y ‘ vfi‘vffw t . “blister copper Turn no Songs Such as "lire-airways"- A talking musical comedy that l; .1] POPULAR REVUE -—WITI'I—- s SUE CAROL LOLO LANE SHARON LYNN‘ JOHN" BIEEEDEN DIXIE LEE DAVID PERCY DAVID ROLLINS ' hateful" sites“ “chisel. Quotations furnished by Stewart "Jlones d: 00.. correspondents of " Greensillelds A: 00., members of the Montreal Stock Exchange. 88 Great "’Gcorge Street, Charlottetown. MARKET REVIEW Brazilian, Nickel and Noranda cen- l tinue to be the centre of attraction on the Montreal Stock Exchange. The ‘improved market position of Braz-' illan and the fine annual reports of ‘x the two premier Canadian Mining i klzllVVAléill FOR - l _,‘ .Al-I--5lNG.lNG.4- TALKING - DANCING ~ ' " rnrrv MUSICAL.COMEDY . ' You Bally“ iwvaurlhg With Susie" Etc. The erealm of Americas youth. with a ‘song and n laugh on their lips and feet that are never still. in an a" singing. all-dancing all- & ALSO MACK L THE FIRST FILM FOLLIES—THE MOST t ‘ enterprises have dralvn the ai-ient-I ion of the public even in thisdull; _ period. i y ‘Pile report of International Nickel, ‘which is rerzarded as being one of the i most comprehensive ever produced, fby a Company in-Canada fully sub-l ‘JBt/arlltiats the optimistic conclusions arrived at by various students of thc. ‘Ubfllllillllly during thc pant Ybar. Th: ,prir<~, of the stbck continued to nd- ivancc during the clay. Demand for it. ,\vas strong and steady. it closed (it ‘c1 1-2. A great deal of iluying in Brazib. inn was reported from-London io- Tlle r-tcck was firm through the _. session and clcscel ~at forty. . Although Nari-riders smelting (‘Pp- acity was practically the‘ same in 192'). if 1 ' annual report for the your cildcd in Decrmbrz‘ 3i, 1929 shows nn increase’ “bfffifi percent in the pmdlicfinn of blister coprcr. During the your tile “smelter trcnicd 42$! 2110 trns o! c-r: "and produced 51,625,478 pound". of ccmp-nred - lviih 33.- 301397 pounds in 1928. The net op- ” erntil v profit-a before deoi-‘v-iction ‘Ind depiction. but nficr trlrzr". and .1. v V@RAMP$ 1 Srclalclltils "NERWLIIII ‘ is, Instant Relief ...___...m ggdo-ptooaoganovooootficoooe Conlaolldatod Gd‘! .. .. TING MONDAYi 3' DAYS ONLY. Big City Blues" ‘That's Elabornte Settlnls- Gorgeous Costumes ifioaol SENNETT w’ ‘ ' ‘ ' courznv 1E V E R. PRODUCED FRANK RICHARDSON ‘ bond ihreistfwéireZqTliiviieilt u; £21} 73 a share based on the 2,239,112 shares outstanding compared with $1.- 39 in 1928 after corresponding deduc- cltirls based on 2.168.566 shares out- ztnnding. In i929 the operating prof- its showed an increase of 102.4 per- ’ centpafier the charges mentioned. I Market reports fumished by (‘ween- shelds k Co.. Montreal. to Stewart Jones dz Co. Quoted at closing, March 7. 1930. Call Money .. ... ... 35V; MONTREAL Abitibi 20".- Alberla Pacific Grain .. 2i Asbcrtds .. n Brazilian .. ... ..... 40 B. A.Cilv..~...... . as B. C. Pmvcwr . . . ..' 37W Building Products .. 27 Canada Cnr .. 26 CanntlnCementn l8, Canada Power and Paper 12H Canada Brewing .. ... 7 Domrim Bridge .. 73‘: Foreign Power Securities .. 30. Fraser Company .. 14".» General Steel Wares . . . . . 11i- Ecmc C'i .. B‘l Imperial Oil .. . . . . . . 233.; lilduztrirol Alcohol .. Bill. Ilit/rrnptloilnl Nickel .. 41‘: Inte-tlrwiwal rctrcleunl . . . . lilcsrey llarris . . . . . . . .. . . Mont-roll Pawrr . . . . . . - - . . . McColl Frontenac .. ... National Breweries . . . . . . . . . . Notional Steel Oar .. Canada Bronze . . Cancels Msitin: Dominion Tar . . Fwnolls Players V. . Narrrlrw .. 41.60‘ Tower Corporation .. 