Colleen answers in the fastest, unddiest, joules! plelurl since ‘Turning TIIIRSTY r011 “S555 nuxullr r01; LOVE JP"- _ Will" you see her 713m"!!! Youth zlflre in the zip. lllvfii srhhrt be! that ever made Mid uhoopvl: l l v v Under Distinguished Patronage of His Honor Lieut. Governor and Mrs. Hearts and His Worship the llinynr and Mrs. Yeo. A Musical Triumph The Greatest Choral Production of a. Decade HAYDNS GRAND ORATORIO “THE CREATION” Presented by the United Choirs of the First Baptist and T rinity’ Churches 70—VOICES—70 Trinity United Church Tuesday May 21st. at 8 p. 1n. 0r|anlst—MISS ROBERTA SPENCER. Dircotor-‘Jlm. E. FLETCHER. ‘Rebuilding W O 9 O O O 0 0 a o o O O o O O O 0 O O O O 0 O O 6 O O O 6 O O O 6 O E O ADMISSION 50c Auspiees Baptist and ‘Irinity Music Committees. O “AO O~§—O-OO4000O4-OOOOO—O-O- OO-O-O- ork Done Continued from page 1 mgn 1n. his place, every article o! manufacturing machinery working to.‘ perfection with the single exception of’ the Brantford Improved Oven, fol" which the new draw plate has not -yet been received. This oven, which, "vhns manufactured by Brandlord Ov- en Company from plans drawn es- pecially for this factory, was one oi difiicult problems to deal with. Reconstruction Efforts i‘! The immense quailtity of water jvjwhich the firemen deluged on the ibuildlng in their efforts to quench e flames had soaked through the 1 rick and sand into the fire brick Ilning of the oven. The expert, ett, which the company quickly gvlorwarded, had the oven taken apart. is was a tremendous Job. calling o;- rather unusual tasks to be done. _ d it is to the credit of our Island oys that, they were quite 911N111 l0 he work set before them: and Mr. ‘ ' tt plld them a great tribute when egvlng, saying "Nowhere in America ould we have found better men for he work.” The rebuilt oven is HOW {kunotioning as well as usual with the xcepllqn of the steel draw plate Oh hieh the biscuits are baked. Por- tions of this were inlllled hi! "l? eat and this curtaiis the full use =1)! the plate. The now one is being anode, but the process takes six weak! its thestcei for it has to be renum- d three weeks in an oil hath. To get back to the construction - lork which was to be done by Mc- Dougsll and MacAuiay. we may») that all the walls had to be rebuilt- new rubberoid roof placed on the“ new drying room built 50x50, and . 111s and ceiling of which is cover- d with Gyp-R/oc, fire proof and ideal .. g, m; pufpOlE, The floor of the dry- . - room ls covered with i4 inch 3| envy steel mesh of immense tensile trenlth. The furnaces used for‘ thfl m; mom were-installed by Fred inor a: Co. On the we 11M "i" : flea the drying r00"! l‘ ,1 "Mk .. 25 x 2o. Also a room for stol- . manufactured produdu i5 x 25. “n; dong wi Beaver Board. t. the Int floor is thoofllce. Iv . .11» manutualrfoe. room which '59P the murmur. hwh =8 l inn. l-ollnrl. Wlkfl- '95-. F“ .9“. ::m with the nhtblkihv W5 “l” bio of turnlnl M i" W" °* M!‘ ~ aim cue-ion M!“ M" which contains‘ the furnaces for dry- ling the DiSCiIiLS. On the east. is a flour room. Every particle of the .buii<iln:, such as ceilings, floors, etc.. ‘mu. been rfiollll: and made practical- iy new. The finish is extremely pleasing throughout the interior of rho factory. The electric llghlllll hi“ been looked after by Kelly and Cox. Wiring has bccn dOlle in conduit Ia- ‘sllion to eliminate fire risk. Their work in this regard has been very satisfactory. ‘i Work Well Dona l The plumbing and heating hesbeen ihandled by the well known firm Stan- ilcy. Show 8.- Peardon. The installation Iof machinery has been llnder the dir- Leczlon oi J. A. Rowe. expert machin- ‘is; and an octogeuarlan, who's won- idcrful skill in that line has been the hdlniratlon of the workmen who were employed with him. Telephone 1n- _.GllillilZ.l0l\5 have been handled in {first-class lnllnllcr by the Telephone iCompnny. Oflicc fixtures by H. H. lltlacbai-lanc 6.: C0,. while George ‘Dowilnc mndo the necessary galvan- iizcd frames for the ovens etc. ‘To the OOOVO-OOOOO-OOOOOOO-OOOOOOOOO-OOOQOOOOOOOOOOOQOQOOO’ sens. "" 9i!