A i . ,resaugg_gy . ., . . , , , - _. GIANTS and JESTERS In Public‘ Life T. Raymond St. John, New York attorney. who has been p named guardian to rep _ ‘ the Dlonng quintuplets in sufs estimated to nnwilnt of $500,000. 'l‘.re suits, St, John explained. have grown out of heavy Chriitmfll allel of dolls without permission of the qulntu. picks. St. John was appointed at request of David Croll. Ontario's. minisier of public welfare and a guardian 0' the “W; girls. I Wllderl with the resignation o: the Thin rulunrn is reserved for news of local interest hut advertising of n newly nature may he inserted at 4 cents n word strictly payable In tuhunce- - CONFEDERATION LiFE INSUB ANCE. 11-6798-‘7-12-312 ENTER/IAIN FOR. VISITOR-Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cudmore entertained Tuesday evening in honour of Mr. Ed. Shaw. Winnipeg, RENEWED INTEREST IN TOURISTS-—A renewed interest in the tourist traffic is indicated by the increaszd number of contribu- tions in the City, and it is gratify- ing to note that interest in the country has been aroused. A ‘sub- staniial cheque has been- received from B. Compton, Lid. Belle River, which is much appreciated by tho Travel Bureau. WEDDING BELLS -- A pretty wedding took place Saturday in St. Patrick's Church. Ottawa, the bride being Miss Maris Fink, daughter oi Mr. and Mrs. Vaimore Fink, of Matiawa, and the bridegroom, Mr. George Fraser, or the Royal Can- adian Mounted Police, son of the i-lcn. George Fraszr of Souris, P. E. I. The bride was given away by Dr. J. Fink and wore a dress of coral rust silk crepe with hat and shoes to match. She carried a bou- quet o: camations and sweet peas. An informal reception was held af- ter the ceremony at the re idence, of Dr. Fink, after which Mr. andl Mrs. Fraser left for their wedding trip. Going away the bride wore a ‘cute the ‘nhematmnal finding’ M: a smart navy blue coat trimmed with fur with a navy b‘ue hat. They will reside in Ottawa-Montreal star. RAT CHASE!) CAT -— Dctlkias Gordon of the Canadian National Hotel staff, Charlottetown. wit- nessed a surprising incident when on his way to work the. other day. i-ie was amazed to ree a large cat being pursued by a rat. The cat took refuge in a tree with the rat remaining unckrneath and survey- ing his intended victim as a do! does a. kitten. Doug threw several pieces of i0: at the rat before it could be persuaded to leave. A mwn sameilmes reverses the usual order by biting a dog but stil‘. more un- usual is a rat trying to catch a cat. “New filo-straw News. Mrs. Charles Martin, I-Iaverhfi, Mass- has been visiting her daugh- ter. Mrs. Ivan Darrach, Clyde Riv- rr for ihe past month. Miss Bertha Irving. Irethbridge. Alta" h visiting in the city the guest o." Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Gzorze T, Binn-l- Miss Irving is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Irving, formerly of Porvnal. Halifax Po rt . A rrivals . VESSELS DUE TO ARRIVE:- Feb. l'7——Gezina from Saint John- Fort Amherst from St. John's. Pilsudski. from New York. Iraocmoae ram Boston. imvland from Halifax. McKmport from \U. S. il-Clltano from New York. Nova II from Haifax. Airthrla from Glasgow. Con. Victor from New Zealand- Belle Isle from Nild ports. ill-Man. Exporter from 5t- John- Lody Nelson from B. W. f. Il-Caveller from Jamaica. D. of Redford from Liverpool. Beaverhilljrom st. John- "—Montoalm from so. John. Inrohbonk from For nut. Dom. Shipper from Halifax. Aursnia from New Ybrh. Iil-Auconia from, Barre. Antonia. from New York. 3a from Jamaica. ‘ Ooirnlion from St. John. Ohsdo from m. o. wol- Om. aboun- from n. a. - Would violate a. clause in the Ash- lsoon as the convention had been | (I! man 000x) Tim cousrnvArro sron AS» r Klvllftvclqrlrlmls- (Qontinued) The contention of the De DR-rt- ment of Justice reprtsentatl s w“ that tho international Waterways ‘may h"! h° lllfisdictlon in the m”? kThev held that u action B en by the Commission it burton Treaty of i842 d §‘:.