gUARY 16, 1924 1 rated swam: with place that cull" ‘wflwmai-dgtfliiniilgnation" when it was learned .. - llfllcoiggol? cifsoauss thafboth his fest were asleep! . n0 ' , stroll rl-iorgg'°”n",ffi was ' oirrrr "amen o‘ ou - wiilioiigesittinxiblllg 151;,” Thsachoolbfl! merely gumbo" ’ J n, 3n impflml d 1h the average member. '1‘ e Press youldus; a Gallery overlooked the old Gore. ‘ flmtlbecsme int ‘yff; 131i of lidvilltige tlliillllfillilllillll g: no one who m “munch were lnvle e. o t - d was . -- " floitlisiigonovmufipflll°° $1922; 34:212.: gaging: 111:4? is‘: r255: growing "l" i’! ‘Myer contributed a syllable to the de- “ which obmfhlsnrlisment mm!’ and yetthamoyfld hlglttdhitslkilx “£63.... s...» “°.‘.“‘.‘.2..‘.'2§..°,I232.°3‘!§. 3 d’. h, been 0 ' h on s , °' ‘he wudlitaturzrigchfi; “mm” otdtge l-“F”; lrvhilisdlsmsnzy- re for a ‘was ing a goo ea o e Y traditions. Theredurmg rivals. He could hit an 01117081118 m“; in the lgcliilséiry com_ sposker-Honhth: nosghwith llllélllllltlty in the Press of the hm“? 5km, e a nno erhgreoi gm. M" a douiainfed under the whua apparent‘? “a? :8 n t! r» c a rm" u‘. e "sur- ess of 10mg break out 0c’ he could g ve a a goo ("in n. ey FY31}! instance W119" fgntlret tzgkc?fltlslftzalt0ntlll: dissgdlrii? , In 01d 7mm‘ Adam fiture of many a debater. Yet Par- frl-lamilton, stillmhflglnrzg llament is supposed to be an ex- 95, brought l" l‘ 1 ceedingly dignified body. e use or lilvc pIllg-crttllnflwggi To ins, village bred, the feudal ii g — M" _“' pomp with which Parliament is op lgbelled the ‘Dtckeyegégganed was always impressive. It se young blade” "5 at "Isuggests the traditional history of of flllllflwkmg "m Bk ‘our modern representative system, rrllery ""11 "efiLY '_"§{§,witn its ancient forms and symbols tiling. llorsie p Y - ‘of sovereignty. It is worth seeing happened mtmes. ‘as a lcolorgll andh sfilarnulstliitg e. use w o ve - U‘ ‘MMENTS 42223....” it know that the mliitzry ., m in thcsc sirstches allhclguard of liouortaitidkghiilbargmvgggl: [h] been made to drama; evaccompan es a p in Parliament. There part. in the show. As His Excell- r '"°'"°“'t=‘i“.?.‘.‘.ilil‘°.'.‘.’.liZ21’.'..§§‘.§.3°l§§‘€3‘l°2f.f§.i.§'5ii°2 l1. ppelaeliiifiibutgd one of ‘them. few bsrs of the Notional Anthem ;.,, had prepared for him s and the guard salutes. On one _- - i. _ , -h had serv- very cold day. however, at the im- a §,§,"'R§,.§f§..‘li igrter staud- portsnt moment of emergence from u; e Order Paper for wecksthe Senate Chamber, the bond lend- " ’ "e d" “M "“' 1"?“ “i 3"" “f.” 221°? "."..E"°..!’J3§‘-’ " " “I the “me”- but ncilgtrg t imis Tin l ti? to tl at a lo’- M Cumin? shook! “b? hli llcglo gilidelheobozsm (‘of the Tlgum gas l w ~ as Ulli g l t» ‘ ‘ill-ll; uiu..':.:::r::.r.-..P"r.'i..:'ir; i‘i' frsomeme, - n‘ .‘..l‘e'fiy.i§..~.. to the fi-ontlDuke of Connaught who paused i in front of the Spcnkcrhwith piumed hat raised, but a smile bow which ncariynlandedlat the corper of his mouth told the .. floor, and 511112 Mistenconfused onndsmen that he under- : want something for them stood. - and that's my Bill." Them! v r oxher bow and several RESTLESS ABERDEEN. his arms iii they an‘, ‘lie! l °‘r‘l;l‘gll:'r'g"ll‘il‘l'lly Oi‘,',“h‘r€,h‘:,: Duke of Connaught reminds merof I ,,_ hum. Oh, m, hm, m, two stories, which I think I ought i i i The foregoing reference to the hhhmhh m“. when h“ to tell, about‘ Lord Aberdeen. On 3,01,,“ ,5. , H“. cement-Jone occasion I was sent to Quebec uiiiuinivn Ptlllfill, and nev- 0“ u“ Much“ errand’ while the ML Governor-General was for a~few h; ghhh, h; U“. Hum,» days quartered at the Citadel. He hhhh. om, Shun‘; hf m? received me in the big drawing- eiiicrnhlv. llr was vmlghfflfllll. I bad become familiar with _..hhhh,.,h,g_ hhh w.“ h, his restlessness, and he gave me L, we afternoon when, m, that duy n special demonstration of Thomphhh “w, speaking, it. There were many chairs, div- q appeared h! the door or ans and sofas scattered around, he; with h hlesshge from and as he talked I observed that m Rohhehh got up to re, His Excellency sat or leaned on h the "w," wax when h them all. In the grate was a new "ed m" he “m, h, a had and unused copper basket for the m, “mum coals, which caught his eye, and telling the simple this great man—hle hi! . 1.1mm; i, 110mm on edged hlsway in and occupied t the hers‘ dnskg. His OBIIIWRIE: h" a few moment!” Th“ “meted all‘ - . journey “he both made every place a man could sit in the h, “hm way M5 h“ an room. Under other circumstances copier-mi | menu“ d“ l saw him do the same thing many e fllgnlfled 5h- John m“ times; yet, and I have said else- orrmed, and many “mum nhere, he could lie down at any a sluglq can" m. Ho,“ fine and sleep for just as short or tics. But he was not de. long a period as he desired. The other incident was roinatlc and, to ms, touching. We were i couldn't walk. , first on one knee and {many-I am other, while keeping him. "'11"! about _4..l.