' . ocrossn. 20, 1933 , pA(;g, FOUR - Tl-IE GUARDIAN. crhxnwrrmvwly V l . . l , THE. GUARDIAN Poised ', ' . Authorised as Second Class liml rm offic- ;. -..m1b-.:-.z-; , What has been demonstrated, says theil Journal, is that an ”adequate national crop insurance plan would involve very large . The Passing . Scene V fly Observer "i ll Department. on-wt amounts being guaranteed by the Federall The Island Gunrdiln ruhIi-hlnr.Co- Government. That does not necessarily ' curse crop insurance-there were head- . , DYNAMITE AND T!!! ART! OF PEACE ii Editor and Managing Director. Inn A. Burnett. Associate Editor, Frank Walker. CIRCULATION "Coven Prince Edward lllufd like the dew” "Tho strongest mumory is weaker than the weakest ink". GBABLOTTETOWN TUESDAY. OCT. 20, 19531 Last constitutional Appeal On November 2nd the Judicial Commit- tee of the Privy Council will commence hearing the last appeal to come before that august body interpreting Canada's consti- tution. In future it will be Canadian judges, appointed by Ottawa who will decide in what manner the constitution divides pow- ers between provinces and the Dominion. The Privy Council is not strictly speak- ing a court. at all, although it gained recog- nition as the highest court for the Com- monwcalth and Empire. It is in theory and in origin a committee appointed to investi- gate appeals to the foot of the Throne, ai traditional right enjoyed by British sub- jects who felt that they had been denied justice by the more conventionallcourts. I There are those who maintain that the oxistence of that right to appeal had an adverse effect on judicial hearings in the courts both because outstanding lawyers might not be prepared to serve on a court which lacked final jurisdiction and because of the temptation to leave the determin- ation of difficult questions to the Judicial Committee before which they would prob- ably be arguing in any case. Against this and composed of the top judicial brains of Britain and to some extent of other Com- monwealth countries. The present. controversy as to whether shakings over the unemployment insurance plan which now has about tl billion in its fund from the contribution of workers, em- ployers and the Government. Yet there should be no suggestion that the guaran- tees the farmers want, and perhaps should have in a modern society, can be given lightly without thought to the capacity of the state to implement them." Border Strife Settlement of the border incidents be- tween Jordan and Israel present a difficult problem for the United Nations and coun- tries with an interest in the pacification of the Middle East. One incident, however, must be a cause of greater concern than all others together. It would have been bad enough if the Israeli attack on Kibya and killing of 66 villagers had been a result of hot heads or oven to gain a tactical ad-: vantage. The deplorablci feature of the massacre is that it was admittedly under-' taken as a reprisal. Reprisals are about the most abomin- able form of warfare. The innocent are made to suffer for the guilty, if there is guilt. They may not constitute a threat to the security of the enemy. They may have had no part in the fighting. The enemy may be no stronger and their own land no weaker by their death. Their only offence is that-of being nationals of a state which it is desired to punish. The Jewish people, themselves, have re- er countries under the Nazi heel. These bloody reprisals are, of course, very differ- ent from the reprisal measures sanctioned by international law for breeches of obli- "llllillllubhk :4 I 4' c l l'?oed'Qwml SONNET Foil OCTOBER Here is all autumn blazing in a jar: An arc of triumph in one leafy fan. All colors gamut in so small a golf good for 9m F (Niles B): The Wayx. everyone who enters this church is converted. .Please watch your hand- bags,"-Edlnburgh Scotsman. We've never figured it out-is the wind, or is it '-0 Sllilvort the argument.