*:.:.r“""r“°“ ti; "Ellis to deal with. This view 33y '12???‘ by the Waterways fldlar,‘ wzawus ice Mignault. A Can- 1 a rways member, support- kn: the Conservation view. The not was cut by the granting or the application upon certain conditions “whiny the government w...‘ furious at its defeat through wh 1; it regarded as the undue interfcg- moo of the Conservation Commis- n’ “hd the doom of the latte.- bfidy was sealed. There was u “Phlirsd correspondence between s- Clifford (he had been knighted {,1 1915) "d "w BOver-nmenp, wuhm chairman in Novembe Yea-rs’ effective serviroieértglengég? Edwatdfillf Ottawa, was Mung ataxia lgfliitil the Commission was was not arblél tom"?! tOiIL-health he to its ‘Hairs. i) y muc attention As Ihave already stated the Cglmmlssion was a law unto itself. h 19W Wars it issued thousands of Villhmfls of publications, up primed outside the Printing Bureau and °°5hh8 the country fully three hundred thousand d 11 T lypflsraohv. paper and“. bin’: 1118 of these books was m.- more expensive than any other m“ °f delminwnial publica- tion. Then the editorial committee o! which I was chairman, Steppgd milieu 1918. Knowing ‘the Printing au was short of work, we Se. chi"! the passage of an order in gggdlssfeavlrlns the Conservation ove mto 10h‘ to tum an m’ printing m7‘ Mt e Government establish- n . r. White fought strenuously “Kahm the ehanse. but he had to §,“h“‘"- 1 ""111 one report. 0n the T-grsntr River Salmon Situation." e author was Mr. J. P. Babcock, an American who had secured em- ployment with the no. government The editorial committee, review; m? the mahh-shrliit. discovered that this question had been dealt with by the International Fisheries Com_ 1111581011. and that practically n11 the material appearing in Bubcockrs Paper had already been secured by the International Cnmmission 5mm other resources, and was embodied 1h 1'15 YBDOIt to be distributed as ratified by the U. S. Senate. My wmmiitee "Ported that as. the printing of this work would dupu. heavy cost to Canada, and further would create the false impression that nothing had been done by the Dominion to remedy conditions on the Fraser, no action be taken. The Privy Council accepted our recom. mendatlon and on the 9th of Jan- uary. i820, an order in council was passed approving our view. After that, whenever Mr. white and 1 met on the street, he gave me the cold shoulder. Had the editorial committee, originally created in 1911. upon the recommendation of the Joint committee of both houses on the printing of Parliament, been in existence ten years earlier, we could have saved the country hun- dreds of thousands of dollars more than we did. For instance, we should promptly have put the sion publication like "Goitre: Its Prevalence and Prevention; "The Farmers’ Handbook"; “The Farm- ers‘ Account Book"; “Flshways in British Columbia," etc. What the Conservation Commission had to do with these topics is beyond compre- hension. , The members of the depart- mental inquiry committee found that in its publicity work the Con- servation Commission had not an equal in Ottawa. By a. carefully thought out system of propaganda it made a detremined effort to ob- tain for itself credit for practically all investigations relative to Can- adian natural resources, generally ignoring the constructive work ai- ready done by the mrmanent gov- ernmental organizations. and in many cases claiming credit for their work to the detriment, in the eyes of the public, of the organiza- tion which had been responsible for its actual accomplishment. One eulogistic champion of the commis- sion said that for years twenty of Canada's foremost scholars. scien- tists and business men, had given their services free. with the 00- operation of representatives of the {cam-cl and provincial governments, much of a success of our commit- shouid take the whereupon Dr. Llonm, with m“; candour, remarked, "1 can only my flies or fishery questions." To this Mr. Sifton replied, "You h“, m °P°h mind?’ whereupon m. Jones confessed, “Not only an open mind but almost a vacant one. I shall be g lad to make the experiment for a yell-l’. and if I do not accomplish “hythhlil I Sllpflpsv someone else can take the matter up." Actually this conversation is reported in the annual record of proceedings. continued from 1912 until i918, and then the annual report for the lat. tor year statm, “Your committee §6.