PAGEFOUR THE GUARDIAN Authorized as Second Class Mail Post Office Department, Ottawa. The Isliind Guardian Publishing Co. CIRCULATION l l I l l'ut all City Zone 3,165 i, Rf-tiiil Trading Zone 8. All Otlwrs 8'37 Total Net l'-ziiil . 13.0491 President and Associate Editor. fun A. Burnett. I Associute Editor. Frank Walker. "lhe Strangest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink". Iii".-iitLori'i:'rt)w.V. sarunoar. SEPT. :9, i351 Rural Beautification The keenly contested plowing niatchesl at Dundas this week have been followedl with Province-wide interest. A less dram-I atic form of competition-which does not hit the headlines until it is all over-ist that which has been so ably initiated and! developed by the Rural Beautification So- city. The results of the Society's 1951 competitions appear in today's issue, and, while it is the winners only who are men-! tioncd-individually and by communities-- the others who competed are also to bei warmly commended on their efforts, andi congratulated on their success. They liavei all won something, and have contributed; not only to the improvement of their owni homes, schools, and surroundings but toi the Province as well. Great credit is due to Johnstonc, president of the Society, which he was chiefly responsible for bringing in-i to existence and to which he has given! such inspired leadership. His own beauti-l fui farm grounds at Long River are among the most attractive in the Domin-, ion, and draw hundreds of admiring visi-l tors annually. ; As time goes on, rural beautificationf will pay greater and greater dividends. It is something our pioneer forefathers could not undertake because they had more: pressing duties to perform, in hewingl homes out of the wilderness and providing' the bare necessities for themselves and families. Today we are in a more favored position. and have a duty as well as oppor- tunity of making this Garden Province a scenic paradise as well. By doing so our farmers are finding that charm and utility go hand in hand, and that it is profitable as well as pleasing to have onels home surroundings beautiful. Colonel E. W. Priitestant orphanage Drive Once a year the Protestant Orphanage makes a drive for funds in aid of the work being carried on in this essential institu- tion, and invariably the response is prompt and generous. This year the appeal is be- ing made on Monday next, and it is to be hoped, will meet with a still greater mcas; ure of success. Under present conditions the problem of financing is most difficult, and can only be met by wholehearted public support. It should not be necessary to labour the point that without voluntary support, solicited through voluntary workers who year after year devote their time and ef- forts unstintedly to this humane work, our orphanages would have to be taken over by the government. and run at the cost of additional taxes. The result would be more bureaucracy and-we venture to say-con- siderably less efficiency than has been dem- onstrated in the operation of both our orphanages in this Province for years past. A Christian democracy that leaves no scope for benevolence and charity is a misnomer. These virtues are essential to the Christian way of life, and they can be exercised in no better manner than in aid- ing the less fortunate children of the com- munity, by providing for their proper care and upbringing. It is a privilege as well as a responsibility to contribute to Mon- day's campaign, while on a strictly cash basis it represents an investment in human lives of incalculable benefit to all concern- ed. British Health service The United Kingdom Information Of- fice has made available some figures in con- nection with the National Health Service which is doubtless being warmly debated in the general election campaign now under- way. According to these figures, one would assume that Britain is a nation of people who require a great deal of medicine, spec- tacles, dental service, other medical at- tention and supplies. For instance, prescriptions dispensed by the pharmaceutical service to'the people of England and Wales alone up to the end of May this year number more than six hun- dred million. An estimated 19,500,000 were supplied with spectacles and more than 23,- 600,000 received dental treatment, with an estimated 7,000,000 dentures supplied. The report reveals that approximately 41,200,000. or about 95 per cent, of the . population have joined the lists of about .,'19,m0 general practitioners (88 per cent of the total) in the National Health Serv-than in .1950. ice. Virtually all the pharmacists working in the