ahaltcoilremandmanyofhlsper- scnalandlife-long friends held. stsouivkwaonthelrishqireetion» It indeed an unenviabie poni- Twenty-Five The Story of Years A King ~ g ‘a Splendid Era By The Hon. Mrs. Francis than” noon when the debate was resumed. It had a powerful and immrfhie effect and visibly sobered the‘ Die Harris. When the critical Division was taken at the close, 131 voted with the Government and 114 against-a. majority (01- the Bill of 57 l7. The Killgb Joy and relief at the result was Open and unconceal- ed. "The nightmare is over at last," hemexclgimed to a close frleng, w.n 0flKl1l'BS¢llm€'iiill'Dfl§, . v .. . and Lord Knollys relates that the m? $§,'t_,‘§$§ed°§§§l%nf King loft London for Balmonil my“; he was gram,“ w note m“ u’ day Ol’ two later. a happy King for Md M; l”, roused haunt, w a full recognition of the reality of memozmmbm 8h. and these sea- m w“ w" “m” weeds entered into the simple fare colonel Beely resigned from the °f the DOOM‘ files-W in Ireland. War office and Mr. Asquith aasum- Bwilehd. ed the post. in a. few days he had Now, verbal» the moot complete control of the situation as We vi his is es e some of. iodine. far as the possibility of any wide- iheuah it is being supplanted by spread "mutiny" in the Army w" Ohilian saltpetre ‘which yields the concerned. But the general sltua- Heme medicament! Onmenvreliwi tioul increased in gravity and now the British coast the kelp is col- armed Europe was ‘ hing the lected into heaps and allowed to British political drains with intense putrcfy, and is then spread on the indeaeea. The mere tbcwht that fields as manure. The stems of the hi! Nliilltd Willi“? would once laminar-la may be made into hlifo- again, after two hundred years, be handles, which can with difficulty engaged in bloody civil strife, flil- be distltnguis“ " from st _ ‘ ed the Kins with cold dread and piece of a~ thick stem. about four 110x101‘. He realized that something inchq; lung, has the tang o! a knife elioebtional had to be dime. if the blade forced into it: when the stem Old ovum-v was to be ssvnd. and hardcns and dries it ccntractsand despite the mlscivinas o! mam of holds the hilt of the blade firmly. The "led" seaweeds range from rose-red to an almost violet- is due to a. layer of pig- farenee was a. failure and broke up in November. ‘lb tr... King only a few month! on the Throne and not yet downed. the result was a bitter m, 5w. disappointment, but he did not lose 0n the 10th November, Mr. As- m zluith accompantd by. lord Olewc, m, visited the King. and the subsequent audience was one oi great import- . The Premier had come to gain its assurance from tn: sov- "thi event of the (‘World WWW“). nan! srqaiu it is doubtful if any gt timed-ed to Sir Arthur Paggt, 09m. mander-in-Chief in lrzlarstl, that ‘mm “w°°d¥-" thgy pfgfgjfgd go y” dun-mud hum stem is a flat frond or blade, 1on- the Army rather than agree to par- ‘"1137 "lulmnfl the 5mm in W18“!- elnd income species from nine twelve inches in width. one hundred years ago, “in-u. and ‘ra-nglo" was still cried in tin 0th of May, i910. Si! men {Qusly the House of lords had out the Budget of 1000, a and momentous step ted in British ccnstl mm . Mr. Asquithk Government promptly apre led d in January, 1910, tutionnl W181i i-hei in lords throwing out the r ‘Bill. His Majesty would agree to create the numtrsrpf new peers re- °_ quLed to enable the measure te pass. Concerning this momentous y audience, Mr. Asquith has recorded how much he was impressed by the King's attitude: "I have never seen the King to the better advantage-die argucd well |and showed no ohstinacy," and this. coming from a shrewd judge of men, was no small tribute to an un- King. Mi‘. Asquith and lard Orewe left the Palace with the desired prom- ise flour His Majesty and then im- gan another difficult and trying period for the King. Rumors of the King's pledge began to circulate and the Premier showed all his noted adroltneas in evading the issue. He was strongly opposed to the Royal consent being made