a the million Werner Bros. spent Io bring you'll nmome p!‘ the lovable rogue who mode his n -- Sllflllllfi |T$ AWAY TU SENSITIUNII. Nlivljllittlllllsl. ' Ihelbellegdsvvhobeleenlfsaylbisgreotpletunhwonheverydfler “'9 um slowly Weaeeeelhevlrler‘: lpelel “Cqplln ma" bullies no. bedlled overdr- peeehheplrevenelnlerpen-flenellrebeeevy erheeeloeeelweemihlelieleleflunrwdl/d Sobetlnl‘: emozlng ~ ‘ the tenor of lfifljgl DAYS .113... TODAY FRI. . ' - ' ' - “THREE 333;,’ Elllllll. FLYNNQULIVIA ll: IIAVILLANB "z" guru nttml - ansrr nmrsbifllriis"? sternum - cuv IiIBIEE PRINCE ED WARD —_ IVIATXNEE ....-... EVENING . .. 16c, 26c. . 26c. 32c, 31c. PUBLIC FORUM This solemn is open for Ibo discussion by correspondents of questions of interest. The Charlottetown Guardian does nor necessarily endorse the oplnlonw of correspondents. (Continued from page 4) would not suggest that we attempt to educate the manufacturer of booze into giving up the business and seeing that no one else takes up the 10b. Surely the Prohibition- ists have arrived at the’ place to which the Moderationists plead -And despite the possibility of the favourite jibe of the “wets" agaitvfl "wet" prohibitionists, the vast m»..- Jority of prohibltionists are DRY. The drunlcard is simply a Modera- tionist run to excess-not to say to seed. Therefore the scope of educa- tron is wholly within the field and faith of the Moderationlst. What do they want to know more than ~t>hey do’! Anything more about the damnable effects of alcoholic bever- ages on the individual and social and- spiritual life? Anything more about the impossibilities of alcohol- ic beverages in a rapid moving: complex life such as we are living today? Pray, what is it we are tr- educate them in? After all is it not the fact that all we need in this fight is that each should unselflshly accept the truth such knowledge as we have has brought to us concerning the evils of liquor drinking, and then stand for the law that conserves that truth. But no, we are told than Moderationist and all his ilk would have us take the way of education. For they want nothing so much as ‘delay 1n action that will take from them their booze. And while we are educating a ‘generation the Moderationist (act- ‘ing in the interests of the liquor traffic) would have us sell all the liquor we can through government sale, thus destroying the effects or the education. So education would always be necessary, and we should never get beyond the "reason- able" (7) position oi government sale-the Utopian state for the Mozierntlonist, the bootlcgger ant. ‘the liquor traffic. But let us give Pro Moderatione credit for having had some educa. tron in the matter. For he says ht beiieves—to quote him-"Most Mod. erationists believe that though tem- Defence is a virtue, voluntary, self- imposed total abstinence is a higher virtue than mere temperance. While Moderationists condemn prohibition they recommend sobriety and even total abstinence." Is that what they "Breach"? Is that what they prac- tice? Perhaps Pro Moderatione will be good enough to state what he means by a difference between the temperate use of a narcotic drug end tote-l lbetinence in the matter ,. for medicinal purposes, Surely he has over stepped him- self and showed his hand, pardon mo, I should have said cloven foot. ..W.l'len he admits that the only law _th_e people will respect (and o1 course he can speak only for him- self) is a law that gives the liquor traffic a free hand in this province. "to be , he says "The only truc; wisdom is to try to discover a law Jbet will have the genuine support '25! public opinion, enact that law, d. try es far es possible to have enforced.” They heve discovered et lew- It is ejiovernment Cele ’ w. bfThe lest paragraph of his letter your ieme of the find reeds so the lebber. of the "True Tem- Refofm” bunch in the olty Halifax in i020, e bunch of citi- lhec have never raised their or their organizational bud since, that one in tempted to believe that fl wring". source. that we come by way of educarioit, Threw Babes Out In 18th Century MANCHESTER, Feb. 25~(C.P.)