I ‘l l l} ,. ‘i I ,. r t‘; ‘l. ‘"" ' Onl- o. londIr-llll- Inoogor-tllonofl. . a. illlcul WEDNESDAY, J lllliu-slilllnlli . vharroulonoo-iriluuh. I$$l$lILI-_Q- Allolilhllltdl-D-Itfiilfll- UNE 29, 1927 THE DIAMOND JUBILEE‘ I DOMINION DAY this year will be I the greatest National holidayln the history of Canada. 0n that day the Dominion will have reach- ed its sixtieth birthday and the event will be celebrated with due regard to what these sixty years have brought to us. Sixty years as!) Canada was a number of scattered thinly populated settlements sur- rounded by forests, the extent of which was not even dreamed oi. mountains the length and breadth and height of which were a mys- tery, rivers the sources of which These settlements the what is now were unknown. have grown into provinces, hamlets have grown into populolls cities. the forests have beeil meas- ured and are now known to be among the greatest and wealthiest forest areas lathe world; the moun- tains have been scaled and the two sides of the continent have been united by two of the greatest rail- way systems in the world. The riv- ers have been harnessed and their unlimited power turlis tllc wheels of ‘hundreds of factories some of them tllc largest world, And we have dug into the bowels of the earth and discovered coal, oil and lnineral wealth, the value of which is as yet incalcul- able. yours ago, inhabited by the bison and the Red Man, have been coli- HOW lll the verted into wheat fields which now of the provide the greater world's broad. part Truly, Canada has grown in these sixty years and it is fitting that her Diamond Jubilee birthday be ac- cordingly celebrated. The_ Diamond Jubilee will be a milestone not only in the progress and prosperity, but lll the achieve- Tl-lE following letter, addressed’ to Guardian. it indicates the resource- I The prairie provinces, sixty stlcK TACTICS AND SLANG ENGLISH a voter, was handed to Th8 fulness of the Liberal leader in turning everythillfi w m‘ “dvm” tage, no matter whether his asser- tion was justified by facts or not. lu the present instance the atti- tude of Mr. Stewart's Government was grossly misrepresented. The English speaks for itself: Dear Sir: I am informed from our colli- mittee room that yflll B"? "01 going to support me this elec- tion. I think all good unionists should support our men this election, if it was nothing else but for how hard l worked to get the Union Bill through par- liament, while Premier Stewart done his utmost against us. and also put through a very favor- able measure for the Anties two years ago. l again urge upon you not to go back on tne this time alid if you doubt what i am writing you call ask your minister, Rev. Mr. Mflhflllllflll about it. He is doing all in his power for me this clection,.os is practi- cally all the United Church ministers without one excep- tion. Keep this letter strictly pri- vate and confidential. Yours very truly, a; A. .SAUNDERS. {om-i- DECORATING. HElwork of decorating for Diamond Jubilee Celebration is going on lapacc. Tllc public build- ings are beginning to look like a celebration and a fitting one. The decorations must not. however, be confined to our public. buildings. Every flag pole and housetop in tho ing. We are regrettably reticen the city should be decorated, especial- ly decorated with flags and built- about displaying our flags, pitifllily . r , _ f, New BYFlIll_..