards. Canadian Women Win Out in Debate (Canadian Press) VANCOUVER, B. C, April 3—-In the first international women's de- bate evcr held in this city, the team from the Univorlsly of British Col- umbia won out, the losing debaters being students of the Willamette College, Oregon, Miss Minnie Caw- thornc and Miss Greta Mather of the U. of B. C. held the affirmative of "Resolved that the French should lulnlcdintely vacate the Ruhr Valley," yllld Miss Ester Moy- er and Ml!!! Elaine Oberg repres- Trappers and farmers stat-u till-y ‘Flake "W995 W1" be ‘Wren’ “mu” never Saw wolves so plenum] as illl, and economists who have stu» this winger/and [ma]; u would be died the situation contend that it a mistake m lower me bmmty must be followed by mreactiun and $40 on a m,“ m," ,5 15 pmnned by the glowing excess of imports over is to come. This tendency was not C m B’ m, Ad m" l m‘ brought about entirely -by the earth “Ema-L PM e8 Wu veg a quake, although since then it has been more marked than ever. Nor page“ h Wm!" to be mum any makeshift. in the opinion of ex- pert observers, FARM I-‘illl SALE Yfimembvr t0 preserve your good seem to indicate lack of care in "lme- which. once lost you will be protecting children from colds, he El 111011511 you did not exist. is farm consisting of 80 acres of e good land, 60 acres clear and und- m Balance cov- n" outed the Oregon college on the negative. Infant Death Rate is Low VANCOUVER, B, 0., April 3.—— an the tendency be arrested by The city's infant death rate in 1923 is considered very low. the medl- cal health officer giving it es 43 pel- thousand births. Deaths lfrom xports is merely one sign of what Thcush you lose everything else. respiratory diseases. numbering 38, thinks. - dis who does not know how to .____'....>..___ mploy leisure makes morsofa-bua- Everybody is subject to change us of it than there is in ‘bullpen so it cplnel to pus that everybody "5 is mortal. convenient to school. church and railroad stMlon and only one half mile from McMillan’; roller mills. Good buildings, good shelter. and never faillng well of good water; plenty of seaweed.“ foot of the feral. Fenced with wire" . you have. l y lll you!‘ 1107116 your kind and choc. A" fivent deserving or fllOrc than ry disposition will be ‘grelllly mill- lusual notice took place at the home sed by the members of your fum- of Mr. Charles Younker, North Riv. ily. er. when upwards of one hundred As a member of the community at friends of North River. Milton, large your absence will alsolbe grell Hampshire, Kingston and Yul-k tly regretted as you were ever reu. Point assembled to bid him fare- dy to render assistance in sickness well ‘are his departure for Alberta. or trouble of any kind with never The assembly was called to order a though of inconvenience to your» by appointing Mr. Ernest Warren, self. chairman, after which all address -ln closing we would ask you to was rend to Mr. Younker by Missulccept this little gift. not lfor its Grace Dockendorff, and a. presenta-Ivnlue, but rnihcr as a token of the tion of n valuable gold watch llyillgh esteem in which you are held Miss Ella Vlckerson_ Mr. Yonnker, by your friends. although taken lby Elffprfiqqlhaflk- ,We hope that_you will have a ed the donors for their generoug very pleasant journey and that you gift, ln his usual cheery and affable|will returll to us sometime in the manner. Immediately ‘after, Magtgrllléllll‘ future. Lester Yfillflkcl‘. on behalf of the Sizucd on behalf of your true pupils of Warren Grove School, friends. rvcad an address to Mast-er Freddie To Blaster Fred Younker- lounkcr. expressing their regret Dear Freddler-We, your school- nt his departure from the school in matcs cannot see you depart from which he was always a genera] fllv- us without giving you some little orite, and Master Clayton St/even- gift to show you how sorry we will 8011 presented him with a watch, feel over losing you. After the addresses and presentn- In school we will miss you very lions the guests repaired to the din-lunch from your classes but more ing room. where the well known so on the playground where you culinary arts of the ladies present were so agreeable and would al- were displayed and to -which all ways take your share of the did justice. ' The remainder oi‘ the "knocks" that fall to the lot oi’ the QVBMIIB Was spent in music and schoolboy without complaining. 811183118. A very pleasing feature of ‘Now please accept this little gift the programme was the singing of from us and hoping that you will be solos and duets by Mrs. A, 1C. Mac- as well liked lhy your future school- Eacherll and ‘Mrs. Everett Stevlcn- mates as you are by us. ‘ wit. also the singing of Mr. Davis We remain your loving friends, Ward. the accompaniment lbelng ‘Pupils of Warren Grove School Piflyeii by Mrs. Lemuel Ooles, Milt on. After bouncing Mr. Youuker and singing “For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" an evening which will long be remembered in the minds of those present was brought to a c1059 by singing the National All- them. FMWWHYE are the addressee: To Mr. Charles Youn-ker, Dear Charlie-We, mul- {new}; and neighbors assembled here this BVQ-llllllgalltlvlllg heard of your in- tended departure for Western Can- ada, feel that we cannot let you g0 from our midst, without in some Wily eXpresslng our kindly feelings towards you, Partings, whether they be for a l0"! 