-— The History of the Fouhdling Hos- pital. by R. H. Nichols and F. A. Wruy i5 reviewed in the English press: “The Greeks exposed the infants they did not want to keep (mostly girls). to die in pots by the road- side. In London during the orgy or‘ gin-drinking in the first half of the 18th century some people threw theirs on to dunghiLls. "The sight of these outcast babies moved Thomas Coram, retired sea captain and shipwright, to his great campaign of mercy, resulting in the foundation in 1739 of that famous institution the Foundling Hospital whose detailed early his- tory from minutes and official records is given in this well-docu- mented volume. "The important irlp given in early years by Handel and Hogarth and other musicians and artists is well described and excellently illustrated. but the most interesting chapters are those dealing with the disastrous years when, instead of taking in as many children ns they had room for, the governors agreed, in ‘return for a Parliamen- tary grant, to rccefvle any child that was presented. “They did not expect more in- . time: {ants than the full number of those usually exposed in streets and at people's doors, or deserted in parish workhouses, but they found the hospital besieged. A trade grew up in bringing infants. from coimtry districts at so much a head, nnd parish authorities seized the chance of ridding themselves of possible burdens on the rates. Dying child- ren were often dumped at the gates to save the cost of burial. Indis- crlminate admission lasted from i756 to i760, when Parliament stopped grants. except payments for such children already admitted as survived. Out of 14.934 ‘Parlia- mentary children’ zeceived during MORTGAGE SALE There will be sold by Public Auc- tion in front of the Law Cvllfii Building in Charlottetown. l" Queen's County, Prince Edward Is- land, on Friday the Twenty-seventh day of March A. D. 1036, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon ALT-g will tract piece or parcel of land situate, lying and being on Township num- ber thirty-one in Queen's County, aforesaid, bounded and described as follows: Bounded on the north by land formerly in the possession or Catherine Nicholson (widow), on the east by the South Colviile Road. on the South by land formerly in possession of Donald McLeod, lately of Ivan R. Clow, andon the west by the Mill farm of 225 acres for- merly in possession of Fred. Stronih containing seventy-five acres or land a little more or less- Also all that other tract piece or parcel of land on said Township bounded as follows: on the North by land of Charles Curiey, on the West. by land of George Sinnott, on the South by land of Donald Mc- Arthur and on the East by land above described, being the farm of land formerly held in occupation by Alien McSwain end willed by him to his son Malcolm Molwaln, con- taining in all 107 acres of land a little more or less: The above sale is made under and by virtue of a power of sale con- “ms*";rs"s.srs:s~ 110118589 l 9 Y‘ sixth dey of June A. D., 1034, and made between Louise G- IMF-cod of oolville Road in Q1199!" Con"!!! in Prince Idweld Island, Married amwm“£'s.%°élfrft‘lf..“if . . llld 1 ‘Former 0P THE 0mm: P and because defeult mm; awn’ med! in 90ml" 0f prlfleipll green Ind interest secur- “Ibr fglill" particulars apply to d‘ Hesiem. i . ‘£01k 80th Pl‘ r those four years, 10,204 died. “The book is a history of the in- stitution and not of the inmates, but the reader often wishes there could have been more about the conditions and fate of the children. The treatment in the hospital seems 1o have been humane and, for tin,- lime, irygicnically enlighten- ed, but there are harrowing glimpses, such as that of the cara- vanful of four-yeer-olds, taken away from their foster-mothers, on their svrry back to the hosiptal, lying on beds in an inn, where they ‘cried very much after their Mammy's' or of the batch of girls of seven apprenticed to a woollen manufacturer. of whom 22 out of '14 died in the year and the rest were reported to be in a ‘perilous condition.’ "Comm, the book tells us, in old age quarrellcd with the governors and ceased to take part in the management of the hospital, but he tvas often seen sitting under the arcade, ‘regaling small foundlings with gingerbread.’ and would thus ‘comfort himself with asight of the children.’ When the hospital moved into the country in 1920 a gallant band of modern Corams set them- selves to save the Foundllng site as a piaygrund for London children. They have succeeded and it is pleasmrt to picture the old man now comforting himself with the sight of the children not only in the new hospital at Berkhsmstead but in his old haunts in‘ Blooms- bury." ' Physicists Study Hypothetical Ether NEW YORK, Feb. 26—(A.P.)