aiiall be humbled; shall humble hlmeelt shall sited. Whoeoever ehall exalt hlmeelll‘ and whosoever be ex- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew the A; a christian I protest aglllne! pgllmpn’ by either demanding or afl- cepting governmental protection- prostitution of l the Christian Annual Subscriptions Delivered $1.00 I ‘dd B¥1l“ll'-c"“‘"". »--l v- l- l. w» GHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA.‘ FRIDAY. NOVEMBER s, 1926 2""'l.’.‘{f.l intuitive. pa»: iiilllliiifi iiililli t iliililii iiIVEHS lliiiiiN iHiiii Hliiiifi» iii illiliiifi Mellse ‘at Liege, Rising Inch all Hour, Has ‘Risen by Nine Feet — Houses in Four Towns Flooded to BRUSSELS. Nov. 4. — Panic stricken by tile rush of flood wa- ters. rlvemide inhabitants» ill the ‘Mouse. Sam Bres and Ourthe Val- leys have been deserting their homes during the past folv days o! heavy rains. y Tile Meuee at Liege ‘had risen ‘by nine feet this afternoon. and was rising at the rate of an inch nu hour. Tile/situation was most ser- ious at Dinant. J-luy. Flemalle and Jemeppe. ln these pluces the houses bordering the aver have Action 0f Irish . Free State Sur- prise to British PAlRlS- PNOV. 4-—Surpriae is felt llvBritish quarters at Geneva at the action of the ‘Irish Free State yesterday in registering with the Secretariat oi’ the League oi’ Na- lions a seriee of postal Conventions tilat have been concluded with (Junada. India the 11.6. and Ger- lllally flllfioftllnil to the Geneva correspondent of the journal Des Debate. it is recalled that Great Britain two years ago contested the right oi o. ‘Dominion to register with the League of ‘Nations agreements that llall been concluded with other Do- lnilliorls on the ground that such were pllrely matters of home polit- ics. 'l‘he ilrlsh lFree State dis- agreed with this view of tho ques- lion ut that time. 'i‘he Journal ‘Dcs Debuts‘ (ieuova correspondent foresees iurtllcl‘ oil- ioctlons frollr VGreut Jirituln and points out at the lrlsll Free State has taken‘ ‘ednltlative while the imperial conference is sitting in London. il-le regards ‘this as signi- f lcnnt. ' ‘ -——-——§o-¢--—- German Returns Stolen Silverware (Canadian Press) liAM. Flilllile, ‘Nov. 4—-A troubled conscience has forced u German soldier lo make restitution, after iWelVB YBWYG. for it wrong commit- ted (illflnlg the war. ‘From Altorla. Prussia. lire Mayor of diam has received a huge bundle containing lsilvcrware which the sender declared ho stoic from a llousc in llluu when lill‘ town was pillltgcd by tho (lcrruilns in llil-l. ‘lie expressed regret for his llci. and su'd ho llopcll llrc .\iu_vol‘ would restore ille property lo tho o w u er. ‘Tile Mayor. however, is hllvilllz n hard time of Baldwin Praises he‘ Culture 0f Ancient Greece!‘ LONDON. Nov. ~l.~ Praise pl‘ .|Splirturl civilization which "saved 11s all irolll brink" dark Fliilililliéli, lllllg nosed ncoplc" was voiced by ‘Premier Stanley Baldwin of Great Britain in a speech tonight before a meeting of archeologists. "Will there be excavators of FORCING ITALVY ‘ro DISTURB THE wontors PEACE bl().\"l'\l(lE.l\L, Nov. 4 —Pnlice lo- Second ‘Stories. 3.000 years llerlce?" the lpfelniel‘ cued lby police and military dc- “u l3 “mu “lllwy that they will situation would be relieved, bllt “Tile life of the Spartans ought flooded t0 l1 depth oi’ ‘several feet. some or our modern women are G “gllarttr should have its appeal S 3.1186 . have stood much chalice ill those perilnzs oi‘ the V611!‘ 490 B. C. ~ in the Vellacb Valley of the -Carirl~ Marathon and again. four years 1dr. tary streams are swollen arid many allzed. our present. (¢i\'1]|z3.tv|l3n have collapsed. crops of grapes. i._<¢>____ rnllnicatlorr is interrupted llnid- ill- BUST OF LORD CURZON crud with Italy as one of the dis- llluiiillfl Vlceroys an outlet for its 000.000 annual sur- tilan Lord Cu '. lllilii, indeed. in the lust fivc or six which Dr. llrurlo lilor-lclli. of iltuly. when it was necessary he should stood for. paid tribute ill lbehalf of the Gol- able to deal with their problems iu ford. oi‘ (llllifornia. a population of forty \\’l‘l'l.