lllllllsl IIIIIIIEIIIIIII IIIIIII WIIlll-i-IIIBS” Illl Flllll llalllclno cyjulL *’ Tweak T“, v‘ or firth! digmtlfl of food, gross»?! ._fl)e' meet eel-lbs: of prudent-deg ‘ pIaInh-beeeuaeitlsrenpouaible " many cerium troubled. ' .l‘wunali-lnt,Pllfi'lction qfmflws M!!! endures-rive Nenvaluncss, _“Fruit-a-tives" will always rerieve - Indi, I . ulereese the flow of the digestlvd juices and correotConstipotionJhieh 1 lllually accompanies Indigestion. l we a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25o, JAE dealers or sent postpaid by ‘Fruits-tires Limited. Ottawa ‘run he desired. Indeed so promis- Fire Sale All shades in stock, .1. sold at half price. . $1.50 to $1175 shades H: for 75c. A t’; t '3 light fixtures, com- _. plete with shades $7. ' 2 light fixtures, coni- plete with shades, $6. S. Mclsaac & Sons s. In: Queen ‘Rreet Phone 722-J ~nnev w» UNION CAFE QUEEN ST. bpen from 8 a. m. until rafter because these tablets, ‘ lfiengthcn the stomach muselu . .1Il:lt one wonders why it. Was bec- jlnllnngenlent in v-iew of tbc ,~ port, we wonder what is ‘.0 comet l, \\'.'l_\" matters. v . . ' w . - ‘ Int-stern (IHIMIIII :.~ conl-c-ruexl ZIWIIIHQ] paw n-r.|-1,-..d_ “yo “tppg bmught I ‘ . ‘Ave llllrl- no doubt the eastern sec-fur; h; H‘? hlnliyu" mm the m,“ for. time IIIIIIIIIIITETIIWILIIUIIIIIIIII rzflrazi. “fllmdb ‘r; art": IIIIIIIII Dally (In nieal I38!) QILOQ i533 per you (lulled) In advance Iilr Charles Dnllen. Prrllileuf, l. ll. Burnett, Illlllor lll| Pulllllhen D- K. Currie. Alloelufe Hillier. I - _ l WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1922 I 5 time rlor Elie help to apply It If we bad. The cash value or‘ these neg- haw liAulwAv eoAno ' let-ted acres ls lying Idle. The mer- chant who, would leave half his stock on b-ls shelves from yrcnr t.» Fear would n01 have lnug to wall l ‘ The new railway board ha: re- Jurnrd from Its western tour of TIIIIWZLV: inspection and repor! s l matters In a most promising : H p i t l H ‘ I ifm‘ bankruptcy. The farmer with - “ - . ' . I t > "l: ill. 1mm.‘ an H‘ w ) " U ‘ * ‘his hundred acres of hind. mak- ‘of the various stuffs. nf Illa putrid-ling a living o" ha“ of it “my be w; z ‘ " . th. II d tl , ““"_“l°“" u: in“ w“: an‘ (‘eibankrupt and not know it. He can -. ll rs goo 3:5? l 0-. ' gt e I w man e- m ‘ h k h d I {continue to live on from your wrst "1' r f. s! I h H e ml M; m) H g 1m“kl."enr, working hard, nlaklllg no . to - - w m“ q c lmoney nnd letting stock and farm ‘up duscnblulrufizln‘halibut-ome- Iess and less valuable IIII tll u! last. he is obliged to give it ‘LFIIISOIIIB. Equipment, , . Jlllll truck ling is tbs whole railway situation _ up. If be sire-re to expend hls ener- ‘gles on a frw of his ar-res he _ could inake money. m. cssnrj‘ to make a change in the l ~'I‘bls lesson was learned by our b loversens men in Erance. There V. " they saw the French peasants liv- iinl.’ comfortably on four or flve acres of land. every Inch zanltivat- II Ilanlla the former rbairlnun and _ ' ' g led and every inch producing to It s to the former board. When o, lutnvost capacity. recall the continuous carping (“HI-I Th“ m) mom“ a renew Ition upon the ‘ large farm. The m“ “a-Vfllnom land a mlm has the better "m! fimLprovlded be is using II to the tIll-ul all belied by the present re-‘ibpst