service, and 95 per cent of the dentists. It is obvious that the National Health Service has reached down to give a great many people medical, dental and pharm- aceutical -attention who had either neglect- od these important health branches or were unable to afford them before the national scheme was put into operation. But wheth- er the country will be able, financially, to carry it on indefinitely without consider- able curtailment, or revision to a partial jcontributory basis, is a question time alone ,will answer. In the meantime it is likely ithe whole scheme will be given a thorough public examination during the campaign. LDIIORIAL N0ll;S Tomorrow, the 19th Sunday after Trin- The St. Laurent Government prefers to pay off old debts with its huge accum- ulatcd surplus than relieve the unfortunate taxpayers who have their own burdens to bear. The special session of the Legislature called for Tuesday, Oct. 23 will see the end of Mayor Earle MacDonald's term of office. Who will succeed him is now the question in municipal circles. ii. iii. Queen Marys needlepoint carpet scheme realized 9510-1,350.00 foi' Britain. This money has been cabled in dollars to the British Carpet Committee in Great Britain by the Imperial Order of the Daugh- ters of the Empire. v on The expansion of Pictou's steel plants isi matter for congratulation to our neigh- bouring Province and also for satisfaction here. The prosperity of nearby commun-p ities is a most welcome stimulus to our,- Oil'l'l. 0 Emile Zola, French novelist, died this date 1902. His work is powerful but some- times repulsive and depicts the seamy side of society, heredity, drink. disease, the people and church. He took a prominent part in the rehabilitation of Captain Drey- ms. 0 9 I The largest aircraft carrier in the world will be joining the British Navy before the end of this year. It is now being completed at a cost of S42 million, excluding guns H.M.S. Eagle as she will be named, Will carry 100 aircraft and have a crew of 2,570 officers and men. 0 Canada's National Industrial Design Committee, which met this week in Ottawa, is again trying by competitions to stimulate activity in this field and to uncover talent. There is almostno aspect of industry which could not be benefited by the application of the principles of good design. 9 O Fateful words for a handbill deliverer. Down in Wichita Falls, Tex., Mrs. Ollie Gray, 72, had distributed some religious handbills and was 'walking home when she was struck and killed by a train. On the handbills in big black type were the words: ”How long would you like to live?" 0 O I The number of tourists is increasing but the amount they spend is down accord- ing to a late report. The trend should not be discouraging for if it were a case of few- or of them finding that a Canadian trip involved spending more, then there would be something to worry about.- I 0 0 it was ever thus. The Electricity Board of Northern Ireland has spent :65 million bringing power to farmers, on the under- standing they would buy milking machines, electric cream separators, etc. Not a few farmers bought radios and toasters instead, with the result that the board new threat- ens to cut off power 0 C O The parliamentary restaurant (says the Gazettels Ottawa correspondent), normally used by senators and M.P.fs but reserved for NATO's top brass during the session, is checking on its food stocks. Delegates were heavy eaters. Waitresses reported that some took on two or three main courses at a sitting. "They ate", said one waitress, "as though it were their last square meal." There was -a big run on eggs by delegates from countries with scarce supply and tight rationing. O O I .More nonsense has perhaps been talked (says The Letter Review) about the price of milk than about any other item in the cost of living except rentals of dwellings. The facts are that, at present prices, con- sumption of milk is increasing while pro- duction falls. Clearly, the Canadian people are not being deprived of milk owing to high prices, but, on the contrary, are in grave diingcr of going short because of low prices. Sales of fluid milk iind cream in June were 31;. hlrziier than last year; for the first six months of 1951 2ft: higher are THE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN To lliaiiitain The High Standard I tom ll" KrcAuTioN." Me Too number . .