— The possibility of real existence oi’ the hypothetical “other? an in- visible medium filling all space, was revived today by some new mathe- matical calculations present ‘ ‘ to the American Physical Society. W. B. Cartmcll of the University of Montreal showed computations that the formula by which exist- ence of "ether" ha‘; been ruled out may be in error. His caluclations go back to the great experiment begun in 1884 by Michelson and Morley, whic was taken by Einstein and most other scientists as proving there was no ether. ‘These two measured the "other drift." The experiment was like measur- ing the water passing a boat. being rowed in the moving current of a river. The water would pass the boat faster when it was rowed up- stream than downstream, if the rowing was at the same rate. Light, this experiment held. should act like the water, because it travels as pulsations in ether, and the earth is movelng through the ether. The earth's known motion is about 16 miles n. second. _ Michelson and Morley set up an interferometer, a cross, at whose centre s. beam of light was split. so that half o: it travelled at right angles to the other 5131f out of ends of the (SW55 bars. These split beams were reflected back. At the point where the reunited they should show "fringes! ‘of color, if there was a difference in their velocity in one direction as oom- pared with the other. There was a difference. but it was for less than expected. So much less that the experiment was agidiudged as showing no ether exis- Dr. Beyfon Miller. of the Case School of Applied Science has been sciences doubting thomaa fer .26 years, repeating this experiment to show that the tiny effect obtained was nevertheless reel. Dr. CartmelPs calculations today ru-eto the effect; that the original experimenters should not have ex- pected the big “effect? which they nevvr got. The should have expec- ted only a tiny one. just about the kind that Dr. Miller- gets. Challenges of the of the mathematics on which expectations of the big "effect" ‘rested here been mode before end have not stood the test of rigid examination. Other whysicfrts will go over Dr. Cart- Slew ADDED . - COMEDY And BUCK JQNES SERIAL CRAP. SIX TODAY-FRI-SAT. ~ DAILY 3.l5—7.00—8.45 P. M- ‘rvm. 11c. 26c. Eve. 28o, 32c. §Zigia of Reich Armies a Investing; Rhine Brwssnrs. ‘rep. 26-4012». Nightmare memories of 1914, when gray-clad German hordes swept across the frontier the overwhelm Beligium, darken the nation to- day as anxious Belgians are told about camouflaged massing of German troops in the demilitariz- ed Rhlneland. "The ‘demliitarized’ zone along the Rhine is, in fact. remilitariz-, ed." said an article in the Brus- sels "Soir" written by a retired army commander. "By the end of 1930 Germany will be able to muster- a first-line army totall- ing 2,280,000 fully-trained soldiers “Mobilized during the night, a German motorized division could reach Leige by ‘l a. m. Namur by noon and Brussels and Antwerp by 2 p. m." These claims rang afresh a tocsin already sounded by Albert Deveze, minister of defence Sketching the- changed condi- tions 0n the eastern frontier since 1928, when the allies occupied the Rhine and the German army was merely an unmotorized relchswehr, Devéze warned that Belgulm to- day stands in grave danger of in- vasion—this time, possibly, across the Dutch border. Deveze read a secret dossier. dealing with the military situa- tion to the defence committees of both the serrate and the chamber of deputies, and urged the immedi- ate bolstering of Belgium's skele- ton army of only 40,000 soldiers. Although the cabinets power automatically ends March .81. Devese stressed that a postpone- ment of even two months might endanger the country's security. Belgium's only minister to re- main in office through four suc- cessive cabinets, Deveze has turned to both King Leopold and Premier Van Zeeland for support to pre- pare for the evcntualit of fGer- many's attempting mHitar-y re- occupatlorr of the Rhine Zone. The article, in the newspaper "Soir" claimed, among other things: i-Germany possesfcs on the left bank of the Rhine two