‘ A thrllllnr and llilariou chapter from the life of EDWARD Wed-Thurs mm‘ CAPITOL TODA one of New York's “fluent? l P R I N C E “The Bellamy Trial” MYSTERY . . . a beautiful woman and anotherb husband . . . a. knife THRILLED to death! TUES. WED. “DO, YOUR Bun Iurrelifi "SK Y- WAY. IAN" Air I Thriller M i in the dark . . . you'll be l? ver Foxes. The fact, that the comp- uuy has never flolded to the temp- tation of cheapening its product no matter how strong the competition“ enables it m hold the title of "the lstandard Biscuit of the Fox World." Not only in Prince Edward Island but throughout the entire Dominion, also in Europe, the Imperial Fox Biscuit ‘is fed to foxes. In the far North the Eskimo and his husky as well as the domiciled foxes eat them with relish. The Cod Liver Oil content which the company was first to incorporate in .biscult as been proved through the ‘years to be a most valuable adjunct through its richness in vitlmines. The Company were among the first to learn through the knowledge of its chemist that Cod Liver Oil varies tremendously in potency. Some Cod ‘Liver Oils have ten times the vita- mine contents of others. In order to secure an oil that has the satisfact- ory vitamins content required so as to enable s. decrease in quantity there- by preventing any undue cathartic effect, arrangements were made a year ago to secure the August and September out-put of one of the well known Newfoundland Refineries. 'I'he production has proved entirely satis- factory. High Nutritive Value It is perhaps unique that the com- pany should have learned the value of Cod Liver Oil so far in advance of many scientists, but it is a fact. Years ago when the celebrated Doc- tor Saleeby, one of Great Britain's leading nutritionists visited here, he was astounded to find that Cod Liv- er Oil was being used in biscuit form for Fox Feed. He had just re- turned from a Tuberculosis Congress in Switzerland where Bun-Ught and Cod liver-Oil were dlscused. The value of Cod Liver Oil particularly for foxes which are raised in sheds. where no sun light in the direct form roaches them, cannot be over-estim- ated. If you use this manner of CUTTING DOWN BRITISH FOREST IONDON. May 18 _ (Canadian Press) — Great Britain's largest oak forest. the Royal Forest of Dean, which was planted to provide timber for the British Navy, is being cut dovm. Unlike Sherwood Forest which is gradually disappearing to make room for colliery developments, Deon. is suffering from the ravages of di- sense. Hundreds oi acres of trees are be- ing attacked by a mysterious ailment. and are going prematurely to dc- csy. Their branches are shrivelilng up and dying. and their trunks are becoming over grown with moss and fungus. The forest. in some parts, is intact, but over a. large area in the centre the decayed boughs and stunt- ed tree make w piteous picture. The giant, of the forest is a giant no long- er, Pitiless disease has SRDPEd 105 vitality. ' The exact cause of the forest plague cannot be determined, although ex- perts havc made frequent investiga- tions to discover it. The investiga- tion, however, has ascertained that the chief cause of the rot ls an un- known fungi entering the lower dead or dying branches of the trees. One theory is that harm ls done by the frequent tunnelling and earth dis- turbance occasioned by ihe working of mines under the forest. Yorkshire Pigs At Cap Rouge Five years ago, half a dozen York- shire sows were received from the Central Experimental Farm. and a boar from the Kentviile Station. A couple of seasons later. a very good imported sire was procured, and in 192B another herd header was ship- ped from Ottawa. Every one was a typical animal of the breed, and