it if t '.- l 0 » v l . l ll. 1 - ' . . l 1 L .'_...1` Q- » _. »; . ... .,l .,, -- -e.-1. _-1 f' .» . '>_' » ..l I l 1 l I 1 i /' .T I » '<" " ...- »- ' ~ l\f"">:.:e|~°»" :,',.,.,l....l TO-DA Y lol: la. , ,snows , Riding the waves l of laughter] Zoemlag through a whirlwind of mirth. 'Top speed shud into the funni- ' at situations youve ever lun. He’s the Gown Prince of joy- And he's brought a boatlosd of thrills to make the fun com- plete. Watch For Announcement of Program For Prince Edward Wednesday and Thursday' J* l T I f i `s;*:~.sa=-_"une 'rh -"‘ dr ‘ nf -rs' _ rll ' ' rr _‘~_f ,’ T lhv . las. in on B; 1 Wi ll Glll . we-‘ll ' _ v ' _ ther north than Pennsylvania. Coun- Judgment in the case was reserved. E. ' -F _ try practice. in Britain. employs the -__ ` only about twelve are at present in O5” leaves to expel "bots" from horses. LEAVE FOR NAVAL BARRACKS the The voung leaves are dried in the -One officer and thirty three men one of the most decisive battles of Be overnhpulverized. and kept in air-of the local half company of the the ti ht tins One heaped teaspoonful Royal Canadian Naval Volunteer R0- ers SF *Ci ':’“*'°"*~r=*' if 2, me ALSO SHORT TALKIE ' SUBJ ECT S Matinee 3.15 161% 26c. Eve. 'i de 8.45 C _ _ _ e a t R 3 ‘ 1 H I g fairly smooth, under this is a deeply ' f sculptured heavy under-shell, won- Capitol Thursday ollhe " '-tl THRILLS-ACTTON 2°°»4-"°- A ani:/ir snow waiting for the planting time. OPENING TIIRILLING NEW SERIAL WITH TIM McCOY “THE INDIANS ` ARE COMING" - _ CABALLEDOH /L_ The nut has a thin outer husk. Field, Oreo ister. was en 1 stro aarrrsr ssnvross. north nlver l P A Sunday. March 1. Fairview, 11 a. m.; North River, a p. m.; 1;,-mg k 'I p. m. W. R.. Mscwaiker, min- ' of ins amern . - plements and crop wen totally de- Yed- .- ¢___ 1 burned to the ground last ev- Sou about 0.30, when a gasoline exploded The barn, the im The loss totalled about 81 AN FIRE A1' M.AEGA'l'l-'The barn‘ , Mr. Henry Henderson, -Margate, central Guardian 0 B SI E R I _ARDBERG NIVERSMTY 1-_*_ ' , th African Wa r Veterans A t t e n rl Service At St. Dun- 500. °-is ARBIVI FROM WEST INDIES- Among the passengers arriving at St. John. N. B., on the S. S. Lady Hew- kins from the west Indies are Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Buntain, Charlotte- town. 1. LENTEN SERMONS-.'I11e‘ first Lenten sermons of the season were preached last evening at St. Dunst- an's Basilica and at the Church oi the Most Holy Redeemer. The ser- mon at the former was preached by Rev. Fr. McMahon on “The First Precept." Special music was render- ed by the Corpus Christi Choir. At the Church of the Most Holy Re- deemer a sermon was preached by Rev. Fr. Murphy, introductory to a series on the church. The men’s choir sang Ara Maria by Ett, Rosary and vespers were said by Rev. Jas. McGrcel, the Rector, and the benedictlcn by Fr. Murphy. LAWYERS RVETURN-Messl‘s J. J. Jollnston. K. C., and W. E- Bentley. reprcsenting the appellant in the McWilliams will case which came before the Supreme Court of Can- lada last week, and Mr. Thane A. lCampbeil, who with Mr. J. O. C. Campbell, represented the respond- stan’s Basilica-Sen inon By. Fr. McMah- on - Ceremony At Monument. Eleven surviving veterans of the Boer War with about forty Great War Veterans, paraded to Saint Dunstan's Basilica yesterday morn- ing for, their annual Paerdeberg Sunday services, and