racarous THE GUARDIAN Authorised II Second Club am Put omen Ilupuhnont. A I. The lllnnd Guardian Iobllnblng Co. accident and Auocilta Idilor. fun A. Burnett. Anocluto Isdltor. II-uni: Walker. CIICULATION "Coven Prince Ildwlrd llllnd like the dew” "Hie Strongest Memory is Woolm Man the Weakest Ink". C-HARLOTTETOWN. FIIIDAY. FEB. 22. 1952 Manitoba School Grants Provincial grants to school districts in Manitoba are to be increased this year by .7-2775.000, according to a recent announce- ment by Premier Campbell. Last year a S500,000 increase was given, boosting tlir. provincels contribution to elementary and years by nearly Si1,300.000. "This increase,” says the Winnipeg Free Press, "has been made possible by th(. fortunate circumstance that the Federal Government's payment to Manitoba for the rental of the provincial income, corporation and inheritance taxes will be substantially higher this year than last. The province, however. is under no compulsion to turn any of the increased Federal payments over to the school boards or municipal councils. "While under no compulsion to do so, the provincial Government, in fact, has dealt generously with local authorities in the matter of education. In 1946-47, the last year before the first post-war D0- minion-Provincigl taxation agreement was entered into. the total provincial grant to elementary and secondary education was 351,817,000. -In the fiscal year which will end on March 31, next, the estimated grant will be b4,343,755; and in the coming year, with the increase announced by Mr. Campbell, it will be 515,118,755. Thus in the space of six years, as its own revenues in- creased. the province has nearly tripled its rontributioii to elementary and secondary school education." For Music Lovers Musica Britannica is a new publication and it is hoped that it will do for British music what the Encyclopaedia Britannica has done for British general knowledge. Creative musical art has flourished in Brit- ain for six centuries but much of this music has remained unpublished in the country of its origin and when scholars wished to look at old English music they frequently had to go to German or other European collections to find it. This sad state of af- fairs is now being remedied with the pub- lication in London of Musica Britannica, a comprehensive survey of British music since the Middle Ages which is dedicated to His Majesty King George VI. The first three volumes have just been published and it is not yet foreseen when the final volume will be completed. This vast un- dertaking was first mooted by Sir Hubert Parry and Sir Charles Villiers, and Stan- ford, who worked on the pijojggt at the Royal College of Music before the First World War. The scheme was in al)ey3ll("1' for some years until 8 Committee con- taining many of the most eminent British musicians was formed under the auspices of the Royal Musical Association, with the active support of the Arts Council. Aids To Stock Raising liicaven lielpstliose who legitimately hclpihe world. themselves. as the U. S. A. cattle brecderslmany. are once more discovering. A bushveld grass which South African. farmers have hardly begun to sow is now EDITORIAL NU! ES Washingtonfs birthday. C O O ' Snow-shoeing was the there were who attempted it. 0 O O lVindsor's fears of a lengthy an ending. 0 O O for the pollsters. a large scale. y I O O ' The hazards of fire in ioutbreak at Southport. just across 1 Hillsborough Bridge. 1 atus nor ' I 0 Q i It is persistently lfraiscd to at least the- maximum permitted lold age pensioners under '70. Such a move is overdue but should be carried to the logical conclusion of disregarding each al- lowance in computing qualification for the other. 