the few months Just past gulggiirlxlllllluellt officials and private "oncerna in this province have been ' vin much thought to the pos- sibiliies offered by development and expansion in the field of Horti- culture. Since our province has be- some very well known as the "Car- den of the Gulf" it is probably with some surprise that many peo- ple from within and outside our boundaries realise that the quantity of "Island" Horticultural products on the market is so limited. It is, therefore. quite natural that we should become interested in increas- mg our production of fruits and vegetables to supply the demand for these products in both the fresh mu processed state. when considering um matter the first two questions which should arise are "What can we produce ,.-atisfactorily?" and "For what can we find adequate and remunera- iive ma.rkets?". It would certainly appear that several crops would satisfactorily answer these questions but as yet we have had very lit- tle experience with many of them. Howcv . we have, for several years, been growing one crop for lvlilch our conditions have proven favourable and which has general- lv given its growers quite profit.- ibio returns. Strawberries have been grown rather extensively. i mine areas of our province and to a limited extent in most other areas. Already it has become evident that our yields are consistently higher than those obtained in the other Maritime province and it is quite ifflltltllll that through improved cul- tural practices we can increase our present yields. A few years ago marketing of the sii'awbei'l'y crop in years of high yields presented a problem but since the formation of the three Strawberry Exchanges and the introduction of Strawberry proces- sing this problem has gradually been overcome. Presently the pro- duction of our 300 acres is greatly inadequate to supply the constantly .ncreaslng demand for processed strawberries in addition to those inquired for the fresh fruit mar- ket. Through speaking with individ- Agrioultural News P. I. I.-Department ot Agriculture unis closely connected with and interested in the strawberry busi- ness we find thamhey are gene;-g1. ly quits enthusiastic about the fu- ture of the strawberry trade and are very anxious to see. consider- able expansion in the growth of this crop. In strawberries we have an established trade which has proven successful but which could benefit many .more people and operate more efficiently if it were expand- ed. To those who are planning to establish a strawberry plantation next spring we would like to sug- gest that they, in the near future decide upon the number of plants they will require and make neces- sary arrangements regarding pur- chase of these plants. It weather permits it would also be advisable to select the land this fall and to get an application of manure plow- ed under. We would finally point out that the members of the Department are at all times pleased to hear from and assist the growers in any way possible. MANAGEMENT or YOUNG nsiiur srocx In last weeks article Quarters for the young calf. Cleanliness in feeding. Teaching the calf to drink and the quantity of whole milk were discussed. In next weeks coli- cluding article of this series the Importance of good hay for calves and skim milk feeding will be dealt with. . To avoid indigestion and scours, feed the calf at regular hours. Calves allowed to become too hun- gry between feedings will often take their food in gulps, with the re- sult that acute indigestion, bloat, diarrhea, or even death may fol- low. Do not guess at the amount of milk to be fed, weigh it ac- curately. Many cases of scours and diges- tive troubles are due to the fact that gruel feeding often results in the souring of left-over feed in buckets and troughs. To avoid this danger and also to reduce labour. many farmers prefer the dry feed- ing method. Calves can be raised successfully without mess or fuss M ilk Per Day Calves Calves over under so lbs. '10 lbs. with Dam lb 6 lbs. 8 lbs. 10 lbs. 6 lbs. 3 lbs. NO Villl Feed ith nionih MORE Tnli month Iith month MILK Let the calf nurse the mother for the first two days. After two days, separate the calf from the cow. Place a suitable calf meal in front of the calf at all times. Feed whole milk at least three times it day for the first five weeks. read the amounts indicated in the dry feeding schedule above. Keep good quality leafy green bay in front of the calves at all times. At three weeks, gradually thin out the milk with water until at the end of the fifth week the calf