afterwards pro- ceeded to the South African War monument in Queen Square, where the usual anniversary ceremony was held. The Boer War veterans on parade were Dr. H. D. Johnston, W. C. Cook, Ed. Small, James Walker, Fred Furze, William Warren, Law- rence Gaudet, Picton Brown, Donald Kennedy, Charlie Hine and Walter Lane, ' At the Basilica, mass was cele- brated by Rev. Father Sullivan, and was followed by a stirring sermon on patriotism, by Rev. Father Mc- Mahon. The speakerpeid a tribute to the South African War Veterans present, and to those who gave their lives in the war. l-le contrasted the patriotism of war with the\ patriot- -ism of peace. At the monument, the Canadian 1 Legion Band, which was in attend- ance at the parade, played Onward derfully hard and difficult to bleak em returned to the Pmvlnce Saw! Chrlsllan soldlem The Wreagl, was e ' - , _ 1 d F S Although the nut is longer than the day e\.mlng_ Mn J_- O_ c_ Campbell deposlkd by Comrade, Gul,-let and V F 6 m S € , _ "English" walnut ibut not Glllltc “S remained in Montreal. The hearing Bl'°Wl1. and the Last Post was sound- equal in diameter) it has compara of gh, gage began Tuesday afternoon ed tively little ‘meaff bill! What ther” and concluded Thursday noon. Mr. concluded with The King, and the l.'l`uesday 69° Wed. A fl _ f , by Bugler Smith. The ceremony is ls 0! ve S11 0l'l0l‘ flHV01' The Justice Duff acted as Chief Justice. parade returned to the Canadian Title 01' Ellzllsh vlalhllt JUSIHHS Justices Neacombe, Rinfret, Ramont Legion Rooms for dismissal. FCEM. grows las I have readl no fur- land Cannon were also on the Bench. 0 f the sixty who enlisted from P. I., for service in South Africa, Province. At Psardeberg, where Boer War was fought the soldi- from the Maritime Provinces dis- V g .. ls given to the animal each day, inlserves leftllfor Halifax Saturday to tiuguished themselves. and made ` _inn ldays, the bots pass ou ump losses for Tuesday are as follows: and 'ine horse gets the good of its _ The Victoria Driving Club will en- C ed. /is ine autlernut L- close to urwel balfaclw they will rake ml- lor Class A. Pace: Marge Direct. Billy fc rlcavm' with the permission of the "v\‘eafhel'man", to sta-ge two after- 1\ov>n`.= racing on Tuesday and _Wed- nesday of this week. The track will he cleared this afternoon. Should the “rather turn moderately cold. a goofl course will be provided on the same course as formerly, east end of Hillsboro Bridge. .. Cope, Major S. g (‘-lass A Trot: Mac Todd, Wattslj Edition. 1|; Class B. Pace: Premier Prince. Peterset, Biilingwood Earle, La Co- , m its mornings grainfeerl. In a few attend 'hell annual lmlnlnii. which possible thecapture of Cronje, the f, in 51 5 is called for by the 'Royal Canad- Boer general. he walnut, liotanieally, wo may look or the some remedial principle inlllals- Slflke ll0l .Mn Monty Gcrow, well known trainer arrived in the city Satllrdalh bringing with him some of the re- cent winners at the bl( "W dn" me Carnival held at Fort Fairfield. Maine, It ls the Intention to start these horses ln the local races this week or as soon as tl1¢Y le* 0"" me erieer or then- len; trip- Thu' H" ° likely l00Kll1l performed creditabli' 0|’ il" Mb" side of the line. Tho following are the name! Mid records of the new arrivals. Leiock. z;oa 1-2 , rree~r.»r-all paw- fvr 2=18 eligible to any class. Dillingham The Intense, 2:10 1-4, eligible for 2:15 ont. Mr nenley. four-y=`“-°l°* Sm" pacer. OLD RIVAZS T0 MEET nbegwelte and Sussex will play an exhibition feature at the Forum ia- morrow night. Fans will remember gh, many hard fought hockey baftles the above mentioned team! Pll!