we- t i- . Pioneer Marks Press-Most o of 80 but Mrs. Annie Morrison's fav- orite spot was the wide-open spaces and she has just celebrated he: 100th birthday. she lives here with ~ 100th Birthday IIIXJDIA. Muoh M-(Camdlm 011118 tn the fireside when they reach the age I - at thrilling savings on -_- .- I Sailors Berers Oil-Face Hats cvunuy of’! ‘ Alfredo Hats, Inc". l5 W 39th 5n, Nawjgrlr ii . a; ‘Silks . . OME (I)N THURSDAY AND FOL notable showing of New Hats . . . New Suits . . . New Hosiery . . . New Gloves . . . New Coats and Dresses for‘ girls, New Men's Wear. At the Spring Opening Thursday Afternoon-Friday, Saturday MARCH 28th. 29th. 30s.. See the new styles shown on Living Models! our ~ . New $Ira we New Brims MWUzJ/ors ‘ Bonnets V Breton: Classics a- LOWING DAYS and see the . . New Coats . . . New Dresses .New Lr-PLOIREIQ YEARNS FOR POLAR MENUS lily The Canadian Press) ‘NEW YORK. March 26 -— New ‘for: rusinurants ' ould please Lin- coln Ellsworth better if they ser- ved sizzling seal steaks or sauted breast oi penguin. "I like the wild taste oi such meat,” said the ex- plorer. back from Antarctica. “Seal steak ls delicious and the only difficulty with penguin was that it took i7 of them to feed our CIPW. The breasts are the only parts you can eat." Penguin eggs. too, are not to be snubbed on a. polar menu. They are about tho size of turkey eggs and Iriocl or in omclets are fit for any exploirrs breakfast. In New York vhile making up his. mind on plans for another try at. owsfiiiig the southern back yard of tilt‘. world, Ellsworth is keeping in trim by wrestling daily. Graying at 54 and tanned as if he wintr-rvci on it Mid-ml beach. he hopes to rcturn to tlm Antarctic so that early in November or late in October ho can attempt another HOIF-TVJIIKI dash. T.) the "so what" minded per- sons of the general public who lcok uskance at polar expeditions, Ellsworth hnd this in say: “Thai-c :1 o 5.000.000 square miles in the Antarctic-an area rqu to that of Europe one! Australia. 90 113d posal the Free State government percent of This, areas must have all the rc-f sourcrs of toal. gold and platinum‘ which is “neXPwTed-Yovercoat of Irish ‘Frieze which his bother wore during his trip to Ireland on a German submarine. and any other resource found orig-m; rem. was returned w mm by any other continent. They may be inaccessible today but we do not know what tomorrow will bring." Irish May Claim Casements Body. DUBLIN, M21111! 26—(CP)-Pro- posals to convert Pentonvillc Prison London. into a housing site has prompted an agitation among Irish Republicans to have the body of Sir Roger Casement transferred to Ireland for burial. Executed for high treason during the war, Case- ment was buried near the prison ivali under a slab murked with the initials “R. C." Among those supporting the pro- should request the British govern- ment to hand over the body are Sir Roger's brother. Thomzm Casc- meni, now retired civil servant. Professor Eoln MacNeill. brother of the former Governor-General of the Free State mid Mrs. Tom Clarke. c. senator and widow o.’ one oi’ the executed signatories of the Proclamation of the Pish Republic at the Easter Rising of i916. also supported the appeal. Tom Casement h» preserved the TRAP F [SHERMAN ’S HA ULERS One of the most useful 'machines on the market for fisherman, well made of good heavy material, gear, pinion and bearings, fitted with grease cups. equipped this hauler with foot clutch which h very convenient in case the rope should get caught, instead of stopping the engine. all you have to do is put your foot on the louver» which releases the gear. The gegr is driven with a 2 H. P. Air Cooled Stationery Ellllne. l thoroughly reliable machine, Write for Photo and best price to-day. Iii» ' We have also iii» Ii it Scotland Yazd some time ago. In a statement expressing hi5 support for the request that the body be transferred, he said it was his brother's wish. expressed ire- quently. that he should be buried in