-ff-1-use -The Lordly Potato lS)(ill0y Post-Rccordl Inter-Island co-operation is demonstrated in a practical way when Ciipc Brctoners go to Prince Edward Island to help giiriicr the potato harvest. Around 100 men from the Glace Bay area ill'C now being recruit- cd for this purpose by the Nn- can display proudly not their new- ilontli Eniploymeiit Service. This est. death-dealing machines, but is an annual chore which will their progress in me arc, and keep potato pickers busy in P. E. I. for the next month. Bless- nizs on them all. llowcver you like ll--ll0lllC- iricd, l-li'cncli-fried, chipped. in a suliid with sliced row onions or baked in the skin-the potato is :1 lordiy fruit of the earth. What isn't sufficiently appreciated is that the potato boiled or baked in the skin rind served with skin on. tops all other forms of this wholesome dish. Only the fragile need four the skin of the potato which has a tasty flavour and probably food mine as well for those of discriminating palates. .& 4-(N C-. , '?2('3(-)s?T2G0-i5-3.iMi Old Cha rloltetown mm! P. E. I.) l S .l !Rl:Jl”0li.llEIlS AT SIIBIAIEIESIDE "A special train lelt Cliz1rlotte- town for Summcrside on Thurs- the newly organized Summersidc Reform Club. with D. Brinks Mc- Kenzie iii. their head, and the whole cnrtegc, preceded by Cal- braith's Band, marched through the town, which was all ablaze with the lights of the illumin- ntions iind temperance torches. It was one of the most. magnif- ir-cnt sights ever witnessed in the island. "After niarrliing round for ubout .-in hour. they were led to the Ludlow Hall, where n splen- did rcpiist was spread out walt- lng for them. After all were re- frcshcd, they procecdcd to the up- stuir room. which was soon filled to ovcrflowin;.:. Never in the memory of the oldest inhabitant was witnessed such a tremend- ous crdwd. rind such quiet, order- ly enthusiasm. Without doubt, 'Trmpci':incc Rcform' has taken an effectual hold in Summcrsldc. "Spccclics were delivered by Messrs. A. Sims. A. McDougall. D. Brinks McKenzie. Theo. Chap- pcll. S. D. Fitzgerald, A. P. Mills. W. Bi-cnan. C. Hunt. Mutcii Mc- Kcnzic. J. R. C.-ilhnun. M.P.P., Mr. Simpson. rind the Rev. Neil Mc- Kay. One or two excellent chor- uses were sung. The band at in- tervals played selections. and Messrs. Jackson iind Regan also favored the audience. "After spending a very plcusant evening with their Summerside brothers. the Charlottetown Re- form Club bld good-bye, and took the train for Town at 11 p.m., and reached home at half-past one-safe. sound, and sober." -The Examiner. Nov. 10. 1877. go.-.-.n.-.-:-i:-.-4-.n.-5-7.i-iA.-it-tin:-.-.-.'.'.s :' he Age-old Story; -'-'-r”u'a's For. brethren. yo lisvo been called unto liberty; only use not libel-ty for on occasion to the flesh, but by love serve one In- otlicr. . . . This I say then. Walk In the spirit, and ya sbsll not fulfill the lust of the flesh. . . . Now the works of the flesh sro manifest. which are these, Adult- ery, fornication, unclosnness. In- clviousness, idolbfry, witchcraft. h s t r e d. variance. crnulstlons. wrstii. strife. scditions. lieresics. cnvylnn. murders. drunkenness. revclllncs. Illfl such like: of the which I fail you before, as I line also told you in time put. that they which do such things shall not inherit the ldngdom of God. not the fruit of tho spirit is love. joy. peace. lmigsuffarlng. gentle- ness, goodness. faith. ' mcchiels. G:-rmveriincc: against such there is no luv; . . . If we live in the play out on by American fighter aircraft. What a happy day it will be when sciences, in their measures for the good of biimanlt.y.- Ottawa J0lil'-s rial. Canada Air Lines, one of our porters spent a week of his vaca- tion on an holiday. He flew clean across Can- ada, in both directions. The whole trip took him seven days. He veiled no fewer miles during the trip which start- ed at Montreal, took him west Vancouver then and finally west to Toronto. He now is in Toronto where he he is ”restlng up" from the whirl. wind tour which kept him on his reportorial toes for about 12 to 14 hours a day for seven days. object of the whole trip was to graphical- ly show how easy it is around in Canada, cut it down to size. By flying. the reporter man. 21 Monclon, Montreal, Toronto, Fort. William, Winnipeg, Calgary day. zit 3:25. with about two hun- . mg . drecl of the Charlottetown Reform E1,::f:uVel' Owen sound Sun" Club, to take part in ii grand ' g demoiistriilion illid torchliglit pro- - ccssion with their Summersitlc Dr. C. wmet Cunnlnglmh M brethrcn. They were met at the London. has completed his menu- train by about four hundred of menu” work, --msmry of Underg Middle Ages. but the British did not adopt the idea, Dr. Cunningham, until the eight- ;Qwxr.x..v.vN. rxc Rome was "thrilled" by .s dis. Jet the nations Trans re- With the co-operation of exhaustive, busman'a tra- lhan 