-otthwc Evening Citizen, The Charlottetown Guardian has received with pleasure the new; of the . appointment if Lieutenant ,Wednesday of this week is the llotlh anniversary oi the birth of Alfred Bernard Nobel who is re- membered chiefly as the inventor of cwnamlte and the founder of the Nobel prizes for outstanding medicine, literature, and Peace. His very practical patronage of t thcsrtssnd sciences was,-inasense I result. of his inven-tics skill. It wasthe way he chose to reimburse mankind. partially lat least. for the added destruction of life and pro- perty which his invention of dyna- mite made 1 virtual certainty. It has been said that in his la- ter years Nobel regretted having made the outstanding scientific discovery. although there is no evidence that he agreed with those who my in it the impending des- truction of civillmtlon. . . . of O duous year: of toll and reseuch. It is probably are to prcgum. D 8 P This prediction universal y No doubt it was made when the first crude gun replaced. the bow and arrow. so with the tropedo, the aeroplane, and. in these latter days, the atom slid hydrogen bombs. In each development some hcve seen the imminent and total destruction of civilization. And it is certainly true that the marginal line between survival and destruction has been at times very thin. These days it is thinner than ever before, and there are plenty of deep and sane thinkers, quite apart from the habitual prophets of gloom, who argue that the time for restoring the rapidly vanish- ing line is fast running out. There are some who say that nothing anyone can do now will be good enough to save the world from be- ing blown to pieces. 0 O U W F ti ri N scientific inventors like Alfred always found themselves in A moral predlcnmbnt. Good and bad pcssibilitiu have come with every new invention and discovery. How to encourage the former and ren- der impotent the latter has been, 3 them in I. state of It must be terrifying to n.-ppm. live and discriminating mind. such as Nobel undoubtedly pougemed not to be able to debs;-min; ch; moral iudaement has not been .,l,l, to keep peace with the work of his hands and brain. ' 0 But. although it is not the gum- tlon of science to man monl achievement. in physics, chemistry, decisions, scientific invveniorg, llg. everybody else, have to live wlch heir consciences and try to 33,, ntcntment. utcomc for good or iii of come- thlng that has taken long and hr. that the Nobel Fburidation was, m an at least, an Ittempt by ,, ood man to bring a positive mom force to bear on a. morally lndll. ferent discovery. No one would dis. ute the claim that in the fifty ears, or a little more. of its ex. doom has voiced whenever a new' istence that Foundation has con- inventlon with potential de.sJruc- tributed much service to the am five properties has been revealed. that belong to peace and to pea” itself. It. isn't likely that anybody .-lc. votes himself to physics. chemis- try. medicine. idealistic lit.el'atlire, or peace measures, for hope at rg. am. In fact. many of the truly dedicated ones in all fields of hu- man betterment have left. the world virtually unknown. The work itself is the artist's best reward. or all that itris helpful to know lat there is specific internation- al recognition of the most succea. sfui efforts in things which on. ch human life and which max; for peace. The effects for good and ill of obel's chief invention us now fairly well known. No one. how- ever, could measure the total ef- fect. up to this time of his filial bequest to the world. In the field of literature, for V- f V l . . peatedly been victims of this aberration of l . l l .' gas lth: ad;aI:lagt:e0:C::eJggeggggfgvegsri; warfare, as have other Sections of the pop. . TA notlcc at All llallows-by-the of repeaters smongl the prison laII(l)(?:5l' h:vheos:ee:m:3llLm:w.lr::, :;5l:l:ieCELnig1ennp;'l::rtlli1E: ha: Solkls : ' . . , . . . ow , v - -- no in .: unal E” F0 ulatlon of Poland, Russia. France and oth- er " Lm"'”"' mad” N” P”P"l3”0" Bl”! Sufficient evidence ” me" wlenml” ”"””"y' m” them good and purposeful Wi'lt:l”a.. lit, at