public, fearing that it would drag the Drown the cockpit of party politics. In December another General ll- ectlcn took place, but the new Par- liament which the King Oliened personally on the 0th February, 1011. was little different in com- plexion to" the one it had super- mded. But the fresh election had ‘ finally cleared the ring for the final round of the lords vs. Commons’ fight, and feeling and excitement in the country and at Wutmineter ‘a; “Plcase God. we will have no more such crises." his devoted sec- retary said to his IIIBSWY-fl. wish and a prophecy which, alas, was not to be fulfilled. To this day, His Majesty does not care to dwell on the first year oi’ his reign. but he realizes the/t it taught him valuable lessons and was an experience of politics and statecraft which was to standhiminsoedstead in the all testing years that were to come. It also brought him in close contact with all the leading politicians and statemen of the day. His sincere and unaffected, manly like a breath cf stimulating fresh air to men like Asquith, Lsnsdcwrle d t ch included Irish mem- bxgléhwaaincfleeatfihemnrs wceesion. The late King Edward's last year had been clouded ~by fllct between the Lords and not all his great til control a controversy exhausted as they frequently were by the heat and bitterness of a conflict - The late Ilord Morley considered the?’ King George had emerged from thefiret greatcrisisofhismlgnln a brilliant manner, which was all the more spectaculdr had not been anticipated. “I wonder what would have hap- pened if Your Majesty had creat- ed m new peers" asked a Cabinet Mini-Bier of the King some years e afterwards when discussing the “Perhaps all the old pears would. have surrendered their titles in disgust," replied Hie Majesty smil- '4 lab u ill I'm! hltcf t0 tense The King began to feel the drain Ilt note rah 5 v5‘ "No doubt some of them would then have sold their robes and cor- mhifllitl‘. who was a‘ the King greatly enjoyed the quip. With the House of lords‘ ques- tion now out of the way the King l! be human if he antici- lleted smoother political waters to follow. But stormy 1011 we; not 0c close without the perpetual shadow gum of Ireland looming larger and Ill-g- er over the political sky. John Red- mond with his Irish Party held the‘ balance of power in the commons, and the price of his support o1 the Government, was Home Rule. when the Parliament Act was mil-ill’ linseed. the Liberal Govern- ment lost no time their intentions oi introducing an Irish Home Rule Bill. Ulster retal- iated even before the “ ‘ and ‘ 5153 g5.’ 3% i! 8h 5 2 ‘i? E g5 tins: he has con- s. genuine liking and admir- for Mr. Aaquithmhich never end of the latter!" ii HEi Ell itlcn he was now in. insistent and repea the ‘ml-ice, that the euld declare whether had or had not glvmfl‘: if callrrd upon, and the ier-‘s invariably evasive replies, to get on the Kings nerves. Mr. Asquith privately in- formed Mr. Balfour and Lord lens downs of the exact ,. l. l‘ E i g? u El Gill‘ filial lswrv. What was the right thins Even the suave but astute Mr- li- f. Balfour. then leader of the 001i- THE CHARLUFFETOWN GUARDIAN IOQ¥\mP‘wmImIlliDiulRlllblBl!'r Always a great believer in the rsonal truth, His Majmy wwk- iy t0 bring the leaders to the distracted country. P9 pclitlce-l question. The ‘incident at his friends and advisers. His Maj- gardcd as a. new departure, but the , i circumstances justify my action. For months wc have trend has been surely and Glvil War." and His ‘Mb!