most of them were later on at the raising your pups to maturity or if you are getting your old ones ready in the fall for pelting. be sure tofeed generously of Imperial Cod Liver Oil biscuits. They are rich in vitamirles from the bottled Sun-Light incorpor- ated in them. In addition to these ingredients it has variolli other ar- ticles combined with Whole-Wheat l [genius oi I-‘runk M. Stewart. of Bruce lS.cwart dc C0,, and to their excellent iivuorkmen, The Imperial Biscuit Com- vpany are indebted for the new Steel 1 Elevator which takes the bis- >tullss aim at directly from the l oven to the drying room where its spreads tilom on the‘ drying ‘floors. Mr. Stewart drew the plans. iThcy were quickly brought to com- ‘plction by the Company's mechanics. I The paint was purchased from Beth- une Hardware Company; rubberold mooring from The Rogers Hardware |Compnny; tho windows and frames ‘from McDonald <1: Rowe; Gyp-Roc and Beaver Board and lumber from l’... M. Poole dc Company, and other articles, hardware, etc" from Fenncll dz Chandler. The brickwork on flues was done by J. Gcrmley and the oven work under the direction of James Stronlbcrg. As slated in the beginning the fuc- tory is now in readiness once more with the following staffz-Businea Manager-Ross B hunc; Factory superintendent-ink; Warren; Ex- pert Mixer-John flamed: Expert Bllker-Jtarl McMillan. These with their assistants have been with the company for many years. are con- zcieniiouihnd painstaking employees imbued with the idea of turning out the very best possible biscuit-for Il- lment so cleanly prepared as to be ilt lfor human consumption. l The Annual Meeting of the comp- lany which was held recently result- =ed in the following directorate being lelected for 1929:-President. w. o. s. fMcLure. M.L.A,; Vice-President, W. lK. Rogers; Seeretary-fifireasurer, Lt. lcbl. us. MacKlnnon. n.s.o.; Dir- ? ectorll-Oordon McMillan, Leigh War- .rcn, Ray Clark. 1 The Guardian heartily congratul- iates the various contractors on their ‘work in n-establishing the Oomp- ‘anyb Manufacturing Plant and busts that the season of 1919 will rsult l0 profitably so as to make up for the loss of tho big ilre. Fair Maid: “f wonder whet causes the flight of time?" Brilliant Young Man: “It is prob- ably urged on ‘oy the spur of the mo- mcnt." Auntiv-"Well. Tommie. how did you and Joan enjoy the penin- mimei" ' TOmHlP-"Ohv. we thought it a pretty rotten show. but father and mother wished to go, and we did not like to disappoint them." .1...‘ Flour baked into valuable nourlsh- {or betw- offspring head of their classes at the Quebec Provincial Exhibition. But every breeder of experience knows that. to have good individuals is only part of of the work, too often indeed the easiest thing in the great game of live stock improvement. The first important question is “Will these individuals transmit as good than “they arc themselves?" and only the progeny test can answer it satisfactorily. Every one of the above mentioned six sows was bred to theNova. Scotia boar, and it. was soon evident that only three would throw better gills than they were themselves. so that by 1926, half of the original dams went to the butcher. During 1928. two others followed, leaving only one out of six to continue the breeding work. There is now only one young sow left from the five which were discarded, and it is probable that she will not be kept, as she certainly is not of as good typepss the others. In 1029. seven sows farrowed, and every one of them was entered in the R. O. P. test. Four pigs of each of these litters. when weighing about 200 pounds. will be shipped to a slaughter house where they will be graded. It is obvious that dams pro- ducing hogs which will uniformly grade high will be ‘more valuable than others giving pigs which will be placed low for poor quality of meat. A careful record is kept. of the