0r a short time are always We all wish things to go better Bad. lbut particularly more so, when with somebody else ilhnu with our- we are called upon to part with a selves. . glib- lOh, how contemptlble a thing is man unless he can raise himself above what is human. Detrnction and spits are received with eager oars. -Pcrpet~ual use at anything is giv- cll to no one, and heir follows ihelr as wave succeeds wave. lie will never be a hap y man whom it tormenls to see a appier. We hale tell hawk because the al- ways lives in arms. i IIUnLD-MOMILLAN: - We“ up!» ‘pl -' l . ‘all-l’ Visitor: "lo you've flvin your IOII a radio at!" Well lllreqsfe. wow/u can, its Mercury. in Canada. ' - w e afvfll‘. nag l: 0d. my - Wornen buy hosiery to-day with the safll¢ discrimination they displa of millinery or gloves. arc almost unanimous in in the choice at is why they their choice of \ No other hosiery combines to such a satis- ' g degree the qualities of perfect fit and urability that have made fastest selling line of high Mercury the dc hosiery merruryl/Killsfimifeii Jlamilfory- Canada ‘masses or noslzav Ana unocnwun. DseQLMwLvcQ-ssnmnmr-rlwgrs _ THE MINISTERING ANGEL PLUS NECESSARY KNOWLEDGE The Red Cross inaugurates Home Nursing Glasses. There is all age-old superstiti- tloll lilut any wolllllll, merely be- cause silo is u wonluu. cull minister to the sick null care alike for the lllfnnt null the aged. Poets have helped the illusion alollg, and most oi‘ us ill uur school days have fell an individual tllrob of joy over the lines. "When paill and anguish wring the brow, A ministering angel thou." But alas. when some of tile fam- ily nre really ill, or an epidemic of "flu" rages through the town or country, the lllost sympathetic soul in the world finds it hurd to cope tidy and uncomfortable. or to make mustard plasters that don't leak 0111. While a "full bed bath" seems as impossible us an aeroplane flight. Thousands oi‘. wolnen today feel tho need of some elementary in- struction in tile care of the sick. in the simpler forlns of nursing and in carrying out the doctors’ orders and the need is voicing itself through many organizations which gather together the women of our country for social and progressive purposes. The Red Cross Society through- out Canada is offering a course in Home Nursing. Care of the Baby and First Aid, thus giving a valu- able opportunity for women to make themselves better fitted for the great life responsibilities that rest upon them. The Prince Edward island Divi- slon has taken up this all import- ant work arld for the past few weeks has been conducting Home Nursing Classes in Summerside to a large nlld most enthusiastic group of women who find that the two hour period devoted to the in- struction, demonstration and. pract- ice of tho members flies past all too quickly. The llonle Nursing Manubl recently issued by the Can- aud contains information that everyone wants. The course la being organized in Charlottetown and will be held every Tuesday evening. if you llre not enrolled do not put it off mnother day. JOIN NOW. Women's institute, Women's Clubs or other groups who wish to have Home Nursing classes organ- ized in their districts should apply to Miss M. G. Wilson, Rod Cross Society, Charlottetown. ‘mom-i TORONTO. Al)?" 3.—lA meeting of retail coal dealers this afternoon decided to cut the price of coal in T-oronto one dollar a ton. effective tomorrow. making the rate $15, in- stead of $16. - é ATRAMP PUETS lllnulsl . (By Dominion News Service) GLASGOW, April 5.——A love of music has brought to u young Glas- gow warehouse porter a bequest of ncnrly $5,000. ' John tBoleyn, a wandering min- strclluld knife-grinder, who has died in n Glasgow model lodging-- unemployed friend. Johll Thomson. Tile money is in the shape of security bonds and cash. Boleyn was 65 years o" n1".- and suffered from a heart affection. l-lo had sold his grinder with the in- wlul lleull that are persistently all-denim“ of spending his last days in the country, but he was found dead in ‘his bed. die was well educated, and had contributed a n-umber of verses to various magazines. He had travel- led far, and when he ‘became too old for work in the shipyards he took to the open road. in the warm- el- weather he toured the Scottish villages with his grinder. life -met his heir casually several years ago; both were interested ill musical matters, and Boleyn ad- mired Thomson for being an ab- stained and non-smoker. Those who knew Boleyn are surprised to learn he had money. _ .__¢¢o>—'——- olvtv on: coop CATCH Terra Nova Captain Abram Kean, which was reported to to the week- end to have secured 17000 seals ap- local sealing fleet to have secured ll profitable catch. The Terra Nova has been badly knocked about in the ice. lScorea of tons of rafting does at one time poured over the little steamers rails, carrying away B0 feet oi’ her bulwanks, and in other ways damaging the craift. The llam- age has been repaired. The other six ships of tlhe fleet on the eastern coast an: either tightly locked in the floea, or else flnd it impossible to penetrate the ice ‘barrier interposed between them llnd the seal herds, on the lrlngq of which tile Terra_ Nova mun are working, The Eagle carries a small nir- plane, the aviator of which made a reconnaissance yesterday and re- ported sighting u patch of ice four miles by eight on which was a herd oi’ seals computed to number 50.- 000. These animals. it is reported, are safe from the hunters union a heavy sou arises, as the molt pow- erful ice breaker afloat could not penetrate the doe. A Sure Relief For 1o mwv racumiur Inn Women's -WL_:“YAOI¢‘ 1m .0101“: m-n lmllllyl» n. 4pm the uul, Iomll. i .~a-_ g. lib treatment h baud onltriotly udcutlflo principles Iotunllocatldnofthodiconlqttoannot ‘ aflcnuloumtflominotudlngdollyd undpdnrul GUM! house, has lelft his savings to ane ST. JOHN'S, Nlild., April 3.-—'l‘he ‘ pears to llle the only ship of the-