fldvantagm Mum, 0f m“. farm tors are llblc to do Ihls but they {can-a to It by a slow process of (years, each your ‘adding a flel-I filer-stood the rails-ll)" situation alzdjiln the already fertilized ones but know how to handle ll bus Ileeninaver ‘pagan; peed or mm, the opinion of all fair minded illbllilfleltlg 11ml Qould not glvp a -wIl<: have kept in tnlull with rnll- gm-m Ttml I . borzltctl h_\ [be rl-purt w‘ ‘l-lt‘ ruil- icrezlsed cost Involved and lbc sat ‘Iflflltllflfy conditions revealed the inspection. _ It is u belated tribute to Mr. I). w p is by lil-lslu endured b,» the late bolfril. the obstacles thrown In the prejudices created IIPXI. 1‘ "Fbzll. .\Ir. llllnua lborougilly IlII- (III 1'5‘- t“ "MY “‘-~"" \\'c hove been grent Innd vrast- g-rs and eve-n yel with all our PX- ‘_\\'-'\.\' INHIWI. til lens-t u» far as Ihrlpcrlence many of our farms are ltm" M“ h“ found equally HRI-lB'-tiIizl-l~ \\':|~' l“I!‘II vurd manure and lappolnterl to his present. ‘position oo-eooiooeooonoeoooee-e-w Notes By The Wily ‘a. _ eoooe-eooeloooé C ‘,‘ u Turgepn, M.P., for Gloucester. xa, has been nnrvlfi- ted w mo Selulte oi‘ (Ianads it! u representative of that Province. Mr. Turgeon was born at Levis, Q. In 1840 and educnwd in, that pmvlnce. A journalist by profes- sion he was first elected to’ the House nf Uomulobs In 1900, and ‘bl-a been continuously elected since. Tllc sent in the (‘luminous thus made vacant Is pipbibletlu solo for the governnlelyy New Bfilllflwltflfi. ‘ ._ L" Sluice tile vacancy in the Semhtb occurred there has huen much spo- culutlon as I0 which of a number of aspirants would race-Ive the coveted appointment. Among the number tile mnne of Hon. William Pugs-lay, now Lleutanuntr Govern- cr of the Province and fonncrly Minister of Public Workr ‘n the Laurler Administration has been prominently mentioned. I-le was Ill Noveruber 1918 and one year 0f his regular ofllz-lat term lat-here- fnrsVuttexplred. His re-entry upon political Ilfe haul been confidently expected by ln.lny 0t‘ his numer- ous friends. v For a 200d while past it llglz) been thought tllul the present Gov erumentfls support In the Selmte. ‘vuhlch IIIL~I been hitherto weak lfl numlbcl- and ubllllj‘, lulgbt be great ly strengthened by t-be appoint- ment of Hon, I71‘. Pugslcy there- to. coupled with a portfolio In the cnlblnet. His political zlblllty. shrewdneeci and DITIYUIIIPIIY are admitted by all and It was be ljevel] that the goyernlnent desired Ills assistance. _Wb,etbcr the sel- ection of My. Tin-goon is duc m tuba v- zrown robsnnmusidcbij. 0-: new» The PubliqForum ‘flue lumn In open for the Ileeuealen by w" upend- ente of quutlene of Inter- Q The Charlottetown Guardian don not Muel- erlly endorse the oplnlone_ Qxpcinuel! by m oerrne ‘ ponflintl. g fQQOQQ-oe-eoeoeeoeeeeoeee-O-e Wrong Sh‘ ——'l‘l'lere bus been u good deal. OIL-ed lal rcnnunents in (Ianada on. the erroneous news wbdht'~l_\\y‘_\\'rallgel Island,‘ cxpe. dltlqn sent our. from New York 5931B. ’ weeks ago. I told the re- Ilflrter‘ n substance that we had fi fungi-I Island a colon-y which We ‘Dwposwl to lnalnulln lndefln; "BIY. In my opinion \Vl'a,ngel' l5. land-wlll never hereafter be un- “Pllflbitaletl. I sold the Teddy Bear had been despzltcbcd to Wrange] Islsnd- with additional supplies and reinforcements. She curried three ‘white men and a party of Eskimos who were Io have been landed on the Island to remain there together with such of the Party already there as might prel- 9!