‘ those more worthy of ('ll'[i\‘ll- cal parties in ‘Pitfiififllelll. colnprellellslvenees oi‘ range and u ‘PROVE V5RY Pol-WE m“ hm“ lllly were ‘scorching for illrl-l- gal- been ‘flooded to their second lstor- ‘l-‘lllell- "Will llleli llllil‘ eXlllllfllle trrchnletrts- finlrl‘ safety -l‘8ZDl‘li)ll1.(iEll. gas pipes alarming conditions still prevailed. to appeal to this generation. What while many industrial llvorks lie striving to overtake the Jlloileg and for tlhe ‘Fascisti. for tile Spartans Serious Damage ‘ma’ VIENNA. Nov. 4."—l‘illlliil‘i‘.iiti of year more momentous for Europe this. district by heavy rains of the er. nt ‘Salamis. bridges have been destroyed and would have been rendered impos- heve been destroyed and wheat and‘ dustry in the affected urea. is at ill UNVEILEDAT OXFORD turlrirlg factors. it will not be tllc l. He was d mull trlus of people dire to lack of terri- yfibrs of his ll . for many days a guvc to tllc Cnnuiiiun clllh lloro _ I devote himself many hour's a day to Countries which had riches. re- Pfllllltlllt to the late Lord Curzon, in a ililferent Iway fronl that which Lord Oxford praised Lord Cllr~ anllions and annual excess of ‘births lion lrl \vllrli. lnurry people (zzllled. grasp of dialectical dlgility. and. -*--' a ii. for illc (‘Oll- scionco still-hurl (lcrlullrr (‘Olliii no: l‘i‘l‘ilii lilo trxllci illliiliilln ui' till» house he robbed. i ~——-—QO§_-M__H_ l l BRUTAL MURDER 0F SEVEN YEAiR O-LD l NEW YORK GlFlL. lunt holdup rllon wh-o forccli J. Adams. munagllr oi‘ lloe\v‘s Thou- tro. corner of Mansfield and St. (Yutherirlc streets, to open tho oi‘- ficc safe. and escaped with $5.000 inst night. After cutting the icic- Euglish cities when these are cov- ered with debris some 2.000 or ies. Many residents were cut off llmllles 11nd vases such us we find by the flood waters. and were res- lll Greece?" Colder weather and fro-st this und similar useful articles, bllt no- evenlng gave hope that the flood lllllli; comparing with our .lill(iS. Many roads and thousands of acres they did to drunkarils should ap- of farm and pasture land were Deal to snob as Lari}. Aston “mp. idle. The streets of Liege were cov» fashions m- ule girls who pumcp ered with an inch of snow tonight. mated in‘ the (lreciurl festivals never trusted strangers. i don't think ii Fmviet delegation would III “Europe's debt to Grecian culture ___ ‘can ‘be best exemplified by the hap- persons are homeless llllllli serious than llll-i- when western civiliza- properly damage has been ‘caused tion was suved- ill its lnfaucy- at past. few days, which have caused "But for that. Ezrstelm Europe fl/oods. The Vellach River and tribll- and Rome would have been orierlt- railways underwashoil. Factories sible and we all would have dark and houses along the river banks skinnekl‘. long-nosed people." sugar stocks damaged seriously. Telegraph and telephone corll-‘ standstill. | mm} MUN i REAL. NilV. ‘l, —-Sh0u.](l ihc [real-e of lilo world be (endang- furllt of hlussolirll .but because oi IIJONDON, ‘Nov s-"Thsre hurgliie impossibility. otitaly securing been few great’ Wllildlévei‘ knew the resilience and Kory"- exuberltnce oi’ ‘perfect health. llo ‘This was tho crux of u ruossilgl- cripple, urrtl uni erwcnl. u torturing yesterday in rlpi-ukiiii: of lliussoliui. burden of physical agony at u limo and especially of what Mussolini ‘lhe public service." sources oi’ coul and iron and other in these words Lord Blrkenheall raw materials after the war were Whose honor Lorri Oxford and As- ltaly had found through Mussolini qnitll teddy unveiled a bust at 0x~ but ltlrly had a territory the size zorfs gift as urn orator. The faclli over dcutils of 600,000. There lies lll which llc rnbst excelled were also fourteen different politi- ihe pedestrian llge-lllcilllty of cx-l Dlllilllflll. ielicitouu choice o1’ pllruf-ie, MONTREAL BANDITS lust but rroi least. tho capacity of lilVlP-K ltt the right ruorllerlt a knock. WOMAN KILLED AND CHILDREN ARE BLINDED lIIOIINlCL. N. Y.. Nov. -I.