" FEBRUARY 9. 193s mm. ‘- a ROYAL sArLon , Love of the sea ls lnh.rent in a1 hive hxltohd and lt ls thcnlfore only ilygoper that the ‘mos. Erlgish guy. ‘Iyelgll since the muarts" should be wsaiior at h.art. That he is also a Tfuiior by lIrO-esalnil. the King new I'm-gets and he dces n t like o hc e to fro: it eitha. A czrtan Frat 10rd cf th. Ag. gltraity time ventured to oxpres qurprlse to the King at the in.im- Ins cud extensive knowledge m, uisjesty pxsetsed of the inside ar- Zggflielil :lts and gasigcts o: n mod» 13m ba.tle8ll.p vWQifili {h}. WQX’ liointiy inspecting‘ at‘ the tins. i "1 was fifteen years inth’ Navy," ‘ulswercd the King drily, "and not f. year has passed sin-r: that I have ioot visited the Fleet at some time >r another. You must rem mber iIllII 1 was a sa'lor ion berm l WEI‘ dreamed I would bn g King, md I have never l':st into est in I my first profession. Observers not- id an embarrassed First Lord got- mg rather pink in the cheeks. for it was s fart that he had never been aboard a battleship before, 1n His life. When King Edward. then Prince pf wales, d'clded to allow his sec- nnd son to follow a naval corner. the step was not enthusie “ “v lliarcved or by Queen Victoria. I. is said that her girlish memories of iler sailor-uncle King William IV llitl not tend to increase her admlr ition and respect for the marinara ti ilaval men. but when her grand- son made it clear that he ardontly desired to go to sea, the autocratic Queen bowed to the inevitable, ~At the early wee of twelve, thoro- lore, Prince George. as tho King was then styled. rncame u nnvgl tadet snd was attached to HALE. ‘Brltannlt’ at Dartmouth. rmthr the command of Captain '5. run- fax. Here the boy Prince and his older brother Prince Albert Victor, later to be the ill-fated Dulml of Clflirnw. were treated exactly like all the other cadets and they took part in all the games and pranks beloved by high-spirited lads. Both the youthful Princes found ihe mush and Nady naval atmos- here a little disconcerting gt, first ht they soon settled down and it was quickly discovered that the fffls rflndsons were no “soft- ya. It was even reported to their ther that Prince George had been I Twenty-Five ‘The 8.... of By The Hon. Mrs, Francis Lsacollely officers and Io metrics. 'I'he mow - advent: and boys mace up tho n- malndcr. ‘There is-no doubt what- ever that his three years with the "Bscehln o" laid the ma! rounds».- t men and his success indenting with them. At the express commands of thcir exalted father not the slight- cat suownm c: latitude was shown ~to the two Ployal Princes. They tcck their regrlar turn as watch keepers. went aloft. and spent the stipulated time in sailing drill am‘ ‘boat duty. '11!!! attended "school" every mornng with the 0th": cadets and "mifdirs" mt’ in addition to ‘swat- ‘tlng up" French and mathematics, had to study smsnship and gun- Mfy. At 0 every morning the two srlndsons of thr queen had to lump out oi theYr bunks to th~ sound of sn ear-piercing bwle. and frequently sleepy-eyed. had to line l3 for drill a quarter-of-an-hour er. Prince George was always slsepisr in the morning than his brothel- and it was nothkg unusual for the future King of England to bo unceremoniously hauled out of his bunk by his brother or one or two of the other lads. what msliy W!“ him. however, of "sleepy head" in the mornings, was the sudden appilrtsion of a heavy cold 8901180 on his nose-the invention of a bright "middle" who newer tir- ed alto-Avon's all his life. In re- counting the story. The "Bacchantc" made two voy- Blee with the Princes on board and during the three years’ period it visited the west Indies. Australia. China, Japan. South America, South Africa, Ceylon, Palestine, Egypt, Bpain. Greece, and a host of other. smaller places and islands. It was indeed a glowing experience for two rsger and intelligent boys and the "Diary oi the ‘Bac¢ltante"' which was kept by the two Princes and yvas published in book form in 1800 shows even in its carefullyyecvtcd form. how much they enjoyed it. .4 The strict life oi discipline on- board ship was more than oom- pmlsated for by their shore tours a Splendid Era elder - .