-_W$Y. A pcrlod of colrn nu now ouococd- -' od to tho tompoct and whirl- wind of an cloction. There are many sensible people in both our politic- al parties who take thought from time to time of the political, the '- moterial, the moral and social wall- boing and prosperity of our belovf ed Province and the moment in a favorable one for these thoughtful electors to calmly conside the course of events ill our millet dur- ing the past thirty years. Within that period the public men who brought ur the Oar Ferry, re- covered $100,000 a year that was justly due us from Ottawa, and saved our federal representation from being reduced to two mem- bers, were at once defeated at the polls. Was that a wise or a just decision? Think it over! In place of the men who brought us all those benefits and were re- jected, other men were elected who taxed the people with heavy‘bur- dens such as were never known be- fore in our fair island. Was that an honest, just or wise choice‘! Think it over! Again we have had another Gov- ernment who brought us $165,000 of our just ducc from Ottawa and greatly reduced the tax burdens which had been laid upon the peo- ple by their opponents. Alld now that Government has also been de- feated. Think it- over! This last has been done for what the loaders of the majority call the "holy" cause of prohibition. These self-righteous men, claiming to be lnore truly “tempei-ato" than the Apostles and Prophets of old, have taught as that there can he no temperance short of total abstlll- once and prohibition. it is not true, btlt the lie prevailed. Was it wise and just that it. should prevail? 'i‘lillik it over! The prchibitionist members elect are known to many of those who voted for them. How many of those members have not violated the pro- llibitory law within the paet four years? is the new House one whit more sober alid law-abiding _tllan the older House recently dissolved? lWhat possible prospect is there of prohibition doing any good in the land with 27,000 votes just now ro- shy about expressing pride in ou nationality. A stranger ment of science. Scientific discov-iCharlottetown on a national lloli- cries and inventions undreamed of day could scarcely recognize it uwbe Premier of the Province, and l! muchless than sixty years agorwill British or Canadian. be in evidence. Canada lll one vastlthere are those-who do not own a . audience will stand around thelflag- me ‘my and towns’ and to bring m Capital City of Ottawa and listen Brltlfill flag l8 l1 duty. I10! merely H to hymns of praise and [hhnksglv- decoration, and every Canadian who lug and addresses of congratulaflonlviilllefl his British connection should from Parliament Hill, which wi|l'0wu a British or a Canadian flag. be hoard from the Atlantic in the and show it on occasions of nation- Pacific, from the farthest ll0l‘l.ll to'fll thanksgiving or celebration. we understand there a1‘e plenty of flags available in the city. They will be far beyond the southern boundary From the Victory Tower from the carlllolnthclurgest. chime of bells ill the world, which will he heard in the romotcst corners of symbolic of the , Canada. liow greater unity yct to he of the vari- ous races aud nationalities conlpris- ing the Canadian people shall be this blending of voice ill song, speaking nf man to man from ()t- tawa to the shores of two oceans over three thousand miles apart! This celebration will be more cs- peclally for the young. The chil- ‘drenof today will take part in the greater celebration yet to he. the Centennial of forty years hence. Looking back over these sixty years and remembering the physics transformation that has taken place 1 in otfr country, noting the industri val development and the marvels of scientific achievement, imagination staggers in trying to speculate on what the next forty years shall bring. The children of today wii look back from the Centennial to the Diamond Jubilee as to a primitive time, to a time of beginnings, for the will as much greater industrially, commercially and scientifically as is the Canada of today greater than Canada of the Centennial Yhat of the day of Confederation. Oar children shall be told of tho gloriouchoritllge, which is theirs to guard, to develop and to honor. They shall be told of the Greater um n yet to be tholrl, tho Oldcqt daughter of tho grouped-fly pirotho world has over soon, t olden notin- lath Cbillmcnwoal .qtl'it‘stluiii;_-sslea' oomprilcl out.» maul