l To Deputy Chief —--- POLICE CAPTAIN R. T. HARDY At the March M meeting of the City Council, of Worcester. Mass. Police Captain Robert T. Hardy of Worcestefs police department, a former Islander, was deputy chief, after serving that city for 30 years. “Bob" Hardy was born in Elms- dale, Lot 4, son of the la.e John T. and Agnes (Horn) Hardy, was edu-| Showing The clump is large,‘ to”, bated ill tne public schools there. “"5 3448.91 13 1191c“ me Blmld- and. satisfaction for the Northumbrian ‘engfilnga ‘ivolgfedwgilxl fl9l9cciehgeggf| i; next to the Scotsman ls “m” ° ‘e p we ° ' |dcslre for "increase of gear." lng a list of 100 candidates in the civil service examination. A year later he WES detailed to special duty in plain clothes. ing gone “No-license," and remained with that squad until 1912. In 1915, he received a special commission to attend the New York Police Train- ilig, schoo‘ and on his relurn Worcester became athletic instruc- tor to the department in its train- iniz school until 1928. However, dur- ing lhls period "Bo " was assigned to many other special duties. In 1919 he was netliiied as a. plain- clothes de.ec ivc, and in less than a. year hcaxied a civil service list for the rank of lieutenant detective. appointed I the city hay rm spite of w and the sedum acre (acrld) of the gold tolls ita r t0 got rid ot the cabbage 0a pills: nuisance spraying the p ants with two oun- ces of common table salt dissolved in one gallon of ataxia treat- U’ '< white nose and whiskers. A tiny bell hangs from the chin, and the contraption depends from the end of s coiled spring long enough and fine enough to permit it to jump and swing in the wind, when it ll hun in the fruit-tree. The flash of t e eyes and the sound of the bell is said to b very effective. Such scarers-no utters what the make-should not be put into the trees till the fruit is about ripe, and should be taken down immed- iately it is gathered; so that the birds do not get used to the scorer. ' On April 5th. I took a turn in ythe garden to see how things had wlntered; everythiu seemed to be satisfactory. The Goth of Gold Crocus (C._suslanus) was further advanced with lhg tips of the buds Ahzm it was last yiear. a matter of Another little plank-which we in the Old Country wrongly named “Golden MossK-has wintered well. its rather succulent character. It forms a close cush- ion of minute leaves, later covered with starry yellow flowers. It the "wall-pepper" of rural Britain botanist; and may be found on old walls, old graves, and the like habitats. A good plant for the rock garden. The Oowslips came through all right. in fact the winter seemed easier on them, than does the sum- mer. By the end of July, all the - NEWSY NOTES - I! AGIIDOLA An English enin; magazine ductions brought it down a not‘ ~ leaves now developing, will be waisnliligzctlliargeetlifigtloyvrie and dea¢ hm‘ “aw leaves at the detective bureau, and in Dec- Sim"? 7mm the Pa)“ 55 "hfiweama emoc-r oi the some year Was pro- E1‘ EFOWS 3°01"- alld Wm 3st m magikedl ROhGfiIYBCF-ilzfi captaléi, dwnlch léitlo 311th éfiasgtlswftgwrgieqléeélée r 1e e un name e t’ ' 4 _ W’ in.» bear 1131s Haney w. During uni-urn life u a pdica owever. ens y mu p - officer he has traveled non-way ision of wots- This year. s11 around the world in m. pmsult of sou well. criminals, his longest trip being to of the newer Blue Oowslips. Poland w bring back a prisoner The nuns are {at P9 wanted for murder in WOIUSWJ‘. through the ground I Absolutely absorbed with police expect much oi u dismay this yw‘ work. he has studied procedure in The tulips one b“ B N9 Selected» UxsMigeleaandSanFrmiciscmCaL, bulbs, ready for werinl. and and other American cities; Berlin, they rarely do u well the second . Poland; the year. But it they are taken uP— Free Oily of Danzig, and Scotland when the leaves die down-and Yard. a1 of which gives him the dried off in a. shady Dlace. The“ 1'9‘ background w m1 nu new duties in planted in a properly prepared bed l capable mnmer. hey should %ve a 800d dill)!!!