7,000 air to east to J-ialifax says to get ged to stay over in Halifax. and clothing," at the age of seventy- two. The reason that the Pilgrim Fathers shlvered as they set. sail for America 331 years ago was that they did not wear underwear. Italians and French were it in the according to centh century. He thinks the knights in armor may lmvc been the first to wear pants or petti- coats because of wind whistling through chinks in the metal. Am- erica's two great contributions to- ward undergarmcnts, says the au- thor. have been the one-piece HD1011-Suit. and. more recently, the pioneer use of nylon in that de. pai-tment. -New York Herald Tri- bune. Rural exodus is one of the grav- 05i- Droblems of our times. Notably in France there is it movement of countryside desertion against which it Bppears to be difficult to react. In Canada scarcely an agrl- cultural congress or meeting is held that someone does not begin UV deploring the abandonment of the land by the sons and daugh- ters of farmers. In French Canada in particular the population which was rural in the proportion of 70 out of 100 in 1871, has become ui-. ban in the proportion of so out of 100. according to statistics com- piled from the census of 1941. Mbre 1. Notes By The Way 1. J 5 t disquieting verifications still are expected when the results of the census which has just concluded 15 made public. The painful spectacle of abandoned forms should cause an uneasiness. It represents ii one- sided economic evolution which, here as elsewhere, brings about more and more quickly the disln. tegratlon of the whole human structure. - Le Droit, Ottawa. xx The happy an it the height. of Queen Victoria's reign is detailed in a book called the Home Cook Book. Published about 1535. which went beyond recipes and house. hold hints to provide a. guide to Proper manners for every social occasion. it is a. warm reminder of quieter, gentler days when a. list of "economical dinners" recom- mended beef on four days oi the week. They were great. eaters in those days-those who could af- ford it. Breakfast might include beefsteak and creamed potatoes and scrambled eggs. The book took it for granted that its reader had is large income and 3 great capacity for work. She was "the woman of intellect . . . talented . . .useful in the church or socie. ty." Her daughter studied music, languages and philosophy and he,- home staffed with maids and 391'- vants, was the scene of gay and gracious dinner parties. Her sit. ting room was always clean '-be. cause she sweeps it with tea leaves and sponges the carpet with ox gall." The ideal housewife could also "set a pane of glass, put on a door knob and hang a gate in the best: style." and yet, on her ap. pointed visiting day. guests always found her busy with some elegant trifle of lace or woolwork, writing letters. or touching a sketch, to be laid aside on the entrance of visi- tors." -Barrie Examiner. E 7oed' Gaza A GREAT TIMT Sweet. Chance. that led my step: abroad, Beyond the town, where wild flow. er: grow- A rainbow and s cuckoo, Lordl How rich and great the times are now! Know. all ye sheep And cows that keep on staring that I stand so long In grass that's wet from heavy rain- A rainbow and I cuckoo's song May never come together again! May never come This side the tomb. -W. H. Davies. The Great-West Life is th Pi-ovlncisl ' Offices: CHABIDTTETOWN 1-ilrit. let us also will: in the spirit. BUY TO SAVE BUY LIFE INSURANCE AND SAVE YOUR MONEY It is good business to buy Life Insurance. the Guardian of, thousands of Canadian Homes. Consult your nearest Agent or write or call on IiYllliMAll & CO. LTD. Aocnra ruaooouour ms i-soviiucs e Champion of Thrift and Managers - IUMMEISIDE - MONTAGUI SEPTEMBER 29. INT CENTRES OF Regardless of whether you ap- proach Oxford by bus, by rail. or by the river Isis, you will be re- minded of the line from the poem in the old school book: "The still, grey spires of oxford against the pearl grey sky". And as you drive up the streets you will meet Ox- ford”: merry gentlemen in cap and gown, gentlemen who are re- spected by thc people as well as by the students. Oxford puts you in an inquisit- ive frame of mind. There, noth- ing is taken for granted. In teach- ing any subject. they explain the theories and views of the various experts, writers and philosophers, and then, after I close and de- tailed discussion. let the student make up his mind. In Oxford, I met. my friend, Walter Kontak, from Antigonisii, who will complete his studies there next year. We made a tour of some of the colleges. the lib- raries, the museums and the town. It would take