5' FEBRUARY 1o. was 1111'. UHARLCYYIDIUvvu i=- a Morning‘ Stock Letter (wane m; and on mow YORK. libb. $—With the gupreme Court meetina w 111°11- M. and with a holiday on Wed- nesdfly it is very probable the mar- ket may develop irre- ‘ ‘ll-Y 1U’ m, next few days but if volume noglnclelse materially on the 5x11 side we would continue to m]; 10; better prices. We would expect, an‘ irregular market today Wm. lrobalble strength in stock firllnaikere, mbbey. Owens, Ford, General American, and Chrysler. v Stock Prices Push Forward On Mt'I. Mart l (c. 1'. By Guardian's Special Wire) MONTREAL, reb. 0-—Prices slanted upward at the close of Montreal Stock Exchange Satur- day after the majority ‘of issues managed to breast profit-taking waves. A half-dozen soft spots were in evidence but gains held a. good margin over losses. Fractional im- provement was shown by utilities, papers and a number of other is- sues. Selective demand boosted a few as much as two points. In the power division Montreal, Brazilian, Corporation, Canada Northern, International. Quebec and Shawllligcn w o r k e d fractionally higher. Bell Telephone 10st a. cou- ple of points on its first transfer in recent sessions. . Steamship issues again moved higher on seasonal demand and anticipation of coming businea im- provenmnt. Canada Steamships preferred jumped 1 1-2 points. to 14 1-8, a new high for c. year or more. The common added a minor frac- tion. Among the metals Consolidated Smehers dropped five points while International Nickel and Noranda fluctuated mildly but nnished even. Fractional firmness was shown by Bathurst Paper. St. Lawrence Cor- poration preferred and Dryden. 8t- Lawmncc Paper preferred, Howard Smith and Corporation common were unchanged. . Gains of about two points each were pasted by Woods Manufactur- ing preferred and Dominion Textile while Canada Cement preferred some a b01111- Ssies totalled 14 005 shares; bond . 85.21”- ~ Miscellaneous (Canadian Pies) MONTREAL. Feb. 6- Wheat, ncr no 2 95. Barley C W no 3 45. Oats, feed no 1 36. Flour spring wheat ilrsts $5.60. Flour seconds 85.20. Flour bakers $5.30. Flour winter wheat ahoicc $3.75. Flour white corn $4.00 Bran ton $19-25. Shorts tOn 620.25, Mddlings ton $2525. Rolled oats bag 00 lbs $2110. Cheese no 1 Ont col 12. Hav no 2 per ton oarlots $9.00. Butter no 1 22 3-4 t0 28 1-4. Ezzs in cartons A 1 large 30- Eggs A medium, 28. Egg.- A puilets 27. ‘Potatoes 60's P E I mts $1.35 to l .40. 90's P E I oobbiers $1.30 t0 61-35. 80's P E I mts 31.20-81.25. 80's P E I cobble 81.10-61.15. 80s Que mts $18.05 to $1.10. 80's Que no 2 00 to $1.00. (Canadian Press) paients, patents. Southern Pacific, Oliver NEW YORK-Crown Cork and Seal has acquired the -Aclne Can Company of Phil. i marks expan- sion in the field of manufacture of ageneral line of plain and litho- graphed cane and the - tin boxes. cans. sanitary cans and all types oi tin‘ boxes and metal containers and packages. Report Canada Dry Gingerale and subquartcr ended Deo- 31 sub- ject to audit showed net loss $51,- 564 after depreciation, interest. federal taxes and other deductions against net profit $3.579 in Dec. quarter 1634. MINING (Canadian Press) L TORONTO, Feb. 9—A mildly weak‘ tone prevailed on Toronto mining share market- Saturday. Big issues traded in decidedly light volume at fairly steady prices while a. moderate amount of lio- uidatlon continued in secondary and penny golds. The gold share index dropped .36 to 131.09 and the miscellaneous minm index .16 to 134.67. Aggregate volume was 1,- 563,000 for the two hour session. Syvanite in the medium-price golds. closed l_0 cents down at 2.