\ 4 v. _ _._ __. _ ;‘i Tho colorful South America loft an indelible impression on the Kinlasaboyanditwasonhissd. vice and suggestions forty years later. that. the Prince of ales do. sided to visit Latin Ame ca. Buen- os Alzes and the wide rolling pun.‘ pus are remembered ’ lly by- l-lls Majesty to this day. . Another vivid memory o! "Bac- chanto" days is the lunch in the tomb of Rameoes IV in the Oity of "W 13°16 In Mint. while the climb- ln; of the Great Pyramid has never been forgotten by the King although W011 over fifty years have gone since ho performed the fest. With such wonderful experiences board. it is not surprising that the FDYBI "middles" were supremely happy. Every moming. sometimes as early as 4 a.rn.. the present British Sovereign. an exuberant youth in his early teens. had his swim, and be rapidly became one of the s‘ ‘ swimmers on the ship. In all the llfe of the vessel he took an active part. l-le joined the ship choir and regularly attended the choral practices for the Bun- day services. Someone, a few years ago. once asked l-m Majesty what was his favorite hymn and he in- terestod his guest by saying that he had never been moved by a hymn more than by the "Becchan " hymn "Fbr Absent Friends." which ho used to sing as a boy on board ship on the last Sunday of every month. Without hesitation His Mej- naty began to recite the first and last verses. Which run: "Holy Father in Thy Mercy Hoar our anxious prayer; Keep our loved ones, now far absent. ‘Neath Thy care.” "Bother, son, and Ho‘y Spirit, God the Ome in Three; wees them, guide them, save them. keep them. New‘ to Thee." ' Y In Augustf 1802, the "Bacchante" returned to England and “the long. -lol'i‘g'='voyc~,e was 07515" Queen Vic- toria. no love: oi ships, paid a visit to the boat as-lt lay off Oowes and was conducfrd all over it, flhil"'l'lg keen, interest in the vessel her on shore and the healthy life on, and visits. and _very little-moaned grsndscnsinad learned to love and their eyes. The anxious Mr. Dalton ‘of which they‘ had written w her had sometimes a tfyin! hi"! ‘VB-Wh- .ao_ enthusiastiraliy. ins ever his import-ant ywnr char- _Threo weeks before iv- was “paid sec who displayed an uuderstand- "off" the ship, Prince George was ahlo anxiety to get aw?y."0n thmr bongtmeg m Whgppflyhggm chm-ch own" when they stewed uhmfl by the smurf-hop of Canterbury. Once at Ballaret ln"='Austrells who gave a movm». agfmon on taught "scrapping" with a bqv 5 leer older and had sEOQIVGd a black tye in the contest. '.l‘he old queen‘ V" V"? annoynd when she beard [he news. but the Prince or Wulov humorously told s. friend law.- th-lt u hi! 5°11 had administered the black eye instead of receiving one, Ker Marsty might have sa‘d noth- Illlf about the affair. Pfhlw Gwrse spent two very harry rem- on the “Britannia” and m5 Mhiestyb memories of these b°Yh°°d d8?! have never left h'm. Nvthhls dnlishis him more than lo meet one of the fast-diminish- lns band of "Britannia" boys, 13m. his the Great Wtir. on his frcuent {We i0 the Fleet. h» met qwt- a ew and had long chats with every "it of them. about the old days. QOn the 6th August. 