1.3., t l l 1 3 i j. I r' K719 I'- 41'KE'-'r1-:--.- -. ..;-::-,g- -,3 . ... . PAGE roux .l'IHE GUARDIAN Authorised no second 'JIou Mull '-vul Ulflco Dopurlrnonl. ilniuvs l'IIo llllnd uunrillnn r'unllnblug Una UIBl.'Ul.A'l'l0N foul City Zone . llclinl liroding zono -. All Other: ..................... - Total Net Paid . 13.043 Editor onvl Managing Ilroctor. I. it Jurneu Aoooclaui Editor, Fronli Wollmr. "Tho Strongest Memory Is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink" UHARLOTTETOWN sarunnav.-Minor? -lli..l-951 ............. 3.185 I.I5'. "Agricola" H" Some men are born to greatness, some attain greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them. Blythe Hurst, Sr., known far and wide in scientific and literary circles as "Agricola", belonged to the sec- 'ond class. He was :1 genius but of the class which provides for the capacity of taking pains. He was endowed with special powers of mind which enabled him, in the Biblical phrase, ”to prove all things" he sought after, with the result that he became an acknowledged authority on his favourite hobby of horticulture and kin- :lred subjects. his writings being quoted far and wide, and his opinion sought by and given to innumerable readers and admirers. Mr. Hurst was a native of Northum- Jcrland, England, whence he came by sailing ship to this Province in 1910, taking six weeks for the voyage. It was character- istic of him that in that period he for the first time learned and became a master of trigonometry. He never knew what it was to be idle mentally or physically, he was always finding something useful and profit- able to occupy every spare minute. Yet he was never hurried nor allowed himself to be harassed. He took things coolly and calmly, attempting to attain his objective not in the speediest way, but the way that would stand the test of re-examination. Mr. Hurst was great company, and could enter- tain friends from far and near with his dissertations on things scientific and practical. As a schoolmaster, before he became a writer, he took a keen interest in training his scholars to think as well as to repeat. He felt that it was better for a boy to real- ize what he was reciting than to get it off parrot fashion. That was the secret of his own success as a seeker after knowledge- in reading and learning he always stopped to think what impression was being left m his mind and why. In this way Mr. Hurst became an authority on whatever study or hobby he set his mind to. Read- ers of Agricola's ”Newsy Notes” in the Saturdayis issue of The Guardian must in actuality have enjoyed a feast of reason and flow of soul, for there was not an issue but his contributions contained some- thing worth while to the literate, in pract- ically every walk of life. He was no pusher or self-seeker, his works spoke for him. He lived a humble farmer's life and 'was contented to be of assistance to his neighbours, his readers, and to the Prov- incc at large in the contributions he made for their scientific, horticultural, agricult- ural and economic advancement, not to mention their religious and cultural attain- ments. His works, in a more than usual sense. do follow him. Keeping The Peac; The line followed by Communists and fellow tmvellrrs since the nations of the world showed signs of opposing Russian expansion has been that of crying, "Peace. peace," when, of course, there is no peace and no hope of peace should Russia become sufficiently strong to get her way by force. That is still the Communist line, but in our determination to resist aggression we should not forget that a true peace is also the object of the United Nations. When the agizrcssors hordes were over-riiiiii... . South Korea it would have been the height of folly to yield to appeals which really meant that the rest of the world should stand idly by. .. It was equally unwise in the face of military reverses to attempt to parley with R triumphant enemy. The only result was to raise the confidence of the Reds and strengthen their determination to drive the United Nations forces into the sea. The situation today, however, is radical- ly different. The U. N. and its defenders can negotiate from strength. The probabil- ity of the Chinese being prepared to listen to reason is immeasurably greater than when they were riding high. No op- portunity should be neglected of ending the hostilities in Korea on terms which assure that country's independence even should it be necessary to provide some means of re- . assuring the Chinese that their own secur- ity is to be in no way threatened. HEDIIOIIIAI. nous ' V..- mosque, but not so today under the Com- munist standards of morality, hence the shooting of Iran's Premier at a funeral service in Teheran. ' O O I The Easter recess of Parliament has been fixed from Wednesday, March 21 to Monday, April 2. 