` “ r l ». »l,nwt/ l / ~~ ~ e oft... _-le.. ...f MAY 27. 1929 » _ _ .- _ - _ _, ~ rua cll_/\_le_`l_.r__>'lf'rt§l`owN nlllanrluo PAGE NH - “-1” Wie World Price Edward Island I- O P1 W mer Needs No Rclbiefie\iVitihc(l’otli1t¢i>rees tri1lidFtl1r- ,Silver Fox Some of Them Clear $25,000 A Yeaer (Edwin C. Hill in the New York Sun) CHABLOTTETOWN, P. E. I, _ ' Sailing acrcssthe Strait of North- 1 umberland upon the little ferryi steamer which was once the private. yacht or that Austrian Prince whose i assassination at Baralevo threw thoi world into Iver, one comes into sight. i pmsntly of a low, red coast-brignli ,-sd, .pinned with green. 'rt is tne| coast of Oan`ada's smallest provlncmi pidioo Edward Island, the Rhode le mid of the Dominion. It is the “Mil- lion Acre Farm," without a hill or ll stone. Its soil from end to end tit is about the size of Long Isiandl is as .red as the British flag nnrl it il. E known the world over for it. seed] potatoes and its silver. foxes, l Gradually it swims toward the steamer, this land that the lliriinmf sailed “cradled in the Sea" nnd that f the French named "La Basse et Bei: Isle," and as it nears its astonish- | ing redness becomes more dcflnile. Untiiied ground side by side tl-uni fields of waving oats and liay sllor I up precisely like the red and green squsrvs of I checker board. There is probably nothing quite like this col- oring of a whole island anywhere in i the world. Once, ages ago, it it-_'ts red sandstone. Then time and water and' weather did its work. The roi i sandstone crumbled into loam of pc- l cuiisr richness, and la farmers' para- dise lay at the feet or its first sei. tiers. _ ,. _ ‘-o~, _ .:.,,_.-_/_,,r,.~.~.;~; is l _ .'.,...~l~ ~,.lgr¢~,-_- l 4 'l Today The one-time sea toy of the ill-fated .;'illstrian, new ending its career-_ as a icrry for tollrists and merchants trav- "1""5 b°5“'°f`n N0Va Scotia and Char- lottetolril, noses its way into the nal1'o\v harbor entrance of the main C_iiY» Swings with the channel and fmally lies lm alongside the dock. OHL' Stews ashore to one of the old- ost provincial or State capitals in Alnerica.. It antedates Washington and moat of the Americnn Stain C-Hllilais. It was the cradle of the Canadian Confederation because it was at Charlottetown that the 11|-gt renfrcicrence was held which dis- cussed tile union of the provinces. AN ANCIENT PLAC2 It is one of the most interesting of the cities and towns of the Mo,-1. UHICS with its broad; tree-lined streets, its quaint old houses and its llilicid, ll\'ll'll0l0\’iIlg people _Men mine to it first mack in 1534; then the Sieur Doublet in 1663 sought, to °=\=\blL<1l greet fisheries. Finally the English took lt, along with the rest of Canada, from French hands lhat were not strong enough to hold what their bold adventurers had follnd, and it and the rest of the rich iiiile island was eventually colonized after an absurd system of lots grant- cd to royal favorites. I The whole island was granted in one day by thc drawing of lots, sixty- seven cf them, and for nearly a cen- tury the well-bcing of Prln¢¢ Edward island was retarded by the greed and neglect of absentee landlords. Fin.~.ily, some fifty-odd years ago, tile Government of the little province bought out the last of these holdings and since then the island has boom- cd in its own fashion. The ricissitudcs of its early coloni- zation were not wholly bad in its ef- fects, for the land wav carefully sur- veyed and regularly laid out. Many settlers of the right kind camo to it -»F;'encll from Acadia, thousands that were driven out of Nova. Scotia in the great expulsion of Grand Pre; Irish, Scotch and English, and the dcscenclllnts of these original settlers arc on the island today. There is pi-actirnlly no immigration. Sn wonderfully productive is the soil, so free from stones and so fa-' . Are You Looking Forward To the time when the bright warm weather of summer arrives. , . i ‘ 'Are you prepared to take the necessary pre- cautions in order to keep your perishable food from. spoiling. _ We have in our stock at the present time, Refrigerators that will keep this _food fresh. Call and look them over. Youlwill find tllzlt our prices, are the low-I est- on the Island for the quality received. 