1879, Prince mmjlle 8nd Prince Albert joined the Bacchante‘ at cowes n1 for [he next three years the lives and beimilhts of both o! thy-m ma” Mi indissolubly luv-ea with the "Mesh ship or lus: over soc feet 1on1. Over fifty years have passed Em” "l9 Kins was “paid off" the Bacchunte" but, Qiklfythlfll! my“. "triad with the vessel a“'l its mem- mble "While! ar- etl'l {"1 vivid as N" I“ m! Mfliestfs m'nd. w}? Wile onlv fourt-rn years ‘old m ~n he joined the ship. still rank- r 5:, as B "KM. and he left it a tau- ti‘ ~ "Wily midsblpnv-n o’ ggwen- ‘"1 "h" hvl awe-i '1 m mile-i around the world g-s 5-,.“ ‘ma. and DF0D‘es'th"t men o.’ seven‘y at gym I'M hardlv ever 1-5-1" gb-ut, v~m fourteen to vventcen is s ‘P y “INTI 5% for e"er" ‘Moles- ffllifhd in this (‘av th- xi-v- p. l‘ rvful that h-r aw" t‘"e period I: me "d“"“ "I" ‘P "cli"n‘e"' as SW11???‘ of; ‘call it wbrn in remm-A “In tho-e vhf/flow d...‘ n w... ,- nlifl-‘iivn to rnd th~ Queen's two (he $11!. in direct sr-ccssron to "n" on such a prolonged lea-trip. Whue the "Burn-rite" a‘? "FY11 by steam rower. it l" "R11" a ssilirv-shio and wh~n bmlts sails were unto-led it was a, lm ea-“M ““""“e sight. sec-cc- ' "W". h~l'-~~c*n'ur-- woo, W“ W" I" P?" and corvwrtsbb‘ a1 It 1“ "5"" 1"" ev": -n Au-ntiei girl"!!! was dreaded by most peo-I hoifjju‘ Genres and his lw-tlvr, , - er. We're rill-d with swish. ghil‘ at th~ - worse‘ no any.‘ ' ""14 ‘Ne fem all O-u ' ro-' $i“IctIvf'l.l. ‘i131 o n, . m, reoo-“Wvugnls :2. Wm: pwi rrsmlvd III" cwfined boyhood, was ‘titlmineo that an owl two lively’ xfellarshould 1t s chance to devolop' m‘ cltnrsfton and personality- "Féll. llrs and manly atmcophm. "bf!" V!" 7011:. father and mother are." was the. p I691]. i0 the young prim‘; d, mo. GQNTIWO. ‘lhd pp. i a, their o 'v‘a..‘l”.iliii,fl“" =~ v v; "h" Rw- coc-l -D~lion m ‘a! mils ' ' n! edwutlon he ha! n1 waists-sym- tile-w’ vim u»: -..... "‘°"' "hln- Pr". ‘il- on- M,‘ W?! Charis: Biomass rp- llfhlll u ‘the ‘Tm WM from las- m“. ,- '3' ‘ ‘II u.» ' 14> when chattlns w the "dimers? the oc-aslon. which was destined Prince George suddenly announced in, 1-,. hi3 last, fm- he dig" ghoflly that h;- wanted to descend a gold flterwqdg, THE CHARLOTTETOWN_ GUARDIAN -_i-w to Create Five .New Kings ASZIVPurt-t of" Silver Jubilee Ceremonies ‘ ‘ Top, Mahnnjah of Baroda, By Central Press Canadian LONDON, Fcb. IP-Durlng ‘the celebrations of the sllvcr jubilee 0' King Geofn, five new kings will be created within the British Em- pile. At the Imperlrl Durbar In be held in Delhi, the King-emperor will confer the ran of klrlgship to five of the richest men in the world, the five most important ruling prin- ces in India. They are: 'I‘l'ie Nizam of Hyderabrd. The Gackrzar of Barofa. The Maharajah of Mysore. The Mehzlrajzh of Kashmir. The Mahurajah o! Gwalior. 1111119 II Wu- 51! u" Qrartlflrmr-i Thus ‘ended with a solemn church Dill-fill t0 1111111179 117m We" "99" ceremony an eventful and imp"rt- less and limidst the diikhil-‘ti m!!!’ nnt three {was for the prrsent era the Prince drumed canvas trous- King. The Navy was now the career ere. oflekln and corduroy iwktt morn than ever desired by his heart and oapy and final/Y bOCIB. 511d i!!!" and he set himself with a will tn- mediately descended in the cage. ‘Wm-es 1g, Appognged m 111015, All that he saw ln the mine fas- "gamma" gm- legvfnq the “BM. clnsted him and he we: leuh to chanfe" lie sailed with that ship to lesve, but he did not do so with- the Nov-eh Amgrlgg, am w“; mugs; Out l nusaet. Whit‘?! i119 Km" 5m! stations and was prr-"l-ioted sub-lieu- trelleume at Bfludri-flkham. In All!