9 O 0 To be, or not to be, a Provincial Sales Tax-that is the question agitating the minds and pockets of legislators, business men, and, most of all, consumers. I O O The vchemence of Premier Jonesi denial of any intention of imposing a sales tax would seem to lend support, if any be need- ed, to the very general view that an elect- ion is close at hand. 0 O 0 g The end of Education Week should see more people more interested in the problems facing our schools. That interest is es- sential if youth is to receive the advant- ages to which it is entitled. 0 O O This Province was one of the five gain- ing more families than it lost according to a Department of Health and Welfare re- port. Single men and women may still be seeking greener fields but it seems that families now see the Island as holding out the promise of well-being and security. 0 0 0 Young farmers are returning from the woods of our neighbouring provinces, their winter employment cut short by the mild weather so appreciated by the rest of us. They may find, however, that wood cutting offers opportunities right at home on the family wood-lot. I O 0 That of 1814 complaints to the R. C. M. P. no less than 1209 were unfounded shows a very serious situation. While the small force was uselessly investigating those 1209 unfounded complaints the resources available for dealing with the real offences must have been sadly depleted. O 0 O Tliougli we had a surplus on.currciit ac- count last year. we still increased our pub- lic debt over a million-and-a-quarter dol- lars. It was Senator Maclntyre, when Min- ister of Public Works, who exclaimed "What is a million anyway?"-neither liere nor there. If it is here all right, but if it is there we are in a hole. 3 '3 1 The ils'65,000,000 subsidy proposed by the Federal Government for the prairie grain-growers will come from the taxpay- ers. This enormous subsidy slated to go west, would otherwise have been available for other spending purposes, including de- fence. Now it will have to be replaced by a similar amount raised by taxation. 0 O O A successful Islander abroad, Mr. D. A. Riley, M.P., is receiving unstinted praise in Ottawa and New Brunswick for suc- cessfully organizing a delegation of M.P.'s and their friends on a visit to see the pos- sibilities of Saint John as a manufacturing centre. Of the provinces only Prince Erl- ward Island and Nova Scotia were unrep- resented on the tour. Presumably their M.P.'s did not need to be told of the pos- sibilities of their fellow Maritime Provinces. O O I Guiseppe Mazzini, Italian patriot, died this date 1872. He was born at Genoa. joined the Carbonari which subsequently vas supcrccdecl by Mazzini's Young Italy Society. After various failures to provoke l rising in Italy (1831-1834) he lived in Switzerland until he migrated to London in '937. There he founded the journal "Apost- olato.Populare" and continued his political propaganda. He was briefly one of the triumvirs at Rome but resigned when his proposals were rejected. His last attempt at rebellion, at Palermo in 1870, failed but two months later he saw the realization of ..l ins hopes. As Garibaldi was the soldier and Cavour the statesman of a united Italy, 30 Mazzini was its idealist and spiritual founder. The complaint by a speaker in the Leg- islature that his tributes to former mem- bers and leading civil servants who had passed away during the year were not mentioned in the newspaper report of his remarks, "raises a point which the public, if not the politicians, will apprqclate. That is that the press reporters seek to avoid, as much as possible, repetitious statements. Tributes to deceased noteworthles are paid by every speaker in the Draft Address de- bate, and they are referred to in general terms iii reference to the opening speeches delivered on both sides. Usually theyhave already been fully covered in press obituar- ies and in tributes published lnlthe press at the time the obituaries appeared. Readers appreciate the fact that in a half column or column report they are not getting all that a meihbcr said in the course of an hour's speech or more. Formerly it was the practice to publish lengthier reports, but it is doubtful if these were read by the public generally and certainly they would get scant attention today. . .. .. A gt - Cl-iARl.0T'l'i-2Tl)WlVl ' . Vanishing Act ma GUARDIAN. PUBLIC FUl3UM This column in open to the sllacuulon by correspondent: of question: of interest. The Guardian don not necessar- lly onoonm the opinion ol correspondents. TH!