——\Vhcrl \|rs Arlnl- ‘SPiHYUllil EHlNlE IN Fiiiiillii‘ Pillliii‘ liili ilili" iiPlN lll Sliiiii’ To Slow Down “Red” Propaganda Abroad, to Settle Foreign ‘Debts, and to Obtain Loans in Other Countries for Develop- ment, Feature New Program. LONDON. Nov. 4. —Joaeph Stalin. head of the Central Execu- tive Committee of the Communlllf party. who has seized the reins of power in Russia, hale. according to the diplomatic correspondent of the Westminster Gazette. resolved on a charge in the foreign policy of the Soviet Government. The plan includes the slowing down of Communist ‘propaganda abroadl securing d: jure recognition of Russia by the United Stately and other countries. the settlement of Russia's debts to foreign count?" ind obtaining foreign loans for do velopment. ' t‘. Stalin. it is imparted. conalikrs the use o1 foreign loans a better way of industriallzing Russia thin estranging the peasantry by in- creased taxation to raise money- Theflii-‘re. he wants to limit the ictivltie"; oi the Communist lnterpationale abroad. Plllllss rllls ll Lecture on Habit ‘ Formation By Prof. Blanchard 0n Tuesday evening or Rosary Hall the following Interesting and instructive lecture on Habit Form- ullon was delivered before tho Catholic ‘Women's League hv Frill J. H. Blanchard: Prof. lBlanchard opened llis lea tul‘e by defining habit. Habit. he said. irl its simplest fornl is the tendency to think. speak or to act as one has thought, spoken or act- ed iu. the past. in other words it is the tendency to repeat activities of all kinds. This tendency in- clines us to do the familiar act rather than the new one. Habit formation in its broader sense means learning. lt is a recognit- ion of the fact that our conduct is modifiable arid that such modifica- tions may be rrlade perfect. I Most of us are inclined to think that habits are chiefly physical; orl the contrary in whatever way the nervous system ls employed habits are formed. There are intellect- llal. moral and emotional habits. [XPIHES INiNSW i.iiii"3 iiliillitii lll Piili Nlill llii] iliil liililiifi New York Man Falls — Wife Alleges Caller Was Given . Operator. on Stairs and is Killed Negligence Because Wrong Number by l NEW YORK. Nov. l —l-ler hus- band having been killed by a fall dowrl stairs willie on his way l0 answer the telephone and investig‘ ailon proving that it was a wrong nu-rnber anyway. .\lrs- Mary And- erson. of Arnboy Road. Great Kills. Staten i-slantl. instituted suit for 850.000 today agallnsrt the New. York Telephone Company. alleging negligence on the port of the tele- phone operator. The suit. which attorneys de- ‘i-iabit formation results ill the lessening ofattention to the process. Any process that is habitual can be ‘ llllllll; lllll lNll lllllsf llll illlllHlPHlNBl Kings, Queen-s and Other Members of Roy- ‘alty Will Attend Ceremony on Thurs- day. ding gown today. and found ll fl Eggiiflfilrléngvillé ‘plgltélzleuyhylizi Perfect iii. lliater she went l0 llle riage to Leopold. The home of her kitchen of the lflllllly flilllfllllelll- parent-s. {he Duke and Duchess of and ‘lulled u chocolate frosted cflke wa-stergotlzlllli. in which she and for the deleciution of the Belgian her sisters have lived since chilli- crown prince. Leopold. to whom " od. is. despite its luxuriousrless, she will be married Thursday. i‘ reality an apartment of the type The