‘ | tenant during the period. A spell a‘ trails the Royal sailors were wzrm- Ighe my,“ Naval college, Gwen. 1y Wfilcflmlfl EVBYWYYW- "WI "1' ,wlch, followed and he became a casino wvishnese and lwk 0f bu" Jieutenant in loss. His zeal and ef- nose or side. Wimfnl l1! Allltfllih" ‘rlciency and his absolute dlregard Itober. ml. rt is said that ills moth- lon his return home. and their ex- Jlfhough the weather was Wm" Gov-ram ‘or the m mm ~ South Ah-i ‘to saw-vi» rm. °' u’ "mm 'll heats. Amen." his many accom- plishments l-lis Majesty numbur- not least. his abili‘y to make "bush- man's tea" which he lea-nod in the Bush in western Australia in those far-off days. . Melbourne, sydnoy. Brisbane and other of the Australian towns saw‘ the Queen's grandsons rousing re- ceptions. which narticularly pleased. Royal circles at‘ home when they hewd of it. ,i In Japan. the Mikado put a Pal- ace at ‘Ibkio at the dispovl of thr- rathrt- emlrrrassezi Royal youths when the "Bcchwte" crrived fcr a few days’ stay. The Mikado extend- ed hospitality in truly regal man- ner ln evcly way and tho only n1- fortunats oontretemcs was when tho ‘Emperor's pivate band. the Rrlfin, was commanded to play be- fore the distinguished vls'tors. Th" band of ancient origin had eqwlily ancient instruments of a wel‘d and unusual type. and the music, to ssy the lerst. was scarcely me‘od":us. 'I'I‘r Rel-in was in the midst of its osnfcrmcnce when all innocently. Prince George remarkcd audiblv that thcy were farm: a long time to "tune up." one zealous compan- ion went to investigatg the matte:- und conveyed the hint in French to the grave and lavishly-attired conductor. A few minutes late.- the music cersed and the Raisin quiet- ly st/fn away from the lfnqustlng- chamber. No‘ many people are a re the.‘ the King is tsttoec! on .h anus- an operation which he unirw-nt during th‘: Japanese visit in 0c- er. Queen Alexand-a, cried whorl she first saw those tattoo marks. istenco was carefully kept from Queen Victoria. In Ohlna and Japan the two Princes had a most interesting time and were enthusiastically welorm- ed in Shanghai, Kong I. and Yokohama by all the " ion" and the native oewiation. Palestine‘ cf absorbing interest to the P lace during his "Blcchanto" visit. IIIIQIIIQ- lcpatclg sects in charge cf the piacutbu-vlriuodlurltymms umvmwau t. ' ~ ‘ to e “ca...” o; small hotel in which read: c lieu: ‘Wirele- of his Royal rank bad now mad!‘- hlm one of the most popular young officers in the Navy and when he was put in command of the gun- boat "Thrush" in i890. he was con- gratulated on all sides. The follow- ing year he was made s. Command er and put in charge of the "Mel- amnus." , The Royal Bauer at twenty-six, was now one of the happiest and: most oortrnted men in the SCTVIU‘ find absrlutely absorbed in the life. Into all the many and intimate de- tails of a ship's communal life h" displuyrd close and continual in- terest and he was the idol of his off'ccrs and meg. “I a-g-me with vou, this grog is shccklnti." he scid to a s‘ilor on, the "hi-alumnus." who had b-en bold enough to draw the attention of the new Commandrr t.o the quality of that important beverage. One "sip" convinced the new “Chief" and from that day the "Melam-plvs" grow borame the best in the whole first. Then in Jnnuay, 189", th~ Duke of Clarence d'ed ‘from influenza and the Crmrcander of the "Mel- ampus." as th~ only survivlm son of the Prince of Wales. bocarm sud- denly s. young man oi vast import- ance and interest to the nation and the Empimho hrlr but once removed, to Britain's historic crown. The unr-rroted death of his much-loved elder brothe" was a crushing blow to the "sailor P inoe' and for a time his grief over the event prevented him from fully pet'- csiving how much it was going to alter his whole ilfe. But soon it wis made clear to him.in a tactful manner by his parents, that his sc- tlvo connection with tho Navy hsd to terminate. in view of the BIIIIIIQG illuu ‘ . The intimation at first rather, stunrfld tho Commander Prince and it is known that he tried hard] to prove that a