-I POTA TO MARKET Sir, -- Thc potato market. in Canada is at the present. time very quiet and without life. New Bruns- wick is selling table potatoes at about 3103.00 per cai-loud less than In my law student days, it. seems to me that the young people had more fun than at present. It is true that there were no motor cars the P.E.I. market, and they are moving approximately three cars to our one. It is fortunate that the stock of potatoes here is decidedly less than it year ago. and our growers are therefore not forcing potatoes on the market. otherwise the situation would be even worse than it is now. There seems to be the idea with some people that the Potato Mar- keting Board has some connection or activity with the active market- ing of our crop - actually the Board, which meets only at odd times, has little to do with the prob- lcm of finding the best markets, and but a passing knowledge of the deal problems and marketing de- mands and prospects. It is apparent today that the ag- recmcul: with a similar Board in New Brunswick has not been too beneficial to our growers. Whether the market. rises or lowers or re- mains steady as it comes out of the present inactive state, the situation will be based on the buyers” and scllrrs' idea of the reserve supply hi Canada for the balance of the season; and any action of the local Marketing Board cannot influence it one way or another. unless the Board is prepared to buy. pay for. and dispose of any surplus in mar- kets other than to the normal channels of marketing. The dealers not.e in the press report that all potato growers in the province are to be registered. as a result of 3. meeting of the Fed- eration of Agriculture and its off- spring, the Potato Marketing Board. It is noted that the people mainly interested in the potato business were not consulted before plans were made for the implementing of an expensive theory. when you start to register 10.003 farmers, and ask for returns on the acreage, variety, yield, storngzes and marketing intentions, you immed- iately employ a staff and expen- slve equipment for tabulation. It the information is 100 per cent. correct, it can be of value for com- parlng with like information of pre- vious years; but if perchance it is only 90 per cent correct or less. it can be far more dangerous than helpful. Many potato growers and dealers have gone broke holding for higher prices which never came - basing their information on the best information, statistics and trade reports available over a who): area. Such ideas are expensive, but more than that. they are really dangerous in the hands of people clothed with autocratic powers. No man or Board can or ever has con- slstantly forecast the potato market with accuracy. We are. Sir. et.c., POTATO DEALERS ASS'N. DGOsHGOGr60;f 60(C' Q Old Charlottetown d 6 (And r. a. I.) I i i HOUSES AT VARIANCE Disagreements between the Leg- islature Councll and the House of Assembly were not infrequent in the old days. The following ex- change of acrimonious messages occurred during the scsslcn of March-Aprll,18:9: Council Chamber. 11th April. ”His Majesty! Council, in giving their assent to the present Ap- propriation Bill, wish the Hause of Assembly to understand, that in doing so, they by no means hpprcve of all the items of ex- penditure therein contained. Al- though His Majesty's .C:uncil are disposed to sanction ii reason- able remuneration to the Mem- bers of the House of Assembly, fer their scrvlccs in General Aa- scmbly. yet they conceive that. a sum of I50 to the Speaker, and 1223 to each of the members, for thelr services in the present. ses- sion, is an exorbitant allowance. wholly unpa cccdented. and in no manner wafi-antcd by the present state of the annual revenue cf this Island. But His Majesty's Council, taking into considera- tion that by rejecting these items, a total loss of the Appropriation Bill would foll:w. have been in- duced to give their assent. to the present bill, protecting. however, against this grant being drawn in- to any precedent. for the future." Home of Assembly, 11th April: ordered, that the following macs- nge be sent. to His Majesty's Council: "The House of Assembly in its message of the let: any of May last. to His Majesty: coun- cil, having expressed its cur- prisc and dinpprobatlon at the novel mode adopted by the Coun- cil of assigning to the House of Iasembly, by Message, their rea- sons for either auenting or dis- conting to any Bill sent. to them for their concurrence, and the House atlll being cf opinion that such a made of proceeding is of very cvu tendency. and to ill cul- culntcd to promote the service of Hi: Majesty and of the Colony, have tbei-efcro thought fit to re- turn the Message cent down this day with the Appropriation Bill." Council chamber. lltli April: ordered, that a copy of the follow- ing resolution be lent down to the House of Assembly; "That it in the undoubted aha constitution- al right. of fill Mnjactyu council. In giving their accent to. o lllll uni down to the Home of Anem- bly, to assign. by Manon. their reasons for counting to -- ouch Bill; and that the hilly and in- ll HDRVOOCUBMC. in those days, so that our ambit of enjoyment. was more limited. The beochcs were not patronized as they are today. And yet we enjoyed life. We formed portion and went out rowing on the harbour and sang the old songs and the current. ones. on a holiday we chartered ll. bolt: and went. on an excursion up the East: or West River and held I picnic. We had our weekly card parties with supper and dance afterwards. These parties started at eight or half past eight and were over by twelve o'clock. There were balls at Government The favorite Navy practice of using Biblical quotations to con- vey 9. lot in 8. little by official signals was brought into play on the departure of HMCS Huron from Halifax: Naval Mcssage:- To: Huron Fl-om: Canflaglant Un- classified Routine. Goodbye good luok and a safe return to your home port. Ephesians chapter six verses 10, 11 and 12. The quotation reads: ”Finally, my brethern, be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might. Put on the whole armor of God. iihat ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places."