‘ staying a second Yezlr. In case of Illness. honlesickness or for any other 'l‘I-‘llSOIl. only of the men already on the. island were to come out ir they wished. The HIEHHOII of navigation of the polar ocean is not long, especially ll! unfavourable years. My expedi- tion Wus prlrutelj/ financed. more than ninety per cent. of tlfe mon- o)’ belnl: furnished by ulyself untl' the rest b_\‘ personal friends. The expense or it considerably exceed- Bll my earning for llle lust your and, in consequence. I was forced to attempt borrowing money. I did not flnd this eusiv. and all my banknble securilles bad been pledged. When finally I secured the necessary money, the proper stilling time for the Teddy ‘Bear was ulrcnrly u nlontb past. Our failure to rvucll Wrungal Island was due, therefore, primarily to financial difficulties and only sec- ondarily due to the fact that this the dominant influence of Quebec in the cabinet, or lo Dr. Pugsll-y‘ trboive to rcloin his present. DIISI-l tlon, tlu- public ILFI‘. left to guesml lFIVu (I-llcrrll |)_\’l‘-I‘ll‘('[IODS llreto ht.- llelrl In the neilr fullIr-e by rm- ;unI.lvnul~.lbIt\ one. year happened to be zln especially -AII this and more I explained to the ‘New York reporter, but his no-| none of the terrible Arctic luust have Ilci-n very strong upon him. fonwllat I l-ullurl u supply ship he referred to in IIIH ncvrspapt-u‘ (IP24- l-‘on of the» death or resignation ofi the slttlltg nlembele. These are to; be held on the some (lay according. to estftbllsltPrl practice, the polllngl on IIIICQIIPIII-II‘ 4 and the nomlnn- llsland. Also ll.» YIIIIGII to patch u.» l-Tn-sctlc ship" and ill- stead-dlf sauina: that ‘lllv suppffes had failed to rcuub - \V'rangel Is- land. be said that a relief ship Ilml falle-d to re-u-ue‘ the men from the explain. us I hurl dune this when you buy King Cole Tea you are sure-sure. of ‘that full rich flavor that has won for it its widespread sale. “You?! like the Flavor" Are you sure of the tea you are buying? Take ‘advantoac >of: Pawns. .3 n, / is Price Savings- ‘ 358135179335 , i Ladies Coats Dresses Clothing Stockings 1'. . Underwear Waists and Men's Furnishings 1W!‘ 0N5 LTD- ‘l7 Wulll Illlllllllulllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll‘ 't'lu:t.ur_v. And ycl lbe mnu whorwc IWYPT "("11" IPPUIIY-P m"? than lions twu week's ,.ay|i¢.r_ pnm- Qfl Aha‘ ‘mwpl-v- ._ . midni ht. . _ a ‘brought the .~"_\\l|-nl ‘In Ibis Pltllllqlllrtw‘. or four acres a Willi Thfll the flve seats were held by Inb- - . Quick Lunches And aunt-ill‘ ru- r- . _ . __ 0 " fluyeldr I‘IIIIILQ(T‘IIIHII'OQ:'Q:Q\ l1:“l‘£:;le s)?" shown by the experiences 01 the. incltller as u spa-cue to shun nor us! , _ , T“ 1m‘ one h _ Conqervativ‘, ma‘, {guild ,l_{"lmliill'qn‘ll' ‘(.,l_llfinel'l‘t>tlllj' 134ml‘. That comment. u- -S0lIIOI.lIlIIg like an easy way out ol . _ [ho-agfs h“ gm". hp (‘onjnuafrqal fat-qr l s . y .1 - 11nd hue" m‘ M“ m] H" It n F ' h, ,1 juslified on the basis ‘of the uens- llt. There mus-L be sane preparation. ondlTha ‘mmmt “m” "W" mmaflhomtf ' n "a m ' 3 ‘hlpzlpur stories. The trouble mm The sacrifices of marriage must be flMel-zantlc and iently satisI':l\-lllr_v l-ulldliml. I ‘nmn to whose thorough kllm'lcllge.hll7'e'fi ha“ 97mm“ m‘ “m” as good l-l-rbnnce of being safe amdl . . . nos Cartier.