- eaty concluded an impressive speech with a moving appeal (Or a settle- merit. All present in the Oonference Room noted the worn 5nd heg- gaid look of the Royal speaker, and it was not out of want of sympathy orrespect for the Sovereign, that the conference ended in a complete deadlocklnafewdsysThenasln some act of a Greek tragedy. there stalked on to the national stage tin re of a looming World War, like magic the “Irish Play- ers" and their political drama. re- ceded into the background at once. Suddenly and dramatically, the notion was one again, but the Great War was a heavy price to pay for domestic peace. In the light o! the world-shattering events after- wards, no doubt the Irish Home R/ule struggle of 1911-14 appears petty and trivial but at the time it con- vulsed the country, and its rever- ssrvative Party, shared the sene-"ei hilief that the new Kind might not a equal to the dlmcult posltion- 1n the l-lcusc of Commons higth in; tin Government of taking advantage of sign who had just come ‘throne. and who. nature of the case, could not have behln upol-fence of publle of his greet we- in Wwements were made in Belfast to form a Provisional Government PIedTBd to resist by all and every mans, Illstei-‘s inclusion in a Dub- lin r-urlioment. From that date to i014 there raged a political struggle- which easily surpassed the contro- versy over the House of Lords, for delicacy and even danger to the lord Crrewe announced the fact in Icrd Crew's used the expression “reluctant consent" whendewribirlg the King's attitude and this was fastened upon by the Conservatives Orown. legal lights like Sir Edward Oar- aon and F. E. Smith (later 14ml Birkcnhcad) roused great audiences in Ireland and Briicin to delirious excitement by declaring that ‘Uls- ter would fight and Ulster would be right.” Sir Edward Carson said that he "would break every law that is possible" and "FEE." intimated that he would not shirk the issue of for- cible resistance by Ulster- even “if the whole fabric of the Oimstitu- tion" was to be convulsed as a eon- sequence. Mr. Bonny Law had suc- ceeded Mr. Balfour as leader, and far from checking the exuberance of the Ulster leaders, the mild-looking Scots-Canadian made the public he “could imagine no line of resis- tance w which Ulster will go, which I should not be ready to support." The sudden boiling of the long- simmerlng Irish cauldron with the racial and religious passions that it aroused, caused the King more , and dismay than it did the placid Prime Minister. who was convinced that the Ulster ttitude was all sham and pose. m I “Ulster never causes me t oss no “mm to ma”, the pmcd duflng o; five minllrtfizgfilh" Mr- Mgmth which he unflinchingly faced two m ti“ m‘ b T’ M Ouw“ m7’ niece-one of which in its early m‘ stages did a great deal to hasten his matters infinitely worse than they were before. The Tones in. the promptly tabled a. Vole of Demure upon the Government. that the advice given by the Ministers to the King "was a. violation of constitutional lib- ing debate brought his. made te his cal stair. of the country l" It of the brains of arty." The ensll a. ringing declaration f "I hold my office," ly by the favor cf ‘the the confidence of the airs" it was time thlt amateurs took the helm Immediately after the his father, King George lost time in thoroughly cumming the if in this supreme moment o! a great struggle I were to betray It was characteristic of the King that he conmatula later on these dem whole political lituatlml. Asquith’; surprise, and iiellmoval at met. listed on seeing the Wposition and learning their views But the Premier was very soon neatly impressed wit Majesty was very uneasy over the w brilliant combat responsible for the looking face of the State visits to 'lrc~ tland later in the yea-r. hole political sit- wmbulcd with tin and common sense of the K1118- ‘lbry leaders like Mr. Balfour and tired and grave- inn naval thoroughness, to meat Bill came before mentals. when State lfflirl were ‘The whole diiiicult of the political crisis that there wen" sharp difference! who repeated the remark Kin; afterwards. "He is an exceptional man, in yways ands uckyone. re- m, . “(Ham plied His Majesty. "I must confess ma‘ m“ I“ fly "m" e W‘ ""11 "W"! “mm”! '1“ esty does not hesitate to acknow- had never even entered the turned up on the fateful sar- A few was a worried and man at this period can- ied. The spectacle of an army of over 00,000 being drilled in Ulster. to resist Home as these returning dubbed. when they arriv- ccra of the lildeil 