°°1‘Z"‘.i“°“°‘i.u"‘.{“ we...” um u W" qua e e be nggggd to undertake e lions. etc." Nevertheless during ch15 period the Conservation Conunis- Slon offered advice on fish culture, ygitgs. salmon and Whitefish; pub. a small lib f treatises, raw o expert the settlement of international, (ed. eral and protincial fishery disputes, mental committee showed that 1n the course of years the Conserva. tion Commission had encroached on the work of the different depart- ments as foDows; tilizers. farm and county surveys, demonstration farms, health of ani- mals. reports to and before the Intema- tlonal Joint Commission , and by publicity propaganda which con. fused the settled policy of the dif- ferent departments dealing with international problems. powers, stream flow, forestry, wild life, natural resources inventory, on the depletion of the sockeye salmon in British Columbia, ‘at a time when the question was being dlealt with by international negotia- t pulverized fuel, gas, nunerai fer- tilizer, mining resources survey. with fuel problems of Western Can- ada, the brlquettlng of lignite, utili- zation oi flshways, etc. that in three or four years the Con- servation Commlssion had spent thousands of dollars of public money in forset surveys in Ontario, Nova Scotla, Saskatchewan and Brit- ish Columbia; as also upon the regeneration of cut-over pulpwood lands. All this work involved ex- penditure for field surveys, com- pilation and publication, and this notwithstanding the fact that the Dominion already had and has to- day an efficient forestry service clamps on Conservation commik ‘which for years had dealt with maintained a well-equipped and managed forest laboratory. Powers of Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan” was ready for publi- cation, the Department of the m- terior raised serious objections to action being taken until ' its ' of- ficers had had the opportunity of examining the proofs. mission could not refuse and then it was found neoe extensive and EXP! ‘w After the report oi the commis- sion was finally completed, it was copied from the reports of the In- for the -purpose of conserviuii Canada's great natural resources, and had splendidly carried out their work. They did nothim of the kind. As already pointed but,‘ these "foremost ‘ ‘ " ""1 bugmm men" only came to Ot- tawa, if at all, for the annual meeting, while provincial repro- sentatives appeared only when they had something to submit ai- gwuug their particular provinces. As a sample of the commission's m,“ m mo mention an incident ‘mun hgppenefl st the annual meeting in i912. Mr. ‘ Patton, of E Those Splitting Headaches A Symptom of Disease ticn Hi lllmi l. The coulo of headache in the sec unmis- of poisonous matter in tho blood which reads with it, every moment, to all port; munusm~ W- . o 15:1!‘ Wanna; of the system must‘ be Hdlrlil) fifillfll [21 i?! cleared lip before you MI I“ hgdnchc, which is n symptom of an na- hoalthy condition of the bod!