m; ' if hi? mother's hum, ‘but ll in lhC Parliament Building there willrlilg forth a paean of national jubilation this . Doubtles needed again next week during til get them ready and show them o the national holidays, Friday all Saturday and again on Sunday. -_—-<o@.i___ MR. COOLIOGE GOES TO CHURCH. Tllifi reporters who iu-computlio Mr. Coolidge to lllii privacy as that accorded lrvin Cobb's gold fish, but the President must like the publicity or he would do something about it. They are visiting- This should not be so. The visit of Their Excellencies. Let us summer home ill the mountains of South Dakota permit him about as much r corded zlguinst it'.’ 'i‘hink it over‘. Mr. Saunders is really coming to splotlgoti to divide the moncymow treceived from railway taxes with old age pensions, which will take $100,000 more out of the provincial revenue. Altogether there will be $200,000 to be raised by new taxes, or by restoring the taxes which the Stewart Government struck off. Mr. Saunders will have some unpleas- ant work in attempting to carry out his promises and commitments, alld there will be some loud squealing among his supporters when the new e taxes come home to roost. n Ontario prohlblticniats arc sadly d disappointed that their province did Iwl Ht vllce set half so boozy in. they expoctcdf The prollibitionlst‘ Toronto Star tolls the tale that down to June 25th barely 100,000 permits had been sold among three millions of people in the province, Tile permits cost two dollars each, .1 “"0 B" Dilly $200,000 was received whore n. million dollars for 600,000 permits had glean confidently pro- dictcd. promised to Prince Edward Island waiting on the bank to photograph, ills catch when he goes fishing,’ they chronicle what he eats ‘nndl wears, the names and opinions of! l his guests, and thoy even go to church wtill him, says the Ottawa. Journal. On Sunday the President’ and Mrs. Coolidge went to church l Hcrmosa, described as a decadent cattle town, and heard anaerlqop by a young college student whode oratorlcai flights are given due pro- minence. There were 210 persons present "by actual count, including the newspaper men aocllodiied to the President's party.'~,’,_ collec- tion, adds the voracious reporter, was $47.49, and sot; k lidw record. at 15H" "l9 Kllli! Government at pre ‘sent and this Province gtnnds 5o strongly in favor of that particular aallmh" 1"“ ROW. it would seem most desirable that a “dry" mlg in their midst ill the Privyconnnl chamlmr- H6 might possibly con his colleagues to the true pi-nhiht tion faith. P9590" Why-his former colleagu les to sink to the bottom. the condi- - s, h» lonaumuof? KEEPING THE TU-BEIGULOSIB PATIENT SAFE Hy taking a small quantity pt’- blood from a patient, putting it in u small vessel, and leal-nin! how long» it takes (or the little red corpusc- tion of the patient may be esti- mated. _ l halve spoken of this before, and of how where the littlo corpuscles all sink within a half hour, that it’ it is a surgical case, the operation is performed immediately. _ lf it is over two hours the patient is thought to be really in a normal condition. Anything between an hour and two hours indicates’ trou- ble, though not necessarily serious. And now from the above. a very simple but effective methodg pf keeping a clieck on tuberculous patients is being used_ , As you know after a patient ‘has taken the “cure" at a tuberculosis sanitariurn, ills‘ future. "health do» pends entirely upon his method oh life. if he gets careless, stays up late‘ at night. stays in crowded rooms for hours, gets little pr no fresh air, and neglects the daily walk, then it is not unlikely that he will begin to lose weight and Blfelliltll. and have a return of his lung condition. Sometimes, despite his best at- tempts to live hygienlcally, he finds himself not gaining as he gllmlld. By having him return to the guill- tarium or to a dispensary or clinic, and