least, it has served to call attention to the great. influence of good literature. The latest recipient of the :- ward may not be the most disting- uished writer of them all. He 3 i Ottawa or the Provinces have the right to , , , ,,p,,,,l only l .m ll . l l l l . . . . gatlons which cannot be otherwise com- Tm bowlggreylblue M autumn gab 133128 ll; 19 Li! of, the General Maurice Pope being chosen W9 ""17 be S"”- 'l '.”l"" M "” himself says that both Kipling and . . l control inter-provincial bus lines is one pensated for Reprisals in the form or bmmm are Sp cm p y golf. Hnmlltonas Canadas first ambassador to anxiety to many scientists. Shaw (but not mlswonhyl Wm v. . . . . . . . , . . c or, 1 . - t j i l 1 ' it with which Such an In-mama! arbitrator 15 re in relations abro atin treaties and when 5m”'”' Wm "9 1”” ””””” r”--- lspmlnlmd -mm um mhwgh mt lalrflllm lgclednlfeanw its 1y2.:lIcllu::cgxl- h” '”p"”" m m” "i' ”"' W" in 5 , . -A l'f k' an 5'” if g ' g 3 near and far . an ”"d” by bl”-ll he "ls Very 5' ” 9 3 ' nowadays would dispute an thin . . u ell qualified to deal. Vii hout ma lng y . , Two rhccsc sandwiches in week lclose , bl qua or dcmucllch to more which 5' 3 , J , mmpallqons between legal lalent on one so forth are recognized meanslof protest- And lrlflessfll (liar-t. their brittle bunt- men by emy camdlal, .....,,,l,l lllclm lhlf df!?l'f,c;:':l'3. t”beL:3(m:'"lf:l'l Wm Ill-eady 1,, opemlon, lc mo llhe 8:91” I'll"!!! SW12? ufnen lthlilns T , t . ' ' st wron ful acts of a national 3 9 c the ch b ' t f - , i 5 C" ”l- ” 9"” ” i l” - . ..... .. the and me other. It may be ggggsam g wind-llyaelgl my. at cm ...... 3.1:; "sir: o"..:..::1::':::f. 5:”lil:i2”;.lX3E..?”l2l2:L ,mo;,- :3 up 33- lvmg; or me- - - . -l t d. L It i a on- n a an bcwi er ng ays. Ono fem 0 our le would frnke the l"V9"'-i” h1""”” was wsmnsme feels sure that if the spirit of Al- federation. "Almost an Islander” is the hccdlng of me Guudlm mm for neither the one nor the other. and lg lg relreshlng to us, as ll His task was finished when he mug: he to General pope. to hue brought about the amalgamation all hj, other achlevemenu md of certain forces which together honors given second place to 1 WW” do "rum "hmg5' near miss. Island pride is nothing The hsk M brmgmg me” mm” when amalgamated, to constructive Drop from the boughs left shiver- ing brown and bars. The children run to catch them as they fall, Child, wind. and leaf whirled in a madcap spree: For each leaf caught, observed that there are objections to such l ' disputes between Ottawa and the provinces , , . , , . db Bit,F' d1hUtd - - taWa' It (minds. against the mkl: thgt tr-whit is to be hoped, for Israel's sake even only Shouldjustme be done but t at Jug we more than for other countries that the in- difference between the cheese in- dustry being in the red or in the black. As things are now Cannclians' eat 5.8 pounds of cheese at year. Norwegians consume 18.7 pounds. "You can do many things with cheese-it makes sandwiches, rare- fred Bernard Nobel is aware of what is going on he will have no fault to find with this year's choice. The Security Council has been sum- "A happy HALLOWED GROUND should seem to be done. , , l . . , month!" they call . . . ,0 mm at and .l .l b J In any case the l-lnal Constitutional ap, dlVldU3lS lesponslble for that llanton such joy lhig gm 0; branches bits. salads and flavoring. It comes Emmy asset m m; lltg: Preoelfilnfe ends. ffllilve 0bV10U-Sly belonsed til Ancient Roman law protectrd ' . t b I , vthn slaughter be brought to book. .... brings to mg in assorted types and many flavors. on the 5,3 we have never heard another sphere-.-the m0l'31. And It any area containlnil monuments peal taken from this coun F,V 8 019 - ll That by its burning beauty I re- It is nutritious. satisfying, avall- of anyone lvmln that E dl bl seems that the supreme predica- of the dead with upmost; rever- prlvy Council is a notable historic event", It An ' ctla-ll ID d H bud ntlllel and Canadian-made. We lshcd Camdlan swag ..Alm?m?g:x; ment of man is that somehow his ence. ' - - au umnfs g ry an A c - ud t f it."