0h"; and ted- ' debate in the um m, was full of d“!!! the information given Orewefe to their leaders Ind statement. I IR“ m his anxiety for his Ministers. He felt that something more than a "welt and see" roller We MM §giwe . Egg-ii L =3 E 8 i f; berations were even shaking the stops of the Throne. “Ireland has put ten years on m! bee." remarked the King wearily w Mr. Asquith once. and at the i191‘- iod it was true. His Majesty has al- ways been a lover of Ireland s/nd the Irish people and he could not and cannot to this clay, understand why a peaceful and honorable set- tlement could not have been arrived at by I914 at latest. From i910 to 1914. King Georg‘ V could fairly be described as the most harassed monarch in the world-with the excepii '11, perhaps. of the Cnanwhc had not. however, the British King's love of his people or his sensitive and human heart. It was indeed s. stormy opening for a. twenty-five years‘ reign, and the best proof that the King had emerg- ed triumphant and with increased p stiga from it, was the great ad- miration and real respect with which the King was regarded by his Ministerial advisers at the out- break of the War. “The inelrperiern. ed and rather tin-lid King" as someone had described him in 1910. had shown himself a resolute monarch who. however, never ex- ceeded his constitutional powers. . Inherent common sense with q-ick perception and sound intuition was and is the secret of the King's suc- cess and the key to his personality The first four years oi his reign brought all these qufllties to the fore and develops" tbcmamazlng- ly, and in that sense, the King has father's death. "God has been good to me," the B00 General Booth and His MB]- lcdge that during the opening criticalyears of his reign, he de- pended much on prayer for stmngth and guidance. "He will go down in history as "George the Good" commented an with the King during the war- yeara. and it maywall be true. But if a title was to be bestowed on His Majesty on his conduct and character during the dangerous‘ doirlestic troubles before i014. the most appropriate and deserved one would be "George the Wise." Those now fer-off days should be remem- bered by the nation for ever. for they are convincing evidence cf the and priceless value of a gifted and prudent. constitutional monarch. 1a UPTURED 2 No elastic. "flit. Init- paaalva. Guarantees. Write for M! IIIIIMMII. . DIES HANUFAOTUIING OfiAllY NEWSY NOTES yllllilil . lpcvtectlcnaincetheyvaiture forth htcrtbeduskofevcn- lust the tinillikwhen rats and i?" alnslami the rat increasing so greatly has gone forth to protect certain species of orwls and, an been taken all‘ over the drop county. My own experience with a "bounty on sparrows" points to a dame: ONLY DIAWIIID (I) unceasing Another brown seaweed. the lem- hotn parties together and so ""5 in iis various species. we ,, ,,,, 523,2“,*’;{,',",,“,,,=°,,§1=,“,,,i,;§,", I§é’5‘.‘“‘“'......"§.““nnn°”° ‘Elihu? 3i 0 , O, ' meg-gt megflngl mg “woman, has an undefined range soutn of were going en behind the mnurlmmiiiw-Oeeurewneiwresn all unknown to the public. They "whim we 1- iwsiiuris hm were most abortive. but they were 5”“ E- Because of its abundance, else and utility, 1914, Ifls Majesty we‘ gravely ccn- "l-Wwi hes lten advanced to the “mm 1o 19am m“ the “my w“ honor of a popular name: this is beginning u, be flyecud by the the true "kelp," sometimes called "K1819, or sea-girdles. It consists of m; gun-ugh 1n March. w“. when a stem from one to ten feet long, 0mg" out 0; ,_ mm o; rm m_ and from one-half to two inches in diameter; in old plants Surmounting the in this matter. A few years ago while working on a farm on the Island, and noticing that the house (""“ lish") sparrows were incrcasv lng unduly. I offered a. bounty of 2 cents for each sparrow brought in. This hardly paid for the and shot, but the sporting instinct or the lads cm amused went right after the sparrows. Whe the cadaversalkiegan to come fir,‘ “w my mm e' The" we" c p; sown on land previously inoculated and only