divisions (30,000 men) of Landes Polizei (national police) with full military equipment except artillery . z-The missing artillery. how- ever, is posted on the right bank of the Rhine. Four of the 32 new Gennsn artillery divisions actually are residing in the demilitarimd zone. 3-- Numerous send-military for- motions are established on the left bank of the Rine. One of them. the labor service, has camps close to the Belgian border. i-Identified formations include two groups of naizi brown shirts, comprising five or six brigades, making a total of 150,000 ' men. Seven regiments of S 8., or senior nazi guards, make another 20,000. A motorized corps of six regiments adds an additional 40,000. ii-Germany has 250,000 fully equipped troops on the left bank of the Rhine. , Viewing these figures, clalrneres authcrtic by m: "Bolt." look at their own tiny army of 40,000 men and wonder how they dould stem another such invasion as swept over them 23 years ego. REPAIR ANCIENT ABBEY YORK, Englsnd-(O-PJ-Rulns of St. Mary's Abbey, York, founded in i909. fir-gently need repairing if they ere to be saved from collaps- ing, end the Yorkshire Philosophic- al Societ, is appealing for 022,500 to osrry out the work.‘ one in bu; lDNDmh-KLPJ-Cherles Mun- flly. e conductor. was found dead" on the beck seet of hilr bu: when it entered the garage et High Wy- mell’! ceiculetiofu es hes been done .r:.".-. s»- rns cnrirzcmrsrowu ousaoim a The Central Guardian ..':-.':;.".i':.-..:".::"'.'.'.' "' ‘f.- :::t:,em Illlble i‘: advance. ' ' oomnnmxfloT-Im millil- Mwg, n-omr-rg-ara. UNITED cnunm or (mum. ‘charge for Sunday, Much 1st, ere as follows: North W south Winsloe 9 P. M. Prinootown Road 7 P. M. Rev. Thus. Pelefllfiffl. mnmber, 14-3104-2-27-11. HOLDS EN-IOYID-llcmntly ll!‘- benefit of ‘his friends in Piotou and Sydney. 1t is mufyms to Mm from e message received from Mayor Mugguhof Sydney that the broadcast wee successful end that Mr. Calder! friends in that pert of the country were very IM to hear his familiar voice once more. 1R8. ImltTlNC-‘rhe Bend-st Young People's Society held their weekly meeting in the ” ‘ on Tuesday night. ‘rho devotional period was led by Mr. J. O. Dodge. The special feature of the evenink was an oratorioal contest in which four speakers participated, m. Neill C. Price being the winner. The judges were Miss Alexandria Scott, Messrs. J. P. Gordon end J. W. Boulter. FUNERAL SERVICES-Info fu- neral of Mrs_ Mary Sherry was held yesterday morning to St. Dunstan’; Basilica where Requiem High Mass was celebrated by Rev. W, McCardle. The pail bearers were Messrs. Thomas Power, T. L. Smith, George Bell, Patrick Cullen, Daniel Gillis and William Flynn. Service at the grave was conducted by Rev. P. McMahon, DD. PARTICIPATED IN BARBECUE -A Revelstoke. British Columbia, newspaper of recent date has an interesting description of a barbe- cue staged at Mountain View Park by the North Kootenay Pioneers’ Association. attended by over a thousand people, et which a huge steer was roasted over an open fire and sliced up and served between generous slabs of buttezed bread. Leading citizens of the community participated in the function, the chicf chef being Mr. Gordon Wheatiey, who is e. son of Mrs. E. Whcatley, Fitzroy Street, Char- lottetown. LOST HOME BY l-‘lll.%On Sun- day, February 16th, the home.of John Robertson, Kingsboro, was WINSUOE-l-Services on m» above - lot. Be here early. Acurzw-sunrnss‘ , a DMOHTH-EHD srror: s .~ Shoppers Special; _Pldn to Shop Here’ Week-end. Worreer)’: nan éetln vPumps and sons-a,- Black Kid Tia and Strapd, not all sizes in each line, but ellleisee .ILl5 lnthe $100 Women's and Misses’ ber Overslroes. All sizes. Per pair aut- i... imr Sole 99G Rubbers. All out» Women's B l s c k Velvet; Fur Trimmed Over-shoes for this week end Men's Sizes 6 to 11 ll WOMEN'S 38ml"! W!” Ban you wear size 2% or 3 , r Values to $5.00 D We have received another 200 pelts Per Pair ‘Men’: and Boys’ Gllll llll BBEllS 1st Quality Red Rubber $1.79 W“ Sizes" 1 }SHOE STORES Women's Brown Cloth, or all-rubber overshoes. Values to $3.00 uar s 29c Per Pair $1.39 ' m5 Linwoo- destroyed by fire, which was by an over-heated stove pipe. Mr. and Mrs. Robertson and two. child- ren were in Sunday School when it started, and when Mn, Robertson came home and found that the fire was between the