71% ‘Friez- Drcs .. . 7M6 ‘Quebec. Power .. .. ' (ii Silawlnizan .. ... .. 741 ‘cmelters .. . 2:11‘. ‘Steel of Canada .. ... tfiflfeel of Canada Pfd .. iSlmnca .. .. . ..... ... . 38h Winnipeg Electric .. NEW YORK American Can .. ... 142 Allegheny .. ... ... Aneccndn .. ... ... ... ... 74%‘ jBendix Aviation .. ..' Internal-tonal Harvester .. |Povllck&lbrrd_.. sou ‘Pccrlfioc. n. .. . ml ‘ 40% Oiroilmw anmZ. mi Securities A .~. c; “ti. M" Paramount Players Lasky .. . 70ft ll . .1101. Alf-own _ somsfrsm. m c1» \ . .. . _ ‘ _ .“COME AND ‘°~‘° "‘- - - A V‘ fighting Blue-Jacket smashl through to hippilless. Alfie plums lnwwn COMEDY ~ Butter .. Eggs Potatoes . Turnips .. Oats .. flay -- ... Pork . .' . Straw Butter Eggs Potatoes .. ... ... ... ... ... 70-30 Turn-lps .. l-lcy .. Pork-...; . . . . . . . . . . .. MT. STEWART ‘Du-tter .. Eggs . . Potatoes ‘Turnips .. Oats“ .. Hay Pork . . Qumran HARBOR Butter . . . . . . _ . . . . . . ..-40 Eggs robotics Turnlps .. Oat;- .. filly EZRA Potatoes . . Turnips . Oats MT. S'i‘EWART NOTES Another very 47 ‘hockey WM played on Morell Rink. 3g,l“l'l<lPi' llilzht Fob. 28 betwccn the l-id. dllllsborougll and Morcll teams. ‘Score 7-4 ill favor of I-fd. f-lillsbor- iough. keep up the good work lid. illillsboro. Miss Ernestine (‘mint Mt. Stewart. ‘was slvlaitor to Charlottetown on i" {macaw last. Misl Etta McDonald, Ollcrry I-flll. 130% ‘iv spending some time at the home ‘of iMlss Dorothy Smaliwocd.‘ Ilia many friends are sorry to leum tint-Mr. Michael Iileehlln Mt. Stewart is cqrlfhled to his bed on. account of illness and are looking forward for an early recovery. ' ttennepott Copper .. 59% yart. ‘_». Montgomery Ward .. .. 46%| - . illegal-a Hudson Power .. ..... llili A ycry enjoyablodanoe, wuheld at the home of Mr. John AilhcDon- old in Monday night Mel-ch 3 And Ill present dnloyed tllemielvu for if»; tliegmcll hwwjcl (no lourflfllqm-‘cfi.’ h " l were nllcnss ‘.1!_'}.-___._ _ AM 0 N DlA ‘Y ‘lumen SENNETT comm-scenic AND " rollicking, frolicking cqmedy Pnrls and London. ' '7 ‘ills MARKETS “cuillumorrl-Jrowu “...-.- ...-u... ... n. ... ... ... ....... .... .... ....-—65 Ilfiglwfillilcfdvklfll’ ‘ville, a p. m. and hunter River '1 E m. Sunday School-mister River sunshade-file service in thc Presbyterian Gluten, Bradfllbme, on Saturday Much 9th will be at 11 a. m. all are cordially invited. ctvnr: alvlm-oh Sunday, March Bth the Sunday School ill the Pres- byterian Church. Clydeltiver, will be ct 1i a. m. There will not be any rog- ular preaching services. MAKING GOOD’ RECOVERY- The emlgreglation of Belfast. and Bell niver are more than pleased that their pastor. ftcv. M. C. Mc- Donald has so recovered from his crit- ical operation in the P. E. Island hos- pital as to be able to return. to his home shortly and are also very much pleased that the Sew l). M. Sinclair (if Valleyfield has so kindly offered to preach for him at-Icldoxl on Sun- day. the 9th at 3 o'clock p. m. SALVATION ‘Aalvlv CITADEL- The ‘week end servicu Saturday. marked by the influence of the pres- ent series of Rcvivahsélvices being now wnduoted byvAdjutant and Mrs. A. W. Martin. Saturday 8 p. m. Sub- ject "The Brazen Serpent." Sunday i1 l. m. Subject "Daniel's Prayer," 3 p. in. Subject. W100i. and Saved." ‘Ibis service will b: Inoadcest by C. H. C. K. 7p. m. Subject. '"I'he Judge- ment Day.