weeks to inspect it all carefully. I had dinner in the old. high dining room of Christ. Church College, founded by Car- dinal Wolsey in 1542. Christ Church is just one col- lege in Oxford. It is full of all those things of stately beauty which makes Oxford different from any place else in the world The fireplaces, the lovely wide tables, the high oak-finished walls are still the same. Over the en- trance gate to Christ Church Col- lege, is the tower which contains the old bell known as the "Great: Tom", which came from Osney Abbey after the dissolution. This bell weighs over seven tons and at 9.15 every evening, penis a curfew of 101 strokes,-the original num- ber of the students. The great quadrangle, 260 feet square. is the most imposing in all Oxford. In the south east corner is the exquisite college chapel which is also the cathedral for the diocese of Oxford. In addition to Saxon, and Norman work, this chapel has a. beautiful fan-triicerled roof, and Burns-Jones windows. In the Lady Chapel is the bomb and the shrine of St. Frideswide, the patron of Oxford, and behind it is the four- teeenth century Latin Chapel. The chapel house is entered from the clolster through a Norman door- way. The line Pickwater Quadrangle entrance is surmounted by statues of Dr. John Fell, who is remem- bered especially through the old rhyme, "I do not love thee Dr. Fell", and Dean Lydeil. for whose little daughter Lewis Carroll, then tutor of Christ's Church, first told his immortal story of "Alice in Wonderland". Carroll's rooms are still there. I O 0 On our visit there. pwaltcr and I saw a couple of seventeenth cen- tury playii. acted in all their splendor and pageantry in the open air just at. sunset. These are presented every spring by the under-graduate students of the colleges, usually played in the gardens, under the trees and amid the fountains of their own college. one which we saw at. Magdalen College was superbly acted and became even more real when a. herd of deer, which run freely in the gardens, followed by their yaung does bounded across the open stage. When at Oxford. you must: make it a point to go out to Whitney. This is the liveliest and most beautiful of all the market towns in the south of England. Go by bicycle. The Whitney people are very hospitable. It in the home of the modern factories which make the world famotn Whitney blank- ets. Bicycles in Oxford are al- most; as numerous as in Copen- hagen, if that. is possible. one Sunday. we blcycled up to Buckingham to visit A farmer friend, whom we had met at a conference in Holland. He was a leader of the cooperative move- ment. in that area and s. director of the National Farmers' Union. Buckingham is it mixed farming area, with some of the best. dual purpose Shorthorna and lowland sheep that I have seen. Here. too. they pay it lot of attention to growing special high-class regist- ered graas seed. and get excellent results from grass silage. They have organized their own grass growing. seed cleaning. and seed marketing cooperative on 3 large inter-county basis. But more about this in the ncxt.ch.aPlel'- There are inexpensive study tours by motor coach, boat. and train to most parts of the British Isles, but it is not. possible to take them all during ii short. visit. With what funds we could spare. we were determined to see as much as poslsbie during our short stsy. Britain cannot be described without I visit to the Lake Dis- trict and the Scottish Borders. This was one of the most: interest- ing tours. It covered the north Tyne valley area and the coastal district of Northumbcrlnnd. in- cluding thbury, Alnwick. Bam- buruh In I voyage by tlalilns boat to the Farm Islands. the largest sea-bird and seal sanctuary in the United Kinudom. Crossing the border into scot- lsnd for a brief period. we visited Drybui-alt Abbey. s tweed mill at Oslnhicls, Abbotsford. and the Vale of Ylrrow. We Attended lectures on "Nort.humberiand". "Ferns Islands", "sir Walter Scott". the "Border Country", and the "tableau Writers". The A Club at Oolssbiols ontcrtshs tbei overuse visitors with s border concert in their historic old Gslii House. In the Lake District. we a visit to the Wordsv.-oi-l.h'iI cot so at Grurncre, and to I lakcland sheep form. It is hard Lessons From Europe" In Community Progressl By Leo P. Mclsaac Part One (continued) (All Rights Reserved) would have us believe. poor, but. they had visions and ttihey knew what they wantcd ill 0. eral mistakes in spelling.but. read- ing between the lines you can an wisdom, clear thinking and a dc- terminatlon to remedy, or at least. improve the terrible living condi- tions that were 'lhCll prevalent. 