- 79. Maoassa stiffened to show a gain of 2 cents. Pioneer lost 25 cents and Hollinger l-B- The few gainers of small am- ounts among the golds were Little Long Lacfl Wrisht 1111181881168. Siscoe. God's Lake, Cariboo and Canadian Malartic. Ease mate's were slow. Noranda weakened 1-2 while Hudson Bay. Sudbury Basin and Falconbridge closed higher. . TORONTO, awn. o- Stocks (ion Put (‘llcul ~liel (‘lllboug . lllcrlcy Dome llnlll Expl . Fllliorallo iirllllnln l. (lramloro Granada . .. (lreclu- . . . (llnlunr Ilulcrmv “flfll liock lint-lull" llolllngcr lloulontvlul MONTREAL, PTO. Q- PYlCGI Uilirlllljrl moved slightly higher when trad- ,.n"y‘,nnu'm,; 111i.’ volume increased on the pro- Pei-run .. duce section of Canadian commod- 11st (‘oh - ity exchangstoday. }.f‘,_',':°,“.‘,'o"' Butte: Spot-Sales: 125 boxes p10,..."- we:t rl-graded, 23; 100 Que grass Prclnlr-l‘ == 1-1- 1:": ‘it. ~ 911cm shot-Ont white l0 11-4 r155‘ .;..¥;.- .' l0 11 l-2. col 11 1-2 to 12. Reno iloill Essa Boo-Ont A large 21-21:; A 1M1» - medium as m 2s, A pullets as a 24. 333,111? -_ __—'"'_ 3?." ‘if? ' . 0H‘ . . - - . . . .. New York Curb 3113i...‘ ~ - s: sill}... guvgllad by Plirlolll and Cnlnpllly 51"} 233i" Illlll" (‘u boll! Dinar.“ “uk .‘eh-‘. cilia-i... r " ' H l Anita " Iiocka 01"" L." - '1‘ .. illrl-Qioff: " 1}‘, '1‘:::|.r;ulac . all-e l4 sum-r; .. .' wit‘ (Canadian Prue) ltocks 4m" Cyan a . Ame: Gas Etc ... . Am" 51111 Pew . Amer Sup Pow 2:01: Gas ElicA . . . .. Alderman 13% as c9; ___ _ ' _ Brett Tr - - (Ian Marordni . u l.‘ C“ m" l? olllfl flew n‘ 2 "@010 Pet .. .. "i- Maah-u... 3'1‘ ardo!CanA....... 251-2 . o3 1111 Oil Penn ., "E0111!!! . . m.»- mm . 1a f WJCQT- - when» and Montreal-millil- “lvmnw msas-u"' 51M ‘rm-moan closed un- luw"!!! wrong; mar-s “m, w” 1}.“ “'5. m" ‘t. M 25-31 0011b. .. bench franc at sea cents and even. A TIONS ' . Prices Hold F i r m O n N.Y. Market (57 Frank MaoMfllen, Aasocleipd Press Financial writer) (A. P. By Guardian's Specie-l Wire) NEW YORK, Feb. 9—Priceg held well against profit-taking in the stock market Saturday, and toward the finish annealed to be gathering vitality. The final tone was about steady for the bulk of the list with strong spots cropping out here and there gen while some realizing still went Turnover in the stock exchange was 1.252.460 shares. No change was corded in the Associated Press average of 60 stocks at 60.4. The 45 utilitim shaded up .1 of a point to another new high for 1985-36. while the 15 rails were as much down and the 30 lndustrials were level, Wall street still looked on the bright side of things, in general, although many traders were not 1115110594 i0 get too far out on a. limb pending Monday's meeting of tho Supreme Court and the possi- bility that the long-expected TVA decision may be forthcoming. The shares list moved unevenly in the first hour. Then the air- crafts developed B- (oilowing. Doug- las, off more than a point at one time, recovered for a gain of as much, but backed up later to close where it started at 7). United Air- craft held an advance of 1 3-4 at 29 3-4 and Boeing ended up 1-2 at 28 1-3. . Among gainers of fractions to a point or more were U. S. Steel, Bcthlehem, Sharon Steel. Delaware 8c Hudson. and N. Y. Central. Homestuke Mining, on a few sales, advanced 22 points to 544, a new high. ‘ On the losing side for moderate amounts were Case. International Telephone. Cluett Peabody, Santa Fe, and Consolidated Gas. In the Canadian list Lake Shore lost a point at 57. Fractional losses "ocurred in Distlliers-Seagrams, Hiram Walker, Dominion Stores. Canadian Marconi and Imperial Oil. Suchissues as Dome Mines. McIntyre-Porcupine, Teck Hughes. Brazilian, Canadian Industrial Al- cohol. Ford of Canada, Massey Har- ris and Quebec Power were slight- ly higher. MEI. Stock (Supplied by Pliflelil nml Company Memlu-rn 0| Monircul stock exchange llml Curb Market) Sim-kn Upon Last Allilllll .. 