sailor-heir to tho] Throne was not so lnsdvlsnbls as wgg thought by Queen Vfstoria and his own father. In the end. however. be sow the force and logic of their. srpnnents and sadly, but dutlfnllyl ho relinquished the command of which he had been so proud-and hh days of active naval service were over for ever. But his heart newer loft the Navy. His promotion to captain in 18%| svo him greater pleasure than the itlo of Duke of Cornwall and York which he had received the year previously. "f worked hard to In- come a Captain," he told s. friend It the time. "and did nothing to become a Duke." ‘ In 100i the present Ring was made a Rlcar-Admi line» he twoymrs wuavl nd r ‘of payouts in the economy panic of | wlvu. to Ihis efforts. always quietly and un- Already there is one king llrlndia. the King of lTrpal. Orly recently‘ Col. Frederick Bailey prrsented his, credcntia‘s as ‘irst British minister} to the court of the fist King of- Nepal. I the time was to come when he] could proudly call himself Aimlnl- in Chief of the British Navy. “I'm all at sea," said a flu-stared Cabinet Minister once. during the War, when he could not find a particular document for Hi1 Mal- _ esty's perusal. "l wLsh I .was."'re- plied the King. half to himself, and i the Minister heir-d s distinct sigh‘ as the words were spoken. His twenty-five years’ of storm. strain and stnéss‘ have increased, if anything, His Majesty's love of ships and the mcn who man them. Unlike some naval officers. the King has a high regard and respect for the Merchant Service, which h: rightly considers to tn as import-j ant in its own sphere as the Navy is in its own. What it melnt to the British Navy during the past quar- ter-of-a-century to have a "Sailor King" on the Tlrone. the great majority of the nation do not per- hsps realize. The masterly way in wh‘ch the German sen-menace was met be- fore the War and conquered during it. was duo to the alertness of those in active and civilian control of -the lWnt. and that spirit owed much to the influence of the King behind the scenes. Admirals and Commanders such as Fisher. Bares- ford, and Prince Louis of Batten- burg, whom the King had known intimately while in the Navy. al- ways found His Majesty a kcen and informed lttener on mval topics, and more than one First Lord of the Admiralty has been sharpened up in consequence, by the Kim. His. Mafristy. of course, does not and never has. interfered in mat- ters of policy. but naval conditions always arouse his acute interest. and it is notorious among Navy men that. tho sudden IDTIICIIIOD 1831 to naval ratings. was strongly disliked by the King when first it was mrzntioned to him. He, unlike his ministerial advisers. knew at first-hand how sailors allow so much out of their pay to their liquidate hire-purchase and instalment agreements. and he thus realized what the cuts would entail to the men and their relat- ives. His Majesty from boyhood has had great sympathy with ordin- sry sailors and he is a warm sup- porter of more modern and im- proved conditions for them. Things in this respect are much better than they were when the King begun his naval. career and this is due in no small c t: obtrusively made. Nowadays, the King's love o! the ma is mainly confined tn his an- nual yachting holiday at Oowas. and how eagerly he looks forward to it is offly known to his intimate friends. His Majesty knows every- thing to be known about a sailing- ship and at Oowes. tskm pert in every one of the complicated oper- ations of a yacht. with boyish met thee and dellht- , The new kings will have the right to exchan .2 dipkrnatic envoys wl:h the B.itlsh (curt. Fabulously Wealthy The six new klzfs, reprssrting almost fabulousnrealth, and consid- erable power overnrillions of people of India, are shown” Injthe accom- panying layout. ' 0f them, the Sunday Express London says: The Gac-ltwar of Baroda is the shepherd boy,whu became a kin!