taking a blood test as above, the length of time it takes for the red corpusclcs to sink to the bottom is recorded at each visit. if the time takemheconles longer each time, then it shows that he is getting hotter all the time. if short- er, then he is advised to test more, get more fresh air and so forth, and A Till-i or; Mlltttte mun; nexus... “nu-l of the . nineteenth century - the first port of the twenflflhtcontury rom- ance and adventuroin Canada have been those associated, mainly with Prospecting and mining. The early discoveries of gold mad silver in Nova seotlajqncboc and [JBHB or Ontario did not create any great amount of excitoment, and results, as compared with present day out- put, were unlmpo taut. Following the great goldrushes of Australia an'd California, ‘come that of British Columbia in 1868 and subsequently that following the more mement- ous discoveries in the tributaries of the Fraser River in Cariboo. Sub- sequent minor excitement occurred over finds in Omineca, Cassiar and in 1880 in Atlin. Cariboo alone has yielded about $60,000,000 of placer gold and B. C, altogether between $75,000,000 and $80,000,000. Perhaps the richest discoveries ever made werel-in Yukon. beginning in 1896. and nothing since the Australian ex- citement so stirred the imagination orthe “English-speaking world. Daw- son, the centre of the district, and well within the Arctic Circle, be- came a modelu city of thousands of inhabitants, with all the conven- fences and highlights of a cosmo- poiitan centre. The glory of placer milling, subject to possible new dis- coveries, with all its romance, ad- venture, hardships, its high hopes and its many tragedies. is now a thing of the past. lads-mining, responsible for the present output of over ‘$240,000,000 and ever increasing production, is a comparatively recent industry. its inlportance was only begllllllllll t0 be recognized in 1886. Wllfll ll!“ began to be systematically collect- ed and! tabulated. That year the out- put was valued at a little over $10,- 000,000, and the fact that lll coal. copper, silver, gold, nickel. lead. zinc, asbestos and structural nlater- iais production hasincreased twen- ty-four times since then is a piece of romance in itself, and in the line first statistics oi‘ mining in Canada p ment. fllllll who return at n certain date. Therefore his actual from the tuberculosis standpoint is known. and he can fcci that hr is living safely, Titus he is not allowed to got "run down," and make a long stay in the sanitaritlm become again necessary. g FOR THE . ; SCRAP BOOK 1 A SERIES or LITERARY t: QUOTATIONS FOR f BOOK LOVERS +fb+§fififififi flb “ Wednesday, June 29th. n A contipedc was happy quitvor,‘ Until a frog In h’ Said: "Pray whlc -leg comics after OO-OOOO-OR“‘ A little child raises a piteons cry of frightii‘ it is left alone for only a few minutes; and later on.‘ to be shut up by itself is a great punish- Young people soon get on very frienillly terms with one an- ICUISI‘; it is only them of any nobility of mind who —-but to spend the wltlflle day thus are glad now and then to be alone, would bc disagreeable. up man can easily do it it is litlie trouble to him to be lnuch- alone; and it beclc-ntes less and less trouble as he advances ill years. has outlived- friends, and is either indifferent or dead to the pleasures oi’ iif=e. is in his proper ellenlent in solitude, and in individual cases tho spatial tendency to retirement and seclu- sion will always be in direct pro- portion io intellectual capacity. — Anhu- Schopenhauer. --—'<o->-———- the few among condition A growli- An old all his 'AA¢A_Q¢ In ccmmonlwith thousands wo ‘are getting tired of waiting for that Cabinet portfolio that was long ago As there is not a aigle prohibition. ’“°'"">' "11""!!! lw annotated to sit vert some of the least wicked of . fliill-TMI}; Sinclair cnco ut ‘there, ‘and ruuyvm w" an ablcr ma" than molt of hio colleagues.