“ Young Peoples meetings at l0 a m. and 2 p. m. Monday ev- ening at 8 p. m. Cottage meetings at homo of Mrs. RobtxStewart. Young street. Gayinwn. All converts are‘ urged to attend every possible ser- vice. Strangers and ‘friends are cor- dially invited. ::IMI'OIVI‘ANT NOTICE. — TIIE VOGUE OPEN TI-IIS MORNING FOR BUSINESS, THE OLD STAND, I58 RICHMOND STREET. Z199. spent the week end at the home of her parents. Dr and‘ Mrs. McDon- nld. Mt. Stewart. Mr. John A. Barrett Charlottetoum. went a few-days at his home Mt. Stewart. recently. ' Misses Ma-ry and Helen Walsh. Mt. Stewart. were‘ visitors to Charlotte- town on Tuesday last. Mr. and Mrs. John Pigott and family. Savage Harbour. paid ll visit to friends at Mt. Stewart 0n Sun- day last. Now that the time for hauling fertilizer has begun a number of famlers are busily engaged at haul- ing their spring supply. The many friends of Mire Ruth lvlcKemlie were glad to see her able to be at Mt. Stewart on Saturday having being cmlfined to her home for awhile with a severe case of Lu- g-rippe. ' ‘Miss Fannie‘ Coffin. Int 48. spent the week end at her hclne. I-Id. l-lill- sboro-D. ' MOUNT TRYON SCIIOOL Tile followh; is the standing of MountTryon ‘School for the month of Februaryz~ ' Grade IX-l I-lelen Campbell. 2 Neva Quigley. Grade VI--1 Edward Qlliiiiflll- Grade V—1 James Qulglcy. 2 Wit- more Quigley, 3 Bessie Warren. Grade ill-ll Everett Huncis. 2 ‘Russel Qulgley. ii Florence Qnigley. >4 Louise Warren. Grade I Sr.-l Lewis McDonald. 2 Gladys McDonald. l _ Grade I‘Jr.—l Charlotte Quiglcy. 2 Arthur Qulgley. - Perfect attendance ‘ward Quil- ley. James Quizley. Everett Francis. Russel Qulgley, Gladys McDonald. , __...... BOUTHIIILVILLI SCHOOL Following 1| the standing of So. Melville Qchooi for lllontll-‘OI Feb- ruuryz- ‘ _ ' Grade X-l Wilfred Bradley, 1 Maurice Bradley. a yen. ‘lnlnor. Grade IXL-lfierlld MOIIIIIIIII. _ Grads Vfll-l, plenum- rl-lllhcr. 2 ncmhy nlxch. a Edwin Bradley. - Grade vn-se-l Betty 11-min. 2 Vere-nice G-rcennn. a Mcrlonjlood. ' VII ‘Jr.—l Dorothy Green- lihfil mine l-llnlm. ~ v Grids IY-Phtrlcia-Hood and Marjorie‘ Dlxon -' (MW) I Jlioph moon 1nd Adrilh minor (equil) Grade m-l- Juana Gfetnlll, 2 Mercodcilrloiil. 3.2mm. rcclc.‘ Willi " n. ' F Nilocrlntttnunce: vwmnt}. out}. a " cm- ult Mum’ hummer mluushu 6f tbs city's clout importqpt ,,_ = Sundly. Monday. swlll be distinctly. Immigration‘ ' page id) -i_ naughty children and wls revived e.- gain in a reputed saying of the Knis- el-‘s at the beginning of the Greet War when he called upon his offic- er; to show no mercy, and we find I-Iun defined in the Oxford Diction- m-y as "one of an Asiatic nomad truce the 4th and 5th centuries. (contempt) German. Austrian. or esp. Prussian. of the Slavs. Tartars, or the Mon- gols-the latter of whom overrun parts of China. and, it L4 thought. came westward as far as Great Brit- ain. Tile movements. we have been noticing were not deliberate migra- tions. they were caused. u we saw. by an urge to movcforward to richer pastures. or by a pressure from be- hind due to increased population and a change in the geographical con- ditions of the land. Among these peo- pies able bodied men were all com- batants. the tribe was always mob- olimd for war. and so slavery arose; slavery is the concomitant of war. they both belong to this period of man's development. but of the two war is infinitely the more hideous. Perhaps the reason that traffic in slaves was prohibited in the Brit- ish Isles and slavery abolished in the United States during the ins-t century was the fact that 1t had been reviv- ed after Europeans began exploiting hot countries and that it had not grown into the fibre cf the people as had war. The oppositional the church and of the conservative minded pro- prietor classes was almost unanimous