- gigty-ilve years ago the then Geek- war was deposed, and the present rulvs. a twelve year-old shephflfd boy of distantly royal descent was found and ofliclally adopted. His state brings him an annual revenue of 2,000,000 poundsr. .-, ' V», “You look no more than‘ ‘fifty. Your luaiesty." renurked a sheet. a. year or two ago on the King's yacli at ‘Coives- ‘ "If I looked what _I feel like just now, I should appear sixteen." was the King's Ihlljlllllg reply. All nee-loving men are always perennially young in looks and spirits. and not :1 l“ ' "f the King's wondejul health r? i vitllity is due to 111,5 boyhood and early man- hood's days in the Navy. Flor necr- ly sixty years he has carried with him much of that buoyancy and fresh atmosphere which only the sea. moms abl-e to give a min. Bil- tain owes hel- Navy s. great deal in- deed, and not the least of the debts is the fact that it nos largely wh- tributed to the making of the “Wis- est King who evnr sat on the Brit- ish Throne." Georce V Royal Sailor and Kingly Statesman. (Continued next Saturday) of Anniversary Recalls N. B. 001d Friday sum‘ JOHN. u. n? Feb. 8- (CP)—'1loday was the ‘filth shril- versary of Cold Friday. FY5411" tionally know as the coldest day ever experienced in New Brwlswlvk- On Rbnlary 8. 1861, the minimum temperature reading here was said to have been 20 below mro and 28 below at the city outskirts. 0f» flclal recording to metecrolcsicv-I conditions here did not start until later that Will‘- Saint John's officially coldest day occurred in January. 1890, when the mercury sank to 21 below. Two other odtflclal temrlraltures lower than the unofficial Cold Friday mark heap were 20 8 on December 30, 1938, and 20.3 on Fhbnlcry B of last year. The in/tter reoding also was made on a Friday, exactly 73 years and one day after the more famous but perhaps little more frigid fiiday. Unofficial records at other New Brunswick points where cold weather usually hits the province hardest were as low as 39 below during 1034's cold Friday. Some thermometers in 8th; John resi- stexed 20 below and the average nlmum unofficial reading here was 24 below. _ The original Cold Friday brought bitter. weather to most of the North casm of freezing and sirfferlng were r . A northwest gale. some- times blowing at 70, miles an hour, infenslfiod the cold in New Bruns- wick. ours just outside of Saint John reed 30 below. As the cold wave swept cost- ward from Ontario, tempemtures here made s. record drop of cg degrees in some i2 hours. A thaw the previom day had aroused trope the buck of winker has brohim h New Rmllfik-nbn the .~ hfhsrsjah of Nepal. Mnsharaiah of Gwffor. Lower, Msharajah of Mylcre, Mal: arojeh of Kashmir. Nicazn of Ilylerabad. " The Mahardjiih of Mysore isitho" fifty-yesr-old ruler of Iridiiis “model state." rich in coal, gold. coffee and timber. ‘ The Nizam of Hy ‘nrabad is the premier p ince of India. wealthiest man in the world, and rule: of ter- ritory as large as Itily, with 14,00),- Ooosubjects. His personal ftrtune is estimated at 100,000,000 pounds. The Maharajah of Kashmir rules one of the most beautiful cotntrles in the world, bordering Rusian. Chinese and Afghanistan territory in the extreme north of India, and therefore of great strategic im- portance. As Sir Hari Singh he was "Mr. A.” of the notorious Robinson cam in 1924. He is thirty-nine. The Maharajah of Gwallcr is the elghteen-year-old Prince George Rao, named after the King-emper- ‘or. Ills state is flourishing. some night, however, the wind changed to the northwest and be- came": gale, lashing