‘ . Jam gallve aml- well u grunt" Irunl now us that those sloldtls did not corres- reullzed. 'l‘he.re cannot be two mnsw pond with the facts, lend-lug tbc "tors tn serve ill our religion. The é lénptlow the poorest flclrl" on the farn I to full capacity Dinners All home made baking In- “ eluding pies cf every descrip. tlon, cake. etc. Ice Cream served, Glve us a call. We wlll please you. All, *600l~7-rnusSattutf.. d] Daily Selections fol Iillardlan lteadels From the W. 3. Leugg” collection I '. THE GREIAT SILENCE By Balllol __$almon. silent-e Street; y The ‘Mt-‘FIJIIIIIILIIIIIII at sea a mom- em SIOWUtIZ The Flag is dipped throughout the anchored Fleet, in the noisy - \~q-I'u4.- .’-l»-..-1~.~»»;+-;"‘* 2A grove salute. bend- ISucb sl-mple syntbols we would freely give 1n grateful Ylnemonv Ous lad Who sac fired their we might. Llvo. a baring of the nl‘ the Glori- all lhnt HAI-Ll-JAND FAREWELLI t‘ They died that we might Ilve—— ', Hallb-And Farewell! ' a-AII honour give ._ To those who nobly ptrlvlng nnbly fell. ‘ That. we nllxht. live!‘ ' That we might. Ilve they (lied:- ‘Hllll-vlnd Fnrewelll é-Thelr courage tried. By every mean device of treach- _ _ erous hale. » Like Kings lhr-y died. ‘Eternal honour glve.— BAlI!-—-—AnrI_. Fflrewcll!—— r ulfo HIOEEyWIIO died, “m; (p15, fiplt-pdour of lifld - It $1M I hérolc -wll.s not l-VOII given a plat-c on thoimmhlctm" l" W" Y“‘“'“‘ with ‘ new railway board simply Ilecziuse,g°“d crop 9"?“ the first rem“ _ ‘ If flmse n; us who are shot-t nnseclns to be little probability dint ‘ the balance I-{nugo of (iommmm wm be ma-lscnrcely‘ more tllull boys and bud‘ Igovernlncnt. Yet, we are In Ilelleve ‘ the experiment of chemically fer-Italian), disturbed‘ ~ |lllIlL the management of the Can-; fol‘ the l'.'lilw:l_\' and his excel I JMISIIIPSH albllit)’ llll lllls is oar-Fla" M’ "(W111i {be \'.';l.< ‘m zlppolntce of the late I lhelp and Ion: on land would try‘ ltillzlng two or three acres lyeur int-re would be feumr . . . . . och ladlun Mltlomll Railways has been ‘j I I IIllkPII out of politics! v pom“ ' There lire/many things we ar-allarms and fewer vacant ones. asked to believe in these satrennl nus days but which. strive as wot will. refuse to lzo down. It. ls m-all- , m“ h°w°""r' ‘° m“! M” ‘ates’, On this side of m.» Atlantic Ilttle “mum ‘mm m Mr" Hanmt H ‘Interest Is- taken In British politics ‘xfhjmunny contradicts an mp cN-gexcept In cases of national rrlsls. til-ism levelled at hlln during hlszTha present mammal cnmpnlgn ordinarily In- Irlcumbency and lrffords room for-its hope that hlls optlltllstlc outook or. lwmatmg Jammy perhaps because Railway‘: Um ,of the fact that the government w“ (“My justmem ‘and the premier that, alone of all No doubt thenew railway hoard 1M Mum govemmems and lead‘ ' . h P I Ed l1 1 . m“ ghwly’ vii “f: b W3; ‘era. survived the war are fighting ' s an . e rus we s a e - lfor their political lives. Lloyd Geo pared for them. The situation here ls not satisfactory. The east and. Me lforcmost figure In world politics. ._.