- Mr. Hardy's relatives, m flit Is- The lnoller lllbs 8° m" m‘ landarehishsothnrsltwdy nus-say bod and or! 810M100- of Rosebenk; Haber H. y of Why is it that in Britain fho Elmsdnle; his sisters Mn. Edwin C. men do the gardening, while in Arthur of Alberton, Mrs. Leslie this country it is looked on as a Harry "woman's lob"? The Scottish gard- giclltlillm o! M11. v arbour of Alma. and Mrs. Harvey ener is considered the aristocrat of adorns o! 014017. ‘Dwo brothers. the horticultural would. ljah and Allen. an residents or Worcestcr. hun Pinion Prhsu Mrs. Hart was In lanai Ohm J. Milli farmer h Bu! tovmmip, Ontario). gsrhwdmighmsr of Iihanu 1 mm Rd Jane cKendriick) Mfliigun of (which I tsks to be in eeland, Lot 11. and sister of Edgar once ke t tab on the farm produce Millimn o! Mililgan b Morrison. prices 8cm 1905 onward to lass. NotthanL ecl them with the inoom 1 mo. m m a as m; gpinlon mil} rem 1"" u bsab Joselltiioowortliofpg-o- duos is year. and of course the ztitrlefitlincome would be less thm Ooverdllcfl Bible ‘lfhore has just been ubllghgd by tbs Lutterworbh Presmpllnndon, Iid- “W complete New Testament in Modem Pang“ Form." The version Appear; {,0 have been very favorably received. though the wordin does not al. Ways fllree with e Authorized Version, and even becomes what is termed "pedestrian". 8t. Luke, 1B, 95, becomes "It is easier for a Y0 80 thwush the eye of n. new: than for s rich man to enter- the Kingdom o! God.” Some scholars, 1i is explained. my that the Aram- aic word for "camel" and fin "rope' is iihe same. That i; not the way an ancestor explained the - 8e w his enquiring grandson. Eastern towns. he said, had two entrances. side by side; the large door or gate wu. for the passage oi’ bodies of horsemen, processions, armies and so on. There smaller door, more often used, that permitted one man at a time to enter. This was known as the Needles Eye. If one came with a laden camel, he was obliged to strip the beast before it could o throu h. Such an incident woud be qute familiar to the disciples and to the people whom Christ was addressing. The Second Epistle to Timothy, 4. 9. becomes: ‘Make speed to come to me at once." That is still cap- able of further condensation! For over 300 years the King is James Authorized Version has “canalized" the thoughts and writ- ing of the Englisb-speakin races. We used it as a reading at school, for the villagers had little money to spare for "ReadersWand in course of time we could pick up any quotations our com anions used. That was the advsn age of having but one Version; if you multiply versions the words don't stick! “The effect which this ver- sion has had on the moral and religious life of the world, both dir- ectly and indirectly, is beyond all calculation." The Coverdales Bible was one of the fore-runner: of our King James’ version, and itself was the offlpr of ‘ryndnleb Bible. I curious facsimile copy m James". (I began this in January 1935. and have just reached the and of the Apocryphal) . Alpert from the iuistsndsrdinsd spe ing, the feature that struck me most frsquervtl was that many wonisnowusedsoelyinthe North like dogs Northinnibiwianl “Dead” was spe and pronounced "dee<i” "s it is to this clay by the colllus. and Ito , sharte snares "g arts". 11, s ‘ifs-time since I heard that . ' The second not csablo a . about the Ooverdale Bible is in scores of passages it does not agree with the Authorized Version, ' thoiqh 1t. has something of the some beauty and digni- of lan- par County, School. and Township tax- u for the some 00- The 0118' incl document-w ich I found on spring-cleaning my desk. and 1115i; saved from binnlnoris a most in- teresting one, but is too lon8 quote in its entirety. We can Bet a good idea of it y Kenny we: Mari-u n “N'< A Connor Prodnoo-filfloh Ind: Fully Guaranteed Always Dependable. Al O loner- Il dalmatian ‘IO! ‘rm d t hims 1i. iii... 