§l lit-ml 4 e "nor-Gerrard's car was behind our olficlal car. At Nepigou wc missed Lord and Lady Aberdeen; but they caught up to us at Winnipeg. ‘then _ Their Exoeilencies, for whom I hsd r l formed an affectionate regard dur- iing my frequent meetings with them at Ge. nment House, told us ._that the day of their engagement. land they had spent it wondering ' hand in hand over a country that reminded them of their native heath and the circumstances of of them for that. Lady Aberdeen was an ingiy clever woman. l should be in- clliicd. iniact, to regard her us por- haps tho most capable I have ever Jznoivn. Hcr sincerity of purpose could never be doubted by anyone . 'Vill0 hail conic into intimate con- , ‘tact with her. and her enormoll! ‘ onsrgy and persistence in the do- ing of things were amusing. There were many stories in circulation firming the Aberdeen regime at .- ilovernhrent House ‘about the wear- ilafof cops by maids, the novel lib- ~ bftlflt; cl an to genesis sad so #1::- . u ere s eor ven ons. e s‘“‘“°l Rd" '°“ ‘m. Iiberdghl we kindly and democ- dppmntif‘! ‘l cqfll‘. rat!" but t ‘ had a vary clear of the British Empire no pt ea; e aitgaity which st- t § sir-rank.’ Y . in? fordhis weak‘ were: _ b a 11'“: you: ‘ldilp "an. 9H. *3 l!!! "55 t’ n the us," qua’; twoferidnr pg .m nnmsnts to her ° °h"m" h"'5°l'- gzfilgeflll: frlyvnfinlngfii: g: ' "d! ll" Empress of Nurese nnd the-National council oi’ ich is now on‘ a _> _ Woino around thewofld-W nun,“ . t c osslng the continent and the (Iov- . their betrothal. l thought no less THE CHARLOTTE-TOWN consume ‘ One of the least advertised in- stltution; in Canada is the Royal Military College at Kingston. yet it has been consistently at work since its establishment in 1876 makins the name of Canada known and honored in every country of the world, through the achieve- ments of its graduates. There is probably no country in the world where military and engineering feats of any consequence have occurred in which some graduate from the R. M. C. has not figured. _The objects of the College are to provide a complete military, scientific and engineering educa- tion for Canadians, as well as a broad, modern education in general subjects. The College is located on a fam- ous historical site ,one of its build- ings being that once lrnown as "The Stone Frigate, a part of the dockyard established in 1789, which bad upper storeys open like the decks of a ship. Today the chief of the R. M. C. is Sir Archibald Macdonell, with a distinguished record in the army and the Royal Mounted. before he went to France in 1914. He comes of a family with military records centuries long, which had represen- tatives at the taking of Loulsbourg and of Quebec. in the war of 1837. - forty-two members of his family held commissions in the army in Canada. Among the graduates of the R. M. C., are: Lt.-Col. W. A. Bishop, V. C., D. S. 0., M. C., D. F. C., who brought downi- seventy-two enemy aircraft in the Great War. Mai-Gen. Sir William Bridges. commander of the Australian army at Gallipoli, who died of wounds in that campaign. _ __'____ ' v.‘ ‘r l‘ . Q P ' Mai-Gen. Sir Charles Dobell. who commanded the Allied forces of the Cameroons in the Great War, and is A. D. C. to the Ki-ng. "g1 :1: v Col. VG. R. Firth, who held high commands in the British War Office during the war. Col. Sir Edouard Girousrd, who was director-general of munitions supply in Britain in 1915. Mai-Gen. Joly de Lotblniere, who was engineer-ln-chief with the Anzacs in the Great War and who built the largest hydro-elscertic transmission power scheme in the East, and did amazing engineering work in Kashmir. Lt. R. W. Leonard, who is doing so much to promote interest in Canada history and education. H. R. Poussette. now head of the Canadian Commercial Intelligence Service. Mai-Gen. Sir Dudley Ridout, who commanded at Singapore during the whole of the Great War. ' PAGE NINE ll. ii. c. subunits IIIIE woii nurse i ll mini comm or TliE worm a Gen. Victor William, who com- manded the 8th Canadian Infantry Brigade during the world war, and a whole host of other military men who have been honored by their own and foreign governments for magnificent military and engineer- ing enterprises. Sir Archibald Mac-- douell is himself a graduate. The pictures show the main, building of the College, the com- bandant, and a group of students in training. General Butler's bandit-chasing r " of Philadelphia have been busy testing out the cleparil mom's new can and guns. One of the officers is shown firing at a novel target, marked fol accurate shootinir in . ’ Mister-or vi res ) r ~ ~ ~ n.- nnnnreriYeui asiwfilaaéTt-"oren- in and a very determined fillitfl I diam the Msxlcanfovqn‘ of Guadalajara alto? its “mfg ‘glider itiefdosrimlbtipf General Amaro. on Indian soldiq r1: .__'__-____U ,__r'___,_, .._..-.—,-.,' ,_n..;o....<.n-<\.--..-=~ as», ~ .o\