-L .. .. W -' marks the end of a long process of Judl- EDlTORlAL NOTEs hoe" El". 11,26 Frees: mm 0 ”"d”" Omwan or Nearby v. Toron- ' tonlan". That probably mum W, cially interpreting this countryls constitu- -Una R. Lisa in the Chl'i.sii.:n According in Dr. liniph H. Banay.l are not as alert in our community PROFESSIONAL CARDS it H0” Students Wmffor years til cmlne tgatfel The Canadian Legion Poppy Campaign Science Monuori an American psychiatrist the mostlitlwanlges has we iougirlt to be "Id 4 t , ' sonln eveo y t i ' . Iere y are m are some of th V the various lines o rea . g h P9 t . 15 well under way. ll Should be emphasl l . expensive and least. effective Sam, M WMF-omwa hum”. e Chas. R; Mccuaid Dr. w. R can." I 4 famous but an0.ny.mmiS Juiigels W 0. cg: ized, perhaps, that apart from the modest Te"'ble Thmg 2',T,3l3:,..,”l. 3:33:23 'T'm"-sm- B.A. cnm0P;:AOToB 1' billed t0 the dlsltlnchve slmgel Wm, cost of making the wreaths, by disabled u -"M "button Dr- Banayis opinion. based i 35ll"9'""R 5"”""'0"- ""'”"' G"""l"" . which the judicial committees advice is,Veteram the r d ; Shep saved me all right; other on M,” of Rudy 0, mg m. ufrrAnv. Etc C5-U"-OWWTOWN NV tendered to the Crown ' id in p Ocee S are Spent locally to ma ml: bflhu hgmd halvtl rim” mates of sing sing prison would . Old Charlouemwn ll-stern Trull Isullvltnz 9”" 5”” "1 "in" 5' V. ,'A , , , ' , - an ve erans and their dependents, '"9- 56 , 9 'mF-0 Hm , .- , ch lg d , .. ' . mm” 4 l It is gratifying that Prince Edward Is- . ' . x)21l'!1:':803'x'tg.i:)JlfeI1earl,:'1(ll&111ol:illeS belgnlnxluillls glillollgxllzt-ziflllcethee aglillzllace rellierooe (And 2. r.. Ll ?1i Goad" & "guard ' land should be represented before the Judl- ' he moved lm mm aim whlcfl which he expressed it the other M. Albun Farmer. Q.C. GILBERT A. GAUDET. &A., u..n ' dgy .. the lmnc cohcenclon of the NEWSPAPER. ITEMS ILA. LLB. Barristers and Solicitors cial committee on this historic occasion by two distinguished members of the Bar, At- torney-General the Hon. Walter E. Darby, Circumstances alter cases. When it comes to talking about the size and ad- vantages of cities everyone claims very was held in a cast, and then con- tinued: "I got out of it with :1 broken arm, three broken ribs. a crushed ankle and a cut on my But I was lucky. Another Canadian Penal Association and the American Prison Association In Toronto. An examination of fig- ures showing the high percentage From The Examiner, Nov. 29,1879: The cent nuisance is again the cause of much complaint by our llnrrlater and solicitor Blnlf of Commerce Building Charlottetown Money to Loan i Money to Loan Canadian Bank of Commerce Blfllz. A. Wulthon Guudet. l l . . , l Ll Q.C., and Deputy Attorney-General J- of C- Ispeclil V”'tu.e.f0r their Own 1101718 l0Wn. It gfliiutel and lb would have been 1(TIeX'Ch(iiinlSh. We are credibly lh. mi...?m.......Cj. K - it camvbe1lQ-C- is '10 h9wever- that when It is -u om-but cm .':.'.'l:.. lull.l”.ll."Lt.l.”il.”l3f.f5 Gordon : MacMillun ”--" ll pp a question of priority as a target for the "Was the bull vicious?" we and an eternal vigilance sees to idle. This is really a hardship ' ' '"”"""E"- 50””""""'- W” l , Atomic Bomb, Tor-ontols mayor Should mod. 35KIC.:.tl”-Blh91l'( Illlpldlyid it that no harm is ever done. In to our merchants, who cannot re- D-Au I-L-Bu lf:'"gp'no5""'d.':'e'l . - " ' r v , rs n L c 3' lily crop Insurance C0518 estly disclaim anything but secondary im- not asbirvcizlous. lwglrisedhlfll: ff-3:: 3'lZgll3lip?f9.3Qlse:v2S.3?lin"f.f.23ii Hgxicemlnpafilgezdfffearr .5'i".3'l's"?L s0m(I;'l.T0lnif'i"" ",”'r” '9 V'''' C”"”""'' ii mw- portance for the ”Queen City” a calf. He is now three years old, killed his maszer. We understand there they remain. as those Wilt; HI” DlA1..622S no Gown F ' C 17' A study of crop insurance costs is con- ' gnclnall that flllle h; has! been as lhllt. while they frequently rate gggeihscrilnit lnva'r1lablY 1'4"" m ZTTWFIT Ag,',,!:?'9'N-3; ' , , v - 0 0 0 00 e as I :6 ng en. or some ony 1.000 u ds. ti - Em '1 EX!