gets no milk at all. At the end of the fifth month. discontinue feeding calf meal and start feeding a suitable concentrate and your own grain. No matter what method of feed- DRY FEEDING SCHEDULE by following this schedule. Balanced Hay Calf Meal 4 Calf meal Keep good in front quality. of calves fine. and feed leafy. ad liblium. green in box hay 2 lbs. in front 3 lbs. of calves 4 lbs. at all Change to limos a dry and Freshening Ration Lng is followed later, a calf should receive whole milk in normal amounts for at least 2 weeks, and preferably for 3 or 4 weeks or more, if the calf is especially valuable. or if it is not strong. For very young calves there is no satisfac- tory practical substitute for milk. The young call should be fed sparingly. for there is much more danger of overfeeding the first few days than of underfeeding. For the first day or two it or 8 pounds of milk daily is it safe allowance for an average calf. with s pounds as a maximum for is large, lusty onc. Feeding 3 times a day is slightly better for the calf during the first week or so. and is advisable if the CITY AND CENTRAL I-OTB TAXI. Dill 6560-G569. "YOUR DOLLAR BUY! MOBI- at the IIUGIIIB DRUG 8'l'0Il.' KIIOBINI. Electric and Pro- pane Gas. Refrigerators. Bryan?-0D and MacKlr. FIBESTONE TOY FAIB open Lay away now for Christmas. WOBTl'l'S DRUG STORE, Prime Btreet. will be the only Drug Store open this afternoon and evening. TONIGHT-DRAMA FESTIVAL OPENS with a rollicking comedy "The Whlteheaded Boy." directed by Vera Millar. Curtain 8.15 p. m. Parkdale Hall. Admission 50 cents. TONIGHT in Central Christian Chui-ch at 8.00 p. m. Ralph and Leeta whitrow will show pictures and tell of their work as missionar- ies in Northern Saskatchewan. Please attend. IN MEMORIAM WALLACE TAYLOR The death occurred at the P. E. 1. Hospital on Nov. 3. 1954. of Wallace Taylor in his 81st. year. The late Mr. Taylor was born at Duiiilas, son of the late John and Susan Acorn Taylor. He spent his entire life on P. E. 1.. and was ll'('ll and favorably known. hav- ing iiccn engaged in farming up until his lost illness. In 1901 he married Florence Cantcllo of Pt. Prim. To this un- ion were born one son illld three daughters. Wm. Taylor, Strath- rona; Catherine, Mrs. Norman Maiheson, Forest Hill, who pre- deceased him one year ago; Mary, Mrs. Sam Garrett, Forest Hill; Laura, Mrs. Martin Gillis, Strath- cona. A number of grand-children and great grand-children. Also iwo brothers. Seymour on the old homestead. Upton, and Albert oi Milford. Mass. The largely attended funeral was held from his late residence followed by service, in Dundas United Church and were conduct- ed by his pastor, Rev. 3. Cut- tance. Hymns sung were, "The Lord's Myy Shepherd" and "I Am Thlnc O Lorri". a solo "Looking This Way" byHcrbert McLeod was beautifully rendered. Pall bearers were three grand- sons and three nephews. Myles Maiheson. Everett Garrett. Albert Taylor, Truelove and Charles Tay- lor and John Riley. Funeral was under the dirt-,ctinii of A. B. Cutcliffe. followed by burial in Dundee Cemetery. Your cares on earth are over. The heavenly crown is won Your busy hands are re-sting. As the Master saith "Come". Card Of Thanks The family of the late Wallace Taylor, Starilicoiin, wish to sin- cerely thank Dr. Cox. Dr. Laid- law. nurses and staff of P. E. 1. Hospital and special nurses. also friends and neighbors for acts of kindness and expressions of sym- pathy and all who helped them in their time of sorrow. THE VENIIOME 114 Kent Street Now under new management. Called Now THE KENT STREET HQTEL Rooms Day or Week (Continued on page ii) --II KIKIK x Ea-us! , A .7.” 2" A '1 A A e I subscription to THE GUARDIAN is a daily reminder your tiiougiittuliness E i A A k W The ALL-veal: Gig: 5 Clip and Mail today to The Guardian. Enclosed please find 8 ........ ...... for s .. .............. .. month's suir 4 seription to The Guardian to be sent with my compliments: rum: ' Anbness - Name of sender sbonass An appropriate Christmas Card will be mailed stating from whom the gift is sent. .Ratee off the Island to any part of Canada or the U.S. are:- .. One Year 312.00: six Months 38.00. 3.5.5., o9p,..oae Year 33.00; six Months 31.50. the-srjnmneans "Wl rant Till ascx WEl.l.'