the province with sleet. ‘line weather grew colder every nunute. "The gthirmncrnetier in different parts of New Brunswick occasion- ally makes a record in the ‘thirties’ without making people nearly 50 uncomfortable as that did", com- mentxzd the st. John News of Fob- ruary 11, 1861. Attributing the dif- ference to the "cold humidity of the atmosphere" the IWWSPBDBT said. Ferry Unable To Run "Fences. bsrnsjoutholms and oven well-finished buildings were so much affected by the frost that great bwrds would rip off, making s. noise like the reports of pistols. People going through the streets had their noses, cheeks and other exposed parts frostbitten. Some hundreds of people must have suf- iezcd in this way. The harbor was so filled with vapor that the ferry steamer oould not cross the whole day and at one time tho vapor was so irvtlense that it extended t0 Prince William street, a thing that we never saw before. “Black homes going through the streets Iliad turned into white ones. completely coated with the frost; while the breath as it issued from the nostrils of man or beast was to a.ll appearances palpable enough to be cut with a. knife. The stages for Fmdericstlon could not leave-to to take the road would have been sudden doath-—passeng~ers, there- fcce. had to lay over for another day." Telnpemtiwes at other points that day were; New York l2 below; Boston, 16 below. N. H., 32 below; Sackvllle, N. B. 36 below. On February ll. i914, oven lower temperatures were recorded in New England. Ptosque Isle, Me, lay paralyzed with the mercury at, 52 below while thermometers at three other places in that state mid 50 below. Preventive Dentistry Through Education For P. E. Island It is already too Lalo for many oi those .who have reached adult years to have more than remedial work done upon their teeth, but it is not so with the children and par- ticularly with those of pro-school age. 1t is hero that preventive den- tistry can be wilted with the most lasting benefits both to the individ- usl and the state. With the idea of saving the men and women of tomorrow from the suffering and diseases of the present generation the gospel oi preventive dentistry Is being carried to the and schools of Prince Edward Island. ‘the campaign is being conducted by the Canadian Dental Hygiene Council. hosting loco-common changes to be made in February 16th. for this purpose. The llcvllsslle "of u» Island Telephone Directory I f ls Ilow Being Prepared _ A new Issue of the Island Telephone Directory is scheduled for publication on April 1st. List- ings will be closed on February 16th. Persons who intend to become Telephone sub- scribers st this lime. and subscribers who wish torsend their requests to the nearest Business Ofilce at once, and in any event, not later than The Telepholw Directory . . . . because of the - ext/naive field which it. covers and the frequency of its use by the public . . . has long been recog- nized as an ideal medium for advertising. Lim- ited space in the new Directory is now available Please note carefully the closing date. ISIJIIII . TELEPIIIIIIE BIIIPAIIY » LIMITED their listings, are urged with the Department o! Health and the Department oi’ Education of the Province, and the Prince Edward Island _ Dental Association. The Province has been divided into nine districts for the purpose of the or- ganization of this great campaign. Preventive dentistry does not mean only visits to the dentist's of- fice. It is education oi the young people in the proper care of the teeth, and that means less trouble in adult years and a. healthier and happier people. Every child stteudlfi school in the Province o! Prince Edward’ Island will recmve instruction in dental hygiene during the new thirty