1 _ Tull lioness lllillownar oo. » LIMITE. . l , _ .. _ _ . U ‘_v"`$)“ _ _ , ,M`ELforTr SEPAR-.4 TORS _“if » l ~. beatenif as'l°°ii- _J ; I lll has u .record .or clean ,_~ Jkhuuliug, fewrcpairs, and im! ‘ ` life. ` ' . ._ >.,`v,\ ` - num andxNs's-carrot and sun. \ I nnsr :sons for deep of ‘. ,muon yells. ki 3 lodsul irlul machines in 4 _» o .. » _ G” p|eg,_a||ey_ will interest - _ guaranteed. ' JOHN H. GILL `. . . .. ',U§Qg||@|p¢¢t vored by climate and rainfall (or, if nct rninillii, an unvarylng and drcncrillg dew) and enriched in the v.-ily of natural fertilizer from the sea in the shape of mussel mild, that it sllpports in comfort the” most closely populated area in all Canada. ’I`he_\' are farmers, these peopléi their llrcs piacidly and regularly de- voted to the growing of a peculiarly lille potato and to other less profit- sb-Is Zami products. Th ri?-`-i‘:a yer-l put, your loot upon Prince Edward l..ian;i you hr-or the virtues of the Prince Edwilrd Island seed potato' The automobile license plates of the Prince Edward Island invariably carry the lcgend “Seed Potatoes and iforcs," the iuzlin and superior prod- nets cl the tight little sea garden. Tilcy ship those seed potatoes all over lilo world wheres potatoes are _ul-own, but most. of them go to the Cruliltril States of America. They fact lop prices for them. Last YH* their potato crop brought in $4.230.- elro, nzufli is lr pile or money for ° rii:1l~lcr so small. ' 'i‘i;f~g,' are proud of their turnips also, and lilo turnips fetched them ll lniiiiiril and a. qilartel' Of 8005 rolnlrl rloiiars. The result of all this' along wlzh the silver fox farming| tim.: so nlr.n_v of them play with on tire side, is that the Prince Edward isinllfl rural folk are extraordinarily p"c.1p<~l‘ol:s. Some of them clear |25.- llfll or more cl-cry year. The saving llanlcr. oi' Cl‘.al'iottct0r\'n and the ohhh* towns are bursting with farmers' lncllcy, l\'o agricultural d€i>i'¢S|0¥i 071 the milieu Acre Farm. Thur fide 1° tilc bc.»t. Alncrlcnll made out-0ii10b1-°f‘5 and scarcely one denies him-8.21! I radio plnything, but they are curious- ly conscl'\':itivc. "1 very much doubt that B per rent. or lite llwllie hlve 2"" °°"“ oil the island," said the HOD. Fnnkl Henriz, Lieutenant-Governor of N10 provillce. "They have not been over to New Brunswick even or to N0*/B Scotia. They are rooted to the soil and the soil occupies almost their en-, tire thought. Tile doin# °f th? rest of the world mean lit-tie '-0 . it, 3'- \ __ . \/ .i<3'?+.~‘_d ,\ 1'- .zoo _ ` _ Not too much of a good thing STRENGTH is a good quality in tea. So is ~ flavor. So is fullness. But there can be too much strength, too much flavor, too much fullness. By mix- ing a strong tea which we f may find in Northem India with a high-flavored tea- the cream, perhaps, ofa cer- tain Ceylon plucking, and a full rich tea from a famous garden in Assam, we get just enoughst.rength,justenough flavor, just enough fullness. In short, we get King Cole. You know King Cole will be the same next year as it is this year. But we never knowayearinadvancewhere we can find the teas with which to blend it. -_~L¢_,.--_-_x -,- . s; . a ' l li `-Z-I :` ` | "` 5 ‘_ _ .si .A ~ W =*\==f.>-. You will eajoyxiug Cole Cofee tor the habit sticks. They are oddly content with "Tho being any other island worth the name. To them it is tha home and haven of everything worth while in life. To the older generation, that is; the middle aged and elderly. The young people have quite a dil- ferent notion. They grow restless be- fore they are out of their teens - and it is away for New York or Bos- ton or somewhere else in the States. To them the air _is clomorous with exciting calls - calls to life and'pieas- ure. Almost all of these young peo- ple of Prince Edward Island have well to do, evenlrich families. There is almost never any lack of money. The farmhouses are attractive and 'well furnished. They have radio and phonwraphs and daily newspapers. As farm work goes their life is not hard, because it the Lord ever made life easy for the farmer anywhere upon this earth he made it easy in this tiny province. But thc young people grow bored with the eternal and a. few then, and all through the islandypa come across farmstoads where there are no young people at. all - youths, that is. They have gone to the States to make their fortune. 