0 quarters part of two blocks. the Cooperat- ive Bank. the Cooperative Iiisiiiw ance dozens of other factories, which produce footwear. clothing, furnit- ure, textiles. liardwnre and many other classes of consumer goods. If is all the more striking when one remembers that this huge or- ganization was working men and a boy. in torn small rooms. in March, 1864. 'I'hci' went slowly starting their produc- tion in February. manufacture of biscuits, choco- liites. products, by the wily, are still pro- duced in the same factories under modern conditions. more to say on this in Piirt II. . . . every possible way p ENGLISH CULTURE its variety of scenery, the hills of Grasmcre or Ambleside. Suffice it to say that it is all one gfsav vacatioriland. Wvbere we canal dream of going someday. with lnir. of time on our hands and pleixv. eoua funds in our pockets. 0 I 0 We came back by way 31 Np- castle-on-Tyne, that great ship. building center. down to 1-re),-am and the Roman Wall. During one college tour from Loughborougii we called at Stratford-on-Avon, the home of Shakespeare, and sat-,' the famous Memorial Tlicatrc, tho bridge, and the monuments. Bin we did not have time to rema.. for Richard ll. which was p1,,y1,,':' at that. time. There were mm,- ofiicial and semi-official tours from the College. The first and most interesting N those, was to Rochdale; the non... of the cooperative pioneers. Time we visited the museums. actuallv the first cooperative store. It is set up in the very room, whim, rcmalns exactly as it was. ivmm. the first twenty-clglit pioneers met to discuss the project and whgyp they opened their store in 1344. We saw their minute-bool: whim records in the most benutimi handwriting, all their dlsctisslon.-' and decisions. They may not. have been edii. cried, but those early pioneers were not ignorant. men. nor were they all weavers. as some stories They were In the minutes there are sex- We spent A couple of days at the headquarters of the Cooper- ative Wholesale Society at Man- chester. this. commercial organizations in world, is the result of the plan- ning, the foresight and the encrg-: It is hard to believe that one of the biggest single the early and ignorant pioneers. There we saw Hoiyhoiike Housc. the headquarters of the British Cooperative Union, built memory of George hoake. one of the early converts and supporters of the Rochdalc, movement. - to the Jacob Hols- Then f.here'is the C. W. S. head- occupying the grciitcr Society hCfidqilili'lel'5, nnri founded by two 1873. with tiir and curraiit bread. These We will havr There were aLso special visits in Leicester and Kettering. the home of the producer or co-partiiersbin cooperatives. organized in Christian Socialists, in the and 60's, when. strikes. many of the factory wort- ers were out of work. The men banded tog:-.ilici-, program. enough capital set up it system under which they. the workers. could run tlieir nun factories, own their own bllSllif3Sr cs. manage their own affairs nrrl do their own marketing. and mm" chandlsinsz. tempts failed, but at Leicester and Kettering, we saw some of Enr- lnnd's most modern and fll'0'1l'NS- ive factories. Those societies were the days of tho lR.'vI' as a result. of him studlcri 1 togetlw in scraped of their own and Many of these ills There were trips to local tru- tions, to prlvatclil Owllfd l"””” ice of special interest. And. ml the aide. students are hnilml l” to obtain fir tailed informatioii,aiirl in llilvz the people with whoni tbcv rm have special problems in lliitl.-” As a result of this D0i1(.'v'. l ” able to attend the 'annuai Illl'l'”- J of the National Farmers Unto, '- Enizland and Wales. I0 5l"”l” l, day at the British Milk .Nfrii'Vr':f': Board. to work with some of i-Ill economists at the Atl1tiCl"'”",” College nearby. to visit two n. ii: Farm Institutes. to nttr-nd of the Young Farmcrs' Club nit g inns, and to take a socclnl cr” for overseas students. in '3. - education techniques, at Nnl-l ham University. (To be continued) C. F. B. EARNINGSK 28-i('P' r MONTREAL. Sci”- Canadinn Pacific iti-.iiwn.V ”vl"p puny today reported net m-in..r- for August utct257.909. f0'7llf','l with 52,604,400 In the ccrrrw” inn month irisl. y0lt'-'- N, Gross cnrnlmts for Inc” f- H month i-mounted to 8,.-.ti.,2iiI zp against s25.7l9..'S57 In the month last your, while l"'.(!IlvxI'1n virs totnllcd 5i ”i e x p r n g nxalnst s'.'3.025.16i. gg,4 Fall Surplus iiave llrrlvoii If )0" are interested inf; suit, Topeoiii or Ow-rr.-I fhut fits. call at M. Maollliorooli Ii Son in Queen St. to describe the Lake District with