200 Bllillurllt 1755i llrll 'l'l‘l l-l’! llrzizlllllll . - . 13M lll‘l-\\' (‘orp i flll .. .. 111)}, (‘an .\‘ur 1'1‘ 24 (‘llll (‘llrl Flillllll . '- lll}. (‘all ('\'ll\‘_‘lll. . -' 1 C1111 lml Al . ~_' 111,44 (‘an 1km .. . - 127., (.‘(1l:llll':‘(~. . .. i 2i) (‘or-k Plow . “.1. N11}, Dist s g5 ac Dom 2177’, lloln . . .3 72 imp '1‘. '1 . ‘Ill 14% “nanny Ilnrris . (1% ii lllt .\ c3; l in»; 491,11 110C011 at .. iii 1117;, Mont Fowl-r . . zmg. fill Kilt Brow . 411i, 41 Pow (‘urp . H7); 111%. Sllnwl ,;.;n 211,4. 211/1 Sou Can I'm»- . 151% 13% Slur-l 0f (‘all . lllfl; (l2 TJTJKS Bk oi‘ (‘all . l-ik of Cum .. Bk Mimi .. 208% Blioi‘ .\'. S. [loyal lll: o Currencies NEW YORK, Feb. 9—L9BdiIl$ currencies maintained a steady tone in terms of the United States dollar in the foreign exchange markets Saturday. The Canadian dollar improved from s. premium of 3-16 to [-32 of one per cent. The French franc was up .00 l-4 of a. cent at. 6.60 1-2 cents and the pound‘ sterling un- changed at $15-02 1-4. The flow of gold from the Unit- ed States continued. Shipments arranged during the day were $3.- 935,000, bringing the amount ship- ped or consigned abroad since the move started Monday to $20,676,- 000. PRODUCE (Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Feb. O-Egg prices moved higher on ‘ ‘ 1 open produce markets last week while butter also finished firmer. Po- tatoes and cheese were even. Graded egg shipments in cal-lots orlesswerefltoflfloentsadoeen for A large and 25 to 25 1-4 cents for A medium.- Oheese was l2 cents per pound for no 1 Ontario colored. Butter was firmer at 23 1-4. to 23 1-2 cents ps1‘ pound for cerlcts or less of no 1 while lots to retail- ers were 24- for solids and 25 for prints. Potatoes were unchanged at 01.35 to-$1.40 m Prince Edward Island mountains and 11.30 to $1.- 35 for oobblen. per 90 pound bag- In so pound bags, P. l. f. moun- tains were $1.20 to $1.26, cobbler: 01.15 to I130. New Inlnswicks 0i.- 10 to 01.16. Quebec $1.06 to 01.10 and Quebec no 2 60 cents to 01. A large wooden chopping bowl makes an infers-sting device for holding fruits or vegetables for a table centerpiece during winter en- tertaining 1- IV. ~ Y. Stock Exchange (Supplied by Pltfield and Colnpnly Members of Montreal Stock exchange and Curb Market) QDQI LII‘ Stocks lion Gus (‘u Corn Proil Cur Wright Deere lilac Allin Eric 1i. .11 . Firestone . . 2121.2, (lell 171w" 39%, Gen Fimllri 337,, Gen hint 57 ‘ Goodrich 19% lltl Mo: l i1‘ 15' lll Con Mk lnt llllr 51 Inter uu. 111,5 Johns .\l.-lll (‘srp 10% 1101p) Kenna-colt . . . 33y, 33y, Mont \\'i'l‘\l so sou liurruy (‘nip . 18% 10 hilt (‘lll-ll lll-i.’ .. . .. 28% 281/; New York .\' 11 .. .. 51/; 51);, Nor All! Co .. . 281;, Nor l'lll~ 21 Puck .\i I . gag, Purllulnll. i 111),’, Penn ll l: 35% l'hii ml r . . . . . .. 45 Pull Ser (‘up 41 Pulc 0.1 1.. . 20 Rodin .. . . . . .. 13 ltulllc k lll Urpil 7 71/. Scnra I100 . 04 611/1 Shell 'l'llllvn Uli . . 17 11% South Pal: . .. 31% '31 Std Oil x J sq .‘ udl-bnker Texas Corp Units-ll (.orp Uri lill Air lllfiml Gus lll lI h‘ ltllll . U S Slop] (‘u Vnlllliiluln Woullvur: l; M Ti. CURB (Supplied by Pltfleld and Company Mcmllcrn of Montreal Illmk exchange lellel Montrclll Curb Millie!) Stocks Open Last ll1l.l\l St 227 l a 0115i from .\ .. “if Hill)’ Oil 33y, llltcr Pril- llr/g "y, lli-lcllcl-s . . . . . . . .. 