- ore Born i blood with Burdock Blood Bitters, than, l ' "No more headaches". rid o! tho ‘tho the poisonous matter from (Ovilyfilht leservod) the commission's- tsrr h; _ ed that the “presiant fgoge commission is an energetic chair- man for the committee on "firh. tries-noodle and fur-bearing. “m- 11518- From the beginning, he 6 d. work (in connection with the fisheries. had been without direc- tion from the ommittee. and the ffiafu"? i‘! the PYQBTBM. as well as , we execution 0i it. had been left officials of‘ the commission, who °n "worm or other duties could give only fl- PH-rt of their time to work. . Mr. Sifton, t Patton's stateirzgxnlttelferlfrlgrklgrhngvsf: have never succeeded in making tee on fish ri . that Dr. Joneeseiof Inc“? chairmanship." that I know very little about fish- The search for a qualified expert fishery investiga- and tried its hand in The investigations of the depart- Agriculture; with regard to fer- External Affairs; by independent Interior; in connection with water c. Marine and Fisheries; by reports on. Mines; with regard to coal, peat, Research Council; in connection The committee found, moreover, orest economics and research, and When the report on the “Water The com- y to make charges. discovered that about seventy-five per cent of it was original -data terior Department. I could go on enumerating a score of additional encroachments by the Conservation Commission on the work of the public depart- ments, but lack of space forbids. Anyway the government decided that the organization must go and at the session or 1921 a bill for its abolition was adopted by Parlia- ment. The view oi’ the Prime Minister (Mr. Melghan) was_ that the Conservation Commission had done valuable pioneer service by awakening public interest to the need of conservation. and in giving advice as to the development work to be followed. but in the 80116111- aunt's opinion with the extension M the services by the public de- partments there was. he said. all BRINGING UP FATHER ,_____.___- grit _ on mm‘ " ' ' fisrown Nporziui view of several agd"! warehouses at Delhi, Ontario, of which there are five altogether. The largest, on the ‘right, is 660 feet long. overlapping of activities which should be ended. His view was that the original intention in creating the Conservation Commission was for temporary purposes only; to ad- vise in a broad, general way on the policies to be pursued, and this having been done. the time had oome for it to was not a. murmur from Sir Clif- ford when the rwt passed, although he must have regretted the govern- ment's declsion. Mr; Whit was at- tached to the Department of Jus- tice and rendered effective aid un- til his death, as an adviser cn in- ternational questions. Several mem- bers of the commission's rative salaries with cerns. but sorbed into t e public departments. And thus-ended Canadats million dollar oonssrvation- venture. staff qua-v empower» v :::....:.*;e .t:"°*::...s::‘""-.. ‘o: private Con‘ neves, should be given attention. e mammy were a“ But ordinary gray hair gently ._.____i_____- _ BIG RAILWAY CONTRACT LONDON-The Lmldon, Midland and Scottish railway company has placed orders for $l5.000.000 in roll- ing stock including 227 newest type locomotives. onavnifrfnhm-nas caovvF-z rue. crnnuu A woman whose hair is turning gray should consider this the crowning charm of her whole at- tractive appearance, so why not welcome your gray locks when they come? T11: natural graying of the hair softens the line of cheeks and jaw.which otherwise might have some unkind changes. Some women have a. tendency to early garyness which often distres- ses them. When the natural color and sheen of the hair dulis, a good hair specialist should be consulted. disappear. . There turning white can bring a new charm and a new interest to tho features. Great care is needed to keep gray hair in a healthy condition. It wants careful brushing. and if inclined to dryness, massage with some good tonic lotion. Above all constant washing and careful set- ting are needed. If you are in- A view in one of the ageing warehouses at Delhi. Ontario, when " u may ._ weight of intwccnlt sad 24 million pounds ETWEEN the green leaf in the fields and the golden brown tobacco you buy, many things intervene, involving two main factors — Time and Processing. “~ To grant you the boon of complete smoke satisfaction, tobacco must u 7.5.000 hogsiresda can in stored, vepmmdng s net of tobacco ldlf- ~ ‘ “"**"7?