-The Crowsnest. Protocol is a wonderful thing. dear to the heart of the formalist (How the modern application of the term ever could be tortured from its original meaning is one of those mystcrics which baffle the ordinary mind.) But, over on Prince Edward island, protocol frequently bows to efficiency and common-sense. After the Speech from the Throne had been read, and the Governor had left the chamber, at the opening of the Island Legislature this week, the Speaker began. according to cus- tom, to re-read the Speech to the members who had just heard it. whereupon, the Premier moved that the Speech "be taken as read." The House assented. in lihc laconic language of 3 press des- paich. Additionally, when the Governor entered the chamber for the opening ceremonies, he invit- ed the members to be seated. An- othr lerific shock to protocol- but another victory for common- sense. The Island has its own ways of doing things, and they are us- ually practical- ways. - Halifax Herald. If the Very Rev. Hcwlcll. John- son were to agre to choose between his two apparently conflicting faiths, as he is being pressed to do by a group of British laymen. to forswenr Communism or quit his post. as Dean of Canterbury, it would not. be as hard as it might appear. There can -be no great. degree of conflict involved any more. His heart is no longer in his cathedral or in what it stands for. Where it lies was shown again at the meeting of the World Peace Council in Berlin, a few days ago. One of the other speak- ers, as addlcd as himself apparent- ly, spoke a piece about the for- lurcs U. S. soldiers are inflictin-g on the Koreans. The gamut ran from crucifixion to shroudin-g in wet leather which is allowed to shrink d-ry around the victim, an incorrectly-described practice of Indian-fighting days in the West. (Rawhide, not wet leather, was used). If a Dean of Canterbury could conceivably believe the twaddle Dr. Johnson uttered about the Western countries getting ready for a war against Soviet Russia, the savior of "culture", he could not. without betraying one of the elcvrneninls he bhould up- hold. trullh. sit by without protest while such slanderous nonsense in this torture fabrication is being spoken. Nor, surely, would a Dean of Cnnlenbury with any re- gard for the significance of his office lend his influence to I cause that has to be propped up with such vicious falsehoods. One good thing that can be field of Dr. John.Ion'o course is that his sympathies and views are parad- ed frankly. What harm he does, he does in the open. It would be better, though, if he stepped still further into the open. Canterbury Cathedral in In unsuitable back- drop for the part of -his-activities E I Notes ByiThe Way 1; House and of. private houses. At. these bulls there was always a dance programme and one's am- bition was to secure as many dance: as possible, and from as, many girls on possible. It was not the boy and girl affair of the pre- sent. day. 0 O In Mr. H. P. Duchemln's lifetime I. was privileged on several occas- ions to be his guest at his summer residence at Fortune, near Rourlii. He owned the cottage originally built by Charles Coughltn and wit.h additions and other alterations had made it o thing of beauty. Mr. Duchemin at Fortune was muroundcd by his family, by his sister and friends. He reminded me of the Patrlarchs of old. for all activities seemed to revolve around him; he was loved and he was re- vered. The late Charles Coughlln was one of America's leading actors. He had a stator and a. daughter no less distinguished. Through some con- nection which I do not know, he estobliuhed I summer residence at Fortune and, through him. several other Amerlcm actors did likewise, so that Fortune became known as the "Actora' Colony." - Coughltn become so fond of For- tune that he expressed the wish that when he died he should be buried there. Ripley ("Believe It.' Or Not”) tells of his wish but says. that dying in Galveston, Texas. he- wu buried in the cemete y there. Then come what is known as thel Galveston Flood. The cemetery wasl partly washed away and-accord- ing to Ripley-among the coffins that floated into the Gulf of Mex- ico was that of Charles Coughlin. The coffin struck the Gulf Stream. was carried along the Atlantic Coast and eventually landed at Fortune, Prince Edward Island. where it. was buried and 9. menu- ment crected there to his memory. Notwithstanding Ripley's "Believe It Or Not," this story is in part pure fiction. It is true that Cough- lln was buried in Galveston cem- etery, and that at the time of the flood his body was washed into the into which he puts so much mis- directed effort.