117, 11% EXCHANGE (Canadian Press) Closing exchange 1‘al;e5;_ At Montreal-Pound 5.01 5-32; U- S. dollar 99 25-32; franc 6.68. At New York-Pound 5.02 1-4; Canadian dollar 1.00 7-32; franc 0.69 1-2. At Paris-Pound 75.01 fr; U. S. dollar 14.94 fr; Canadian dollar 14.97 fr In g>id—Pound 12s; U. dollar 58.51 cents; Canadian dollar 58.64 cents. (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Feb. il-Forelgn aXahanse steady. Great Britain demand 1118h 5.02 1-4; low 5.02; close 5.02 1-4; 60 day bills 5.01 1-4; France 6.69 1-2; Italy 6.06; 3e). gium 17.07; Germany 40.80; Can- ada 1.00 7-32. BRUDENELL SCHOOL Report of Brudenell School Ne, 5a Kings Co. Grade IX: Athol Robertson. Grade VII: l Sandra. Ferguson; Z Blair Mal-area: s Bruce McLe-ren. Grade V: 1 Kenneth McLaren; 2 Athol Dewar; 3 Tens Stewart. Grade IV: Mao Nicholson; 2 Olive Shaw; 3' Doris Nicholson. Grade III: 1 Stewart Dewar; 2 Jean McIntyre. Grade I: - Jenni, MoLal-en; 2 Stanley Ferguson. Perfect attendance: Sandra For- guson, Athol Dewar, Btewalt Dewar, Jennie McLalen. THE "PERFECT" LUNOIIEON One of the most vital and vigor- ous men I have ever known, a physician writes 3w for his lunch- e011 every day a plate of thin bread and butter and drank two or three tumblers of milk. "I cannot con- centrate or wcrk properly during the important hours of the after- noon if I eat a stodgy three course meal u. one thirty." Iils dict was physiologically perfect easily ‘ ‘ ‘ and 1M1 in money and labour. I frequently advise patients to follow this plan of bread and butter and milk luncheon. which may be supplemented , al- though it is not necessary, by cheese or an apple. The hasty eat- ing. after long waits, of not very well cooked iunoheons in the rush hour is responsible for a good deal of the indigqtion of business men and women. "Indigestion" leads to many more serious ills and most sufferers from this health die- ebility know that it makes for ir- ritability whiohia devastating both to business efficiency and har- mony in the homo" NOVILT! IIUITS Chinese gooeeberrles, an Oriental edtion of the homely _ ‘ .v now being grown in Ingiand with succsl are among the "novelty" fruits of the moment (says the London Dally hiegreph.) In appearance they are the same cvm fruits, with ehliry nut- brcwn covering. which is sliced shape, bu‘. lltler ln else than our. u u rlauaru \ ~- ‘=57 w. c. PITFIELII We Recommend the Purchase of MARITIME TELEGRAPH Alill TELEPIIOIIE co, no. Common Stock Price 15y, Yield about 4% 156 Richmond Street i... 00., m. As some would tender empty 1111i" WW To silken gown upon e withered form. There draped like learning on a 511' praise the fakirs empty flash: - No inner light, no compensating sift. Yet would we force it on to emin- ence, , , To gain a point or win a favored en Uncaring conscience, sense or con- sequence. So ran our weary thought through weary hours That mark our day's advanced perplexity; When men must follow now each sorry lead And strange experiment of twisted or minds deformed throughout the forming years Of youth and manhood by such schools as leek To educate the mind and not to tr And itself; Till, trained as seals, to toss and spin a ball, They can not fail nor either can they win, Save those poor scraps that. thrown within their pen, Must constitute reward and susten- ance. ain, guide the mind to educate Where now the ancient culture of our land That honoured only purity? where now those would blaze A trail where trail was never blaz- ed before? Who laid foundations, of a nation- hood, ~ Secure in thought that thought would rise To change, renew, but never destroy, The