ill“ l‘ l l r b: _ It possible ior many and the desire of all, to seek to ~’ ‘ Nfifllllfie the memory oi the departed. so... a m» only material um will stand u» nun ‘. nsageoltheyeareandboartlreserecordsci “ ‘ value , oiaiarnilispersonal‘ "_. .- ‘Let naihelp you to choose a memorial whose beauty will 3 ,- harmcailao with its surroundings, and place at your disposal _ A a hi!) equipped shop manned by ‘ eraiianren. . u. our workmanship and pfltea are unequalled. l a ,Vere _p Beck and Son - 1 aiorrnnsam‘ uaauracrcnans ' slsatsglrerandds! one: doom street, c ‘otteiown 1 ' A commie-l — “to: orsrmwzvs sagas qualms 7*‘ ' “$90K noon-M icr-ti». roaches ingredients n. mediating: 3 cupstossted ma“ baocn. diced 1nd‘ itiodput; 55-35. "Pm" "I"! ‘A tvflvoocsalt: l tea- 'P°°“ "i". i‘ "Manon moron. Juice o! ll lemonlii» desired: l egg; slightly beaten. audit cup cold water. Stun 9 mundsmak, a inches thick and ‘Pm 1°!‘ "#511118 with the above marina. ‘and sear until brown on all sides in hot lat. Plies , ’ carrots around the mock duck. cover, and cook over slow dame icr one hour. WWI". salt and reaper the meat and add potatoes, ii desired. Cover and continuo- cooking. l to 1% hours. depending on thertoughnese oi the meat. Serve very hot. The strings used is) hold the meat together alter it has been stulied should removed be- iore serving. ‘ rtltution enjoyed his usual health, up till Tuesday night, when he was able to attend the services o! the Mission being preached in tile parish during that week. A very serious trouble set in, and medical aid was oi no avail,- snd ior- tiiied by the" last rites p! Holy Mo- ther Church, received ircm the hands oi his parish priest ltsv. W. V. MacDonald and consoled by the crumbsz“ l onions. dleedr": subés ~ I vast throng that iilled all the twist- ; ed. hllly- streets o! the little town. .-. n.- Carillon l‘ ray out l I Y rnowucenw. autos-rubles vu- lage-ul the northern coast oi Massa- chusetts. the _ bells 0P a carillon sounded ior the iirlt time in the New vvorldletuhe Church oi Our Lady cfOood voyage’ installed its carillon inlthd summer c! i933. un- ‘til them kind o! Old World lnllelo was unknown in‘; the Unitedetates. The church has s. oonsrothtion 0i Portugueses descent. icr the most part ilshlng iolk irom the Asoroe. They are both musical and pious. arid :thcy realised a long cherished dream when they were at~last able to lnaall in their church the bells oi the caril- lon. Before the bells were out into the tower they were blessed by His Eminence Cardinal O'Connell. in an impressive ceremony, and then they were played tor the iirst time“ before Within the seven yearsJi-hat, hive followed the iirst carillon concert at Gloucester, pzopls have come {rem all» over the United states to hear the bells,‘ and they have returned to their own communities imbued.withv'the id-za ofencouraging the congrega- tions oi their churches 'to install carillon too. rMr. John Rockieller, Jr.. returning irons a trip to Gloucester. ordered Amado ior the -Pcrk Avenue wasion Fathers ,_he calmly breathed his last in; ms nl-sssnes or friends and nu most kind and lévlnr neigh- bors. , , I The iunerll took place on Friday afternoon ream 5t’. Ann's Church. A firs; fcl-lcllgorrsrowlvlhclvu A 17w Gloucester. 8011(8- Baptist church in New York oltythe largest carillon evsr built in the his- tory-ol the world. _ Certainly there arc lew things that can do more good tor a community than ireo music. And the lovely wild to the adjoii/aifigfi cemetery, where the remains wdreflsid io rest inilts ‘final resting place, there to-awalt the trumpet oi the resurrection music oi bells is the most thrilling sort oi concert, I went to Gloucester specially to peace. monL Th‘ pflbhm" "a": Them‘ hear the carillon: I had never-heard mmaum’ John memo“. Hum» one in my lile. I walked up the steel! Coles, John Walsh, Jae. Mclsaac,‘ John O'Connor. May his soul rest in l’! ow‘ L547‘ °‘ u" 5°“ l/"Yiifl- o" narrow street that lsd to the Church bvery porch people sat expectant. looking toward the hill where a cross was " on the summer‘ sky. d ~ - . ' 1N hear o! the death oi Joseph P. Mc- ' l ,1 i ‘ ._.