__¢oa---- ‘BRITISH POLITICS more than Canadian National lge, who has been forlslx years a crest ends of the province given ll service thnl Iallttlelfunyd“ 119w "p “gum” lt- Wm he on .wln out? At this distance l1 would . th t. h n t. Brltlnh our railway‘. counts for notblnglaprcfr a etcmtlmi Fme to whim , op n on appears o e u _ h ‘ m mnway ' the contuuslon that. It ls time fm- a . f’. means numb hm" 0 r ‘change. Sympathy In Canada wlll the Inaturnlly go out. to the great (Lan- rond. Those uud some other mat-l be“ b l d b to the; zldIan Bonn-r Law who has ters must e Dace. e re - It arrives, oven Iletter than n0 service. Time unless It he "overtime" men and to the putronu of mhoson as the best. possible suc- mard when H: cr-slsor to Illoyd George, Should M m“ Pxppnsu n! placing one mo‘: the latter be turned down be wlll m‘ a“ otherwise ‘mammoualy Hflhnot no down without sympathy Igfnclnry report‘. even from Carladlans. Lloyd ‘George has at. present lelght-flve ConnervntIves-umd one hundred ‘and olmy Liberals of ole illn- ‘coalition govermen remaining loy- More and" more the farmers In; nl to hlm. Ilow many wlll "come this province are lncllnlng ycerlylback" to the session of the House towardsr Intenlllve farming. Exp"! of Commons slated for November once has proved that one acre ofl 29th It would l" "MIMI I0 Predict- pmpel-Iy cultivated and properly, fertilized land produces more thou sovernl hnlf neIJectetl acres and ' at Iv" 00H 0! "m6 5"" “hm”; The Intent development In wIre- Moreover. thr- omdv" 0f W" cflylese le Illustrated In en exchhnxe tlvatctl lend ls of betler_ quality, dawn“ “WW1” m, gamer s". and lYrlIIIlB n Ila-tier price In 11w‘ ml; comfortably In hle study rev/I market In; a book: his team of horses we have mr many rears hwl plowing In ‘a fleld some dlstlnce -Iend hungry and land nodr- FIN)‘ away. ench with n radlpdlxture on orelxty acres of e hundred acre m; Med, the farmer ‘dleeelllnz mm m um ms realm w» them wllglwly fromdllsstudy. ve not puffleleot fertilizer v pithy" illblfhpfflfffOlfllhyOdl Ill < i INTENSIVE FARMING -— DITORIAL NOTES lwlck and Halifax 1 these t-lonte-sts arc to be held lnl ummllnc-n on the island llzld been mem- imur difiemn‘ lbers of my expeditions ‘except In IAII-‘Ifk, Ont- whore Quebec; Gloucester, New Bums-NJ"? rp!)orteln us. Althouzhlclty- dweller. provinces of parties Ill the‘ ‘ l would appear probable l [1 Ihati iln these several elections so far,p(ij‘lpnfed as they may be contested tbcrnn- (Ildates wlll represent the two old parties, Conservative and Liberal. ll Progressive was the most formid-I able opponent o! Ihe late ('onser-. votive mom-her at the general el- ection In December Inst. Neither the Progressives nor the IIIIIIJDI‘ party arc expected to put forward any candidate with much prospect of success at the blyeelectlons in Quebec or the Maritime mnteat-x. Progressive mndldates there may be however, If only with the db- ject ol’ absorbing votes and turn- Ing the scale In favor of govern- ment candidates. The late Kaiser, Wllllam Holl- enznllcrli, now In his 83rd year. hits been glv°n much publlcltyln connection with Ills projected sec- ond marriage to the Princess Her- rnlne. He has Toad many troubles during the past eight. years. After the war, which did not. turn out as be had expected, he fled to Hol- land. abdicated his throne, lost bls wlfe nnd ‘has since spent IIIS