'A few years ago Prince Edward Is-’ land had a population of nearly 110,- 000. Today a few more than 88,000 cgcupy its lovely and fertile lands. g considerable l0& relatively. It is' the only province in Canada that heal shown A lcsu in population, and this' falling off, as I say. has been duel almost entirely to the fact that GX- istencs pn the beautiful red sea gar-' den is a, bit too placid. Youth seems to be the same pretty much every-, where, with the same restless stir: in its cosmos. » Many of them come back, in time. They say that the Prince Edward Islander always returns some da,v.l that the red soil infaliibly draws him. But they like to make their fortunes first and then return with a bit of swank and swagger to prove to thc' old folks and to the conservative; neighbors that they were right, olleul enough they came back to add m0'f¢, lsnd to the old homestead or to build! a finer house. l `1t`is not a total loss, this winging} of youth to the American States, bull it, is dubious enough. Many pC0lJi¢ cn the island ask what is_t.o become of thc farms that are the pride Mid glory of the province. Some day l-he conservative gcneration will disall- pear and the fear that these garden farms, likelnothing else so much, ex- 1 cept, for-` size, as the far_n1s of south-i am England or of France, will be “sorted and go back to the brush and the weeds. _ _ ! In the meaniilne theyare making; forming pay as' no other peoDl2.l probably, ever made it pay before.; th ~;?-li-Tore Bare plenty of ways in th” _The agricultural department of thep day and age cf leaving the iSll¥\d~‘ The ygrmg people hiv!! f0\|.l'id 50055 ways, tllihalrpliy f°\‘ th' 3°°d °! prince Edward. There is a railroad] now, the Government owned Cana-i dish National, which comes to Char- lottetown from New Brunswick, fer- rying whole trains across Northum- berland Strait. There is frifii-\°`“i md regular steamer service to both neighboring provinces. You can Ni an airplane ride if you Wlnt lt- Fill' rdf ncratiorl after l°11¢\‘l¢\°H th” province is an institution that other, province of Canada or the Amari-_ can States might take immense; pride ln. 'rho Minister tot-_Azri<=v\-| ture, Mr. Lee. took this writer lol the 300 acre experimental farm that_ the Government conducts, ~and thot ,neo yu blooinins like a nrden-i The Government takes its farmers' by the neck, so to speak, and says to them, as conservative as they are: "now this is me right way to do such and such a thing and it is the 89 _ forefathers of these slow movin! 90°' `pA_l¢_v1qrcItl-W1' " .NW only way n is Ivins-to uojdom upon Island,'f as they invariably call it. dozen fine trout weighing all the They cannot conceive of there even way from a pound to ten pounds ln round of samenes. Life is too easy; perhaps; or at least too unexciting.§ md S0 I-MY troop BWGY. B f0W I10WiGhost. He saw no efficacy in his ,_., Grow Golfing Greens i _V W Y _ ` -_H If The result is entire perfection 1l1§ several special crops. The Govern-' ment has worked the seed potato in- dustry up to the point where the Prince Edward Island spud is the Soil helps a. bit but grading andl rigid elimination of imperfection hncil of disease helps more. They would* fect s d potato go out of the than they would think of presenting tourists with hundred dollar biils,i and that is a long way from their,i idea of entertaining the tourist bushels of those champion spuds ill cents a bushel. That runs into! money when farmers raise as much' as fifty thousand bushels. °f Modern Service it »° ma: ~ r ills, ‘ Worthy of at Modern Car ree, .flue more teen Seve.. million f New Model A Service Policy Established By Ford _ fl a.year and the average price is sixty _ Dealers Th r0ugh0u't__ Canada ` e I l 1 l A lot of golf courses in the Unitcd States look to Prince Edward Island to keep their putting greens like vel- ~ yet carpet, for in this island is grown a. very special kind of grass called "bent grass." They sold a pile of seed last year - $40,000 worth. Once upon a time they bred a very special kind of work horse on the island, but the gas engine and the motor truck has rather pllt a. crimp in that industry. Dalrying is lucra- tive and' their fat milk cows graze all over the lovely rolling land. Naturally, in