about one in five was the real house sparrow! Need- less to say the bounty was with- hopo it is only the Horned Owls that “draw the fire” and that our young sportsmen ‘will learn to tystlnguish the behe- Blrd lovers all over the Maritimcs are concerned over tin: absence of visitors to their feeding-stations this winter‘. says w. Tufts. Thc few birds that do come seem in no way dependent on the artificial food put as they come with the irregularity in take advan- of it. m. IJudlow Jenkins, who provision for his ‘and and Denmark. BLUVER (Giarlctietown Experimental station.) Prqress has been made in the of alfalfa. clever in Prince fisldswese harvesiciffor hay or usedi for Pasture in 1934. As a. fodder ' for glowing stock or de-lryf cattle it has no equal. It is vary rich in a readily digestible form of pro- tein and can be used to greatly lee- scn the cost of a suitable ration for dairy cattle and other live stock. Three essentials in connection with the successful growing of al- Experimental Station are: First: Secure hardy Northern grown seed cf varieties such as Grimm,‘ or Ontario Variegated. This seed should be inoculated with a1- falfa‘ nltrolculture bacteria, or with these bacteria. Second: Alfalfa should be sown on fertile land, that is, in a high state preferred. The plants do best wher- humus is abundant, provided tlr soil is well drained so that rnin' quickly soakaway and where icc does not form in winter. ThirdzAlfalfa, like other clovers, requires an alkaline soil and most Island soils should have from one to tlwo tons per acre of ground lime- stone or the equivalent in shell mud, applied one year or more before seeding cut to alfalfa. feather friends, has the same tale to tell; he believes that food is so plentiful in the woods this winter that the birds stay the: It is reported that and beautiful flock of geese at Pol-t Joli, which in other winters at- tracted the attention of both rm- tions," has now been decimated and scattered to the four winds. 11°15 more than a. few hundreds having been seen there this winter. they swear restless and discontent- eetysummonedsconferenceofall 9.4m the party leaders to nuckingham blggk, This Palace on the 24th July, 1914. mcnt (called phycoerithrin) which "rt ls with feelings of satlsfao- ccnaaals the chloNPhYloThel-‘thod tie» and Mlle that I receive you olneilla palmata. the Dulse of the h!" $0457." t!!! King declared in Scottish, and the Diileshcr the Irish hie main: speech. . - My inier- is a pretty little seaweed of a red- vention at this moment maybe re- dish-purple hue, often cast up on shore. This used to be large quantities tilmughout the maritime regions of at one time, but so many vegetable foods are now avail- able that the tralffic in dulm is a. thing of the past. The Ohondrus crispus. found here, is also common on the coast‘ of Scotland and seaweed is known by name of Oarageen Mose. or Irish Moss; erroneously of course. for botaslicelly it is a long way from being a moss. This seaweed, dried, was in my boyhood sold “chemist/s shop" or drugstore: it was boiled with milk and rugar. and made a. lkht and nutritious inval- ld's food. something like blanc- mange. By ‘much boiling the Chon- drus may be converted into a tena- our north consumed in IIALIDON HILL (l) Edward m. the wliosercignwae watched with deep misgiving the mum" ccurm of events in Ireland. The 0t in 1912. and had succeeded to the throne in 187i. The ‘meaty of Northamp‘ swords point. was as it was to the sentiment of Eilglnnd in renami- The government that concluded the treaty fell. and its place was taken by the infamous Roger Mortimer. who had bmn concerned in the murder of Edward II. 1n 1380, when Edward was l8 years old, he deter- mined to be master in his own king- dmn, arrested and exc T515 upon him at the cuted Morbi- offioes of (This is the origin of that Royalty comes of 'en.) The you!!! ‘Ilhe last of my "red" seaweeds is K1118 of the qualities of his Poiyldes ioturldus. I rescued dram the compost heap and it its way to Kew for