floors, in the wall and finally in the attic, it was be- yond control. The oldest boy was home at the time, and endeavouring to put it out with water. Help soou arrived and the contents were sev- cd, as the day was cairn and the fire burned slowly. The loss is pirtLv covered by insurance. Mr. and Mrs. Robertson wish to thank, firstly, the telephone operator, who responded to the call after hours and called for help; Secondly, all friends and neighbour's, who worked so hard to save all they could. Personals’ Miss Laura MacPhail and Miss Stella MacLean of Argyle Shore are attending the short course st P. W. C. Mr. Sidney G. Cameron, of Mar- Bfltfl. is spending a. few days in the City visiting his two daughters, Mrs. Earl Layers, Prince Street, and Mrs. Harry Alchorn, Sydney St. Miss Minnie Burke of lllortune and Miss Dorothy McKenzie of Winsloe are attending the short course at Prince of Wales College, -___-. Miss Myrtle Garrick, has re- turned from a two weeks visit with her sister Mrs. Clifford Rose in New Glasgow. N. S. Mrs. Helen H. Lewis of Detroit who has been visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McLean, Mon- tague, leaves on return this morning. Mrs. Townsend MacNeill. of North Rustico, spent a pleasant week-end in the City. Ill MEMORIIM In loving memory of LLOYD GODFREY who departed flrle llfe on Feb. fllll, l r We mlu you now, our lrrerte ere eore, Ae limo goes by we mine you more, Your loving nnlle. your gentle lee-e, Ne one can flll your veeent pleee. flnrlly misled by Mother, Feflrer and Water. |s__irE]iiY§rlr| mas. rnvnss nevus . Mrs. Thursa lie/yes, widow of Mr. Prank C. Hayes, peeled away m. 1 in Dover. N. H. - Mrs. Hflyoa before he: rnerriege W" Th"!!! 01118- Born in. Ken- Iinrtmr. P. 1:. 1.. Ibo went to Bor- wick 5i yren e80. rm merrted in that town end spent‘ the greater Dirt of her life" In thbt vicinity. Mrs. Hayee hed four cbildrdn, two of who survive her. s eon n. Hayes of Nortirflerwiok and Mrs. Sereh Mellon otberwiok, lev- en grandchildren and six greet- Irendchildren. Two brothers end William Craig and Bus- eeil of gtedeque end Mrs. Jodedieb were held on Tueedey efterriom et Berwick end interment was =fn the family lot et the tear-green Cem- Sea View 8; Vicinity The Mission Band of and Sea View was held at the home of Mrs. H. L. Doneld on Set- urday afternoon, Rab. 8th. The president. Miss lbatlre Pickering. presided. Meeting opened with hymn followed by Scripture reed- ing and prayer. Twenty members and two visitors responded to roll call with the word ‘Truth!’ Mia- ute; of the Junior nneeting were read by the secretalil’. Miss Jean MscKay_ The quarterly Sunday School lessons were reviewed by the superintendent. Miss Annie Woodslde. Mrs. (Rev) Georse Murray, returned rrmsionaw from Trinidad, gave a splendid discourse on her,work in the mission field. Mrs. Murray having e fine com- mend of language, kqut her listen- ers enthralled to the 0nd and have been inspired to eamy on their work with greater zeal than ever. ‘Phey anticipate hearing more of this country at n. future meeting. The Program and Missionary Com- mittees provided suitable enter- tainment. meeting adJournod with prayer and "The King." Delectable refreshments were served by the hostess. Mr. Edwin Murphy was in Sum- merside Thursday on business. Mrs. John D. Duggen was visit- ing in Kensirr‘ on Wednesday. The many friends of Mrs. Sea-ah Barwise are glad to note ehe has recovered her usual good health. Mr. and Mrs. William C. Donald were recent visitors to Rustloo. M11 Charles Graham, our genial blacksmith, is confined to his home for the pest few_ days auffclng from a severe cold. m. Nelson Peynter, Surllngton, was in Kensington Thlusdey on a business trip. t . The cold was» ounrfireoentry erected in Park Corner .11 filling a much felt went by the" inunediete communities and its promoter, Mr. John E. Cousins, is to be eon- gretuleted on his success. Mr. James Evens attended the semi-final playoffs in Eensmgbon Rink Thursday night. 