¢d ,omg year; ago. Hockey clashes when the Maritime nuee nuns ln the balance. These teal#-9 U* “°' where near the top of the hell! I-¢ :me present time, but clubs _Slim U Sussex and Al1¢K\Wl¢5 lr’ “wus bound to come back sooner or later. New GLASGOW vs BEARCATS New Glasgow Tigers face Truro to- night in the final game of the East- ern Nova Scotia H0¢Kl'y League. The game is being played ln the Halifax Forum. The Tigers go into tbl! llme on the .nerr end or s 1 to nil more 'l‘onlght‘s game is anybodifa as the New Glasxow team are, mln f0r mul, the eqnal oflast yes.r’a Mari- time Champions. ‘ ` SAME FINALISTS ('.’) ' On paper it looks as if the Bear- cats will be triumphant over the Tigen. In that casevthey are almost sure to meet Bathnnt again in the finals. Truro beat the Papermakere ent last yea-r. Amherst are scheduled to take the crystals ln the our-down' whieh conclude tonight. They will then, in all likelihood-meet Bathurst, who are sure to win from the other teams in the New Brunswick league. Amherst will give the Pspermakersl a good game. but Judging by “IU hockey shown bythe latter, things point to a Bathurst win. THE ALLAN CUP _ The tesm_fortuna'e in winning the Quebec-Maritime Province play- downs, which are scheduled to take place, probably in Halifax on March 18 and 18 will play off with the sur- vivors of the Ottawa-Toronto elim- ination. The winners of this, will have quite a jaunt when they play the finals either in Winnipeg or Van- conver. W.K.S. ICE SPORTS West Kent School Iee Sports are on the bill-of-fare for Wednesday night These ice sports staged by the various local schools are verypopue lar as evidenced by the large attend- ances. An added attraction at the sports tomorrow night will be a hock- ey game between W.K.!. and Mount Allison Academy. A bumper crowd is expected. anmansr sraclar. A special train loaded with loyal Amherst rootera ls dne at Summer- alde today. GR-EAT ITALLION A Sydney exolfange says:-At North Sydney is one of the beat bred racing atallioaa that ever came to and it would be a move in the right heads get together and purchased this richly bred stallion and but him. erelv rrs SUSSEX _ DAIRY~ KINGS lot of horses and have' 9151-0" l°f|°*- 3° "5"" md' ‘W Ulu., K1", Magma, green trotter mtv! serie. 2:15 1-2. eligible 1°' W6 PW- "“"’ TUESDAY NIGH T AT 8.30 Seat Sale Opens Tuesday at 10. A. M. Regular Prices \ Looking;_‘Em Over 3 in service for the benefit of Cape Breton mare owners. The need of a mluen ww-lint the bferllvl °¢ the handsome _chestnut stallion in the stable or Billy need ls all toe ap- parent ln Cape Broion at the PNi°l¢ time. MORENZ SPEAK! Howie Morens holds Toronto Leafs .the most dangerous contention in I wards are fast and dmstrolll illlllh the defence. "Leafs are melt ll-ll|l°l" ous when they are around( the l|¢¢l» and that-'s why I think we will ll!" a genuine iight on our hands if we mem in the finals." san llvwle shares Canadiens confidence in a five game series they Wlll outspeed Bl-nine. They "Ill" LH" can beat Chicago in the second series. lN0 ne is giving a thought to the pos who up and winning out-but it can lbe