cake will lllect its destined [iimllial- to Cnnalliallls, fate tomorrow when iwo kings. ‘The 20-year-old princess. who is two illlflflllrs‘. two crown prince's lenown throughout Sweden as the and ciglit pfillPPFnlCS will sit down ito dinner ln honor of Leopold and "1113 bride. Tomorrow’, incidentally is Leopold's 25th birthday. and i-x- teusive preparations have bvcll epara ions for lilE‘ wedding, and made over the crept. ‘ reunification of lllollesty. hasmnda fiwmuv r whelmell by the brilliant ' the fuss which ilas generally been taken care of by a minimum of at- tention. At the beginning the ‘whole attention to the act may be (necessary but us it progresses less and less attention is necessary lllr- tll at last the activity becomes au- tolnatic. Not all our habits reach this perfection hut this is the tend- ency. ' We speak of good habits und bad habits brlt when people use the evil. IBut virtues sense oi are l . _ ii b't . STOCKIHOIAI. Sweden. ‘Nov. 4—— mlzltle for rtsuccieliraltliorl. KAstrlgk.l‘3b:;_pructlcal‘ emomanal and n» -Princerls Astrid tried on her wed- l1 llll-lliéll llleu? ll l‘? Z tenant...“ organized for our wea] or woe. We are subject to tile law oi‘ habit because we are corporeal. The reason why we do a thing with difficulty is Oil account of the plasticity or modiflability of the living matter of the nervous sys- tem. Ollr nervous system grow ill the way it has lbeeu exercised just as a sheet oi’. paper once creas- ed and folded tends to l’all ever aft- wrwartls illto the same identical Habit is thus second nat- lll-e and thshnaiorlty, of our activit- los are purely automatic and hab- ituul. The older-we get the more firmly are we boulld by the despot Di <Z€€€K<€K€Q< ‘I- 7>>2>}§>>}>}>>JDZ . , ».‘ - . l land autocrnv-hublt. lHubit is tho {stuff oi’ which orlr character is ruudo. ‘Wc often any that churuct» or is rcvoaloti by conduct but. mosl. of our conduct is the rcl-lultof habits, good or had. The cfiic- icncy of an individual depends upon his store o! EOOG llilllllll- All? not many people honest and just more from habit their from motives oi goodness and justice’! iiiil-iillllili expression of the emot- ions tend to impress themselves in the plllsloilhfimy- 11nd “'9 ‘lily; ‘fills (‘illlI"-ll'li‘l‘ siilut-s on his face"; Even happiness itself may ilQFOmi‘: ilfliliillili. The cultivation of till- ililiiil. lll‘ optimism will (‘illliil happy illilll.'.ill< lll Sllfillll‘ up thus eiicl-r- ‘illi! ll ' llldi llllllll'(‘. ll (‘illill ifllllllfil‘; illili ll ll-lppy iralul- of ‘lfllllli ‘which. are \\'\llill lllllre lo url lilllivldual iilllll llldl-il knowledge and many ac- colllplisllllrellts. lll-silllrs having values. huvbiili il;l\i‘ llllrlaors and limitations. File llli‘i lilili habit is iarvly based on actual (zilallges which take ‘illfl-i-‘e _lll llll- nervous sysieln eulllllflflllflfl lll? binding powcrwr. .\iu.-ll_ llcllllll! lll talking." uurl thinking oi habit. rt». clared is the first. of its kind in the country. is being heard before Justice Edward Relgelnlann and a jury ill the Richmond County Su- prelrlc Court. I ‘Robert G. Anderson. 62. a real ‘estate salcsnlurl. was awakened from his sleep at five o'clock 0l'l the morning of July 4 last year by the ringing of his telephone. He ano- werell it and learned that the cal- lel- wanted another number. so he returned ‘to bed- ‘Five minutes later it rang again and Mr. Anderson started down again. At the top o! the stairs he tripped and as a re- sult of tho fall he died of heart. failure. 