an island that has been so intensively cultivated for lr century and a. half, you will not find many forests, but they have been canny enough not to cut down all of their trees, for trees hold moisture in the soil, and all through the is- land you see groves and copses, some . _ quite large, and thro`ugh these i‘un‘ streams full of trout and salmon, es- pecially large, luscious trout. It ls no trick at all to collect li two hours fishing of one or the wooded streams. The little province is also rather proud of its oyster crop and of its lobsters, and off the coast great catches are made of the fish of the cold waters of the Mari- times, herrlng, mackerel, eel and sea salmon. There isrl’t much need to import anything except American motion pictures. It is one of the most self-supporting little communi- ties anywhere around the curve of l 1 the globe. _ THE LAMB OF GOD _ Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sirl of the world, Jno. l: ao. ' . CLEAN; CAREFUL. COUBTFDUS SERVICE Modern traffic demands a car not only de- signed and built to meet modern conditions but, _ through proper maintenance, kept up to the highest degree of efficiency. Proper care and attention is espe- dlny illlP0l'\l!l'. Whcll the car is new, In every feature the Model A Ford car has been designed to moot the demands of modem _ motoring. It is fast and comfortable on trips between cities over smooth pavement. or in remote districts where paved roads are imprac- timble. It is agile in the congested tradic of . busy streets and sturdily built to suit the mnsyuaestowbichitisput on the farm. ‘rAmd, equally important in today'a automobile ‘ transportation, the Ford ear is hacked by an outstanding service organization rendering; modem, chicieut service, in keeping with the , = high of the ear itself. 0u.r organization | 'rho Larnh or God was the title I ' lu. been belle upon urs med urn it ie our Biven to Jesus by John, when he I I saw Him coming to him. He acknow- , I ‘lodged his own inferiority t/o Christ, ` ~ and the inferiority of h\ baptism to Christ‘s. I baptize with water, own baptism beyond an ordinance which indeed was Just and righteous and of Heavenly appointment But in Christ‘s baptism, which was by] A duty not only to make a good automobile, but _to help the owner get the greatest possible . QUTUI °‘"‘ P°“cy of modern service worthy of u modern mr still further, eva-y Ford dealer ~ in Canada will give every Ford car buyer free service al 500, 1000 'und 1300 miles. 1] No dsurge will be. made for labor incidental to this service, except _of course, whale re-pin ue my.-gi ‘"7 |h°“8h l°dd¢°¢v lllilllw Or neglect. The only charge ll for new oil. 1 You know lhuapmper W" °fY°'“' Ulf dilfillg lilo first few huudrul miles will leugllsen iii life and prevent unnecessary . trouble hier ou. C] This free service at S00, 1000 und 1500 miles euauru expert alleulion while your mr as new and rs entirely in addition to our usual wurrautiua, \vhicls;vvill be continued. _ use over the longest period of Lime, at a mini- l mum of trouble and expense. I Throughout Canada, wherever you go, you will find efficient Ford service. Ford dealt-rs are equipped with modern machines specially . designed for Ford service work, their mo- . chanics are Ford specialists, trained under direct factory supervision; parts made in ille Ford factory are used wherever replacements are neccnary; Bat rates for labor on all oper- ations ensure economy and enable an accurate estimate of i.be cost of any job. Our service depu-l.rnen`t is continually seeking better, quicker, more emcient methods of service for Ford cars. As soon as the advan- isge of a new systemja new machine or s new operation is proven, it is established through- out tbe organization. In so faras possible, service operations on Ford cars duplicate operations in the manufacture of the in our factory. Ask your Ford dealer for full particulars, . RD OR COMP CANAD , LIMITED `ZTZ`.'