0 ii I Eric Gill, English sculptor, was born this date 1882. The study of architecture led him into the designing of type faces. notably the font known as Gill sanserif, and the carving of the human figure in stone. He designed the George VI series of British postal stamps. Much of his work is exquisite in its simplicity and decidedly unconventional. l Charlottetown, along with Moncton and lTruro, is to be a filter station in the R. C. A. F.'s ground observer corps setup. Once regional supervisors are appointed there Wlll be the task of signing up 672 chief observ- the filter stations and 10 technical advis- ers in the Maritime and Gaspe area. 0 O 0 Though the union of the Crowns of Scotland and England did not take place till after the reign of Elizabeth I, the Scot- tish Supreme Court has ruled that the new Queen is properly designated Eliz- abeth II. This settles a newspaper con- troversy which Scottish Nationalists have been carryingon. I 9 I Should Hon. Mr. Pearson become the head of the North Atlantic Treaty Organ- ization siaff, it would sp-ellthe end of his career as a Canadian politician, unless, like Eisenhower, he kept in touch with his party organization. He isyountg. able. and lliils prospects of becoming Liberal Leader n time. so he will have a hard decision to make. , 0 0 I The sudden passing hence yesterday Of that well-known and popular sportsman, I-Ierb Campbell. may be termed a casualty of the storm. forghe trudged to and from his store on Wednesday through all the accumulation of snow which was 8. SEVEN” tax on him with his lameness. Always cheery and optimistic, he had a good word lto say about most people. especially 9f those unfortunate in making their Way in I He will be greatly missed by 0 Q 9 only practical means of transport in many parts of the country Wednesday and yesterday, and few Ford strike have fortunately not been realized. at wlii'ch all have rejoiced. May the Nova Scotia teachersi dispute soon have as happy I The forthcoming B. C. Provincial elec- t tiongwill pose an unusually difficult problem Not only has the long- standing coalition broken up but new voters have moved into the Pacific Coast area on , , , snow-blocked Secondary educahon m the Space of mo: areas are well illustrated in the disastrous the Neither fire appar- cvcn snow plough could negotiate lthc shoi't distance between the city and '. scene of outbreak. . reported that War ivetei-ans' Allowances will be increased and ithat the allowable other income will be THE GUARDIAN. CHARDOTTETOWN Hold Onto Your blah! vov Home I'M auto, uousv! cease come to omiiuu mu- NOT 7 ii 5: 4UNT1 rim G0-W6 9i-?'G0'W('7('i;iG0- 7- ill I 5” Old Cliarlotieiowii i 4 i 9 A FLVJ-,2 YEAJSSHL laclglum to attend the funeral of; "'l'he ship '.l.-imcs DlllIt'.in','Kll1;' George VI in London i gives which will clear for Liverpool to-lthe impression that not much wasi day with 32,000 bushels of oats accomplished by the change of find 100 M. feet deals, is one of Belgian rulers from the father (And l'. E. i. i Refusal of the young king of; es-gt:-ee-aaisocgs-com-soQ-if-.-3,. xi .-X 64K9- OKQOOQEO-Q L JNotes By The Wayf. with no recorzled objections -from iiorth of the Tweed. Again in 1901. the Prince of Wales who succeed- ed Queen Victoria was the first Eduard to be Sovereign of the United Kingdom. He was known FEBRUARY 2;, 1,, Soldier Of sketch hu raided for many yam hero and is u brother of Mr. Chu- lec H. link. of Charlottetown. and of Dr. William A. Block. 