-.. _ alder, whose sudden death occurred rl v JOIIPI P. lloflilllv at his old homsnat Hope Riven ca ,__ _- _ Thursday, Ana. m. Deceased. . ms many friends were shocked to though never oi a very- robust eon- \ . 11"’ smash: aJb B1 KIFL i c \ aQusbar-anpvsrarlsransraassI-rfiwevmv e.» as: ‘no ‘ -“_‘ 4 \ l minds. _ ITED, have found the solution in fll Spopuiar. / ' ‘ JilRIALS.” r 1hr sale by leadins Iellll , Biscuit g ‘ CharllottetowllvP-iflfill/syj r C6. a CED Q . ‘ I ‘ ‘v ‘ Successful Fox Feeding . . , ' " n a . H ' m, .1gs1,'otvl;€sl)1€gr‘l):ll\"i;(fr£1l1lsr 152225112 will] ltigogllfl? Deli: of fln t Vt d lustrous sheen is uppermost in all e ex “TEEHIMPERIALBISCljIT-COMPANY‘, UM" "Imperial Cod Liver, Oil Fox [Biscuits and Imperial Puppy Food .. 1.~n lmzzt.tl..*llr..l.srsilih""... ' l 1 b th . ‘“Fgggszarglrlsllf-easgugcessemllyi.“ab”!!! ‘ f "w d orlllireqt‘ ~ l 3 Olstrlbm ft-utorsl for Mariam” ‘ A t‘ iiauclr ’ ~ w- i eir‘ increasingly \ l ’ ed up to me: he was selling program 1- harbor. and black trees stretched out ‘i twilight was iast railing. With the “ llrsv star came the first notesoi the " bells. They peeled out with a loud v terlng all the soft stillness with wild A ‘the sounds seem to organize themselves ' Pnbo the system oi tone we are used’ - ctrange dream th t thrusts on us e * when we know ws are awake. Onc- ' ‘The overtones play round the tum‘ . meaning. Angel music must be like ‘ P191118, scaring. pouring the spray Children sat silent on the curb stones: automobiles were pa ked everywhere. and people sat ids them. reading. or lust waiting ior the concert to begin. An urchin daah- books. I sat down on the top o! the ‘Jill. near the church. and looked out toward the silverysea.‘ The shining little cove was silent too, as ii walt- lng (or the bells. There was not I murmur o! breeze. nor the iaintest suundroi auri. Many boats lay at The gaunt arms above the sea. clangor, sweet and terrliylng, shat‘ sounds. Tremendous tones rent the air, carrying with them a great number oi overtones. so that the ears ct the! listeners. are coniused at iirst. ‘rheml ‘.o...but through it all the conius~|l lcn oi overtones persists, like’ a mood that cannot he spent, even (‘hears the tune oblidests Fidles tol- ‘cd out on the great bells, but lihrough it all is that sweet clangc: oi strange sounds...that seems t: zom-sirom all the sky. from heaven. and iili it with an ecstatic mysterious this. Deep balls.’ like dlrges. shaking even the rocks with their mighty re- sonance; sweet high bells that pierce the ears with gloden sounds and sil- very sounds: mellow bells that sing cut, carrying the song miles away, ‘o another village. The tower i: sing- ‘F-(tl "Wild cascades, roaming. and Ii music into the air." some oi the bells oi the Gloucester srlilon have inscriptions oi them... Santa Joan do Arcs Canto Francisco Xavier, Santa Jcao Baptists, Nessa Senhora do Perpetus ‘ .. .niany others. One bell weighs over 3000 pounds; It takes, strength to play the carillon: The carilloneur Kamiel neievere. is a great lrtlst- l iieilthe main tant o! the great carilloneur Den at Cardinal Merciel-‘s Cathedral Church at Mal- Zn-cs. Belgium. but every summer rinds him startling to liie the sweet bolls oi Gloucester. » Onetimeuieveretoldorhlsesrlr boyhood ln__asulnes.jrte The death occurred at Georgetown , nrruenany, August 1am, n: Mrs! William Martell. Unlortunately her; I he lindaad -a i-n-e- PllWd/ round 8t. R ...ths church made iamous by Car- "_dinal aleroler. the great Denyn, pro- bably the greatest carilloneur who ever lived. sew the little boy.