years in lonely exile. For s tlm-"e he sawed wood for exercise and has since written his memoirs. per Imps to the satisfaction of his co tcrle of Junker followers, taut oerullnly not to the majority of readers throughout the civilized world. Since the conclusion of that ar- duous task be has apparently lnld Away lull pen along wllb his buck- eaw and ls now pining for the joys of cnnhublltl Illa. The more youthful companion of his choice, much to Ills dismay and sorrow. ls now said to be unwilling to share ‘his company and Ills exlle at Doorn for more than four or flve months of the year. We are told that he ls worrying a 500d deal about this. It Is not surpris- lnB that he worrleaj-‘ew even of the humblar ones among his for- mor subjects would be willing to take Il-‘WIIB on such terms.‘ wol- thirty years nu wlll bed ‘been the supreme law In Germany. New It ls set at naught by a wom- ln. ‘the one woman of hi cholcbl j Bile may perhaps pIeIIQm-hoflelf [more ‘than ll few months at a time OI’ I III‘ 1III_\'- IIVPTILQE.‘ I I pointed out. thnl some of tbcl IIEIII: and ‘ been as fond of the Arctic as I! was. while two of the party are; n ever" been Itume for I I before. tlIFfY joined our expedition, I said ll was certain that. the cx-I men would enjoy tbel second winter but It. was possible, that the new ‘men might be home- sick. In the‘ Ovent of extreme llolnflslckness, I said the two men might possibly next Fdbruar)‘ travel across the Ice fronl Wrang- cl Island to the nlalnlund and thence lo Enllua Harbor. Tbls would be an easy‘ journey, as can be seen by comparing it. wltll uur numerous journeys where m"- have travelled from Ilve hundred to n thousand nulls-s ovelanllnllar Ice, or worse Ice than the one Ilundrcd miles between Aldo and Wrangel Island. Once on the mainland they would find an unbroken ebnln of habitation —- American traders. Russian traders, wealthy deermen Iisklmo hunting camps. etc. The whole journey across the nortb- oust‘ corner of "Siberia. can be made from house to house sleep- ing every night In comfortable dwellings. In ‘the Arctic we are misc-d to travelling three or four months of a time without ever seeing a trace of Ilulnnn habita- tion so this overland travel athoss northeastern Siberia cannot. be consldvred- difficult. It would bf! expensive however. and would bring these young men nut to elv- Illzntlon only about n month enrl- ler than had they remained on the Island tlll next summer. when fill- unclal condltlons- wlll certainly al- low us to despateh our sblp in Ll-me. . . This statement. about. the new and homesick men p~v-‘=§Il‘.,v.goIn_.; m the mainland. the reporter twisted Into saying tlnr the ex- perienced men might leave the younger men on the Isllnd. nnd make a heroic journey to Siberia In search nf-nsslstnhvo. "ll condi- tions became »l-"*'\"l' " I "":l't tblnk zhe rep “Isl. HIP-WI m = .|_,-- anything ,- ~.‘_ '. x-n» .. "‘ill "polar (um.- I \" o‘. '~ v.1 pellet] him to {rand-lu- n Slllilll‘? statement automatically into her- olo and ghastly terms. As the- newspaper (Iespatchcs In formed you at the time. the Can- ndIan Govern-meant. dld advance us $8.000 , but tlmle was; only about m; m; c9311., of the total expen- diture for the expedition. Ifurtbcr- more.