'lbronto He has published Icvenlbookl and contributed to numerousireligiouc and education ' publications. A native of Puzwnh. N. 5.. he taught at. Mount Allison and Acadia Unl- eraltles before removing to Call-. foi-nla. where he followed the teaching profusion for over thirty years. Robert Alder Mscuod of Bedeque, whose remarkable career he describes. was an uncle of the Black brother: on the maternal side.) 0 0 0 Just forty-three years ago I spoke to President Charles W. Eliot of Harvard one night as he came down the central aisle of the Fog: Museum in Cambridge. at the con- clusion of his lecture on Municipal Government. "President Eliot." said I. "do you happen to recall in the Class of 1869 u young man named Robert Alder McLeod?" "Oh yes. very distinctly; I re- member him well," he flashed back. "He had been in the Civil War on the Southern side-lost his right. arm-n very brilliant and,mosl: re- niarknble fellow!" Robert Alder McLeod at once re- call so vivid a memory after forty years.-durlng which. as president of the oldest. and perhaps greatest American university. Dr. Eliot had come into contact with unnumber- ed thousands of other students? Doubtless it was because of Mc- Leod's unique background and be- cause he had achieved. amid most adverse circumstances, what was probably the highest under-grod- iinte record ever made up to that time at Harvard. l . 0 . Robert Alder McLeod was of Re- volutionary imcestry. His great- gi-eat-zrandfatlier was a chief of the Clan of McLeod, whose resi- dence was Dunvezan Castle on the ,Island of Skye. that ancient castle which Dr. Johnson (The Author of the following in California but is well known Why should the mere name of it ers, 20,160 observers, 1,000 of a staff for Montreal Gazette boasts a poetically l"' iclined member on its staff who reports 85 "There he finest vessels that ever left this port. She was built. umler shed. at Bay Fortune. by John F1 Mll('K1I)'. Esq., for the firm of J. Duncan & Co. She is classed Ail T"? Plflhl years at Lloyds, in- tended for the trade between here anti Liverpool. and is as regards material. workmanship, strength and finish, ll credit to her master builder. Capt. Mclnnls. "The Kliinics Duncan' is 180 V2 ft. long. 32 fi. beam. 18 U3 feet hold, and 756 tons register meas- urement. She has it splendid set of spurs. curries fl large spread of ciinvus. find will, we believe, prove to he it fast sailor. Her lower yards are 69 ft. long, of pitch pine, and her lower masts, Quebec pin:-. 26 inches in diamet- er. Her cabin is painted iind gilded in Mr. Murphy's best style, and the curved work done by Mr. Allen is well done. The vessel will have first-class accommoda- tion for ten or a dozen passengers, and is commanded by Cnptaln Kicklinm, who is one of the most successful seamen afloat." -The Islander. April 21. I871. Tliretitiusic Goes Round And Round (Anaconda Spearhead) Once. there was R farmer who raised corn. and a man who raised hens but no corn. The hens said "no com no eggs." so the man ngreed to work for the farmer one day a week for 35 a day. And the farmer agreed to sell corn to the man for Si a bushel. Irhcy paid each other off every time with the "long green." 