“ Can it be that his doubly refined pro- hlbitioniat convictions supply the Daily Selections ron - Guardian Reader hath done for my soul. 66:16. ll ', ‘ ' . COM-E Alulr ‘hl-l-E» WORLD : -— gome. and hear, all yo that‘ fear o d, And I will deciale what he Psalm - BRAXfiI-Jftz-Lord. we would be Thy witnesses .ullto thc uttcrlnost venture would furnlsll many volu- lnos of truth quite as interesting and exciting as an equal quantity of the best fiction. Though today pros- pecting is following in the paths of more scientific methods of discov‘ ery, and perhaps with more satis- factory rcsults, and although the old-fashioned prospector with hit and miss methods of following up float to its source and staking many more "dry" holes than real deposits is fast dying Olli- "llwll 05 the success of mining has been due to ills relentless pursuit of wealth in tllc wilds of Canada anti strug- gling and undergoing hardships and risks that he would not in any other pursuit expose himself t0- lt was in the way of adventure. ' tloupled with a good deal of chance.‘ that the neckel-copper mines of Slldbury, the silver-Cobalt mines of lead, and zinc mines British Columbia, on Vancouver la- land, at Anyox, at Stewart and in Atlin in B. -C., have bene made p08- glble. The prospector is now bring- ing to his aid science, being in- structed by mining oxpelts, auto-‘ ed dog sleds, horses and canoes- and aeroplanes. l-lo has also ratlll) and wireless to assist. Tile capital- ist is now using diamond drills to determine tho depth and, extent of his ore and tho latest anti most economical processes for treating 1t, making ls possible to utilize pro- iitnbly large bodies of very low- grade quality, in these ways during the last ten years tho area of ex- ploited mineralized territory] has been tremendously increased .and the output proportionately so. inci- dentally Nova Scotia leads in the production of coal, Quebec in aa- bestos, Ontario lil gold, silver and nickel, and British Columbia. in c09- lmportance in Canada. and story of m nes is ties. lilartaolt --~ . it included $6 from v“each.of the not recorded. After the service th i young preacher-hip, name is Rolf Liam-mu token by the ‘camera- Hmoa in "stiller tilovieo and othifr, form! of photographs." cnd “[0191 Dortorl humid away to ‘write two columns it all. .lt was a big f any in‘ ilorinonc. 0118 approval hcrel Premier Meig on observed it in our ease. and Pr mior Kink. who made the mu liflllt. dilrogards it and in so dot effectually snubs bio supports hcro. And they take it lying dow ' Bromide dausuiatutqn . . . two lhxflltcl ilflvcl us snows .. ‘Qmm’! “Willem ' aiutoowbilc. t In.» .. khrlnlih- ~t ~1- ..‘.. .. A do notvlaut him to return! Any- Wly. 0 Premise is a ‘promise, “and it‘. was broadcast throughout tile D01 million at the tinie of the last feder- al election that every provhmq‘ Ichonld have at least one portfolio. Cflolldlel." but tho_oontributious of That promisogru a sound and rent’ the accredited ,,,,,,,,',,,,. m” “a sonable one and met with unani‘ niiu V LESSONS ~/v.-|'r~;.. of prospecting and developing ad- v rnobiles--in addition to old-fashlon- c per, lead and zinc. incidentally, too, mining is now the third industryuin e its development since. es- pecially, 1886 the most interesting in our industrial annals. Canada's future as to the extents of its 5 problematical, but we have reason to conjecture that it is only on the verge-cf its possibili- Honourable ‘aamn Coolcdgo , ‘Pb “F: . ., m... , ,_. Aim-u M. mums. jrilim Edward inland in If". "you of "the Hon. Joseph Popenbofiwu one of the company who‘ iurchlced the Brig Filmy. and‘ sailed -'- around "The Horn" to Son Francisco in 1849 when the gold discoveries in Calif- oruia were attracting adventurous Bllirits froarali parts of the world. lu early manhood he, entered upon a mercantile career. as merch- ant shipbuilddr and-owner, in which he achieved. ouch success