identification. It dark violet color. but to have any particular economic use ccpt to swell the manure heap. of the young iolr. in the long I80. used to make collections of seaweeds, in the same way as we now make herbal-tum collections. Whcrl nicely mounted, the seaweeds looked quite attractive, but I believe the salt had to be washedlout be- fore mounting them. MR. TUFTS LECTURES auspices of the Jack aguc of P. l; Island. a. series of lectures will be s, the Chief Migratory the Maritimes. As enough to escape to France. The Inlglish King had given no , My, aid to Balliot/s enterprise, and per- haps all would have been well for both nations, if he had not con- lar grass mixtures for a numiber of to treat. most of them fleilds. Ibecleanedbyusingahoedcr srvwinc Edward Island andmsny splendid ' CRACKED CORN BEET PULP FEED WHEAT ROLLED OATS falfa, as noted by the Charlothztcrwn ' ROBIN HOOD - WESFIEKN QUEEN — ROYAL HOUSE- HOLIF-BEGAL and PUBITY FLOUR. all of which we are selling at lowest priced by the lag or in ten lots. WANTED-Good quality Oats, for which we are pylng high- i. llorne .8100. cusmnnitrowu ._.. . .-..:~.~:'::::::t::.:r!1.. “-111; cf cultivation. Sandy loam soils arr . WEST KENT SCHOOL Honor Roll for February’- Grade x--1 Lawrence I Mary Cosier, 3 Prank MaoKlrlnon. Grade IX-l Rose Birtlwistle, Sylvia Block, 8 Eileen Johnson. . Grade VIII-l Sandy Brehaut, lé Newton Large, 3 Robert Large. " Grads VIIL-l Billy Rogers. 1i Gordon DeBlois. 8 Drinnmond Cobb; Grade VII-l Jean MacKay, g Sterling Walker, 3 Lillian Block. 3 Grade VII-l Mary MacKay, _ Percival Simmons, 3 Muriel (loafer.- Grade Vl-l Bill ' Stevens, 3 Tom MdRac Grade VL-l Bobby Joyce Fraser. 3 Wall Margaret Fry. Billy Grade V-l Grah Hooper, s John Frippe. Gracie IV--1 Billy .'I'he Charlottetown Station has been sowing from four to five pcunch of alfalfa seed in the regu- .: F‘ years. Nltrc-culture for alfalfa has been used. This culture may be ob- tained free by writing the Dominion Bacteriolcgist. Central Experi- mental Farm, Ottawa, stating the amount of alfalfa seed they wish ‘Iihese who visited the station last simmer noted that there was march more alfalfa than red clover in all of the meadows and that two cuttings of .ha.y were made from Once alfalfa. has been established in a field and the field broken it may then be sown without other clover-e or grasses. using wheat or barley as a nurse crop. Seedlings of 10-00 pounds alfalfa, per acre are thcnauggesicdto secures. standof alfalfa. that should rproduce good , forced crops of hay for several years. Weeds and grasses are alfalfsfs worst enemies and all land should ty and Philip Hardy equal, 2 Worth, 3 Lillian MacLean. Grade II—l Merle Luck. 2 Beverly Smith, 3 Roy Livingston. Grade I-mo examinations. 0D before finally seeding out to alfalfa. n" an...“ 1,, o"... The Necessity For Farm Accounting; ii ‘Ihisyearfcr-rrlolrefarmclrathan pl-illim prud t grandfather, ever before are making en early w": Irina magi”; mp w“ to detailed list of the itelrm restore order in his own country. _ By a strange coincidence, Scot- land was now governed by a minor, a state of things which quickly led to civil war. The great patriot-King b l-tobert Bruce (the younger of that eeibie and . together with name) had died in 1329, leaving a son only eight years old, to inherit the throne. The unsettled state of Scotland prompted liot, who was also of royal descent. to make a bid for kingly power, and in spite of the English King's pro- hibition, he sailed to Scotland and after defeating an army which came against him, was crowned at Scone. Young David Bruce was fortunate collecting fire insurance and settling. estates. as well as a guide for the coming year's financial plans. A record of each department of the farm business should be kept because it is the only way of find- ing out which part of the fanning pays and which does not. To assist the farmer in this very important matteruthe Donainicn Departmeiit of Agriculture has issued simple and useful book. No special knowledge