-' inst. 0" 0 '5? l tamed m the Saskatchewan wheat poops . . . . , time I have been taking him out dangerous ma: thei:ey2.(;b1oe.pl)Ili(hrcl The Rev. William Taylor of . . u an. . . mu" 3"”: "' c"'"i' aundlu ' i i recent submission to a Royal Commissionl d Grace Dalilmg. English heroine. died this for 1 short. walk in the yard. That cousin. the Here-fold. When it World-Wide mlsslonarr fame. 'may Ontometrl-I Lf'l"""'-'2'Il"" "ll ";,:m . ' l . . . . . . A . ' ,, . - - - an: on i an ill on Agriculture and Rural Life, sitting in ale 1342- Daughter Of fl l1ghU10USe-k9eD- ;1,”:",l,?5,,f.",E,l;'”;'..fZ,” )Z5"3'.3li'f lc,'f,E;"n”.: Hilly le)5ef?lxnpgeCi:blmhel:lcctb,1)l'sf::?im:vIlll”1;: Montague. r. r. I. rropeitiu , Regina. The pool examlned the experience er on the Farne Islands in the North Sea, and we were almost up to my run just M mt from-.3” enraged cupy the pulpit in Prince Street PM 8” '" ' "T"-"' under the prairie Farm Assistance Act, 8 She and her father rescued nine people from field gate, when he hlc me me Hereford .5 from , 5.l,ll,.gl,e Jel-- Bgetllodisl Church. mdorlilngh anfri mm. MCTIIQIOII. PCIkO 3! I u . . . l . H knock down. . e en ng omorrow, an n 1 g . . Federal measure, lhrough Whlch wheat the Forfarshire" in 1838. Their heroism gulcgcgrgages to gmbalillsmgom um; say ternoont in the Second Methodist Jo Sn TCVICIH R-0. Nicholsan uas warmly appreciated and rewarded, but ear. and was almost. on my feet 3';';,',”,,:,f,,,;l,;,1i-V,,fl',3;,f';,2”";:,'g ' or'roMz'rms'r LL (3 'r:sI:::.!:.' an growers contribute to a fund to be drawn on when they suffer. complete or partial crop failure. PFAA has operated in Sas- katchewan for 14 years, a period in which the harvests have been unusually good. But even in the record production year of 1952, 3,684 claims for assistance under thcl ' act were honored to the amount of 39758,- 000. - in the 14 years the farmers' contribu- tions, made through a deduction of one per cent on the value of grain delivered to the elevators, amounted to t41,600,000. Dur- lng the same period payments to farmers she died of consumption soon afterwards. The islands were acquired by the National Tnfst in 1925 as a result of a public ap- peal. O O C .Numemus whales were depth charged in mistake for submarines during the 'war. Now Asdic, a radio beam device used by the N8VY during World War II to detect enemy submarines, is to be used to locate whales in the Antarctic this winter. An Edinburgh firm is equipping 22 of its whaling ships with Asdic sets and will em- when I went down again, and say. Mister, it's It terrible thing to be killed by a bull. Just, when I thought it was about over 'B'hep' came in from I really don't know where. and he sure mode that bull forget me for a minute or two- and I had time to get out of the yard. Good old 'shep'." O O O The handsome Scotch oolilo was the hero of the, hour and here he was stretched out. in his master's bedroom-usu lly forbidden territ- ory-with his long nose on the floor, held by, I paw on each side. His brown eyes looked with admir- ation on his master. while his big, ge Old s 0 Lord, by these things men live, and in all t.hf-sf-. things In the life of my spirit: so wilt thou ccover me, and make me to liven Behold, for peace, I had great bit- terness: but thou host in love to- my soul delivered It from the pit of corruption: for thou hast cast "California Street Preacher". ' The Charlottetown Brick Com! pany have already all their plant on the ground, and sufficient clay turned up for half a million bricks, which they will ' upon immediately after the, frost disappears in the spring. We are assured that this company will be able, owing to their proximity to the Railway and the city. to sup- ply bricks at rates that will make building with this material as cheap as wood. Mr. F. W. Hynd- an my sins behind thy hnck. man is agent for the company. Eyes Examined. Glulec Fitted Corner Kent and Queen Sir. Offlos Phone r9133-Home 4750 BIIEVITY AND CLARITY , loll. Mathioson :7 Foster Bnrrlstcrll Solicitors. Etc. 3. R BELL. 0.0. 