in the days of anti slavery as it is today when active efforts are being made to outlaw war by those who ireallze its anachronlsm. when slav- ery was revived us an economic fac- ltor or developing the tropical and sub tropical parts of Arnericll it re- sulted in forced migrations from Africa of negroes accompanied by extreme cruelty and bcqueatlllng to later generations an acute race prob- lem of assimillation that may never be satisfactorily solved-the propos- al to persuade negroes whose great- grandfathers were brought over us slaves from Africa to return there and set up a republic in Liberia seems fantastic. even the return of Jews to Palestine to recreate there a new» nation is an artlllcialnlovement whose success is problcnlatical. tribes by the conquerors in the early history of Peru. in Palestine (e. g. the Babylonian captivity» and in the Roman Empire, the idea‘ being to facilitate assimilation. We on the up whole communities ornations of foreign birth-whether tile ‘advan- tages outweigh the dangers of this for our national life is a question to be considered llltcr ill our study. We saw an example cf the writh- rlrayval of races before invaders or pntruders in the can: o! the Cells in ‘Britain; this can only be done where ithere is i\ hinterland to withdraw into. Modern examples are the with- drawal of the Indians in America west wards before the intruding Euro- peans. the withdrawal northwards of the Kcfflrs in South Africa before the enroaclllng Boers, and still later of the Boers into the Transvaal be- fore the British Empire builders. Religious persecutions in Europe were responsible for historic move- ments~snlsll in their-beginning but most of them of far-reaching influence in the developing of the New World. The persecution of the i-iuguenots in France drove them from the country to England, to Holland-and what gxlncelms us--to South Carolina for they were not, allowed towards the end or the French regime to go to New France. 1n the time of Char- les the First and after the Restora- tion Puritans went to Holland Ind thence to New lhlglsnd and Amer- ica to escape , sacution in Contin- ental Europe. and since the revoii ution in Busch many Russians have found their way‘ to other countries. We have in our Nonhwest Mennon- ites and Doukhobors- ‘ugecc inlvn A curious artificial movement ‘of Pwplis took pluce after thc war in the Balkans. the result. of the acquisition ~by~Glecks of land countries undertook ‘to 10mm i‘ othcl-‘qnptlcrldls. ; , _. I , 111cm ‘is o_ movement of, indl uni or vciyfinlclfgroubn thltfin aggregate is of serious lmpmltotlli Oflifiilllfly.‘ usually.‘ YIIQYNIITIM l! emigration; this ilwlli- giiogotilcr IIIOIIGIILIQOVEIIIQIIQ-‘llld is identical with u» troild‘éit}wal'd'_|'ndd um frclnrurul life within "fllfiflifl own modulus. The two countries aul-j um; incci fmntlliuucvyllltnt are _ latter do.“ first gnnllul it stood n» m thlt was uncouth and crude because classic tradition had not been followedfthe flbl-IMME of the vmuu has been stigmatlacd forever by the name bd- Wmlhl the symbol for ruthless bur- barity- thc name of Attila. the great Hun leader. is said to hllvc been used for centuries in Europe to ten-lfy who, invaded and ravaged Europe in We need not study the movements i We find forcible deporiations of: other hand ill Canada arc building! formerly OWnOd by TIIIM]. The i510 cfllni-rifl losing uiell- citillnl ma in "rllnic vmlm ulctlon. _yot- in for that year. and in the census of mo think/m found w be two mil- lion Gcnadlms in the United amt- cs. 