'I'l-in: farmer paid the man 55 and the mall? Wild the 35 back! to the farmer for the live bushels of corn which lie Wheeled home in his wheel-barrow. After a while. the man said to the farmer, tEvei'y- thing's gone up. and I regret iii- tcnsely to inform you that I can't work for less than 38 a day." The farmer said "I understand. But. you must understand that everythlng's gone up with me too. and I regret intensely to inform you that I can't sell you my corn for less than 31.20 a bushel." The man said he understood. So, the man got 86 ii day and at Si 20 .1. bushel paid the farmer the til for live bushels of corn. Both of them said. "Happy days are here again." By and by the man said to the son Bnudouln. - as King Edward VII without pro- ftest. -from the Scots. Scotamen are .E.. ilznown us logiclnns, but also as re- Officlally or unofficially. in per-gspcclcrs of precedent. when they lads of royal mourning or other-,tl:lnk it over, they will undoubted- wise, Queen Juliana of The Ncth-Ely come to the conclusion that the erlnnds always will be welcome in new Queen is rightfully Queen Ottawa where she and her ehil- Elizabeth the Second. -Globe and dren lived safely and cont.entedly.Iv:i.iil. during the war. -Ottawa Joui-nail -m- lleart-warming is the story of The British Broadcasting Can the two immigrant German phy- poi-ation'a report of the Royal fun-lsiclans. Julius and I-lanna Kratz. Leopold to the and Ottawa Journal. James Boswell visited in l773. as recorded in the latter: famous Journal of a Tour in the Hebrides. During World War II. Mcl..eod's grand- llflohew Captain Fred Black. son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Black of Charlottetown and now Supex-in. tendent of Veterans" Insurance in Ottawa. was the guest of Chief Flora McLeod of McLeod. the pre- sent "lndll" and owner of Dunveg- an Castle. Whose visit to Char- eral. brought to Canada by thelliusband and wife, graduates of a kmemw" 1355 Wmmer Wlll be CBC. was 3. beautiful piece of,German medical school. came to plensanuy remembered b.V all our work, a superlative job. so vivid-Car.-ads. three 3'93” 580- Before cmzenl , . . was the description of scenes at that they had practised medicine Westminster Hall, in the London streets, at Paddington station, ati Windsor (by a woman) and in the in Palestine after leaving Hitler's Germany in 1933. In Quebec, the couple took 3 year as incomes and At the outbreak of the American Revolution 3 company of McLeods was raised for the list Highland- ers in the English service. At the close of that war Lieutenant Rhoderlck McLeod received agrant of land from the Crown and set- tled in the Province of New Brunswick, then part of Nova Scotln. Robert Alder McLeod was Rh0d9l'lCk'! lzreat-grandson. On his mother's side he was descended from William Trucman, a york. shire emigrant. From a brief sutvoblogi-a-phlcal sketch written at graduation. and from other class records found in the Harvard archives. I Am indebt- ed for certain details of a career whose future was most promising but whlchiunfortunatelv came to an untlmelv end in Algiers. Royal chapel that the listener in thus qualified as interim practi- Ottawa. almost could imagine hlm- tioncra in Canada. They went. self an actual spectator; and the, then. to Fort Vermllllm. one of the lovely singing of the choir in the, molt northerly and most. isolated bui-lal..sei-vice at st. George's was rommunltlcs in Alberta, and be. somethlng to linger in the mom-Klan SEl'Vlni: its mixed population. ory.- Ottawa Journal. flaasglyelsr. Dr. illullus passed the gmc ca counc exam nations Mr. Don McLean. .llreslfle:1t of Vflllch Klve him R permanent ii- the Federation on Autcmoiaiielcensewo practice in Canada, and Dealer Associations of Canada, of-lillst recently Dr. Hanna. did hicc- fered a unique comparison to,Wl5e- But they are not leaving 5.;-we home to us the weight ogilibrt Vermilion for the higher fees taxation on Canadian automobiles. mid mm” C0'"m””M9 Wing: of. "when you buy a new car, or anTS0m8 larzcrc enlre to the south. old one." he told the nnniial Bcf'I”lle reason is clear, for when Dr. .Autoniot.ive Trude dinner and t.lie'H"""B lvflll lligwlnnlpeg for her 3.15:, annual meeting of me vgn.lOXililllllv'ill0llI she received a tele- lcouver Motor Deniers Asspcla-l.':rnm of izood wishes from izou ltlon. "you Pay 23 per cent excise! md”m5- 1-990 Mei” Md &w1!