_It‘-" I be aged. It must be aged exactly right, and only Father Time can do the job. He will not be hurried. Thirty months is the average period; but just leave him alone and how wonderfully he matures and mellows the leaf for you. Our tobaccos are aged by Father" Time in marry different storage warehouses located throughout the world, but the Ontario cured leaf we buy goes through the mellowing process at in a plant operated by this company. own, flue< ', Ontario, That vast warehouse at Delhi stores tens of tirousarids of wooden hogshhads packed with slowly warehouse, without a floor. maturing tobacco‘ leaf. It is an unusual The ground is covered five feet deep_witli builderb sand as insulation against earth odours and damp. Above the sand the hogsheads rise row on row, resting on stringers, with free an‘ space all around. l Plank runways between the hogshead rows provide accessto them, for removal or replacement. - For nearly ‘three years these hogsheads of selected tobacco leaf lie mellowing under the subtle influence of Father Time. Summer breezes, winter blasts, circulate around and about them, until at last the tobacco is just right, “aged in the wood", fit and ready for manufacture. We have reason to be proud of our Delhi plant. Experts from ,1 abroad have called it: "The last word in a scientific tobacco handling IMPERIAL TO OF . CANADA, BACCO COMPANY LIMITED shampoo which is particularly suit- ed to gray hair try making this one: Take a. piece of good toilet soap with a fatty basis, and finely. Put it in a perfectly clean saucepan, add warm water, about half a pint to a tablespoon of soap, and stir over the fire water thoroughly pint; of water add one and a half ~—._. V‘ wuss Your sanvrsavusraa orav A Wash oily skin with 1~oap water dolly. Ollr jut as careful misnllon- as idrv 1_ and soft. yet n you‘ when} _ H with oily, conditions use thegwionc tereiid in o. good home-made treatment, or, woeawc still, use loath;- shred it until the BY soap is To each boils and the dissolved. Shh" fore, with and‘ skins require r; FINALLY GONNA‘ XII-E A BY eoux-wa ARE BLIT- MOTHER- ing at all, powder will absorb _ conceal the defects. It will not. of course, and even if it did, porarlly. the oily condition would still exist and worse. may be able to conceal an oily cover up large pores, often caused cosmetic for an oily skin. If you use cleansing cream, apply times with ice cold water. Then use ; a mild astringent. routine in the morning. If, during (hr- day, you notice that oil shows l‘ astringent and apply fresh make- ‘_uo.“ Use a light-textured powder. and‘ greaseless foundation cream. trusting that me rnoTrFrrE§§rfi€TowAitn-' nsoovcav the oll and The many friends of Mrs. (Dr. 1... s. Doyle, president of the Vic comm Order of Nurses, will l pleased to know that she is mat ing steady progress toward reco\ ery. she has been confined to h< home for several (lays as the resu of illness, during which MYS- A- 1 Klilam is acting president of ti. tem- continue to get powdering frequently you birt too much powdering will of oil‘, excessive flow teaspoons o! slvwine. and two by a“ _ v.o.N and presided at the la‘ landd 9' hag‘ mcolmnibg: glel-ékhéhrelfefgri aifvelyxhlfintizvteshffffy rfizular meeting or that tgrganlai We 9!‘ W5 3h 9 m" l" ' ,,’ tio in the absence of e pres. Y 515° be “duh u liked‘ M“ gush’; $rmp1{m.f.nu..§2me'l§ yo‘: fi€ifllt.——MOl1CtOl'\ Times. thoroughly and use as requlred- It eugnmate gotwndi the flaws“ _____-_---- mum hop to‘ a colndprhbm Soap the water hrs the best ACHLRESISHNG BOOTS e. WALTON, FIRE-Aft?!‘ "i"- months of research. eeamelss booi that resist action of gasoline, o and acids have been produced her: it be- not after, a thorough wuhlng warm soap suds. Rinse several Repeat the IT'S A GOLFY ILLNESS W“ M“ "-'L""~’~*‘ “i-lh ‘hi’ “m? Ibnpon, Feb. 14.-<o1=> - plexionsusz, u u- olilns ahgiflot- ‘Qggllglagogdmvairfgaplvgsh ozzagnn John Woolam’ Engush mam, 10h! V! h"? U‘ 5h!" ’ golf champion, is suffering fror tinosynovitis in the left foot. H will be out. of the game for com: time. —BY GEORGE MCMANUS