‘ drunk with the music oi the bells. looking with adoration at the great bell-playi er. l-le took the little ieilow into the tower to watch him play. Convinced that the lad was genuinely musical“ he usurm him the secrets o! nuluu- . A . v C A is good pipe tobacco 4 Alipgarv- ~v‘,\ -' PACE l4. A iicult art. l listened long to the bells....thcy boomed out hymns, old Christmas \ southern plantation Italian lolk songs, a lew classical _ airs oi gentle and digniiled character. Nowhere a sound, save "the stars powdered the sky. I went away, leav- ing the bells behind me I slid swiftly and silently over the smooth road by the sea in a niuiiled automobile. All round me stlll' rang the bells. amt: as hall a~ mile away they could be heard. I knew that in the little booth beneath the tower Kanliei Leiervere was tolling at the keyboard. perspir- lng, weary. dragging heavenly voices irom those great, heavy. iron bells. Theconcert stopped. The silence o! the sea swept coast closed down, Just as the black night closed around the land. But the alr- was still trembling with sweetness, where the great tones had rushed by; my ears still rang with that loud golden music. The Portuguese iolk in their chairs irom their porches; they call in the children.‘ The bells have sung. and they have said goodnight. There will be another concert tomorrow. . .___,_________ » WELL KNOWN- nsny nun became impaired but it was hoped that a needed rest would aid recuperation and possibly effect a.’ cure. At first there seemed to be some imDrovement but all too soon.’ it became apparent that icr her thsl chapter o! this earthly existence was‘ drawing to a close. Though 111s seerm! ed sweet and her desire to remain ior the sake o! others some times’ found expression on her lips, as time" passed On and the malady mads deeper inroads on her waning strength, no murmur o! discontent! was ever heard, but calm-resignation and a benign exemplincation o! the pationest attitude, ‘always attentive to her religious duties. The priest at rest. She was cared ior by hcr| L11 's church ‘l i. songs. 4 3C cred and the light oi liie burned 10W wise. she leaves to mourn five sons: sympathy and less soul breathed calmly iorth to be‘ and one daughter Mary, also two‘ amen-A. r nce" A. common "n32 c/ziezremeiit ' E ‘O builcl a good tire is difficult enough. But to build a good tire to sell at a price usually paid for “seconds” is a triumph of tire engineering. Thar is what the Dominion Rubber Company's have actually done in the new "Endurance". s "Endurance" is a quality tire in every part, and it is only on account‘ of the long experience and immense manu- f , ring facilities of the Dominion Rubber Company l c can be sold at a low price. l rassive carcass is built of web fabric with no cross 1 ds. Every cord surrounded and saturated with rub- ~ l.-. co minimize hear generation. ' Between the plies are cushions of resilient mbligs , to deaden the shocks and to assure easy comfort. New. tread desigrsmakes ample provision for sudden; ’ braking and Quick scarring. It without mo! rica or noise. __ _ - iflliwfiisrireobrliyiolcwpdnsiintlirlflmlselfl; g - - ~ _ mileage, in freedom from trouble, and you will find b’ "far superior tomany a higher priced tire. ~ - ltfaécnannorrslrowu; a - a . Giudet e us. f -_ sauna, ' MdNTlkifiitli-n-AN.‘ A ' y é, SUMMERS-g E . ‘w. so. v -_---—-n1- __- --_——._—____ administered regularly the Sacraqlovlrrg husband and daughter Mary sisters and two brothers. tn nhom. meats which she desired and then‘ and ali that medical skill Ind klndsmoere sympathy la sxwcowo The a; the ghsdows e1 the valley goth-i nursing could do, God willed otherwmany beautiful mesa cares return as spiritual bouquets the Holy Viaticum was her consoi-|P:wr,' Patrick, Vlilllam, Malcolm and Show the high esteem in Vhloh l?“ ation and her strength as her SpOt-_ Mickey, also her sorrowing husband xvas held. May her soul rest in peace .,._