'l.°':'..:' ’°§....2.f"l.. n95. w.» n 1-4 cent» but. yet one of g, pound; then 20 21, , 30. 54. (the last was in the geek year of 1920). 39. and 28 oen . The rice in 1933 had fallen below the evei of the 1895 prices, being 1'1 cents. 1895 were 12 1-2 cents oat-w; as per when l! 1-2. 21. 38. 34 widely used In 1-4., 00, 34 1-2 and 3B cents in T-B- If" '""\- i930. They had fallen to 15 Owl-i Rumor. n nnn- m 1 lrfltnl , I 0 n- ' h an], non-rosin, and skxppml m. bum er non ls.- prices, we come to the pork. In gym-Aux, 1896 pork was 4 1-! cents pet 1b. Only: K5501. from your Drll. then Q 1-4, 6 3-4 f0 U. U. § 1- m Hnnlwaro, Iced on! Bead ltora, 13, and 12 cents in 1930. Hg 933 or writs the price was 4 cents per 1 . . CANADIAN co-ortnsrlyll A bmhq or wheat, brought 03 WOOL (mowlrns Lmrrnn can“ m 1395. ‘Z30 m 1920; l come w! ilmiflm BP-"eh- a0 cents in 193a. 0m in 1895 were ‘*""“'"'“°' m” worth 90 cents s bushel; ill. in 1895, 1900 i906 a the cheapest ill- lnfochntl on the mu . Approved by be Health n! All- ll n I I Branch. for oats, a than that ‘ of i816! In 1920 potatoes were 1.60 to ‘l5 cents per in - This man remarks: “For the twelve months, (that is, in Fsx Farm Choppers usmim: i» one; 1m $6.5 with 4 1-2 cent cattle. 4 cen oats and '15 cent (a bag) potatoes. $411400", in 1920 $88,234' in 19 s a gres ncrease _'t1?n1§15fm9' t 1 must not be for ten tho '60 other. Very ocoasionall to 1930. Tre reader can fill in the ‘Book Q 1.75 .’I‘h fllio 1.001391‘ $ barbed e1 B ma the farmers here have been vain-i ly trying to meet maturing Qbll-‘nmy be obtained from the Agricul- gatlons. taxes and current eXf-‘iefl- ' tural Experiment l? loncing. Michigan, U hogs, i7 cent biltter, 9 cent cheese. title is " i5 cent e885. 60 cent wheat. 25 081i}, Birds, Bulletin 100 Then he gave the totals of taxes for his townshl . In i695 they cams to $8.149; in 1 5. $19,896; in 1915. 25. ing natural phenomena, etmthat 0169.040 and in i990 $171000. There “m; under my-notics last year, I had been a drop in l931—ths lat- est figures available to this farmer est. my gu . Sometimes the cll ference is mer y in the tense; the passage being in the present tense in the one, and in the future tense in the there is a striking difference. as n Isaiah 49. “Of-ill! the 20. when Cover-dale omits the words cos at five year intervals. that "Lfllf thou hast lost the other" lid l0 0n entirely. 1n many cases. as in the f Job. Ooverdale gives the arguments in much plalner lan- guage than does the King James‘ Version. The Moffafis Version is said to be pminer still, but its lan- guage is ratiwr like Journslesel For Ofchlrdhh There has been developed a new kind of bird-scorer for use in or- chards of cherries and other fruits. The robin, though it feeds largely on wom-is and caterpillars, will ‘turn its attention to cherries and strawberries in their season’ and the stnrling is worse, and is be- coming more numerous too. The new device is an automatic acety- line flush gun which may be set m! to " o bu" as often as four times a m uts or as slowly as once in . than 8B. [ten minutes. It makes s. noise like 29, 36, 42. ‘l0, 38, and 32. In 194B. ‘the discharge of a No. 12 csrtridgfi; this man could 011% get E will and is said to poi-nub Th ‘be u” wile is o n. s ' n’ w c quite unlike a sfiun) han from a tree on a coiled spring; w en the °"i’i°‘.‘.‘.’.‘i fill?“ hmoiilii." iiiiifii of m» Union it has been found t l useful in frightening deer from the 1 i orchards. A bulletin dewribing the "gun" station, East . S. A. I Protecting ' Cherries from Some Nature Notes Qving spent some time clamlfy- found some items that may inter- rosdsrs. lost week 1 m3; timed a sentrolly situated suns on March 25, 1036, followed by but it t "i! minors and low temperatures. 