quantity, composition. and value of feed eaten by each lot. so that the son will be found out whose off- spring make the best use of the feed eats-n. With the slaughter test this mineralisation-nucleon. v Jill show thcdsmlwhicb produce ' iihanks to ex-Premler Stewart, and _ I the Duncan Commission are gener- i ‘tlllaknla _“_ The Public Forum Thh column a om M’ the discussion by correspondent: of questions of interest. Th6 Charlottetown Gulrdlln the! not necessarily endorse the Q ‘ l opinions 0! "Wmhiu- . nee: ajlrl have to be i 99 - BAD u, mp‘, GOOD m Huh-Muriel MM! l - ouu cums slrz-I notice that Premier Sound- ers has objected to a Conference in be held in Charlottetown upon the question of our claims. and stand- ing out for the project of his Ot- l tawa leader, Mackenzie King, to have i a private sentiment of each province iseparateiy. _ i If there is anything which our Boards of 'I‘rade and people should luppose more strenuously than an- iother it ls this proposal. There can ibe no more certain sacrifice of our l interests than to. entrust them with lPrcmler Saunders and his political inllics, both at Ottawa. and at home. l‘ lIn everything pertaining to govern- Imcnt he is almost a total failure, land to risk the claims question with ‘him for settlement would be the equivalent of suicide. Our claims are substanial. and. ally recognized as firmly established. In any private negotiation there is certainty that Premier King would i): the dominating forceand our lo- val Premier s featherwheight under SPECIAL" t NOTICE 1' On WEDNESDAY ‘MAY 22nd. m: urllloroulnll stones LIMITED .WILLS OPEN A NEW UNIT AT 127 QUEEN STREET Watch Tuesday’s Paper Plan To G0"! hm manipulation. Urged by the need of present funds to tide over~pres- ant adversity our claims. Which are of high intrinsic value, may be ex- ; changed for a mess of pottage. I This Province should be represent- ed ln this matter by men of ability and capacity for negotiation. inde- pendent of party or political influ- _ I An Attic.. Salt - Shaker CHATTI WEEKLY ' ' BUDGET OI’ STORIES ABOUT FAMOUS PEOPLE 1B1: W. ORTON TEWSON ences, who would regard our rights j? as of the first importance. and give I5 GENIUS entitled to wifely in- tliempreccdcnce over every other dulgeme? Brl-“llmllfl "WHEN 5°- DB1’- consideration. You cannot get this tlculflrlv 1h the case v! the Carlyle-1- in a confab between political co- H9 wind not Share the cold cynicism operators, and particularly when one 0f Tennyson. who commented on g5 a, weakly,‘ someones regret that Thomas Carl- Even if poorly represented at s yle and Jane Welsh had ever mar- gencral conference our position ‘fled! " would be infinitely better there than “Not at all. This way there are under the privately proposed make- Only 1W0 unhappy people instead of shift. with the premiers o! all the fours" provinces in negotiation there would ' ° be an assemblage of brain power, BROWNING did not know how and the mutuality of interest be- trying genius could be. Besides. as tween these has shown an attitude David Loth points out in his Life of towards Maritime claims more de- “The Brovmings," he had never regs pendable than the propdsedpoiitical Jane Webb's letters and could not compromise. I aln Sir, etc. BUSINESS. STOCK QUOTATIONS HALIFAX, May 19—Quotat.ions fumlshcd byjohnston and Ward members Montreal Stock Exchange. NEW YORK EXCHANGE At, Top. dc Santa Fe. Ry . . 1977i; American Can Co. . . . . . . . . . . .. 142 American Car a Foundry Co. 98 Am; Loco. Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . 117 Am. Smelt. 8a Refining Co. 100% Am. Bosch Mag. Co. . . . . . . 64% Ana. Copper Mining Co. .. 125% N. Y. Cent. dufiud. Riv. n. n. law. Consol. Gas (N. Y.) . . 115% Hudson Motor Car Co. 86h’; Int/ernatonul Paper Co. ...... 511.1 §Stand Oil of N. J. ‘Reading Co. Southern Pacific Union Pacific Ry, . 5U. S. Industrial Alcohol Co. .. 161 iwestinghouse Elec . . . . . . . . . .. 