4 The friends of Mr. Bilfy Picker- ing regretbe ieltill ind! iosedend hops to I08 blur around rein soon. Despite the bitter elermmtl end eppennt hot that winter h dill with us. Mean. Idwin Murphy end My Adams, See View lobster peekere. ere reel optimiete end en busily preparing for Who coming eueou. JobnTJhckeyiepoenfhnd tong: homo through lllnell Ind her meny friends trust Jae will soonbeemlflldlllln. ., Mr. William J. Menu, inn to Pridey on e luminous in Kfllll. v In. Joseph stewed. Se‘ View. bee returned after a rut wflhber _ m. lkquylluhl- r - r Railway N o t e s An esteemed citizen passed sway at the Prince Edward Island hoe- pltel in the persomof Albert Ed- ward Leigh, afteoan illness of. but a few weeks. The deceased. who was in his 62nd year, was s son of the late Charles Leigh of the Royal Navy, end a brother of the late Colonel Charles Leigh, W!’ the. pest six yeers Mr. Leigh held the position of CJLR. electrical "main- tainer for the Island divuion, and was forrneriy connected with the C.N.R. on the mainland. Competent end courageous in the discharge of his duties, he was held in the high- est regard by all with whom he came in contact. He was a mem- ber of St. Penis Church and also of the Knllhts of Pythias. A wid- ow, two sons and a daughter sur- vive. Tbe funeral was held on Friday afternoon from St. Paul's where service was conducted by Rev. B. D. Raymond. While returning from school lest week Freddy, the ten-yeer-oid boy of Thomas Flynn, C.N.R. cleans. slipped on the icy sidewalk and broke his arm in two places. ‘nre little fellow is doing as well as een be expected. Councillor H. F. Venldmtine of the C. N. roundhouse staff, is visit- inginTx-tuotheguestofhlsslster, mo. Brenton Suttis. Young street. Mrs. Suttls, who was e patient in the Colcbeeter hospital, hes return- ed home. ‘ Miss Christin‘,- McKinnon, North Wiltshixe, sister of Buperinfmdcnt E. W. McKinnon, is spending a few weeks in Bummerside, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Nicholson. wife of J. M. Nicholson, retired 0.21.8. ticket agent. ' Miss Irene Bradley. telephone orp- eretor at the Cenedisn National hotel, returned last night from a holiday trip to Montreal. " Alfred J. Doyle has been _sp- pointed C.N.R_ section foreman at York. Welter O'Brien of Bristol ll 0n- joyhag the hospitality of John Mur- rdv. CH3. watchmen, Summeraide, mid Irallurreyforefewweets. s; as ~92 igils a =55 s 555? 5 ggtggs ‘if: ‘gis-iifigg . .!;-;“§,,r§§ weds rglllil § 3 If; 2 s . brakes, llonoton. VH9 to the OMB. B ‘f British Columbia Legislature 0pm (C. P. by Gllerdielfe Bpwlal Wire) V RIA. Feb. 25—-_Brlthll\ Columbiab 18th legislature 0W1‘ ed its ‘third session here today iii n. subdued atmosphere of mouss- iog for King George V. Little indication of_ business ‘lo come before the session was cor?- teined in the Bbfiech from flip Throne reed by Lieutenant-Cover- nor J. W. Pordbam Johnson. _ The international situation 1m termed "disquieting" in r brief mention of world affairs. then re- ference was made to the recent Dominion-P‘ lncial conference at which "good progress was msdeln important matters taken up which will be pursued to definite con- olusions." Introduction of legislation at ti}? present session on several provin- oiel problems wes forecast ss was e fell session when further leaf» lotion, including measures to im- prove the position of municipalit- ies, will be considered. . roxnouuns on use now or 1r TRAIN A peck of the North Northum- berlend Hunt foxhounds held up I trein from Newcastle to Berwlck- ran-Tweed, near Beremerston re omtly. m hounds. chums I IOX- l“ eaoes the treck in iront- of lb! train. One of them was will!“ before the trein pulled up and 1W5 to be destroyed. The fox escaped- snm crrvsonan A stamp issued by “l9 “m” postel authorities, piclirrinz B" aerial view o5 Colombo Harbor. has been withdrawn es it was consid- end objectionable for militafl’ w! navel reasons. rbur stemps issued in Ceylml l" connection with King oems a Jul" flee have also been wfthdrgwlh: method of transportation - 01° Cape Traverse 100 5°!"- Jemes Stanley Brown. 5°°"1°“ foreman, Aiberton. is confined w 111;. home on account of fractured l1 . Mrs. Woolrldge, wife of H81"? Woolrilise of the CJLR. store do! pertinent. left Setufdey for 91",, John and Montreei whore she W‘ spend some time vllltlnl Wm‘ friends. n. N‘. sleek. inspector- of d1 peld en offiolll pant an m! wuum Pertridlfl» son o! °-. 5 rem-rm, 0mm. 0081mm!!!» "' one of the oleny Island hoopllm» membere u» the 011I=1°"=,'u,,_ ar-w Gredl. who rut to t!" fer quintet m u» match nhwf w“! in the Y lmflillllm- “*2 .0. w. Ilelbeeob. one. 11g new monahucnnrwm" ' 'D'§ -i