Murlough Bay, Flair-head, County Antrim. facing Rathlln Island. This is in Northern Ireland but MLCa-se- mcnt declared he would regard the remains as belonging to the nation and would Bgree to the wishes of the people in regard to burial in the Free state. Sean Fitzpatrick. Secretary of the National Groves Association-an extremist Republican body-said that he was sure Casement would have been satisfied "to have his remains kept in bondage in an Enszlisl-i jail until the country which he gave his life to free has been ltberated from British domin- ation." It is regarded as probable the re- quest for the transfer of the hrdy will be made by the Irish Free State, in the event of the demoli- tion of the prison. ‘VAR. ON GOPHFRS AID!“ ISY BONUS (By The Csniuilln Press) INDIAN HEAD. $RSIC., March 26 -'I‘here may be a bit of a bonus for the early bird in this district who gets his Robbers at the first of the season. Members of the council arr studying a suggestion this season be extended to cope ~-ith the pests. Last year the municipality paid ut $750 for gopher tails. The ani- “mils, who thrive on dry years. were sported more harmful than grass- ioppers. It is considered likely the “axon will be extended after June 1 and a bonus given for the early DOGS PRODUCE REVENUE VICTORIA. March 26-13088 Ire worth more than lawyers in Van- couver. In the private bills com- mittee of the British legislation. Mayor G. (7. McGeer, of Vancouver, estimated his city collected $10,000 .WQI'Q present including her own chll n. grand-children and great- gran wzhildren. Mrs. Morrison came and family in the Wapella district o! southern Saskatchewan. Qhe has s vivid memory and can tell you, with detail. many of the early incidents in he: life in 800t- lmd and u, Wopella. She remained on her him imtil 1920, capable o! pitching has and doing a day's work with the nest o! the family. Her husband died in 1915. Early to bed. mt least eight hours good sleep, and up with the birds is her simple recipe for longevity. health and happiness. Five of her eight children are living on the prairies. iNtrs. Mourlsorfs girlhood days were went at South Ulst. kwerness. She was born o. twin. on 8t. Pat- rick's dw. March l7, 1835. Her sis- ter died at. the age of eight years. The twins were two of six children in the Meir-risen fB-Tflfl§'~—ffl.rtn€’l‘ uric‘ fisher fdik of the district. Veterans of “85” Plan Re-union (By II. A. Ilorwy. Cumdlan Press Stan’ Writer) ‘ - , March 25--(By The Canadian Pressh-‘Fnere ls n. well- worn path around a. plain tomb- stone in st. Boniface Cemetery. There are ‘ , make the sign of the moss. The stone mriks the grave of Louis David Riel. Metls leader in the Northwest rebellfh whose bid for self-government in Saskatchewan led to his execution on Nov. 19, 1885. Tragedy stalked through the poplar-blot! hills surrounding Bat- oche. in northern Saskatchewan, 50 years ago. There was delay in rec-' ognlzing rights of Metis Indians to land on which they squatted. A shot was fixed at Duck Lake and only prompt mobilization o! police and volunteers averted a general Indian Uprising. Today. veterans of Canada's last nrontier war are planning a. 1e- union. Survivors of Toronto's con- tingent of Grenadier Garards, Roy- al Engineers from Halifax, Bolton's Scouts,_ from Blrtie, the "Little Bled: Devils" from Winnipeg. and a handful of buffalo hunters from the plains will toregather at Winnipeg and other centres early inMay in anawertothe calloi’ memory. ‘The old guard will much once again in retrospect. The lean brown look will have gone. perhaps. from the faces o! those who set out from Resins and QlfApllll-flle on s. soo- mile march through deep snows of a late winter. And the step of the men who served with Ottor, at Battleford, and Strange. at Edmon- ton ,will lack the firmness of youth. In their old outfits of green and khaki. red, yellow and blue, they will bivouac for" a few days. Camp fires will wink ohm more and make possible a re-valuotion of historical