_`_`. ' °"' -. ‘I l l _ _ _ I the Holy Ghost, he acknowledged an everlasting efficacy and glory. I _ 3. Subject for profound study- ‘who were given Him of the Father. We Pray f° G05 101” help and in -There vl1s no other way of Salva SifU¢t1°n, and pray that the words tion, but that christ should satisfy written may be pleasing to Hiln and ` Divine Justice fm. then-,_ God hm 1~ Chflsvs Sacrifice- iaged by Adam's transgression and Christ was the Lamb slain from 1,, tmnsg,-essed mr an ms desmnd. the foundation of the world, and ,mfg Wm me sons of me,-,_ an trans. accepted of the Father as the Savior E guessed with our primevn ancesgo,-5_ of men, hence there was saivationfCh,.|5¢, came and wok the plum, of through Him since the foundation - the Elect; and so hewme answer- of the world. I-Ie was represented in = awe for mem and must my their the Pasical Lamb of God in Egypt_,-,m50m_ The um, for p,y|ng_ when the destroying angel be-Ssediuieir ransom came. we see over the dwellings of Israel to dc-lgh,-ist In-eseed and mm-ted gg stroy the first born of Egypt, both., malmcwr before the ganhe. man and beast. A lamb was offered ` ,_-mm which ¢°m»¢, gxgmlmd Him daily, both morning and evening.1w|i,h 1-¢f¢,-em, to His mg and for a burnt offering at the door of I d0cmne_ but muld find no mee tha tabernacle of the congregation,f against mm Though many (,155 EK 295 42» W make Hf'°I\°mC“i~ fm' i witnesses came forward and accused tho people. This was a continual mm of many ¢_hh,gs_ their wltneggg burnt offering, but had reference dm not ,greg and even that solver-ge only to Israel. To tht; continual of- ,md unjust, court W” uhgmgd to fering the spirit directed the mind_ pronounce yu,-lemme 93,1,-5; Him on of prophet Jehu as the bw tvl>=.suoh frivolous charges. And the high for Christ's sacrifice of Himself to` ,lest C1,pp,_,_ “td unto mm, Art make atonement for the people. It iimu the gh,-ish the son of the was a continual offering and there- i B|¢,5ed_ md Jesu, "ld, 1 sm, Then fore the best typ: for Christ`s offer- E gh, meh prim, md me whom gm- ing. Christa medlatorial work isicmd,-lm ohm-sed mm Wm, bt". continual. He is continually ta.king» Mmm bound Him md ¢|,n-led 1-um away sin and saving sinner-S~ Chili” ian Pilate, the Governor of Judea, atonement far exceeds that offered l mg ,caused gh;-lg; 9( ,tin-ing up the on Jewish aitars. Theirs had rzgard l people to revolt, against. Caesar. and to Israelites only, but Christ's ex- lntting up ss king of the Jews. t/Bhd! t0 all the W°l’ld- The Sam' , The accusation of pissphemy would tim of other animals were also of- i bg 9| no "git with Pilate, who was fered. as bulls and goats, and their l 3 wo;-sniper of Jupiter, the great blood, sprinkled before and on the I god or the Romans; besides he rc- l'n¢I'¢l' Heat. When M0568 had SPOKUI l garded the Jewish religion as noth- “CTV D\'0C€Di» '-0 Ill me lJ90Pl¢ W* § ing but Superstition. P1110; extrat- ccrding to the law. he took th? ' ined Jesus with regard tal-I teac - blood of calves and or goats. with ing and aiming at temporal P°wl\'- water, and scarlet wool. and hyssop. i Jesus confessed that He was a king: and lPf|“l‘|¢d wth "h° B°°k °' th” but that His Kingdom was not of lay and all the pwnle. mins. Thi= this world, which satisfied Pilate is the blood of the testament which tml, He wg not aiming st tsmporsl God hath enjoined unto you; and pqqsr, and pronounced Him guilt- vitiwut aheddins of blood there vu less. 'mls enraged the Jews, who no remission of din under the Old threatened to accuse Pilate to the 'lilhmlni Dilpmbltivn- illoman Emperor, as an unfaithful l»_;g_a=v- omrrur. nun use mia Pi'0f1lal’l¢ *D the \‘€ad@1”~ lbeen insulted, offended and dispar-5 l » 1 l l i v H0r0d llwd B150 P1‘0H0\1nC€d Cllristldown to hell both Romansand Jews; isuffering without C0n‘.pial1i121'I- H let Him go. But the high priests and the multitude of the Jewish peopie_ were instant with loud voices, de- manding His crucifixion; and Pilate. terrified by the threat of being ac- cused to Caesar, yielded to the dc- mand of the Jews, and hanclvd Chri.=.