‘ It come so late In the sum- mer that It dld not move forward the selling date of the Teddy Bean. Considerable editorial comment In Canada has been to the effect u wuy from Men ab: only" onto mutt“ she A will “eleeve" for tour?» flve months ' twelve. -Prelul,llnblj' _ b6 agreed to In Indore, Ipnmfwelld o . .hIm In ,In IIIIIICI that any story lcr In guiding any exprcssiolt, you, -.wlth worldly goods-r The menu-ash, that. the worthlesnlleell of Wrangel A d and ‘my folly have been‘ v- lllor ddoes not. tolerate hybrid al- lliances ol‘ sentimental piety and un- ahout the christian frivolitv." polur regions which come through, “There is the typo of woman to-‘ the press is several tithes ul0r€"dn'_v," continued Father Itulantltxl likrb’ l0 b9 lllvoluflfll than all OFLWVIIO likes to Ilave audacious slal- tlinors’ .I1I‘VI'5D?IIYPI' lwu- TFhls ls lueltcs null pictures In decorate. her‘ 011v OI UK‘- Efeflt IIIHICUIIIIJS welhoula and Imagine that this is ad- Imve who are comltlctins a (‘flm-‘mlsslble if sllc Iulugs a crucifix on DllilIu (FY1118 t0 CTIIIKIIKBII Cmlfifillltbe some wall. She kneels piously about the real nature of her nortb- ‘bet-me a Madonna in the tnorning 91'" ll"l'l‘lifll‘lflfi< In the IIIIETIIOOII she provokes the l ill" WFIIIIIE IMF 1911013 11°Pl"3-passers-b_v datrlng looks IITHI lung- yon wlll flnd it of value now or lut- luape." Father Ilalunde verbally rhzlsllz- may (rare to make about Cnnzldzlfislpd those who rel-use nml-riflge m,» W110)’ III h"? DOW‘ ‘10111-“11- purely egotistical purposes. He had l ""1, 3U"- PUY- words of advice for ‘whose about V' STEIFANSSON to IIIIIPTY." and it svus not. llt all like _"*""_ Iblr. P-uutllfs. lle deplored the pres- Inslnflemty IIP |ent way of brlnlzlng up __children to t Idominltte, Instead of llulfllng them Marriage Fatallwhtitl they are anmll nnd teaching MONTREAL. ‘Oct. |lbeln when they are snlzlll IlIId 3I.~"\\'btlt teaching them obedience. Flrlclly he Shall we do with our (Iii-Is nntltspukt‘ at some length on the dan- Doys?" Witlh ullis title to his Icc- gel-s of forcing the adoles time ture. Rev. Father Louis Lnlnndc. S. s. vocation. Tile ohlld, he sol ,must J., addressed ll large audience in Sulbe carefully" studied, and carefully bluffs 9011989. IWt- mwmm“ "*-‘*|§uided into the sphere of livelihood lnzllnlng stnlctly witbln the frlnnelwlllcb ls to be its future. Above all, 01' hi8 Suble rlfl. but inking occcsionhe warned, do not. demand of o I0 deliver 80H"? PIIIIKPIII relnurkslchlld I0 join priesthood or a Ilfe of. about modern fatully llfe, the valz- isolation from worldly pleasures as arles of the young men and wnnlen a. mln.Thc (zhlld, better than parent, of the day and the mlsgtlitlerl Pllllld, wl-ll nnderntnntl when the time FQSIIIIIYIR‘ "Om lll-lllfllfill (‘OIIIIIF-‘l. comes as ll dld to St. Pun], whether I-‘ltther Ilallutde spoke before an lire should be consec “ted to the audience consisting of parents. pre- Church or not. ‘ lntcs and other church officials. to- gether with severalbuntlr ed of the boy pupils 0I' the college. who tilled all the buck seals. The speaker. _ with veiled Irony and wholly wlth~ out any effect of preaching, develop- ed hls subject. luterspersing It with anecdotes. to the (Ie-llglllt of the children, and reserving bls words of advice to the rest of‘ his aud- lence In language couched In terms