persons and events that mark the half-century pages of Canada's his- tory. They one one legion now- Metls und whites-bound by legis- lative mechanism that governs a democratic people. _ There arc four re-unions planned for more than 30" sirvivors of the old Norihivcst Field Force now scattered from the Atlantic to th." Pacific. Maritime veterans will. meet at Halifax. Those in Ontario and Quebec will rzatlier at Toronto. Survivors in the ivcs‘. will gather at Winnipeg and Vancouver. There are’ large Nortliwrst F"eld associa- tions nt each of these points. DEATH SEPARATES occasionally < people pause with bowed head and‘ BROTHERS‘ RE- UNION (By The Canadian Press) can McColl, employc of the Pacific Qrrfil. mater-n Railway, played the Good Samaritan and found a brother he had not. seen ~fnr 21 separate them again. died a few heirs later. until Duncan fMlIld ‘n do: licenses and only $4,100 from itsjuwyers. , hem BRINGING UP FATHER QUmNm-h 39-- Ma-Tflh W-Dlm‘ value of a more aggresslw l i l i vev-rkthen ‘death intervened to has produced evidences of lack of i bnl ce in he far McColi noticed a mun, obviously-‘pur-ziigulariy to.» in Iliiiigiiiii" ill. hanging on desperately to the and potato prdqu¢uon_ Many lamb "m"! 0f I- hmfi! Wilfldflh 11¢"- efs are in the unfortunate position He helped him inside and called a o; hum; an Bvuhble “on” 5pm doctor. When he learned the sick m1“ “m, mum“ and n0 h“; w man's name. he reooznized him as convert the surplus into a. readily hi8 510th". 986W!‘ Mwoll- HEIDI‘ marketable and profltabl: product. W"? BMMTR- Dun. Jack Hector direction o! n more elaborate and Duncan Mccoll. natives of scheme of livestock proluction. Glendale, N. 8., had ported in Vun- whmm o", g pa“ o; yum ‘m wvver ‘t! rem flee and Hector bad undoubtedly prove to be the “mo. lost touch with the other three and most profitable production pol- him 41ml 1°? for tho province. of pasture serious‘ SIMPSIIN BOATS and DRESSES OII SALE FIIIIIAY llT 8.30 A. M. FROlVl TO $25 Gay spring dresses just 0E the designer's tables spec- ially priced to bring tidy savings. Novelty cheers, novelty crepes, novelty prints, plain sheets, styled with the clear-cut. trim lines that are making this spring’s frocks look definitely new. Our offering of coats and suits is exceptional in value and style, Domestic and im- ported tweeds and fine wool weaves that will make it a. pleasure to shop at R. P. Slmpsons. Queen Street port has been given the live stock industry through the success that has been attained by the efforts of producers in the enlarged produc- tion of turnips. mangels, grain and pea mixtures for hay. any’ of alfalfa. Some very fine yields of the latter have been observed in different sec- tions of the province, and if is felt that, if good sired is procured and a proper system of soil cultivation Report of Dept. 0t Agriculture In the annual report of the De- partment of Agriculture Mr W. R. Show reports as follows: The season of 1934 was in many respects one of steady recovery. With the exception c! hay, farm crops produrrd abundant yields. Lack of moisture duh-mg the grow- s-‘as r. for two ye in =u"c:s- _ - u the nay tonnage, while t-‘w- znfrrioi- r|it"iity' affected iIL‘. flow of milk, with u resultant de- crease in volume of supply deliver- ed at Crenmeries and Cheese fac- to: 12s. Fortunately tin- autumn months were wa m ant‘ lotc grazing condi- tions were nvnra. . This proved a. grex. help in cons ruin: tl icziuc- cd hay supply. and xvtiile man p.r- tioir; oi Canada nuvr found ii nec- .ssnry l-o reduce ifvc stock on ac- count cf low roughage suppllsa. .lt- tle diflltulty is feared. in this prov- ince in brlnuing; to» usual. numzer of animals over the wintry on the quantities of feeds in the lianis of poducers. An additional favorble fruturc is the ubunfun crop of roots. and the exceFent crop of grains. straw and potato.» in the uable forage crop will soon produce satisfactory results on the average farm. Singin»; Leads To Career Aluny n prime donna und rndio star started out on their singing careers through some chance hap- ening. In the ccse of Charlie Chamberlain, the “SingEmz Lum- berjack" who has been lmird over the Canadian Radio Ccznmissiorfs it was while holding n impromptu "recital" on a C51: .n Notional Qnllwws‘ train \‘.