(ll'0l::doIlEf ,I1.”odclM"'!'1m"' who de- tax, and 10 per cent. sales tax, andiulmmlims. Mennonites and And C E "3 "sny the ""3t lscholar in each branch of study" . 'n,nd as "the romantic flom-e" of the Mark jtw l - I M. I .3835. wrote this further tribute: ”"' "e ' " "9" He died before he could win for himself and us those honors which when you take the two together B10-Snxons. -- Edmonton Journal. and figure them out. on the rctaiii price it amounts to 21 per cent. I-2! you were a slot machine operator "GVEILIRHX: him a better yarn to ou' a exa tlv .1 "'ElIm M an one e . - w.v:ncl:,u,,',c, pc,,,,3,,,tc',lf f m, tax l-faring. It. has ll l?l'ld,;l;,!ki3;ufl3t ably K.'2,.EE”5c",f, from that nenevermg gg Bun coum-V rm s1.9,m'ooo' which "WW Ikt w chh put him so unfall. Police are reporting iroublc.l""3 "0 Wtl"'r l0 K0 Under it mid 1,,-,lo.',,.i cnmr t gm 1" wiry hitch coming frcm a new -fox-in of drink "W" l"'"- T”? 5133" CF05!!!-S What Such a C1815 niwncnel which is sold to be made by drop-E”5'”l l0 be We MISEOUTYI bed- 39- mnrkable bcclieiiexre sf we more re- ping a particular sleeping iablcii”"5-9 5”"-V c"lll"”" M3l"'9d Inc beginning hut01gaywlxnpr0ml5- into a glass of beer. The tnbletwelmlslmll-3 ""13 l-he Slfellm Would his own star: C chad ml dissolves quickly and while, theyicome flick there. they seized the L. . . say, the taste of the drink is not.0Pl10li unity to build it. They flg- " improved. the "kick" is muinpiied.'""?d 54.000330 could be saved by Edvfvaxlaslslliofltrll igecggffequg WM-7 ,1n3l9Bd Of Producing sleep the not having to fuss around with he wrote at n'.a :1 ru 1' M43 liable: in its new chemical com-lwnmmi Wale? during conatruc- er Rev Alexanld: will My nth- .pnnlonshlp seems to have the op-I "Wt NOW pressure has been put L4.-'od. DD. was at thiilltmilf Mc- ipositc effect. Police say it puts,” W Tclense ll Federal 3l.000.000 Wesleyan lilfethodliit ml let me I 'the drinker into a violent and dc-.53” 10 have been earmarked for cnnscquentlv h d I, n H and structive mood and he becomes brlnslnz the Missouri back if it ed his reside R 'l:qmnnvCmng' hard to handle when appi-ehend- 5”d"'l7 Yew"! Wllihmlt urging. But birth he wnsrimtlus Mm am" my ed on the street or at the police. l-h'-' enlllleefs say that since the Nova scoff; 3: done: 1" Hnmmn stntlon. l-low to deal with the slt- "'l0n9y Was set aside the cost has chosen editor ant 'th "lily been nation is B new problem for the P-""9 to 37,930,003. We suppose Wesleyan and of tn 9 "'hMn authorities. It would seem to dc-. "W l'0ll8C'-3 the impact of lnfln- both weekly capers eh Mhmlmm. rend on means for controlling the W3" 0" moving rivers. Anyhow, to reside in Halifaicfo: l:l('lmt)'jtPa'l'esd Misfortune The story of s Bolnu-Iublo Prince ninni isi...i., by Illlold unmet Black. um. ' 11091"! noon to man Ghmllh to enable me I, m ;collI:::I.bond dttnctad .15., to an ! 