0n QCANDIA NJ for largo to: fur-n. tax pa rs themse ves. almost every Mush i, ‘i937. a large sunspot was QCANDIA No.5 lllhkrthnnsbrs Ywr. tsvltholthnnllsvcrfosnnall u wummyfmm ‘farms. Pnoiablvhonalbsnhll. farmer sh f. W. Lam lough 6. Co. m‘ “m” "Mel"... '° .. p ache 1 The Provincial Flier-en's Lou Board require a ol empty molasses passions. Will any denim for sale plugs communicate with n. quot- piieo clolivlid sf. surest rsilwlywststlon. fiber emvitwm. susm um: noun- emand increased public ur- central: there was s vices. and that there is” one "n" s. musing the taxation. ‘But the. ouid be required ma‘: mo" 2g -s¢.s"i°.r:..'sg~ display of lmora and violent utmos- - fish isturbuioe in Euro and Attica. On April 25- . i981. Your Garden Neoris an . By was a of the drought a1 home-grown ersized E in? cases o! yelitis on _ 1m? physicians any that no iii-no! g - risdlflinssc (lienbuti ital curious ooinc enco the tho opi- demic occurred when so e . mggbgouglnggterflies (r were sport‘! and did considze‘prlzalni)a BfiEwO e turnip amp-already from the drought. The hiiifiommflliffififhhihfsli’. buds blackened and withered. Home the garden seeds were und . Key To the Woodpecker: A correspondent call; my n- tention to an error 1n tho Key published on April 9th. The male Arctic Three-wed Woodpecker is said to have a yellow crown- “and in the next line the crown is said to be black." ‘Phat was s typo- graphical error; it is the female Arctic which has the black crown. TRUNK STORAGE to h ifin in-unls 0 e or luggage h enough 0M the floor to insurJfi damage. VAR-HIKING 5TB?! when varnish! a flight of steps '1 iiansdianf GalrdOIlSQwIiiQ 1938 s! oomoiq non“ hoe. oftheso inrpusrmenits yllllmalrloshortwrkoifavegefabis orrflowerr.‘ ..Ou)tivaihlonserv¢s Ill day m The Beale: 0min. no, recurs, “A - M,“ rain. Pleasures and ‘may’. renovated. When remaining stalls, varnish every of er stairway can be mp4 while being iargefinnscontaln much morethan Biievltsoths drypslnt the smerementimofthennnyfion- OALLANDIIIIIMNQIQtQIGIIIQUI-IW OI Garlands anddnhmdgotoupleasbwfmbwill- BPKXAL PIICK ‘l0 INBTITUTES AND I'll-MB! CLUB! i! A. HORNE o co. _ CHARLOTTETOWN LIME For best results and quickest returns use the famous BROOKVILLE LIME. —_1 Low c0 — Good Se Bulk or Bags Brookvllla Manufacturing 0o. Ltd. I Highest qulity. Most finely pulverized l Pri rvice ' Brookvills, Saint John Co, N3. H. G. 8. ADAMS, Manger NEW ONE-TONNER. _ names rolls v-a economy to "our-ton nus: Many operators sakod For! to build I unit that would glvo them Commer- olnl Cor economy with bigger-than- Comrvlorolal Car capacity. The answer to than requests ls the Ford V-l Ono- Tonnor, on ontlrol now truck In the lino. It gives the proved performance operators associate vvlth Ford V-l haul- ing and delivery equipment. It widens the olrolo of Ford economy. it oflors operators exactly the truck thy med In tho Ono-ton ungo- Tho Ono-Tonnes Ins a 1II-lnch wheelbase. ‘It l0 powered with the and Drive-sway Chassis. Visit 193a m» v-arnucnis -~~.-‘~ I ‘c YIAI 1-0 n 0's ‘s s v,,_|;u-.r u Y I no». fDWER- FOR'1CIMRL0 osobomloul fi-honopovvor V-l engine. lumuunammoolunqom-unmnu on tho road. Though lower In Elsa. It hoe the clan-proved fosturosthat make tho 2-tsn and ‘HQ-inn Ford V-Q Trucks so reliable. Frame, springs and axles are designed for high reserve strength without penalizing economy with u- ouus weight. Ono-Tsunor models on t!!! Plnbl. ‘Xfilfll, CID Ind Chill!‘ p Ford dealer and arrange an "on-tho- lovanvmh your owndrlvu-and ovvnlosdswNWWNIflINflUU~ OI. ,0"! rurvm or m FORD V°l Olll-TOIIIIII sump-ammo» - mama-oak Isa- lnlhnuohhodlslluwoith V'C OIIG 0