art of thirlking that learned to know: Who thought to live and thought evade, Nor to achieve unthinking excell- ence. learnlng's souls heroic newer to they not to Must we despair to read the horoscope Of what the future promises or holds’! Gray walls that loom where in- mate's uniform Of mind and body pace an end- less round Of ritual and routine to the end Of dull existence! Sad futility! _ Alike 1o reasoning and to seeing dead, » Tied to the past and to the future blind; Like coal pit mules, that brought above the ground, By habit bent to fear the light of day, They haunt the pitmouths till again returned To lower life's unthinking servi- tude How long, how long, this burden- ed atmosphere So burdened now with every 6111b"- ed ache 0f thought conforming but to walls of stone Of office, prison, to the hopeless quest For life and freedom, moving end- lessly Within the confines of sad circum- stance- How sad, alas, the tricked men- tallty Of man estranged to Nature and to Life- Till, “Halls of learning." could you so err To “ from schools to stalls of merchandise, Where every trinket, every pander- ed lure Must cater now to popular desire? how A dunce goes in. an idiot comes out Stripped bare of s11 that native to himself. Thrown on the times, unbalanced and insen 'I‘o fend and an ape Of hybrid mind. half animal half marl That fills his stomach while his fellows starve, In world of plenty, where his vac- e. fightaa stranger and ant mind would thwart and strangle every effort made To change the plan, the p. edent or rule Of academic utter uselessnesn- The sum and substances of what learning is, . That knows ten thousand vague uncertainties, And not“; dolen simple honest tru Of plain and ordinary common sense. t James M. MecLean, 2146 Nelson Ave.. New Westminister British Oolumble. open with a knife, distlloslng the fruit within. Cape gooseberl-ies in their leafy oases are also in season lust now. This is one of the most delicious of fruits for home crystailisin: on ac- count of its deli-rate favcur and hill!!! . Charlottetown. Edllflatilln You CANT “mix ISLANDER E Bigelow Thompson says in The Boston ‘Transcript: _ ' "When Robert Haherty was mak- ing his cinema on the Island oi Aran, Patch Ruadh, ‘Red Pat,’ was missing. Search revealed him preening his wishers behind a hugil rock so he would ‘look rlgh " on the screen. Red Pat. is in Boston with others of his ilk, on canvasses oi‘ Louise Misheli, one of the most un- usual personalities among the I younger American artiste, who is having her first Boston exhibition. "They are all there: simple. straight-forward folk in homespun; shawls and tam-o-shanters ,and ‘tls n0 blarhuy that Miss Mishell rates them the race of races. "Of her observations in Aran she said to the interviewer: “They dance their old square dancs to a melodeon, or violin, and they dance with astounding grace. The older generation speak a. little English but the youngsters have only Irish. They taught English in the schoob before the revolution. " ‘ ‘Inishmaan little boys still wear their red petticoats so that the fairies will think they are lit- tle girls and not take them away. The women on the island are ex- ceedingly handsome and big-boned and red-haired . . .They wear no underwear at all. The skirts are so weighted that they never seem to fly up. "' When one comes into Aran it's "Cead mile Faielte," a hundred thousand welcomes. They wouldn't pose for anybody unless they liked them. It certainly isn't a “ of money. They are happy to do you a favor to sit, but one daren't mention money. It Just isn't nice. Of course, you can give them