0. R. FOSTER. LLB. holno on Olly and Farm Proportion no llehfnond street Olnrlottotown. P.8.l. Medina 8: Trainer I. I. MIIIKII. IA. 9.0 JOHN P NICHOLSON. LLB. Barristers. Etc. Collection: - Money To Loan 115 Grafton strut Palmer & Hosiam A. J. IIABLAM. BlA.. LLIL nu-rlohc. and look of Non Booth Ubuobcri clfu-lottptown. I. I. I. no Y To IAIAN J. A. M6Guigan IIABIIBTEB. souorron. Eh- uorluv. Ila. . Onmlo Building 5,... J. Grant, O.D. l ' , . feather-ilk tail 1)c t. h th i t , , . amounted to s103,s0o,ooo, the balance be- may operatomwlth wartime experience. t-ltltoo qp enhe cIrn:t. ' r y M" n Y n. soimnuo nnmol. n.A. mg made up of payments from the Federal who, before setting sail for south Georgia. Shep has the run of the house I llrrilton. mu. a. gem (')l"l'0II1l7l'Ill'l'nmn. '7, treasury together with small surpluses earn- ed- by the plan in Manitobaioperstlons. This scheme. of crop insurance. notes cultivated acreage up to 200 acres, or a fhaximum of s250-a small sum indeed when modern farming costs are consider- Gfl 71" Wheat POOL "id d0"W933 Other the publicly attitude towards oftefiders In some men n of to tu i posh ,, . . . ry, as Insu U d it , i at di l. fllflll BPWIM ilV01' ' 5" ldeiluale Scmme Widespread indignation over particular """' "” ””"l””"I"l'o J-"iu?:"'" om . c.,,,.r::ce,, "wen" en 5 your 3 ,cmp lmunncel the cat to in, home We Wm... M, oh.” la, cu. l rr o N . summnsiol - uormioon tly by the Dominion and provincial will attend a refresher course and learn whaling technique. 0 of Justice to study methods of parole and remission of sentence in this country and elsewhere, it could with advantage otpdy criminal acts is not readily alloyed by the thought that the criminals will be made over into law-abiding citizens. To be suc- cellful. an intelligent parole and remis- sion policy must be accompanied by a con- version of the public from the idea -of re- venge against offenders to one of concern for their rehabilitation. ...fV-35.. now. "He always will". oblerved the farmer. "Even tho wits llyl than ' is, nothing too good 10: 5hpp'.' In the meantime. "Shop" W0 Obviously trying to say. "oh Lncthcr man wu trampled to death in Quebec. Every you I down or no good men looetlieir lives in this fashion. Apparently. there unify from a quiet, docile animal into I. raging cyclone of destruct- ion. lxpsril tell In that they in no such thing as a safe bull. and that lb ignore this fact moans the loss of human life at regular in- tervals. . However. there are farmers who never forget that there is I poten- tial killer under their barn roof. nesunill In o.IwIrI.ont.iu.ult. :1 Our experience of ove onus A. B. SHAW-District moms McAVlNN-spacial l'lAN:'Yl. MMNUIT To Be Adequittoly Insured ALL LINES OF INSURANCE EFll'EO'.l'liD Insurance Since 1872 t .u.f.fsoN r. Mcl.EAN-District mun? It llulllnenldc. , ldnunoioavor as have at cinrlotumm. 1' three quarters of a cen- Muugcr at Montana. min. I Alliscnid. Giills. Ll..I. IAIIIIIII. IOLIOITOI Eh III Ilobnond IL - Charlottetown Dopuljc-ny Alum uhnrlcmtown clinic 1 III Quin It. . Dial Jul can rule um 0'.” t.'ati.t'”'.?'”"”...u& s (M. m bowl. 0I& toonndu unto lots!) or. A. i..;iiarLisdac DINTIUF vi - . the Ottawa Journal, is extremely limited. The lerms of rel Fen I lh l l Ihuckl: It Wu not-hint." ' l In the event of complete coop failure the pointed committee 3: pfhlfi exgellaesw zohld forvxhythfao fl::rlByholrfi"aut, hell l l . I "on". ,I.o”'ni3"n3if'.3nc... l - j. farmer receives 32.50 an acre on half his Well be bmadenedl set up by the Mlnmel. lull ; farmer um killed by his Dr. K. A. Mcciachorn "" ”""'0iI It 100' ”' l I u not for from Godcrich. and I I ' Dnunsl, J. A-. c."-'h.'h :.o. onofni-of 18 Ian! lino! . I'I' , mm to 7' MJDONILD. CIIIIII I '30; numb ouohoe. oto:::.":o.n::sufsu..o mnunvcr. on-rio ? m,.nM' a" 'mo H-l U"'CO.HPK",,,,i; b us once wh. ' lA'll'Iol.I3lI w."ulumn "