‘IllI" travelling from lrthurst in ih~ sam- prov- ‘ncr. ‘o Saint Job" A“ h"r pass- enger on the 58f?“ ' '1‘n hrard the voice and. beln~ impressed. made his My into the onvscnrzer coach ("m- "m-e.“ 0h m...‘ hfllids of the farmers. Tl~e lorxc‘ supply of the latter crop and tide N“ ' ' low market values has bu‘ .iie tendency of drveloping n are . thoughtful consideration oi the 0 live - stock policy for this province. sith potato growing kent within the limits of home storage faclitles and live stmk utilization. Tht season The tendency, however, is in the mod, _ _ _ _ _ _ Phone ‘I000. A very vulunble manure of W?‘ With Eoster just aifiew weeks of’; andSSpring fashions looming large R.(P. SIMPSONIS offer hundreds of dollars of fresh Spring merchandise. " uuunnrns or new SUITS and handling is exercised, this val-. nrwork from Saint. John. N. B. "onnrl" t p — a .- IlY E5 were proceeding. 0h entering, he saw the "vocalist" with l. gtoup of other passengers gathered round him as the latter sat in the sent. Realizing the voice he heard hid possibilities. the passenger 8W6 the singer his card with the result that the former lumber-jack is now singin before the microphone. Previous to this he could not rend a note of music. He is 22 years of loge. a. trifle under 6 ft.. and . weighs 174 lbs. And by the way, lhe is a real lumberlack. A little ‘over a month ago he was logging in the woods around the Lower Neplsgult River. in New Brunswick. At present he sings ballads and shanty songs but his teacher says he has great possibilities, ornnnrc ‘straws rsmytuks RISE lBy Percy Whltcfill’) (Canadlan Press tStafLCorrespond- an ) i, TOKYO. March Eli-From news- paper carrier t3 operatic star in less than a year ls the fairy-like ;rise in fortune of a 23 year oldi J-forean youth. Kin Samboku. He‘ .has been selerlcd for tit" role of lPlnker-ton in the opera Madam Bllltcflly by Nobu-Xo n iJapsn-l cse wife of John Gndsbv, Pritlshl ‘barrister of Tokyo) which she will’ more here in May with herself ur opportunity” l-IARDCO A I "BASEBURNER or FURNACE SIZES AI $|Q,QQ Per Ton (while it lash) Our object 1s to make room for fresh Oar tunlty of using the BEST grade of Bu: compare it with any American Nut, and like hundreds of our customers you will agree that it is for superior to any Goal you have previously sorr costs atflflllporton. |-|. n. LARG -o- cs. m Guards. sadtogive oumoppor- ' ontltoltsrot... . . . IMPORTANT A group of gar- ments will be re- served until 2 p.m. for afternoon shoppers. Phone 236 the title role. Miss Hare is an in- ternationally famed Higer and ha: a high reputation in Italy. Kin lost. his father. a rennllw Korean poet, and his mother. W119" he was five years of age. In abiWli poverty. he munailed to Bel B schooling of-sorts. when he who 1'1 he lvelled from Korea to “KY0 walk most oi the way. Obtain- ing cmployment as a. newsboy and picking up various odd jobs he mun- w save enough money l0 take singing lessons. Finally he bought a cheap piano on the instal- ment plan and obtained additional work as a chorus boy- Last autumn he called on ML“ Ham -who was so struck by "l" richness of his voice she under- took to train him. For long, tedi- ous months she personally 8000* vised his routine for her pupil ant Kin proved himself an apt pill)“ Then came the announcement shi had chosen him to take the lcudmu male role in the famous orern. FROM RADIO T0 ARMY IONIDON, March 2'l—-(CP.i--Col Alan G. C. Dawnay. former‘ of tlifl coldstresm Cluazds, oiho recently‘ retired as Controller oi British Broadcasting programs, has been appolnled to command the lrisii 08 Queen 8t. THEIR» g? 11-5: rue! ‘Emqigezs upg $BNT'NO11C|5ATHAT ‘- I i-iAve WITHDRAWN surfs sorr F09.