some- thing, a. drink of- porter or some cigarettes, but one just can't hire an Aran Islander. They are not to be bought at any price. "The islanders eat no green vegetables at all-s. little fish, some meat, mostly mutton and potatoes. They have no breakfast, dinner or supper; just drink tea and cat bread whenever they are hungry. They marvelied at the way I could eat lettuce and soup and meat all at the same time. Of course, they have no fruits and an apple is a great luxury to them. They eat surprisingly sparingly for such big people who are oufdoors most of the time. No spice at all but a ‘lit of salt, and lots of sugar. run rave SCOTTISH rnir It is one hundred and fifty years ago—-lst January l786—since the death of the Rev. Alex Bryce, the eminent gecmetrician, who was minister of the parish church of Kirknewton, in the Presbytery of Edinburgh. In the year 1750, having occasion to visit Stirling, and knowing that by an Act of the Scottish Parlia- ment this burgh had the keeping of the standard pint jug, he ‘ Telephone i D0 _BICAUBE of the extensive i ldd it covers. and the frequency with which it is med by the public, the Telephone Directory has be- coma recognised as an ideal medium for advertising. at Telephone lnblcrlbell rep- resent a preferred clue of buyers from whom your message will Illll the ut- most results. B; lure to get your advertisement in be- fore February 15th. to LIMI wonl. Other rates on appllentlon. tlon, and listings will be closed on February 15th, a Persons who intend to be- come Telephone subscribers a wish changes of any kind made in their listings, should send their requests to our‘ nearest Business Office at once. We cannot undertake issue to orders received after February 15th. Please note carefully the closing; date. lSLANO TELEPHONEi00, Advertising Rates-Payable in Advance Central Guardian locals do r vm - u per word; Aunouneemeslta on’; Colnlgg gveellignlo-Ipflr 2:13“ ha“, k 2o per word; In Memos-lam Notices, 70o per inch) Lists 0:111 n] d snlflmu n""l“"' end-v 9'9» 4° DB1‘ Willie; Letters of Gondola‘; ‘Tum! per inch; Noliceeof Thanks and Appreciation, 70o per lrlch or 3 per Minimum Charla In! any adverillemgn! twenty-flu centi, Directory 1' NEW Issue of the Island Telephone Directory is w in course of prepara- this time, and those who give efiect in the new TED. Gllllffled Miscellaneous For. Sale OLD NEWSPAPER-S FOB SALE. Apply Guardian Office. 1-30-tf. HORSE BLANKETS T0 CLEAR, 81.75. S. L. Hardy s; co, L445 SCRATCH PADS-PADS ‘IF ‘I00 sheets 5 x 7%. Price 3 cents per pad. Postage extra. Guardian Office. roa sALI - AUCTION roan- Fl". FY1180 111d Whilst Score Cards. Guardian Central Job Printery. FOR. SALE-FOX FEED SMELTS fresh frozen, also Crushed Shell for poultry very cheap. Earle Fisheries C0. L-835-2-6-6i. FOR. SALE-NEWLY iFlllisl-IIJVED 701mg cow-grade, shorthorn. A. Ravenhfll, Union Road. _ L-8l9-2-8-3i. HOUSE FOR. SALE-BEST LOC- aiity. All modern conveniences. Almost new. Priced right. Apply P. O. Box 43, City. L-822-2-6-T-S-M-6i. FOR SALE — PURE BBED GER.- rnan Police dog, one yea: old; Murdock Corbett, New Wiltshire. L-849. FOR. SALE-WOOD ramvl-Fn-T teen acres hardwood situated Stanhope Road. Kings County. Reasonable. Apply H. M, Broth- ers, Cardigan. -8l2-2-5-W-11‘-M-6i. ESCAPE!) FEMALE POX 32 C AVU. Reward. Arthur Woo. Alexandra. L-B17-Z-B-S FOUND - A REMEDY FOB W01! ries. Safe, sure and lasting cor. tentment assured. Sun Life pol cies are the medium_- For parth ulars consult J. A. Moore, Curr. Bldg, Charlottetown. Wanted WANTED — l0 TONS STE-AW, 5 bushels oats. A. R. MacKay, n: 11191131911. L-aeo-z-a- WANTED —- BUSINESS PDOPL excellent room and board, ce‘ tral. Apply Guardian. L-E Female Help Wang IIOUSEKEEPER. WANTED-MU.