. oiggers Pharmacy. open evenings 'tiil I o'clock. on. RANGES, heaters. floor furnaces. lowest prices. Firestone. WI TRADE hockey boots and skates. Firestone. MUSKBAT. WILD MINK. Red Fox, Beaver. etc. My prices are tops. W. Chester S. McLure. A MOVING sale Nov. 26 rand Nov. 27 only. I-felen's Dress Shop, 125 Kent Street. BE-OPENING SOON with all new stock. Relen's Dress shop. 54 Graf- ton Street. SPRING rank Community Club monthly meeting in Hall, Thurs- day. November 25th, a o'clock. PUBLIC INVITED to attend Provincial Home and School semi- annual meeting in P. W. C. Audi- torium, Friday. November 26th, 8.00 p. m. Cunt speaker Mr. H. H. Simpson, vice-president Canadian Home and School. Silver collection. SAD NEWS - Mrs. Ira Barlow recently received a telegram from relatives advising her of the sud- den death of her aunt, Mrs. Ruby Lingley of Wattham, Massachusetts Mrs. Lingley successfully under- went an operation for a fractured hip which she received in a fall at her home. Complications had set in and death came very unexpectedly. Mrs. Lingley was the former Ruby MacAusland. daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Crawford MacAus- land who predeceased her about Si. Laurent And Duplessis Honor Wilfrid laurier . QUEBEC (CP)-National unity and remembrance of the man who made it the cornerstone of his political career Sunday brought do- gether two veteran political lead- ers now trying to patch a 10-year split in their governments' eco- nomic relations. Prime Minister St. Laurent and Premier Duplessls of Q u e b e I: stood, with bowed heads at the base of a monument to Sir Wilfrid Laurier. united in tribute to Can- ada's first French-speaing prime minlter. Sir Wilfrid was prime minister between 1896 and 1911. Mr. St. Laurent, who holds the Commons seat of Quebec East for- merly represented by Sir Wilfrid. pulled the string that unveiled the nine-foot bronze statue to the statesman Quebecers still revere. Portraits of Laurler hang even now in many Quebec farm homes. SMALL CROWD A small crowd of 300 braved a steady drizzle of cold rain to at- tend the ceremonies at Langelier Park. The monument. set on a base of Lake St. John marble, overlooks a busy lowertown inter- What are you really like? What is the rnpl you? Are you the per- son your husband or wife thinks you are? Or your children believe you to be? Or your friends con- sider you? Is the opinion of your neighbors reliable? Or that of your boss, or of your fellow- w'orkers? Perhaps strangers you meet here and there get the truest impression of you. Or are you what you in your secret heart feel yourself to be? I 0 Such questions come to all of us from time to time, In youth of course. they are of burning im- portance. But few of us outgrow them altogether. A thumb-nail biographical sketch of Emily Carr. Canadian painter, in the last issue of a widely read publication, sparked them for me. - Emily Carr (1871-1945) was born in Victoria, British Colunibla. She is p”ranked among the foremost Painters of the Western Hemi- sphere." An exhibition of her Dallltlngs was just opened in the, National Gallery in Ottawa. section. Mr. St. Laurent. in is 15 minute speech following the ceremony said Canadians must strengthen national unity while "carefully" preserving the basic characteris- tics of the nation. Mr. Duplessis, who followed the prime minister recalled that Sir Wilfrid once said Canada's federa- Card Of Thanks I wish to thank the Rev. J. E. l-ieatirwood and the people of Belfast land surrounding districts for their act of kindness shown toward me. i Signed: John Docherty .11.. Ruhamah Schelnfeld Frank We and our Neighbors THE REAL YOU In her youth she studied art in England and France and then came back to leach art in her home - town. Understandably enough, the modern art she had learned, then at its most extreme beginnings, did not appeal to the conservative people of Victoria. They thought her paintings were. ”slmply terrible”. Even now many would find a conventional com- position of water and sky and sailing boats more pleasing than her pointing, ”Blunden Harbor" (reproduced with ilie biographical sketch), of primitive, Indian sculp- tures poised grimly and power- fully on is dock. Emily Carr use turned down as is teacher of art and opened a boarding house and hooked rugs and made pottery to earn a live- ljhood. With the extra sensitive- ness of the artist, she felt that she as xvell as her gift was re- jected by the community and like a. child who feels unwanted, she, became defiant. The writer of the sketch speaks of her as "frumpy and acidulous" and that "she would plod through the staid streets of Victoria with a monkey on her shoulder-while neighbors sneered-or froze with disdain." The picture is probably over- done. but it is evident that Emily Carr went out of her way to show the neighbors she didn't care, for their