-Montreal. Star. Tin pan alley in much the come around the world, whether under predatory capitalism or the col- lectivized state. The Literary Gazette, published -in Russia, seems to provide authority for this conclusion. The Gazette, or- gan of the Soviet writei-5' union. warns Russian song writers that they must stop turning out trashy love lyrics and other "hack" pro- ducts. It seems that too many lyricists have the some stars twiniklin-g. the same rivers rip- -pling. and the some shock work- ers shouting. Of course, it has of- ten been suspected that large numbers of New York and Holly- wood son-gsmiths would go on the dole if June, moon, swoon, and croon were dropped from the vo- cabulary. But one hardly expects to hear the proponents of repeat- ed five-year plans protest that songs sound as if they came off an assembly line. If a Ilussian com- poser-writer team turns out in song for the Communist May Day celebration but fails to get it accepted, the pair merely rewrite: it for Coal Miners' Day or Artil- lery Day, the Soviet. critic com- plains. Perhaps on the theory that songs which flopped in an Arab- ian setting have gone over big when transferred to a Dixie locale -or vice verse. But the worst of- fence cited by the Literary Gaz- ette is that the authors of the song, "Russia Is Our Motherland", designed to foster Soviet patriot- ism, have allowed it to be set to tango music. What have the re- scnrchers of the histori'ans' union been doing? Haven't. they ”discov- crrd" yet. that the tango was first danced in Nizhni Novgorod or Gulf of Mexico; but there the story 'f;l5hkgnt',I .. cih,-isuan Science ends. The man buried at Fortune Monitor, ' is Flocton, another American actor, and the niunent at Abel's Palm was erected by Mrs. Lecllo Carter "T5; n7oe&'t&waz ' CEUSADI The Kings come rldlng back from the crusade. The purple Kings and all their mounted men; They fill the street with clomoruus cavalcade. and David Bolescoe, two celebrated American actors. and is in the form of a sun dial. 0 0 0 On the occasion of the visit of the King and Queen to this Pro- vince, n luncheon was given them by the 1' t t Governor, the Hon. George D. Denlols. At table, the King not to the right. and the Queen to the left of the Governor who in his official position presided at the function. From my place at the table I had 9. full view of the King and Queen so that I witnessed the ” an in- cident I mi about to relate. In front. of the Queen was a bas- The Kings have broken down the ket of fruit. The basket had orig- 3a!'Bt'en- mated with the chef of the Char- Slnslnz 8- mat sons of the ea-W lottetown Hotel and win made of 01'" Wars: different colored candy ribbons. It In crttrrpson ships mm the 898 looked so natural that I saw the 93' "mm intmlt (1 id ti, k With crimson sails and diamondcd gxeeggxmor H Rnw: gnu: 3:, dark Wm ribbon. On the Governor's inform- That. made the Mediterranean mg he, that R was elm,” she flash with flame. ' rubbed her finger on one of the ribbons, then lifted the finger to lb” '" her tongue. It. was candy! . W C And reading how, in month. the ranks Formed on the edge of the desert, armoured all, I wish to God that. I had been wit. them when the first Norman lcopt. upon the wall, , And God-frey led the foremost of the Franks, . And young lord Raymond stormed Jerusalem. Reporters were here from all over Canada for the event. Two of them, however, 4 connection and spent the day In Borden in- stead of Charlottetown. in a burst. of imagination they wired their paper in Toronto in most fantastic report. They said that the City we: crowded with farmers who had come wit their horses and bug- -Killnlro Belloc. glen, that the harbour was filled with flahermenh boats, that. the Memoirs Of The .Hon.. A. W Former Premier and Retired Jluslice Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island After Thoughts :..:.-.I MARCH 10. 1951 E. Arsenault long rubber boots and oils . other imaginary incidcnts.kma' W11 I sent the newspaper editor wire of protest and in reply mm" ed a long telegram of apology I. it the editor Informed me that 9,: reporters for the paper were on their return from HCC0lIlDBIlyin3ule Royal party to Newfoundland, qm he had wired them and that. the would call at Charlottetown my their return. One of them was iii; photographer of the Dionne quim, uplets. Itmet. them on arrival and spent three days motoring um" through the different parts of th Island. The result was fl Scl'lt's of articles on Prince Edward Island lliustinted by-snapshots taken on the spot. The upshot. w,.s' ml. Prince Edward Island received much publicity through a Tommo newspaper whose reporters. 