164% ‘United States Steel . . . . . . . .. 124% i MONTREAL STOCK EXCHANGE iabltlbli ....... 42". _ludustrial Alcohol 33% _,Montreal Power 106's iNatlonal Breweries . . 135 ‘Brazilian Traction .. 55'»; ;Dominion Bridge . .. 1011i l Asbestos . . . . . . . . 13% .Canndlan Brewery .... 23 .Fraser and Co. 64 §Polver Corporation .. .... 101 ;Brltlsh America Oil 4..."... 50% ‘Imperial Oil ................. 115 l BANKS ..........-.. 285 Bank Commerce Bank Montreal Sank Nova Scotla .. "What are you studying John?" asked Aunt Maria. "Economics." "I don't see no use in studying that stuff. If it's forced upon you. you gotta practice it." "Why does a atork stand on one leg?" "I don't know.” "Why. if he lifted it. he'd fell down." the moat money per year. the all important point for the owner. Thu Advanced Registry work will enable farmer! to pick up boars from money making sows, u the m. IPNtor tattoos all Dill from each litter entered for R. O. P. Who will deny thpt such boars are mueh more vclusble than the common run hav- lhg only rllllkplgflll 209351 N their credit! ' ‘ ' " ' know that she had the some quality. It. is true that Browning himself married a genius and that their mu. ried life was an Idyll of the Heart- and Mind. eon BUT to come back to earth. ‘rho job of being wife to a genius is not all lavender as witness the rejoinder of a notable victim to a gushing 701mg thing who gurgled: l "It. must be wonderful to be the wife of a genius!“ “Well," said the wife, “they're Just as hard to get along with as any other damned fool!" Give the little lady a hand. I I I OUT walking with his little son Oliver (now grown up) on one 0c- mlflh- Israel Zanswlii seeing a snail in the middle of a country road, rc- moved l’. humanely to the hedge. "What's that for?" asked Oliver. His father explained that i1 the foolish snail continued to wonder about in the middle of the togd lg would certainly be run oven "Then why doesn't; he get 9, wit; to look after him?" asked the little fellow. Zangwill “swelled visibly" with pride-as Sam Weller would sgy_ lvhtncver he told that story. I I I ALTHOUGH they were great frlthrls. Illobert Louis Stevenson and J. M. Barrie never met. When R. I... S. was living in Samoa. he invited Barrie to visit them and sent him an amusing description oi Mrs. Steven. "“‘- “ere l5 h°w he Pictured her: FANNY V. De G. STEVENSON. "The well-a Woman." Native name: Tamaitai. “This is what you have to look out for. Mr. Barrie,” he wrote. “If you d0!" set on with her it's apity about your vlsif. She runs the show." I I I ‘ITIEN followed these personal do. tails-mentioned in “The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson," by Rum“, Masson: ' "Infinitely little-handsome wum face like Napoleon's-boy's hands, tiny bare feett s cigarette. wild hi“. nlllve dross. usually spotted with garden mould. In company mgnnm presents the appearance o: g “mu and Precise old maid of the days of prunes and prisuw-I-iellilh ener|y_. Can make anything from a house to is row. ail fine and largo in their ygy, My uncle. after seeing her for the first time: . “Yfl- 1mm. you have done well. I married a bosom myself and my; 31°"? Pflifottod it!" I I O 7R3 GI!‘ beck to Honing. It seems that his molt Miller pom, "The Pied Piper of Ramona," no .1000 Willem. son of the famous actor, was lick- so that the child might have some- thing w illustrate with the crude crayon drawings of his four-year-old imagination IT WAS Mark Twain who once beautifully fooled a dinner audience by rising from his seat at the speakers table during the serving of the meal. it bad previously been announced that he had accented. the invitation on the strict understanding that he would not be called upon to gpggk, Deafenlng applause greeted the hu- morist es he sot to his feet. After silence had been obtlinod, Mark drawied out: "Waited? Pious Pill tho bread!" Then he sat down. I O I ' WI-IIN E. W. flld.) Howe. tho "Bole of Potato Hill.