3310 llfolpect of m time: there. I remained on, employing all mom my evening; y:.,,r' ants in ltudylng chm ly the common English 1,,-menu "I had been present in the ch ' lesion Convention. Decembe, 13'; when the oiwnnncc of sedsmo. was passed. and had witnessed ch" first attack on Sumter, and ,,' very enthusiastic for the scum." cause. Having enlisted as m."',” in the Wuhlngton Light fnfaintr; of Charleston. I spent ch months. beginning November 9:; 1801. with this company in um service. On February 24, 1352 on: company enlisted for-one yem-'u.m was mustered into the Conzederm service. Somewhat later we all en. listed 'for the wax”. I was elecm C0FiJoral and rose later by sum”, sive steps to be Orderly s'e,g”m.. 1 I I ' Then followcd'a succession of eiigagem nt and scouting expedi- tlons. oncemlng one ofltiiese he writes: "One of our party you C, , tu-red but the other and I escape?! taking Charles Moore prison... From his diary we learned iii; plan of Cilllmorefs attack on My: I'll Isllind. made on July in, ,,;,. forewarned General Beallregard og Then came other skirml fighting and a "very lllstheeraesialrfidg experience"-being struck on th, knee by I Diet! of shell "him no. much hurt"! From October 3 1.; November 3 he was in Fort sum- ter and witnessed Glllmore': sew. crest bombardment when the fork, falling wall 'kllled eleven of hi. company. Afterwards came nurn. erous other engagements-D.-u,.y., Bluff, Mechanlcavllle. Cold Hm-boi etc. At Petersburg his division be san dlizslmz in and fighting. "June I7. 1864." he writes. "wg repulsed the enemy who attacked our lines. For sixty-six (luvs our brlgade was kept in the trenches. very near the enemy, without 1-g. lief. except for two days. all the time dolnll hard work, having in. sufficient food. and only three hours of sleep allowed each night." C O I On Sunday, August. 21. McLeod was in an engagement in which two Southern brigades were nearly annihilated. "I was on that day. as for some time before." he writes, "in com. "mid of our company. Within a few yards of the enemy's breast. works I fell. n mlnle-ball having passed through my right; gm, Be. ink taken prisoner, I was sent to Cltv Point Hospital: then by it fortunate mistake to I-lower Hog. pitnl. Philadelphia, where it was customary to send only the Unlor wounded. "There. September l. 186-l. mi arm was amputated by Dr. Moor between the elbow and shouldgr Towards the end of October. I win sent to the rebel hospital at Balli- more. where the treatment of the prisoners was bad. I was soon sen: to Point Lookout, and there. wltl: many other disabled prisoners pul aboard the Baltic. and carried n Savannah for exchange. "The voyage of the Baltic show- ed me the most. dreadful SCHIN which I have ever witnessed. Rn- tlons were miserably small and Al- WHYS fnlletl 00 no round. so that men actuzillv died of starvnlion: W""l"l-i Weill inns: iiiidrcsserl: thr boys in attendance cursed and kicked the d,rlli'z and nffci-rd in- suits to the dead." . . . Later young McLeod got. to spin tnnburz. 5. c.. where he studied Greek and Latin for five months with a little French thrown in Durlmz his service as a soldier. he had never inst sl-zht of his chief aim.-study. His plan was to main almtriicts of what:-vcr he similar in the riulrl. of camp. and Cnllllllll tliese in memory. so as to him somethlmz in repeat to himself or the march or in the face of flu i'n9m.V. when books were hard it nrocure. In this way he got semi kl'0WlEd8e of world history in? Latin grammar. "As 5 private." he writes. "1 made my hours of izunrd-diity pm pleasantly by reciting to myself the whole of the 'School of (ii- Comnany' and the 'School of iii.- Bllllihllml” of I-lurdee's Tat-tics.- one volume and a half. which i learned by heiii-t. I went tlirougii Dnvles' Boui-don twice in mm"- Havlm found in copy of Caesar in II racked licr.se,r.cs:- Richmond. 