that he . was soon rocognizcd as one of the foremost men of the Colony. He en- tered political life in 1857 as meni- ber for Bedoque District in‘ the ‘House of Assembly. After holding a seat in the Executive Council‘ through two successive administra- tions he become leader of the Gov- eri-ment in faith-During his second ad ministration 1870 to 1872 his Gov- er-lnent passed the Raiway Bill in Bwleqllfillcc 0f which they met dc- fe t, ' The l-iaytliorne-Laird Government th ll came lM-O Office, lln 1873 they OIJEIBd negotiatioys with the Gov- erl-aent a-t_0ttawa for entrance iacthe Canadian Confcderutloil. aniloll their return secured a dis- so ltion of Parliament on the ques- contequencc of which they met de- n. Pope who had long been all ad ncate ofeConfederation on just gr lids that the terms offered were in fficient. to meet the nerds of tltslsland, and to ellablo it to carry on ts local affairs without i‘i‘S(ll'l.- ingto direct taxation. lic carried thselection, proceeded to Ottawa. (secured the laetter terms which llj-lliil advocated. Plonllltly lllfi IC ‘edaration resolutions were ed by both ‘Houses. and on the 1 ay 0f July 1873 this Island be- c a Canadian ‘Province. Mr. l’ . therefore resigned his position of eader '01! ‘the Governnlcllt to be; cl ed a member for Princol C tyin the Dominion Pariilllnentd Vlell-lllfl six newly Cll‘.t'li‘ll mem-' b arrived in Ottawa lllcy found t vlaoDonaid Government on the i; of defeat over ilir Stl-liflllfld P_ c ‘Scandal. Mr. Popl- stood by his tiling leader and Sllill'l‘ll in his doitt. He did not offer for rc-elec- tionFor a short time he rv-cntered thehovinciai Assembly. 'l‘llen on the resignation of ilollourable teFls. opposed solely on the N er (ihancesfk ‘i when driving in motor coroner l lkl w. ma»... :.".:..".:.::':r..:':: by moving about without acoldontfiniuranee, Let an insurance company takethefinancial rick bo- cauce accidents are , naive. I , ' Accident policies can bo purchaood at reasonable _ , ‘_ prem- iums, from $5.00 up, according to tiff-amount of lllgurgngg desired, . {Nagy ~ For further lnfcrmatlpnljdnsult 3 _ IIYIIIIMMI ~_& G0,, lTll. The Oldest lnsuraitcc ‘Agency p, “F; |_ Low" QM” an" Charlottetown? Dad -Laird in 1876 lo flu-opt the Govnorship of tllc Northwest 'l‘ertol'ies he was t'li'i'lt'il by’ a lat‘! majority to iill the vacant seaTwo years later ho was again snpssftll, at the genrrall election wht the MacKcnzie tiovcrnment w esfated. 0n the 10th of Octob- e v.78 he was swolii a ilu-mber of re . gdng his long period of public se _.e he proved himself a states- which?" .1 h om m' reat alikein rum-option and sh | t d | i the cobalt district, the l c g ._ _ our Cotllsltaiirlfizthtfwe to 2U." duh’ ‘fields 0t Porcupine and Kirkland w ‘lxlxltinfllteyithlelrllitllgdolalltilgt i72 P l Repnuemamle .m°“ey w the best a Vail‘ . --Anonymou;. bake. the carver sold at Rowa- tlw , -. m " .1.‘ ,, '"°° Sm“ °""'°“°.'°‘"" , tare. wsaalwlze your = discoveries at IP88. the will l“ lqloppos 0"‘ he d “O posses“ rm .!., “Welly “Wall'- wlilllfil‘ Speaking generally sociability crowing“ Pam“ and the many llmvg“ rargrkgift (if legdifirfifl‘: l I m. ym uletgatglwte ma“ of . , i 1 ' i ( _ great flhdg g copper-gold, Sill/Bi‘. r w an ell _ flmu“ -i—'————?i__-_,._._- 1.0M} a _ _ i a stands n an averse rato with age m Southern gfi 0g sympaumm and talented 1g 15 mfg“ gp yum and u, L. mfilbrough whose cn-oileration he bio to carry through gleat - measures, that would othor- lave been impossible. =-‘ island Statesman who finally mated the Union of Prince Island with the Dominion, ‘.1 on of the ilailway, the solu- ti the land prolilemnand tho " 0f the coinage with the ad- o! the dtlcinlzll system. wii 1 mind in public affairs. __ rad. with almost prophetic the advantages and disad- v’ es that (ionfedoratlon would b to the Colony. . “ he wide far view he realized a" i national Unity. At tho same _ to in advance of his contem- ,. - saw the necessity for L adjustment of the terms of _ 0'8 as courage and supremo n ‘of great talents to public - are valued in our land the of James Colledge Pope will “IF (Continued on page 5) SEHOLD . l ‘SCRAP BOOK a . y . {noosn-ra ca: aning the Sink Drain lit drain should be cleaned . i ctten_,cs e sink itself. lartaof . , agitator and strong _l o-for potash, into ‘the a it wutepfpo at la leaving, the ‘ ltohunu ill-be dons lbtillt twicola Ie sanitary, - milling‘ Lbiyrup‘ - a l‘ ‘ to ,, ormctio ‘ '0!