1; missed the King's reception in Charlottctowii. - O O 0 My acquaintance with Govern. ment House really relates back 9, my college days when Douglas Mc- Donald, Governor A.A. McDonnld': son, was in college with me. It 1. of the Colonial style of !Il'Cllll.P.Cl- ure. was built. in 1834, and mu, slight alterations in practically in. same as it. was in Colonial days. Many Governors have passgq through Government House slnfg A. A. McDonald's occupancy, and without making any invidloua dis. tinctlon I can truly say that nnng have filled the office more iicccpt. ably and with greater distinction that the Honourable George Du. Brlsay7DeBlols. He was the only Governor in Prince Edward Island to entertain a King and Queen. At his own expense he Cl'Hbeul3hFdU1g Government House grounds with 1 flower garden and by the planting of ornamental trees and buclies, He was lavish in his entertainment and yearly spent many times his salary in extending the hospitality of Government House to visitors and to the people of the Province. 0 0 0 I have never regretted the llmt spent in England as a law student. It is true that it. involved me in an expense which I could ill afford. in a debt which it took me some yam to liquidate, and yet it was worth while. Both as a barrister and as a judge the experience which I sir.- quired in the law office of the Honourable Mr. Russell and in at- tending Court was of great vain: to me. As a lawyer. I learned how solicitors in England prepared their cases for counsel; how the case was fully set out, how the exhibit: were numbered in the order in which they were to be used. ill- dexed and cross-indexed; how do examination in chief was to be clif- ried out even to the questions to be asked by counsel, and the ex- pected nnawcrs in reply. I had the privilege of allmrlinl Court at. the hearing of roses he- fore eminent judges with lelltllnl counsel on either side. I came to know the great judges of England, and the best counsel. some of whom afterwards become great judges in their turn. As a judge I had the opportunity. in the preparation of my judgments, of reading the judi- menta of these jurists and they were all the more interestlnz to me from the fact that I had attended their courts and seen them in ac- tion. It was on experience the value of which I only fully rcalizrd In after years. It was more. It widened my horizon, broadened my views. rind matured my opinion. The visit to Africa was also of value to me. I saw I. part or Ill! world that not many young men have the opportunity of visitlnm There I saw the natives in their habitat. the Zulus. the Basutos and Matiibcle. I saw the Boers. 1119 Grllzuiis nnd Hottentots.bi-sides lhn British ll'll1Ilbll.5ll1l.S, and lcnrurrl of their habits and customs. I have since seen a little of this great; world. I have revisited Ens- land and seen meat of France. I have come to know our l'iellIhl)0'lI5 to the South. and have contacted 8 great many of our Canadian in I ens among whom I count. mun? friends. And now in the sunset of "IV life I thank God that He 113” given me so many years and that He has showered on me the nIR"3' blesslnqa which I hardly deiiervctl To the readers of The GllRl'fllMl- who may have thought. it l,l'0”" while to read my rambling il1'T": oirs, I extend my sincere lllillllls and best. wishes. (The Elldl E fishermen were present in their: The Age-old story And Job opnkc, oud cold, lot the day pcrlolnwhcroin I won born. and "I0 night In which it won cold, than in a nun cblld oonoolvol. glvllegu of His Mhjutrl Coun- llouoo' of Auallbly. llth April: "Resolved. that the Manage cent down this day by the Council, or! i-agate: cllllnl on the port of the honourable Houu, which this Home is not. diopolcd to motnlu and which are not warranted bf Parliamentary precedent: and this House only regrets, that the near opproacii of proroutlon prcventl itttoklng the consideration this uuloi-1.”, The inn rooolutlomwoa ordotld to be dcilvotod lithe Bor,of till ociuicll but thrneuengcr of an Austin . after several lncffo , attempt! to gun admit! , which were uncweil up to , i maniac of pm-ognllon. wu oblig- ed in apart to the Home "that no could not to the Goun- iiry, and a manifest breach of flu in nuon uolgncd bouig: 'l'lluro on not a quor- oqlhoomnuipnunw '1 subject into full: -cm Orsmnllc Ill. 1. A. BROWN. B.Cp'. , Orthopedic l CHIROPODIST ' Now Located in the 5 Now cumuo spec. and Second Floor an R 5 Q,, 3". tional Accident Policies and Annuities. i.,,f,','l,.,,,,,,,,',',',' dlyhnnlohcd without obligation. -Consult nearest IN Kent - 179i Quota t or wt". or an 0." ' l - ,. ffolcpliono 140 A -I.” :.- ii . -in wiiv vouiir. FATHERS iiisuiis; If theyuhove ever tried to take care of an infant id for even one whole day, they are in 11 Eosltlon to understand why ii widow cannot care forf er family andearn a living at the same time. Conserve the Home and Stabilize the Nation. The Great-West Life is the Champion of Thrift the Guardian of thousands'of Canadian Homes. Term, Ordinary Life, Endowment, Pension, Educa- ..iinioMin. & co..un. ? ' 2 ; r . noun-n rinooanoor , Quotations . p luv words!!! i 1