'I‘he' proximity of a wealthy nat- ion with its industries highly dc- velcped offerl opportunities that are i. istible. ‘but the tide semis to be ‘tumirlg. =for Canada is at last coming into her own. A quite unproductive movement of individuals took place yearly of peo- 1904 the unlwing number o1’ two millions of them were wandering ov- er the continent of America. I The last movement of people un- directed by GUVCI merits which we must mention is typified by the gold rush. This u a migration at first of single mensuch as took place to Col- orado. California. British Columbia. the Yukon. and to the South African almond nlines. ‘Ihcse are followed by traders lmd women. law and or- der are established and civilization has advanced another step. g Next week we shall take up move- ments ofl population as a national policy of immigration and coloniza- tion. A Holiday In _ _ _- London And Vicinity ' (C- tinued from page 4) might be safe. Then came trade and icities grewy into lucky bags into which menidlpped m profit. Essent- ‘laliy they remain lucky bags to this 'day, but that. thunk Heaven. is not ithe whole story. A city develops |Trcdition and Pride. London has greater tradition and pride than any ‘other city in the world . . . . . . .. Her: ils every him-van emotion. 1n this Hpendid theatre the comedy and the tragedyof the human heart are acted day and night. Love and treachery, daughter and tears, beauty and ugli- ness. chase one another through thc streets of London every minute of tile day,- beeause London is Just a great mass of human feeling. and man is capable of so much moral com- plexity that you might almost say that good and bad exist in him at the same moment." (H. V. Morton» "Oh gray. O gloomy skies! What then? .i-Iere is a marvellous world of men; ‘More wonderful than Rome was. when The world was ftome! See the great stream of llfc flow by! l-iere thronging myriads laugh and sigh. A Herc rise and fall. here live and die: 1n this vast home." (Lionel Johnson) ONE o'clock in the- City of London " ' ' and the _ traffic roars. throbs mnd thunders. ' ° ' ' I stand on the ‘edge ofa vast pit in which. down through successive strata. brick, tiles black earth. powdered cement. lies thc lclnypn which London rests. it is a deep. dark hole. 1t is as if some surgeon. operating on the great bculy {of the ‘city. has baled it to the spine. ‘I look down with am: at the accum- ulation of nearly two thousand yours o.’ known history piled. layer on layer. twenty-four feet above the primal Rome is dug up in the City of London when anew bank is built. For we stand on the shoulders of Rome. Men from the London snd the Guild- llke lynxes. collect the little bits of red pottery, the coins. the bits of green and mauve glass. this wreckage of that first Iondon. that Iar flung hill. . . . i. As I stand there so mod- still stuck in the strap of my wrist- WhatdcIue?"' Grllduallyus wood lnd- red-tile houses running within the wells in straight lines like marble capitals under our grey skins. thormjuticcircuiur sweep of the theatre. the whim ileum cf the mrum. thc-guudwlth their ‘ ‘, the both! ltthe gates. the long. ctraiihtsitootl clouded. ncuymlrlcc. I see the ‘shaggy Britons and Gaul: “ccmqcictiinngvcvcr m: mhu. their 4 "mining. swords at hips: the 1Qld6nwn0jis= to purl-netball: . Ilourfll AM Ills llcnlhfllkfwghfldn mxcqhuqlun moo-m fiQYfiWWM ‘you V ~~. Aullttvlllinllmvlfli tv-villtilrv hl- the; drove in 1m moo mm pinto: ran w, . o i 4 . ni-iaecupcpcntm lpum-r- Imu- thin m mirmsmm by her mm lfltlamdotlol dominion status in the mum; Olnldfl nflition was worse. "No couiltrydn the world is richerdn natural- rucurcemcbd in tbdfertll- mo: its cqltiulainc country is so Jnuch in need of increasing its pop- 1890 the number dfOlnldilns who hid m1!