655 Millers Said To Have Been Killed (Canadian Press) [RON MOUNTAIN. Mich, Nov. 4 word “habit" it is generally in thel__lMme 10ml 051013131816 today re. ceived a telephone call‘ from the llfllllls lll“ as We" a“ Vie” “reilBarnes-l-leocer iron nll-ue near Ish- Our life is bllt a mass ofjpenflng’ ‘Much, stating 655 miners rwere believed to have been killed in the mine cave in‘ there late to- day. The local officials were asked t-o dispatch mine rescue crews and equipment. lt was rlot stated if any men were believed erltombed in the mine. other response conlirrg ill that par- ticular situation. bivery interest formed. every act of skill perfected. every method of work adopted. everyj orinoip1e..ur ideal accepted. limits out recognition of ally other possible line of action iii that situ- atiorl. Habits bind a person to ,one particular response and at the ‘same time blinds lrirll to any other. Tho danger of this is vcry rcal. if tho habits iornictl are bad and wasteful. illc individual is handi- capped in his growth ilniil new ones are formed. Wili('il in runny cases is hardly to bc hoped for. Good habits are a necessity. There is a no lrlore miserable being than one in whom nothing is hab- itual. Full half the time oi such a nlall goes to the deciding or re- grettirlg of matters Iwhich ought to be so ingrained in his nature as practically not to exist for his cori- sciousness at all.- All other things being equal the more good habits a person possess- es the greater the probability of his doing original work. The genius ls the one who has made habitual manyof the activities de- manded by ills particular field and who therefore has time and energy for the work which calls for deep tilollght. ‘Habit won’l make a genius; but all lncn of‘ cxccptlorlul ability uxccl others in the number urrtl quality of the lrublis in iii!‘ field ill which they excel. The fact that all act onco |’l(‘l‘- lzrlrd it as something luelltul ill rlu- formed tom“. to mproducu “Sm. turl- and believe that $ll\lll'l9lll ‘~"\" is of the utmost importance in tilt- ‘Cousin Of Prince Of Wales Now Dressmaker ‘LONDON, Nov. 4. -The Prince of Wales now boasts a‘ cousin who is a. successful Berkeley Street dresslnaker. ‘He is George Fitz- George. grandson of the Duke oi.’ Carnbridge- _ lll llurtrlerr-lhlp with Miss Rosie Taylor. ire 1215i year made 3.000 DUTIHIU. “This year we are doing even better. which is not bad consider- ing that we starter! with a fEW hundred pounds as capital." -————-<-o->-—i— Worked A Lifetime In Eiffel Tower r- tQapqdlan Prflil) » . PARIS. Nov. 4..——'I‘hat he coul not live except within. the shadow of his beloved Eiffel Tower was the lcasoll given by Basile Terou. for forty year's elevator man at. tilc lower. whorl ho rented an apart- ment near the Champs dc Mars upon retiring on a ‘pension. ‘instead of living in the country. us his friends advised. .\i. ‘Peron lllis "l-lfiodhlwusatlds of tourists during ills two score years as lift marl and has conduct- ed nearly all the rulers oi’ Europe to ‘the centre of the big tower. He was employed when the construc- tion oi’ the tower commenced in 1886 as conductor oi‘ an elevator carrying material and when the tower was formally opened in lil- Sii he ins shifted over to one of tl-e passenger‘ cars. I couldn't live six months with- ollt seein-g the tower." he said; “there would be something gone frolil my. life's horizon.“ .. I- ...., Mining Operations Halted (Canal-than Preaa) S Pll lNG-ll ILL. Water seeping into Number 2 mine N. S" Nov. {- _ _ ‘_%_ ‘ . lliicrnpicd ill NE“ bOlblv. 1\ov. -l—\cr"rlili,'4llt u gas plulc ill llor llorlll- ui TMIHDEOY. a ‘T year old girl. ’\i'll..l.'.\ll_lli‘.iii'll todily u resultant explos- plrorllr wlrrs they walked out oi‘ tho theatre, warning their victims not to summon uld. l. c c! will l! slope lweeeelr’ mlellllcstllul of t-llllln-l-ll. Tilt,’ (‘ilii- the largest vii in the district. has illl-rak llll." Irdlrll- lll" ll ls _""l t" (iPEll liil0lliti be lhllglll w rol-lllxrlrleilcd oar-rations and out 170 ‘t-ilsy us liilll. Hdllil, (lure iorrllcii correct mums pram U“. outser-llnen out, of work temporarily. Tho forlllrl rnirrllrred in. p91‘ “mm. m} lfflwr" Pork Avenuethls aftcrxllotlu.