1 was maklni: good progress in It In Pfoduclng tluafltltles Of Prime beef for the follows on the recent snowstorm: :g:?r'n;:h1I"i:nl.':vi,g&"e1;?:22; -sole of the sleeping tablets. I-Iowlm" Army people seem to have "Until I was nearlv nine - the "web" "wnnd Pamsbvrg bl. United States. The Americans have taken are signs that the hounds Of spring are on man 5750 3 day. The farm” that can satisfactorily be done is -thrown up their hands. "lt'l me-'old. Iwent to no school. exceplefd; fore I W" taken lmsomu In 1361 nnother matter. if invented gnaw system of slznall. News-Chronicle. which was approved at Richmond. for the navy. To keep up rimil" - l id i ll " , PM mini,i:..:i;;i.:...?”s;...;"i:..'”:. i.':::..r:r: lit.” M It back, but we can't." - Detroit there on n visit e'In(,.i.U3ll)dt agreed that was fair, but told the - - ' ' lsts ter s traces (SW1nburnc)- Optlm Wm man that things were going up are convinced the present unpleasimtness seed of the common "buffalo grass” (cen- chrus clllaris), relished by Afrikander cat- stlll higher with him. He would I . . . . - Old Man Free Press. 1' g in composition. I kept it till” tie in the ranching districts of the Trans- isljust a last spasm igjomha Szlgi Mtment ton:z:tns1l!.:0 :zrl:l:;1hc'lh::r mcv;:cb:it.:e:r iniitatieriioiion unlit you ..-.'.,,,&g emi-:3 !lIvft.nAllls:?i'iO:giId- .,,,,,ughm,, me Mr... I van), and discovered that it IS invaluable winter. But not so e ea - 9 Mn ma both mu. "Pmspcmy is drum N "b . "coupe or g.&Qw1!mg.)m.g. month In” the mm. had C0,; What it valuable light iliatldiarlv. for pasture, The department-Cassandra-like tp;0tg!'I0st- acre-.'".:f,ter all. tl1;h mafn was get, m'e"e.yom. uchlnglcegs gctctjgw Eincedb a'xidhstud)l,etl there during 2321 nticirm-utizi-;!the war. were . .. - .. 'a re--niz .- a lay. cam . i reso are l . Texas farmers, living in the greatest lcating woe (Tennyson) warns fl mung .150 . bushel m'co:;l;V;; ggggzimzy 3-Iiovtlmes. recent e ,3” get". ,1-e.,i:i,iu,;i:,q,i;.iy,,;;;.,.11,4g'i.0:j,:,",l,'x.:3:.lf; HM (To bcmconl So-called.” ” 's "moderate" drinking figures in up to 50 per cent of fatal car nccl. ceding the flowers that bloom in the spring tra la (Sir W. S. Gilbert) is a season when coughs, colds, chills and fevers lie in wait for the unwary citizen (Cahill). This sea- son is now upon u.S-" the hens were getting five bushels as always. . And so things went. until the man was getting :10 ll day and the farmer not 32 for A bushel and the man gave the farmer sin for five bushels. And'the hens kept right on laying. even on Thiiradnva. and the man told his wife. "Ain't it wonderful?...tl0 1 dnyl" ' And the farmer told his wife, "Ain't it wonderful...” 3 bush- el". And the hens kent clucklnz Away on five bushels of corn. wn chosen to read on original i.'ii'...”t.iii”t......'i'i'..... ...... .... .... i?.'l.'E”i'ii3".'.'S2;.””E.':”iffi”'"” Cents in u. s. rm f. f . i ' - 9'" - - our -mum-y mice” 3?: 1".'i.i.i:.'::::..:i :2 ':.'.'.'''...:..'':'..'".:2 :.'.::::: '".:i'" W" "M it 3”- effect. as "putting a gr: 1. 1 ' i v - mm at :1 mzi-i.-zrei...-.".i'..:i'..ie.':.'; .."iil.'”.il.?'.?:iii"h lnz sunglasses in twilight. You the Zvimie land before of 2 i ” "9 ” N" ca,” 5” many. And . to . 00 '09- Mlzulne and. in connection with , Mm react quickly enough H ;:1l::n":: ""3.h'"o"'l- allrnhzhege ".2: t3: undci-iakinl. opened I book- see out emerlcncy looming. The hand. then 1 will 3. in the rl:M- ' "1" The ”” ''""”""' "9" real danger of Ilcohol in small or if mu tlepdn h an... moi ";"',;: ”" ”"""' W the 6'” quantities in um. ii. dccclvu peo. hlnil, um. I will go to in. mg. ':,,mm7'ou'?"" '”,"' "."'td- "M"! me. people who wouldn't dream And In! lined up his area. And ..,,,,,,ng m" :3, up beef-raising State of the U. S. A., are sow- .ing it for their stock under the adapted Afrikaans