or Ilmcs ambiguous to the young- sters. but not to pe mlflundurstooll. by the older ‘generation. ‘Two pictures wen-A drawn In editors. to wrong (EUIICIIISIUIIH. I hope that you will always keep —~~€O-}—-~-— MIGHT COME A CROPPER "Say, Uncle Jlm, when -I get big- ger ‘may ‘I ride your Jlorse?" asked 4-year-old Ralph. “Why. Ralph." replied the aston- querled the little fellow. lshed uncle, "I haven't any horse.” “Then wbut dld mammo. ‘mean when she said you Iuld been rldlng your high horsetoo much lately?" By»: Drowning. GLOUCESTER, MBHFL, Oct. 31.4- lCzlptzlln Bert De-mone, of Lunen- burg, N.‘S., a member of the crew of tlle International fishing schooli- er Blucnose, whose body was found In the Ilarbor here Frlday morning- met death by d-rownlng, Medlcul Iixllmlnel- I’. T. Moore. announced last night after an autopsy. An Inquest Into, Demonds dent-h was held yesterday at the request of the Canadians who, came to Glou- cester lo attend the International series. The bearing was In private. and no decision was announced. Wllllnm I-I. Dennis, owner of the Ilallfax Herald, and donor of the International llshermelfs cup; .I-I. R. Silver, of Halifax, chairman of the trustees; A. H. Zwlcker, of Lu- nenburg, one of- the owners ofthe Bluenose. and ‘Captain Angus Wal- ters, of the champion schooner, who was also Demon's uncle, tro- malned here for the Inquiry. Tribute To Dead ‘ Member Of Crew, LUINENIBIJIRIGII Oct. 31.——T.Ile In- ternational champion fisherman Bluenose arrived at her home p01‘! here this ‘morning from Gloucester. Her homecoming was marked by deepest silence In memory of the dead-member of her crew, Captain George ‘Demons, who was drowned at Gloucester Thursday night. The body of ‘Captain Damone, accom- punled ‘by Captain ‘Angus Walters. ls expected Ilerc tomorrow on board the Canadian‘ destroyer Pat- rlol. There wlll be no celebration of the Bluenoee victory untll after the funeral of the deceased fisher- man. ————-¢-o>—-i— ‘In Brlstow. Okla, a hotel was dynamlted. Rumor says several hotel steaks wore-badly ‘bent. ' words, w contrast the good and bad In family Ilfe. with the result- ant unsatisfactory bringing-up of the children In the latter case. Father Ilalande dwelt on the happy family; old-fashioned enough to lhsve fall-h In God: consequently at dl-ast contained. If not overloaded I MEMBERS: "The V01"!!! woman ‘who poses] for effect; “who relies on‘ her per-g sorlal cbarm,tolletlé or eccentricity] of nlanner to become so much the , object of attraction Fthat she ba-I comes the wife of some man. ' "The .\'0"I1ll man so often met with today. Hcslmtlng m form a home for pecuniary reasons; weak nllurnn, n". ls. _ llberbmolre JOHNSTQN ANDWAILII), MONTREAL srock ‘hkfiftknois TORONTO STOCK axqllason: MONCTON, N, on,‘ _' Mlnltnnl, l‘. nun-ea wile cent-nukes. Q - JIIIT-‘lil-Ihil of character. dcvold of solid falth In the Above. These two married. How are the children brought up In such surroundings?" . .._ BASH MARRYAGES "There r I . ‘ I stud Fathl; “brill-lug!” "am-aha; the lbur of llbe moment; by 1m. rum. an they Ilka w call It. rlley meal-ally end with the flgrgnjgl drifting Wart. ml lire ohl-ldrenl eufferl p? rm- -‘ "~ ‘m, ." ,-. , ~l~ . ..'.l m" "I PM rancher. ‘ WJ-qw-‘r. I It rumbled um lint elm was wllfulu err‘ other’ lfflfi-Il ml