done and Maroon: vow if they lmake' that playoff they will be even hotter than they were last year when they let Bruins know they had been in |\.aeri¢s before they yielded. ing NOT S0 BAD OFF Same time agolToronto writers in- dulged in melancholy over the low grade of amateur hockey as purvey- ed in Canada and expressed great fear over Olympic prospects. The game seems to have- improved in Toronto since the alannlat wave of the early season but taking eveythlng into consideration it looks as though Canada can send a strong represent- ation and any Toronto team that can defeat Manitoba Grads would eer- tainly carry plenty of confidence in- to lotion. Moncton C. C..I.A. Win Playdown` (Canadian Press) MONCTON, N. B., Feb. 22.-The Moncton C.C.J.A., advanced into second round of the playdowns lead- ing to ine Maritime amateur chem- pionship in hockey, by virtue of holding the Mount Allison Univer- sity team to a. two all draw here Saturday night in the second game 'of the series between these teams., 'Ilhe C.C.J.A. won the first game played in Sackville last Thursday night by a three to one score and _ 4. o `s|hi|iiies of a third Place team com-l ATllRIlAY’S BIG LEAGUE HUUKEYRESULTS g i At Montreal:-N. Y, Americans, i: Canadiens, 8. At Toronto:-Boston, 2; 1-0|-,,,,¢o| Ai oisavm-iueaueu num", rl Oillwl. 3: (overtime tie). CANADIAN-AMERICAN At Boston:-Philadelphia Arrows, 3; Bolton Bruins Cuba, 4 M Snrlnsfiem-Snrlnrrlela. r; Providence Reds, 4. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE ‘ I _ . At Fort Erie:-Bulalo, 2; rim. burg. 2. (overtime tit). At Cleveland:-Windsor, l; (`le\-1-_ land, I. (overtime tie). Rangers 6; Pl-iiladelphia 1. Chicago l; Detroit 1. (Overtime tlel Curling' At. , Summerside Mr. H. M. Bakers rink won the SUV" °\1l'llD8 “Ones in the final rounds on Friday evening at the Summerslde Curling rink. These curl ing stones are on display in H. R. drocketirs window and will be pre- sented to the winners st a supper in the near future. There was a. lapse of a few even- ings between the first'round and the second and final rounds, following is the score: zndlonnd P°l'UY Weeks _ D. F. McNeill Dr. Bmnis Smith Keith Cameron W. B. McNeill Robert Jardine A. E. Harris" H. M. Baker Skip 3 Skip li Don Baker Don Lidstone George Sheen E. E. Parkman M. P. Titus Percy Weeks H. T. Colvin H- T. B088 ' Skip 17 Skip 1 Finals D. 1'. McNeill ' non Baker Keith Cameron Don Lidstorw Robert Jardine Percy Weeks H. as asker H. 'r. ness won the series by five goals,to three. l|inard‘s Llnilnenl lor all Pain. skip 14 - skip e -s D » PRINCE EDWARD THEATRE FEBRUARY 23rd.l; and 24th. Under the distinguished patronage of His Honour- Lieutenant Governor Dalton and .Mrs. Dalton, HiS Worship Mayor Prowse and Mrs. Prowse. THE GIIARLOTTETUWII Y’S ME||’S GLIIB Canada. Ile is Abbe Worthy. 1:05 i-sl Mr. Clarence llewatt Mr. high Dlrlgwell .Miss ldith Doyle ' loading*-Mil Violet llilllllioi- SEATS NOW Prices-75c. and 50e f ' presents _ ' The 3__Aet Comedy Drama L G ONE BROKE _Directed by Mfg. Arthur H.” Roper with the following ces , mrumugemsum Mr. lon Steele . Mlm Iphegenie Anenanle Mr.cires.x¢rr sainlhlsareioelllnu llisslllrrllsebelgall f vt... .?.i°§3i‘l‘l32.l’.°»iY.°§’l.i.»°£.‘§§.'.s`§'ll.$‘l‘i.¥'§‘..i’ wie.- ofea»u.se|»¢u¢e|\ru»nx»a°»»emv¢°~0~h~¢f° Pl0CllDlP0l!.l.0.A. oN sans _ 'nekef offiee Open direction if 1\\e Cape Breton racing - _ 9 ‘_-m, My