‘ ‘was a type- JBWQX‘ 0n the Salt Like City “New? —0l‘san of the MOTIIlOh3—hg fro- MY the prophet came into the “Newa" composing-room to verify 601m fleures Howe had set up in a report. Finding that Ed had follow- Bd why. he patted him on the shoul- der, saying: "YWTB rllht and I'm wrong." “I told about this incident later so much that for a time I was called ‘Bfiiham?’ says Howe, ‘in his rem- iniscences "Pleln People." I I I ED HOWE also falls a Lincoln fllofy which he fastens on to an AWhl-Wh Worthy. James rmbm by name-wvcll-kuown to Howe --who quoted Lincoln as laying to an At- chison crowd to whom he was tolling llvflw. that his little son once asked him what he said when he proposed to his wife. Lincoln put thg boy om but he persisted, and finally mncoln "plied: ~ "Well. i! you must knovy what 1 "id when l mama w your mother, f said yes." we. A GREAT English architect went to Dublin some yen-g “o u, dug“, the new "t Biliary. He was much on- "Plalhed- Heinz “entertainer? in Dublin socioty—alwaya very excl“. ivo and "proper," Qgpgglflly m ma“ —¢Xblalns Sir William Orpen, “m- °ll8 llainicr and Dubliner (in "mo- rlea of Old Ireland and Myself"), used to mean ea "evening party: u, which you were supposed to go about ll n. m. and luvs about 1i p. m, I I I TEA. coffee and cucumber send- "lflwl were mm. and. u you were llwlv- “me mam’ claret made um ' "w?" "l"! PM"! 0! lemon and ou- cumber floating on top, might b; in- eluded in the refreshments. Other. "l" l" m m m tux. chuckles "Billy" Orpen. aolm time after the architect had 1°" l" hww- Omen met a Dublin lldv. one or the "allot." Ibo n: very tillnandblachaudwolloninghg emu. Tlklnl him aside she one: "Don't you think w. x. (men- tivhlnc the architect) u mad?" "Mad?" said Omn- ‘flfo. I have ha"? Bollard m: din or it. Why. modular’ ' - ' "'1 knee be h," iflgpq f“ u". my seriously. IOI "minute-newsroom "ewe" --'- qlwhtlv saw Brigham. Young. one‘ lily-i. that is, before the World War . l “You know, dear Miss- gave an evening party in his honor, and n19 was kind enough toinvlte me. When I arrived. the opportunity did not occur for mo to have the honor of being introduced to Mr. X. But about l0 o'clock as 1 was sitting in a corner, he suddenly walked up lo mo and said: _ _ “Madam. pardon me. but may I: have the honor of addressing a few» words to you?’ "1 was aghast! We had not been» introduced. but as he was the guest- of honor, and English, I though; I would overlook his bad manners, no I said: " ‘Speak, sir.’ one "Kb BAIT)’: , “ ‘Madam. without your knowing it. all this evening I have been study- ing you afar. and I know exactly. what you require.’ " ‘Sir.’ I exclaimed. ‘I require nothinlg.’ “mouse mo. madam, you do.’ he said earnestly. ‘What you require?! a gin and seltser.’ 3'7“ "‘Bir.' I said. horrified. ‘such’! thing as gin has neverupassed mi lips. And what is more, r feel my desi- friend. our hostess. devil‘ allowed sucl-l, a thing to entei-‘fl house.’ ’ ‘I; “ ‘I suppose she has not.’ he sill. ‘so now I'm of! to town to not some for you. Keep quite still please. until I return.’ . "And he left the house and nsgfi‘ came back at all. Of course M; mad." * e e W‘ ZOLA, who was vain (espeeibfly of his feet), had a lisp sndkflt . sprinkling his sentences with "Ithgt um. tho?" and taking for the assent of his nearer. He declare with s laugh-relates ‘bfiti Daudet (son of the famous Alphohfl in his "Memoirs": "f1; “When my next book"-it iii‘ pened to be "Pot-Bouillo"—"co_ out, people are going to they _ filthy thwine. ithrrt that tho? A v matter of fact, it 1th a bit trim“? ith'th the lower middle clataiit whom I'm dlthcribing. who are H“ ly to blame. not I, ithrrt that thew Continued on Pile 7 m’ #0 ‘l re... Aching Feet Swollen and sore from a strenuous work can law Bathej if INN-I‘ ‘ lioved by Mirlardb. warm water solution.