- ruied in the United States was one fifth of the population of Canada pie popularly known as "bcboes." In mud. ' " ' ' Every week a slwkful of hall Museums watch the excavations limb of Home crowning its single ernmuchu pnrvenu an omnibus ticket watch. I hold the cup of Flnvius. vision in a crystal clears and forms out of s mist I see a smaller and scold- or Romcstundlngwithitsmerble feet in Themes water. I see rows of tunic wit-hint cutrum: I see. the. move tn n. aide us.the Roman troops‘ i... slime-boy “llkrvwi-"lo W taluwouldgccn. ° ' ' 'W‘hatchstter_ of ; 51;. month! old -~sctndll is thO women walk to tile baths: Whit dis- cussion of Rome's intact coiffurc, her newest pin. her sum-test undcll AV. the dcckstilc (lruk of Amine and ilwstaln‘ of L released-TWO. the “one two. three" as the cursmeu dip their greet blades 1n the Thames and o. galley goes home. with letters ~10. ' ' ' * So lhlgland takes shapes out of the mists of time; ac London bc- gins." (Morton). -_ LET us nowlgo out into London. But before doing so, let me say that sf- ter leaving Canada on the 21th of April itboutthc last of the snows and sailing during cold and stormy west- her across the broad Atlantic, it was a happy change to enter calm waters and fine weather’ on approaching Cherbourg on the coast of France where. after taking .in passengers and mails from the tender. we left for Southampton. It was a delight to see the chalk cliffs of the south of England, surmounted by green grass and trees in full foliage. We passed the Isle of Wight. where the late Queen Victoria's residence-Osborne House-also the statue erected to the memory of Tennyson. may be seen from the deck of the steamer; then in succession, beautiful limglish country places and numerous small towns and villages dotted along the coast. What a relief. after being on the stormy ocean. to enter the cnhn waters opposite Cowes. Rydc. the S0- lcnt and other little seaports, then up to Southampton. where we entrained; for London. there to meet long ‘ab- sent relatives just arrived from South Africll. From our private hotel in Queen's Gardens, near Bayswater Road. we took our daily excursions to the heart of the city. On entering Ox- ford Street. as well as the other great London thoroughfares, the first thin: that strikes one. on look- ing at the crowded streets with their hundreds of omnibuses, thousands of motor cars and iother vehicles. and ' the hundreds of thousands of pgdgs. trians (notwithstanding the appar- ent confusion) is the perfect ease with which the moving traffic un. tangles itself. as it were. under tile direction of the always efficient and courteous policeman who stands in the centre of the crossing anrPdi. rects the huge double-decked ‘buses. taxis and motor cars from one di- rectlon to another with rarely an ac- cident. It causes a thrill to watch the skill of the ‘bus drivers in steer- ing their vehicles, with only inches to spare, and going merrily on-thelr way. (To ‘be Continued) GLEN WOOD I ' AND VICINITY Mr W-YT. Mclsaw of Dunblane recently returned home after spend. 