of ac- counting is necessary. and a record ~tions can often be made irl 1cm than one hour per week. The little book, though simple, is ‘a. great step in advance of keeping no accounts whatever‘. ' of their farm busineses to see what they own and what they owe; in short to flnd out how they stand as they wind up one farming year and be- gin another. Some record of re- an inventory (a list with values of live stock, feed, implements, and any other asset on hand) is really necessary. The record not only shows the fan-tier what he is actual- iy worth and whether or not he is getting ahead, but also gives him a basis for a statement for obtain- ing bank credit‘. Further the rec- ord includes a list of property for celved the ambitious notion of be- coming Ballioks overlord. Ballio‘ agreed to swear fealty to Edward and to surrender the town of Ber- wick. which although mainly on th Northumbflsn side of the Border was strongly gurrisocled by Seottis“ forces. On being apprised of thi" agreement the Scots rose as on" man. and dlovc Bslliol from th" Mr. rum can only manure w rive us a week this time. it of hearing thm splendid lectures. to apply at once to m. Earl Jenkins. Cross who is secretary to i» the league meeting. ea localities filled. hence the need for uiseiielf- made by [the lecture!‘- Mr. ‘Diffs has for years visited the Isle-lid Hi1 “movies” nihili- the requests made etum visit. To a Edwardnow moved up a. strong force and besiegpd Berwick. The Scottish regent, a brother "good Inrd James Douglas" with , whom we are already acquainted, > advanced to the relief of the he- ‘ ‘ leaguered town, and attacked an l English covering force which was encomped on Halldon Hill, a little to the north of Berwick. The Eng llsh position had been well chosen: w a marsh covered its front, and a; the Scottish soldiers struggled over the yielding surface, the archers met them with volley upol wy steel" that drove them off the field in utt/er rout The Scottish loss was said to have been 14,000 irisn. an enormous (and 1 may, venture‘ to say,‘ incredible for those days. Halidon Hi‘ was fought in the year 1333, and it immediate result was to make Ed ward III master of the lowland: and to re-iustaie Balliol a; hi~ of the are illustrated by life, is attested by for him to pay a. r charming person has added s. won wins the confidence and of the young folk whom his talks are. mainly M! derful fund of in- - ~ I _ Eoglisl- On account of the moving pio- the lectures can only be given in Halls where electric NATURE NOTES: FIBY. 1085 The summer-side Guardian on Feb. the interesting anncuncem a Hooded Merganser hibitiofi in the vrindc 0a., havinI been shot arry Sudsbury last fall. y Mr. Bruce lleckbcrt. This Merglneer was included in the 1916 list of P. E. Is- particular records Sir ~Waltnr Scott wrote a. dram called "I-lalidon Hill." with which however, he took poet's license tr the Scottish defeat at l-lom- ildon Hill (ill i402) and thus it is of little value to the historian in Archbishop once. after an audience W 2-2 ___== 2-2 “=5: l-Z 2-2 PO UL TR WHEN ! mutBnynaaecfoiarPaarhedklhlt. Cocksrelafor-improvibgyouriloek. Red gurus-afloat truism; comm . . ternalionel Fox 8. Animal Foods. Lid. W‘ lflbhhadlll_ Sllllnorllll. P. l, I. KKIHIBIHKN-ifi ’ cited. N-1f317-2-2-‘stf. ful propagation. A liniiuiln Emmott < It is time to be thinking about Crushed Lime- stone. We have installed additional equipment to take care of orders promptly and can load cars part bags and part bulk. Enquiries soli- Brookville Mftg. 00., Ltd. BROOKVILLE, N. B. ll. G. S. ADAMS, Man "i 1 VIXENS NEED “IMPERlALS ” Successful fox ranchers feed IMPERIAL FOX BISCUITS because theyyeontaln food ele- ments essential for health, strength. and success- “IMPERIALS” should be fed liberally now ‘to vlxene because they supply elementlfireeessary to ensure large may; of strong pupa and main taln health and vigor-of vlxens, umnmsssr fed some illilfibuo richly in generous“ results. " i. IMPERIAL circuit coiirliiv,‘i.u. Charlottetown, P. ll. I.