opinion (revealing how much she did care!) and they generally speaking, made no bones about The Guardian 1' 8 Wednesday, Nov. 24, 954 Emily Carr was known as "The Laughing One" by the Indians in the fishing villages north of Vic- toria where she went to paint as often as her finances would per- mlt. The Indians had no preconcelved theories of art. and her work pleased them. She was happy among them, and they liked and admired her. She felt is kinship with llir-sn and at home. She wrote: "You must learn to feel the pride of the Indian in his an- cestors. and the pinch of the cold raw damp of the West Coast. and the smell and flavor of the wood smoke. and the, sting of it in your eyes-' Which then was the real Emily C8”? The sour. unattractive show-off. the towns-people thought her. The ”laughing one" .. the friendly. h8l7l7)' STU” "10. Indians believed her to be? pTh4C iluesiions posed at the ho- glnning of the column and this one directly concerning Em-U3. Carr, involve the, highly Complicat. ed problem of personality. I shall try to deal with it to some ex- tent, next week. NOTRE DAME - - ACADEMY .- . ' 7 BAZAAR J 1 Wednesday, Nov. 24th Thursday, Nov. 25th , Here is an excellent op- I portunity to procure some i ' Christmas Gift: for your friends: Oil l'alnl.lngs Beautiful Prizes for Bingo. Personals The many friends of Mrs. Frank Bradley. weymouth Street, will be sorry to learn that she has entered the P .15. Island Hospital for treat- ment. NORTHERN RIVER The Llard river, flowihg into the Mackenzie river at Fort Simp- son. was named from the cotton- wood trees (liardsi on its banks. STOCK CLEARANCE SALE and James Bros. J. P. Miu:PHERSON & SON 14 years ago. She is survived by live 1”"? M 5”V"'"m"" WES Plsiette Belfast. their disapproval. Noveltleh one sister and six brothers. one Bd0Pl"l "1 ""K"”d Q"'bF”. i-. c. llllnd. Hard to helli-,vc that this same Fancy Work and am... son and two grandchildren. BM. :":g:):nr?,m”" 9" me Amencmi A A. for "I R my, 0 - l Chicken Sandwiches and other daintlea for Clearing all Stock Suits at 5539.95. (Also a few Lli"”"e0"- trousers and topcoats). Tailored by Shiffer-l-iillman Hm” Cmkmg 73”” . D , oo;CP;Zl;; 3.'.w"i?”"' ' 1 IIIIIIIIIIIIIIJ . 123rd -Annual Statement THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA Eilablikhed 1832 E IYDKY VIOST Goren! Mnegn .- N. I. DINA! Pvrnlnil CA PITAL AUTHORIZED 325,000,000 CAPITAL PAID-UP 315,000,000 REST ACOOIMT 335,000,000 Condensed Statement as as Slat October. l954 ASSETS p I Cash. clearings and due heIHh& ....... ..3NI.lI.Q Cllaldllsl Government seasnriee not exceeding msrleinlm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . , . . . . . . 31 Other bonds and stocks. not neeediag mark value . . . . . . . . . - - -- fnli loans (secured) .. I LIANIJTTES nspesih ..........'............ ........D7.1lJII Aeeapusees and knees efcniit 2-..s.. I7.Q.l'II oihursisiseu 3.8 48 ' Sl.3.lB.l!'l A I GENERAL omcm; 'r0ItON'fO. CANADA Dread: as-nu Condo m in Jnum cuss rvsirrv iuoa oostmcsx itsrasuc TRINIDAD 1,n.vno,sr, um. ' nu mar. 11.3.1. its oil Breed st 37 V-1! -1 This has been a busy. booming year in Canada.pThe Bank of Nova Scotia's i23rd Annual Statement shows it. The State- ment shows the Bank's assets soaring over the billion-dollar mark for the first time-it proud new record. achieved because Canada, too. has had is record year in so many ways. This mile- stone is just one more reflection of the contribution The Bank of Nova Scotia . is making towards Canadian progress . . .your progress. I Behind the figures of the Statement. you can read how the Bank has been called upon to help you save, borrow. build businesses. expand or modernize factories. drill for oil, mine for'metals. lay new roadways, set up new airways 3 - - NIG thousand and one enterprises that strengthen and enrich our Canadian way of life. The Bank is there with funds, with expert counsel. wherever men are p at work releasing the wealth of Canada's natural resources . . . in hydro-eleciricl schemes, in scientihc research . .g. in the construction of a PASSES THE OUR PARTNER BILLION-.D.OLLAR MARK hospitals: welfare oentrcsfschools . . . in commerce. both export and import . . . in industry. both large and small . . . wherever the Bank can help you to greater employ- ment. more extensive productivity, and an ever-high standard of living. , The Bank of Nova Scotia is your partner in helping Canada grow . . . yesterday . . . today . . . and tomorrow. You can obtain your free copy of The Bank's annual report from your nearest ' branch of The Bank. h