111i; the past winter in (he Unmd states. A "Wt-mil was held in Glenwocd Hall on Thursday evening to discuss lllamters in nnection with Oleary Dalrylnz R-hd Cold Storage OoLtd and lo c!" aha-Yes of stock in order m Rive the company a working capital. Among the speakers were Messrs A J. Mathwon. Sanford Phillips. Gor- don Adams of Query. as well as some of the local farmers] A meet- inK was also held in Milo Public Hall for title-same purpose. ‘I'll-is is in line with the policy advocated by the president in the report which he y: ’ at the Annual Meet) i118 0i’ the Company. A lishboflmd giving the name and number of ilholschool has recently been ililaoecl on Dunblane School tllroudh the Mmey of the Women's Institute. 'I'h.ls signbonrd is the work of_Mr Scentliebury, 0f Char- lumibwrl and 0.11 valho have been it consider it a creditable pieop of workmanship. We lander-stand that. sometime, “ nqsciloolgdm also planning the pulchuemt sing. liar boards which is certainly u step in the litht direction. Reminiscent o! warthne we‘, the knittifll ins-nu whidh were, held lh Glcnwood during- the pest winter. for although llhcwomm knit-lad for their clwn families inlbud ‘of ‘ml- the soldbfl. the scone In the women L 17/..- dlllliv" Caesar from the Governor of Lwdfii; . A MAKING |T EASY URING the wi i of cod-liver oil. One ‘L’? ‘ti: A to Ill more geucml i6. ' drawback; use is its natural lu cod-I'm il , icr ecsybdigegliclh, ling “m testing an it available to trillions 31$ Jtsailculthiiving benefits. s a emZcW-‘liiflftdfliiii oil made easy to take. ' sccll n llowne. Toronto. (lnl. w, eflmed in friendly eohvei-nfifdj (‘Omllfllflcd by the click of the 11M. lee. closely resembled the Red ems, Meet-ins: o: former years. Now "m. "thc 10m; Yt-‘iiow days of lltarch. hfl-VGJOIIIS the knitting 11.“ been lwld one and "hooking a" the order of the day. One oi (hm “u 31°14 0n 17111151913’ at the home or Mrs Albert Mclsaac. A (rmlltahlq nmountpf Wonk was accomplish“ 011d it plctumrt afternoon gipne’ 51ml?” ‘W5 59rV9d UV the instep; before those lure-sent took their dc. nurture for their homes. Quite a number from this motion attended the hockey match on m. day rrilrht at C'i-earl! Rink. Prtrliq. ulor interest attacked was one iov f’- tmllily offered by Dr Ciiliiliilhm V" b? Pflllllleltd fOl‘ by Olnzlry and Mill Rive“. An enjoyable evening was hung lewptiy at the home of Mr and M's ‘Albert Mclscac, Glenwood whm p", young people gathered together for a dance. Violin music was furnished by Messrs Preston MCKllillml and Alton Mclsaac. A delicious lunnilmn was served by the hostess assisted by severzrl of the ladies present and dancing was continued until (lie nloming hours. Mr and Mrs Silas Matthews and Mr Clifford ltlattllelvs 6r Alberton were in Glenwood recently nllcnrl- ing the funeral of their uncle. Mr Amasa Betta. In giving the names of the sur- viving members of the mmnr of ilill latte Mr Aulasa Bctts in the: columns, (mm of his brmlher. Ml- George Built. Hamilton, (Intel-lo was inadvertently Ollilttili. Among the names o! those of lfile family who predeceased him should have been included that of the lain Mrs. Wm. ‘mornpsorl of McNcilrs Milli. We reg-rat to report that, liir 1M l-mrt is still seriously ill. in: con- dition shows little i! any lmilfflvt- ment. Radio fang in 111115 vicinity listened in with pleasure to the lecture on prohibition delivered by F"- M" Harding at Summersidc on Sundial afternoon. Much sympathy is felt for MI and Mm Waller Mcwlllialno Dunblll-ne whose baby K111 15 i" Wm‘ pneumonia. We understand thM am is now somewhat better and wish her a sPBfldY 1900""?- Miss Dorothy Mcncurwll- 6W" wood, 5pm; me wccld end in “'65 Cgpe, the guest of her aunt, Mrs nan Ellis. Rev. Mr. boring of the Univ-d 03min}; preached to a lame °°“' gmgcltlan at Glenwood on Sunday morning-O §iuuul)'$ Ki l1 N EY i