‘ l1“? ‘ut from ear to t-‘zlzi rull 114d _ ~‘. itUllll lll‘ \l‘ ‘l! of .l r‘ i- nlsiirill.‘ i ‘fill: body \\'.'l5~l (iscoverlul by n! six your‘ will wi$i(‘i' of llllfsllllirl girl. Hlvlng been trtlneierree from rll pebltion‘ e1 preeldent oi Baldwin; canllalavl steal o Limited. ‘remote. to head of Baldwin's Aoency at museum. Auetralla. ell- Hugh Peyn (- t ceneee this week (or (upland tor a‘ INK ‘"5 W!‘ uetralian, o’ I.” hm“ ' Qlr {WP h le e illeteeueln of [i ht Hon. Qtenley Baldwin, Lady Feynter‘ la I 'l‘llo robbers rein-sell to ioiw llluney from iMrs. Adams and did not ‘touch her jewelry. ‘During lthe various phases of the robbery they loll killed her and injured ull licr three children. Two oi the cllli- llreu. illllucllo. six. and Perri. ti. Nilre probably pcrlllarlciliLv lliillli‘ rd. Mrs Sclrwoolr. n lrllinrd nurse illlmyfiil MN. Ailflhlfl l0 lll! fiflflwil recently lllovell from (‘arlllllll lo illld one ol-tlre rolrlieffl We" fvllrllfill Allgllcd, - llor a chair. month's eojourn. accompanied by Lldy Peynter. p of _ Iudyerel? up and 1 snafu ls»- t ‘a. Z D l .<<<<=<:<<<<<<<<<< ‘f. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>$ l: C1 l‘? <4 <c<c<<< x >s>a>z>>>>>zu>uizl i ‘Tau flil¥€<€€<<€<€€€<€€ W’ fi>§§fl}fifi>b§fi'>fi>llfli Princess Martha, oi ter at Princess Astrid and will be one of the bridesmaids at the Roy- al wedding between Princess Astrid Ind- Prince Leopold oi Bel- gium. Novembflr. . . iHi SEiSIIN OTTAWA. Nov. 4.——Eastorn llllli| l-lswkesbllry on the Northern Ontario is today in the South oi.’ lNorth Bay. gri of the first important snow- sto of the season. and the collll- tryfis blanketed in a mantle of! while. The "wet" snow tied up telegraphic communications for unreal snow storm oi East Snow In Montreal MONTREAL. Nov. 3. —The firs i0 Winnipeg were working. Theislush and mud. The flakes start telegraph companies repprt greatest trouble around North Bai/‘falllng this afternoon. and the telephone service eucollnt-lsleet are predicted ht the McGll cred its chief difficulties. urounll Observatory. woman rnnowu mom [BAR euuoav e/tu. m PENNA. HORSE AND KILLED‘; nnooxvl-pmsl ‘N. Y.. Nov. 4--~ Mrs. Fairman R. Dick. formeriyjin Pennsylvania by the ‘Dauphin Gladys Roosevelt. a cousin of the countycourt. The opinion was .late Presldflltqwl! killed tolrevgiven in ‘proceedings against tile Philkdflphie American Magus ‘Base- bail’ a5. ' _ ‘ when she wee brown from her horse during a lolllilittt. _ " \ Sweden. shown ABOVE. is the oldest ele- FIHST ‘Silill Siiiiiiilwlliimil and the season time this ‘morning. and it was al-lcame to Montreal this morning. most noon before the lines throughand turned the streets into a sell oi the ed at an early hour and were still lllain and lmirlmsmrnxi. rll.‘ Nov. 4. ‘s- izlunday baseball today was declar- ed illegal tinder a statute or 17in binds lilill particular" thought lo ov-l ‘1[()|]_ (if course. habits may hr] broken illll only aftcr lhc cxpenlll-r They should be so disciplined and educated that all inclination to- ward u bad habit within the sys- ture of much time. lunch effort autumn. is Ove..cm“e_ IIGYSU. Vt‘ HUN‘? . (‘Ii lessens the likelihood of any rl-Ivery habit forlrl- ________________ (Continued on page 3) water started leaking lll from Nlim» her tirree mine close by a QIOIHQTY ihai has been idle some years and in which pumping operations were discontinued a year ago. i. l and‘ ma. Ion-owe. TIIWO“ ‘Afiltlill ‘IIIPNMI. who Nee been lppdlnl0d to the government houee at, le the grlnledn at east-j arm lumwe. oi llll Royal engineer-mans eeltieii in ieoe on mm’- e1 0mm city. Hie boner wae the ill-ea member tor Dauphin. Ian. iflllfeiter the creation e1 the delt- ‘flle above photoe m by Que .ll . lll ~ l . - ~.~—- t =.v¢‘.~ . s. 54,-3.3; '”