‘ be capable of looking afte-l- chi] ren. References required. Apl to "J," 0.0. Guardian L-i Male Help Wanted WATKINS DEALER RECENT]. compelled to give up establism route in Prince County. Exce lent opportunity for responsib party. Good earnings. Car neede- Credit furnished. Write immer lately, A. J. McVeigh, J. R. Wai kins Company, 2177 Masson St. Montreal, Que. N-179-2-8-10-17. the Magistrates for permission to view, it, as 1t was kept suspended from the roof of the Council House. It was taken down and given to him, but after examining it minutely he was convinced that 1t could not be the standard jug- Two years afterwards, it occurred to him that this standard might have been borrowed by some of the coppersmitils for the purpose of making legal measures for tho citiz- ens. and having learned that a man named Urquhart had joined the rebel forces in 1745, he followed up this clue. He found that this coppersmithk shop utensils had been brought to public sale, and on Mr. Bryce ob- taining permission to inspect arti- cles in a garnet,- which had been thrown aside as useless, he found the only legal standard of weight and measure in Scotland amongst the rubbish there. Having now received ‘permission to carry it. with him to Edinburgh, his first object was to ascertain precisely by means of it the number of cubic inches and parts of a cubic inch to be found in a true Scottish pint. After seventeen trials with clear springs and river water. several of which were made in the presence of the Magistrates of Edin- burgh, the content of the jug was found to weight at the medium of the trials. 54 ounces. 3 1110i". 3° grains or 26.180 grains, English In this way, by the recovery of the Stirling standard pint 1118. after having obtained the above results by its means, Mr. Bryce. at the desire of the Magistrates of Edinburgh, superintended the ad- justment of the weights and mea- sures kept by the Dean of Guild Court, and for his Services to the city was made a burzels and B11114 brother in January 1754. By Act of the Scottish Parlia- ment, Edinburgh had the kaeplnl of the standard ell. Perth the reel, Lenark the pound, Linlithgow the pint jug. This arrangement was made by the Legislature with a view to improving thg itemal com- merce of the country, as the truf- fickcri of this rude age aitempted frequently frauds in regard to mea- sures lience it may be inferred that Edinburgh was then the principal firlot, besides Stirling having the . PARADISE CREAM One tablespoon granulated gela- tine, I cup cold milk. 1-2 cup powdered sugar, 1 cup blanched al- monds, l cup candied cherries, 1 dozen marshmallows, 1 mint whipp- ing cream, few grains salt, 1-2 tea- spoon vanilla- Heat 1-4 cup milk and add marshmallows. Let stand while market for cloth. Lanarl for wool. and Stirling for distilled and fer- mented liquors-JAMES BAIR-D.‘ I‘. S. A. 800$ Crownhlueetllolel Not-In! Infill: with Crown Princm and eoedingueertheiwilles-Qnh mixing pudding. Soften gelatine i: remaining cold milk. Stir over ho water until dissolved. Add to marsh maliows with sugar, nuts coarse], chopped, cherries cut in quarter: salt vanilla and cream Whlpper until firm. Turn into a mold and le stand in refrigerator for twenty- fcur hours. Unmold and serve witr I- Barnlsh of whipped cream anc whole cherries. charters M. Sklugulfl. ll NW"!- omm Prince om was m of the ""11 1°‘ 1'1"“- mmhw“ 1°’ “m” their m children u» Princess ma: marchers n. the funeral pn- Ragunhill and Astrid. an eldlh. eellonollilngflcrf-Yvdl-I‘ lllll.