‘. over to the soldiers to crucify Him. The Crucifixion was a most pain-_ ful and shameful death; it was the most awful that human and S:lt:lnic` We will consider this important -_ » -_ -- --- -- __ -- - - _ - mbject' "nd" the f°u°Wmg hends: Chr'-5* Wm* mit’ thi! W°l’ld 9° °f‘ Christ. Caused Him i-0 be scourgedscd Saviour suffered at the hands of ldid not say it was too sore; no. 1 Chris” “"m°e fel' Hllmelf UP 3 SB¢1’lUC¢ f0l‘ tht! thinking that so severe a punish-lthe sons of men He could with one love for pcriohing sinners wa" 2 Effltmy U’ Chris” S*‘°’“i°° sins or all who should be saved all ment would satisfy His a cusus word or l-ns power send them ell great the~ nf- .nduvd ell penn guiltlessi and HOW Said Pilaif. I Willlbul then the Scripture would not be ` great His sufferings \‘~`f*l'C- V” fulfilled. and Jesus came to fulfill inclther comprcilenfl nor express. them, and did so to the minutest de- l hors our sins in ills own bod? tail. They then removed His scarlet the tree, that is tile sins of eil w robe and put on His own gormentlshould be saved. Bu who “"`l`° SW and led Him away to be crucified. to I-lim by the Father to rcd:c:n Before nailing to the cross. it was Z hrina' h0m¢ i0 lZl0Yl'~ Tlwn ‘V-‘S0111 customary, according to Solomon's;led the prophecy contained ill l direction. to give the victim it drink I 11613; the pains of ilcll got ilold of spiced w spite could invent: Among the Ro-‘$316. ` mans this horrible punishment was inflicted only on the vilest and worst criininsis. The Jews borrowed it from the Romans. The soldiers then tool: Jesus, and proceeded to Cruelty Him. It is impossible to enumerate all that Christ suffered in so short a discourse as I purpose; so many things that I-le endured are omitted; but Ire fully described in the four Gospels. He had been betrayed by al false disciple; denied by one of Hi-S trite disciples, who still loved Him: andforsaken by all His discipl:s_] When He was arrested. they all for- sook Him and fied. He was lcd bound to Clsphas, and to Pilate. They gpitted in His face buifeted--Him. and other smote Him with the palms the hands. We see Him now ln the hands of the rough Roman sol-_ diers, who hated Him as a Jew. The whole band of soldiers 8f1‘~l\@l'¢d; him with it. put a reed in His right but He shall baptlze with the Holy K ' _ _ , F o M o 'r A N Y o F - A - 5 . ‘ ll . t‘ _ -i lL _ __ _ _ _ l 1 . - ‘ - , ._ ` _ l _ _ » _ » . . _ ' ,v C I Bl 1 o ine to deaden hL1 senses _ me; I found trouble and sorr and lessen his pain, give strong drink § to him that is ready to perish," Prev. , lil .f- King nf the Jews, offered Him a cup _ "if of vinegar mingled with gall: Jesus " 7 tasted it but would not drink. Matt. _, _T-' 5, 27:34. They then odcred Him wine -‘ The soldiers, sporting with the, - ter and nauseous to Him, but He re _ f \__ mingled with niyrrlr to more it bit . (_ Lt, ceived it not, Mark 15:23. They thrn -_ Lv ` crlleined Him on Mount Calvary - » between two thieves. to indicate that .;,_ He was the worst of them. Having stripped off His clothes they laid Him on the Cross and nailed His I - hands and feet to lt. They* drove a spike through the palm orench hand and through the instep of each foot. and thus securely fastened Him to :.‘;;..";f-.:l‘:.;::."..°:.::;;l ..:’;; I fastened securely in the ground, the fect of the victimlbeing about two feet from the ground. It was a pain- ful lingering death. lsstlng_,-"ae_cord- ing to some writers, more than two round Him. idays; but in most cases a shorter Ther first stripped Him and time. 'rhey were left to |nosn..writhe clothed Him in a scarlet robe in land struggle till death 'released mockery of His Kingship, and pialt- them, Chri.et‘s sufferings on' tha ed A crown of thorns and crowned Cross were about sixihours. -Pilate was astonished that He died so~socn. hand. bowed the knee before Him.; He was brought as a lamb' to the and in mockery, called Him King of ‘ slaughter. and as a sheep beforeher CLUBMEN hnd here a milieu to lhelr liking, whgrg mon of kindred tastes i :lid Interests con- gregate. l ectly opposite the Public Gardens, '_ llulfhx. The Hotel: finest Georgian in- spiration, 200 rooms with bath and out.- side vievv. Fireproof. _ M011 could not be i said. ‘ The Social Centre. _-HI... Q the Jews: they spitted on Him, look lshearcre is dumb, so Ho not _ '_ I ' the reed out of His hand and hit His mouth, Iss., 53:1. He vollintar- Z lv Him onthe head with it caus- ily surrendered Himself tn' tiieband ing the thorns to stick deep into His | of soldiers, went through-trials be- held: and when they thought theylforc unjust Judges. and fwalfmti- had sport enough with Him, leo film l demnad to death; 'though ~3uilti`esa. um in malt ww. :mu na. l»lg;iyviue_wla¢ ala_~a.im,, lv QR... $7.7- gi _,_ av ', .. ' ' vi." . if ., »,» ¢ .\ ,.