‘ to sugar. Ladies’. Dresses Andi Fit guaranteed in Stanley Styles- t ‘Wrlvy Council with the port- Rcgulavat $7.98 to Twenty ‘Odd lo ‘lof Minister of Marine and Dollars. Men's Suits. Ovordontcp, _ q H w). rial-lee which lie lit-m llntil 1882, Raincoat: tailored to oacufu, n: ~ Q1133 -~ _ will failing health oliiigrtl him to guaranteed, In any ctylc and ,1)“. Wlllyputtfricnd, ‘v from all political activities. I . ti . aatrustec ‘a he‘ - larc caved. SQF. TAERBUSH Olstrich Put Ntillnjf, '~ - executor and trustee - " (By British United Press), l careful adminlg- LONDON, June -1-5.—Thc Zoo has .‘ tmtqgn ofyour cctateuby-a ‘; just lost. a hardy ostrich rom West coltlpany w ‘success is. - Africa. which 118d a ell-varied mien knowledge gained ,- tasto (inbits Idiot. its death was‘ ‘ , ' n “"139 : y a ong nail which r flit!" Thlgqjnpgnyoflgfgygmfltg on to be digested and ended l by mature judgment oil-a a. perforating the bird's interior. capable, body cL-tiirectols. .~ iBut the other strange parently without harm to the work- ing of its internal machinery, form , a wonderfull collection, so remark- able. in mot. that ‘the Zoo's Coron- .- fill'—who inquires into the calusea of was inevitable ill the inter- “m” mmmlml‘ l" ll Ell!" cllflflnfllld this graphic served in ‘the London School of Tropical Medicine. ‘ The ‘bird's slmrd. which was of- tho size of a Rugby f, to meet the changing provin- f0 n t t h _ Flair-cached, on; , p, a: |,.. c eds which time would ‘brinz. eduagsoztlznjgnlfl‘ t a ‘Gunning ~. 93-3-1" in u l‘ later] out the remedy. Two women's handlterchiefs, one ' ohn, 3|. l marked ‘lNwl-u and a man's nond- kerchief. ' ' - Three single gloves, one mwfked Three fee-t of thick string.‘ ~- ~ Au empty Kodak film upon, -A four-inch nail (in addition to the one that killed the bird.) j ~_ ‘lFo-ur inches of lead pencil. l _ Four hulfpennles, two farthings, and a French coin. l . -_ lPart of a celluloid comb, ‘ , Part of a rolled gold necklace (the Bold of ed off.) A collar stud, V ‘A 'bl°Y°l° lyre valve. v _ b A" "let-m clock Winding key of . rass. , g -A dozen short bite of wire, metal Bllliles. ocr PM‘ rivets.‘ i. A slovs fastener, and <1» UMm-tuuoti f ‘ . - . FRMQNJyE-iortltezoo n Coats Made to - _ Measure , _ ‘l- -. Thi Years "aw - ,.~n<..._- _,-: 9i?!" - ‘ ‘ e wail Nconv panic-with“ l l *6 hi conditeiirtis Sahel-ja- to-day? ‘Willhe balm-a , position to invest .‘_ t: c. your _ y _to impose such uresponsiblllt upon hlmin the autumn o his life. ‘ The "a tment ofThe Bates-n rust Company-as His Own Coffin ‘things ich the creature swallowethap- Ml- llon. W. A. Dink. P-G, ALP. TUBE" "n . ‘bu. Muvrny: u. n. suit. . .‘ . F, BJll-‘Curdy PL‘. - V via-mucous _, G. S. Cam ll, . Woflrr Allison \ ill-Sm“, JLC t,T.FJ'o0|‘n,K.C. \- D. lilorflllfuny, Gama! Manna. EASTER? TRUST g COMPANY '- deaths in tllc Gardens-Jigs had record is to bc-pre- football, was . rs d .' "f " ' an a in the nature of treasure trove. y. 11in, waippukeu gizzard. altb: contained, ac was, to be expected‘; some.‘ kip/ahead granite clllmlllll. used iaroad-maltllll- h the .'lllle,illllill'lilnl'l"l“ Willi“! °- "hid. llfllldllflililllli" ""1 m“ 8mv:llts slgflgdjygkgjply the Wlllbtllll d?! “r . subsequent toimlrn in the bll‘ tot-ion. > ‘ ' out... Time l! j A” ‘Ready? v r which had mosty bebo1911- ‘ ‘ ~< 6w}. ‘Small-nails and oop- ' nit wilcthnl‘ 1°" piece of wood four-inches h»... "~‘l""'l"°' ' aim _u sq