name "buffelgrass." Moreover they are finding in it virtues which the South African farmers never suspected. Mr. L. C. C. Liebenberg, pasture expert of the U. S. Division of Agricultural Re- search, says that the Americans calculate ' that the grass produces: 40 tons of roots to the acre in Texas. This immense root A change of sovereign brings problems for military messes. --According to the Canadian Press, officers of the three arm- ed services now are wondering what to do -rim IDEAL CAPTAIN "T if A long-lened Itruddllng Ill" 0! tivlnz when theyke "a little behold all the plain of Jonlui u - . - G90 9 V1 And the statisticians down . - 3 slated in the store I d lth iii f chm” Bylwm h91PV8real-IV to restore the Sm” Wlth plctures 0: -the lam King rg Wnshlmzton way said "Ain't lit .lj,::;”.d::u:,l:?lE ;:':m':::fe3:'su:l :',.",::,,'f b:,;'""t';:: mnslslne in such WI; 9:, I could. CllrlOdnoItlI;n)I'Ill.l,:;'!f; Ix; :l'"'"" but went for three months. in uisu to is public school, ture and fertility of the soil and to hold which hang in all officers messes. Should ,.,,,,,,,,,,.,,,mN,,,.,m, mom, ., prom mm M . mu record levels." And the politicians About "N be. Gm '"' " WW-leased imnsm 1'-in seam-ii imiomiuu will: ""9" 0' "'0 Mm like the hull f honor un- 'lt in Pl3C9- lhey l'em3i" i" the" msmms 0 a-Id. "Ain't. it wonderful" and Blnnlnl of 'lii5il r d book I b lei. . Another South African grass. which til after the coronation of Queen Elizabeth mmd am my mum R. And to cnguthg zxererign ;:.:rv1i3'o..muh:ii:n cogilgtmnnug mm on my own ggggggt .2” mi mm Ig:1n!t”lg'l:'l:1;0d3":et;,rfull oi l tied it on pi-ofitublv for Iomewhnt. in: than 3 your. Ielllm out It in! in order to mnko another effort to Iccompllch what bud always been my cm Jviub-to get a regular evoi-ybodv felt so good and pros- peroua that the man and tho farmer voted for the politicians: And that is how it was "ecgucily." The mm got. three time: In plain of Jordan: and not Journey- ralth Ilnco England and Scotland "'.l.'”.'.'l.:'.:"".".:"? "WI. w worn unicaa in mi. They to into in main; um qnu:ion.m1l 23:, ',';;.”,';',',"".'." ""' nplolt. and go. -Ardiilochua. (700 8.0-) T' BPIING PI01 ECT or should they be replaced by P0l'tl'3lt8 Of the new if taken when she was Prin- cess Elizabeth? Or again should the messes South ,Afrllc)::iend farmers" hthe!m:ellves mhag; on in the -first ovum mum- .nevertrou osow. asvaeyacev 'mch popularity in California that Govern- sucd by Ottawa. 411; ww, mam, ion, in was known I: William W Iced forevo. ilnuel. "I went to Charleston, 8.0. ?l - lty until the lllould ime been mu hi i 5; ment-certified u" now be b””3ht PGITIOVG P14-3tuN3 of 3" my” much for the can. but mid three I up by him. un Iblno an. and Iduu ..-. g g thcrcl It in ohriiartn dllydna. which stay! Queen is crowned and official portruitsoof time: us much for I'll! shoes. "and. :l;."'on.f';,!;';F""dfA"”;'- all W look m."l.3"-”'.i... when the: ' - - ' ' ' , autos an. N 5.. -(C3,, I !' i . - In In R - bl , m ht W no one is the rnunlc went. round and round. Y 'k9”"l9 V W in are nonbwnnl. one Then came three montlu more work of boautlfvlnx the WW" ,1. 3; all the your rotmtl. Austra her are uvalln e. gi noh bee 1 Th t,l.,gnT?gb.gg h moo tnocw xinc VI:h.lhgrh:'lol;: ma outward. wolwurdi M Iohool. followed by mu-iv mi will set under way eurliv It-Ltd, . . . , . . dmal f union” msmuuon mm uld 30 hr no mrect veg Eve I1 5 are I;.lCkIl,:doll1dn e:lennT:o3.li..m.',l line! the Act. of Union. Ncvorthh Iboaugwllllmg :17! thwarts "D1,: '3cofgbe:?"fBilf'i1.',b::.f.::dwr:on- 7:ip3l'cli.!ii.ma3li'f.'3",lf.fnim'i 0”” .vmdu of 500 men and shill"-