days through the medium o! the Province-wide campaign which is being conducted bylthe Canadian Dental Hygiene‘ Council. gp; It is the greatest. good health campaign ever attempted in the, Province of Prince Edward Island and will be of outstanding benefits o0 thousands. .0. Keeping MD, D.P-H, Chief ealth Officer. M s k I n g homo mov- Ieo with I m od o r n . low-colt camera II actually ll o a s y I I m a k I n g snapshots. It's fascinat- ing sport. foo. AY as well be frank about it. Until a few months ago I had the notion, shared by a good many other folks, that home movies were (1) expensive, (2) diillcult, and (3) not very good, anyway. And then Bill, a friend of mine, got a movie outfit. Neither honor his family can be classed as wealthy. or anything like it, but there he was i —-sporting a movie camera. Natur- ally, I was curious. The camera itself was about the size of a small book. Slid into a top- l coat pocket without any fuss at. all. It was neat as the proverbial pin and about as simple. Bill showed me how to run it. You merely held it up, aimed it as you would a gun, pressed a button—and you are mak- ing movies. Oh, of course, there was a spring to wind and a lens aperture to set, but it was any amount sim- pler than my favorite snapshot cam- era. Even the loading was easy. That particular camera. as I re- call It, cost about $40. It used 8 mm. film and held enough to allow for a couple dozen full-length shots-each shot long enough to show, for ex- ample, a sensational football play, from the snap of the ball to the end of a fifty-yard run, forward pass in- cluded. All that on about ten cents’ worth of film. Movie film, I learned, is really pretty cheap to begin with and doubly so when you consider that the purchase price includes the cost :1 finishing done by the manufac- ursr. Well, I revised my notions of movies, as to cost and difliculty, i-SNAPSHOT CUIL HOW ABOUT MOVIES? promptly. And when I saw the fin... ished movies, a week later. I got all over the idea that amateur movies weren't very good. Bill's were ex- cellent. Arld he's only an average" person, a snspshooter like the rest of us. I'm passing all this on merely for your consideration. Movies, at their best, will never in this world take the place of good snapshots. The snapshot camera has a charm all its own. But there's no reason at all why snapshooters shouldn't take up movies, too. For. obviously, movies can do things that: still cameras call- not. They can get the whole of u‘ bit of action Instead of merely a" part of it. As far as technicalities are con-- corned, anyone who has mastered the essentiak of snapshooting can take up the modern movie camera“ without a qualm. Bill has permitted me to mako a number of movie shots and I'm both surprised and delighted with the results. Maybe someday‘ I'll get mo an outfit. ' Ifind that there are two standard sizes for amateur movie film—8 mll-" ‘ Ilmeter and 16 millimeter (Holly? wood uses 35 millimeter film.) Nah. urally, costs are less in the 8 mm.- class than in the 1G, but even the l6 nlm. outfits are surprisingly rea- sonable In both first and operating costs. 0f course, you can spend a great deal oi‘ money on special equip- ment, but it's not. at all necessary... By the way, with certain l6 mmv outfits you can get action pictures in full color. That's something we snapsllooters can't quite do. to datE" JOHN VAN GUILDER. " date of ssle. 1.; City ‘Bolfl Agent _ i. Bargain Rates to Western Canada Dates of Sale-March 1st to March 14th inclusive. Final Return Limit-Thirty days in addition i0 For rates and full information call W. II. IIIIGEIIS 94 Great George Street ZMIIOZICSNIIIKEMEI-ti biil-tii-lia l I "f-zgz-tg-gi-z gag; >1 Canadian National Railways r? .4 up