was; s52 arrest-Gs t"? "5 9%! PAGE I Cremation is slowly making its ‘Wiy IHE lllllllllllll IIIIIEII p”, _ ~ v a. um’ w nun. Cd. If. A. Iulllnol, n. a. o. wit» an nut-nu. a. n. Ian-u. Anni-u TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1925 I. IIrlclltjliiuLes of the tie-ad. Last year 193$ Idlhr, D. I. Glrrlm I _ A LITTLE WAR CLOUD The strvt-ranci; of diplomatic re- lation,- bet-ween Greece and Tur- key. referred to In our recent des- patchtaaloe.» not nect-esarily IIIWID a European \\'ar or even a war be- IhIIiOIIS involved. Thrru has n-vei‘ been much love H tivtc-n. .he l\\‘.) Iu---‘, ln-uivetdi (Ira-acr- and Turkey and, it‘ illc Allied governments can- iheui to seulg the n.-.. p ISIIZIIlP prt a-nt dispute ipt-aceiilbly it may S bt- jiis. its well to lv-t them fig-ht i-t out. The only ilangiir connected with s thi irimdr- is that the “little fire" may kindle a l.‘ll'9.tl' one. Europe is at lumen. in no shape for playing \\'llll flre. 'l‘lie 'l‘urk‘s are a wide- slit .Ill nation \\..li ramifications in and ‘fiii- iilW-vks are belligerent and llllkllllflllfi and bllWflen them India its will as in Europe .-\.~I.i. lllky may ~iitli fiflllldlllhg which Thi- ks in .-\llIlI'I.S nrl- talking war cutnnt i-a.-iiy he stopped. Hill 1h" rilortiu “doivn with Turkey" ‘is llltllclfilnfl and 'i‘iiikey has In re- t-ei t years achieved diplomatic suc- L-t as which ft-d i..< vzini-iy. The andlhe pPlYilnge of addressing 1!. built lii (lt-Flllillly crossed tiie At-r \\ _ ' . - - - i» 1 ' ' ~ ‘~ .‘ - i Peiziiusi‘ more l)‘lllll'3 are saved W _ _ _ I H r Ahsemm)“ The on] ‘.v,,,,,1,_,,.,n(.,,| l.iiii.i to lii. lllllttl stat s no. i . ._ Ill ~11! HI“ \\.ll ho diutchcd with 3 ‘ y ‘ Are,“ “hilt “w, w,“ ha‘, slncgi|lltl‘.\', ’l‘lii- ll'i'llll'lltlilllri incrotise In in, ,._ ent of recent times ivus When the ‘no M‘ mi‘ w] vim." n u m“ _lll. ~ viiy Ls Illlr to tlic furl that , , ~ r“ ‘l ' "‘ .;i y. p, . . . ' llrir-"lfi ll"? lIPFZI-‘illllllflf 0T. -\ill‘lll 31*‘? /“l‘l"-‘lll1 (‘lrllllndlloll “T” Pr" .-it:k lfllllifu, And ths- outstanding OUR SCHOOLS (fax-Mina lpai-iug plans an ilffslllll tivit-i ll'ili'llll"lis‘ that iri-aliiii-zz-t ‘is the :- -— - as big as tl . ‘Sh Illllltluilll» Tdit-illlfllll- _ The lllaitlfy 0t education in this. itiwipoéeti iiii ‘hip w.li he will m; lhe only thing that can weak- proviut-e during ‘she past half cen- In all in the- tiir_v i..- one to b» pram] of, tin. hbihQw walks of life. t-lzurtzh in politics. at the bar not? . . l‘X]llL‘.l1l t.) he ab. in znaiiiiudi ti tllllllz u the t-hiltlkt life through _ _ iprustui threat to Fllllgfilllllll. it‘ H ‘ ‘ I _ _l I _ H hpwh, “Marks m diarr-nofia Qyhy m m" "w" ,.,,un,,ry_ bu, in. _ cgulu. tub-dd) ntllLlll =4 U&l\\t4 .l _ I : _ lizitl better apply to PTPIIIIPI‘ .\Ia.c- ._ _ - _, - - -, , "l llll-"Ull-llg» ‘h, ,,,,iy_,hh,,,.ing Wwrhnc‘ m?“ ‘rain’! I D ‘ .\t.\\ loik and lmiitliin t puitt Thus “run” {Ham-LL by saving | -n m“. wumn, 1H0] I _ lkmlzl“ kl"?! ‘mil m“ llml- -l~ 5-‘ lli lliili ifillliv. t)I"lU iiy llilll on)‘ li1|l,;i=, g lpngllig;-,ing n“, [he per- ' ‘ I “ "m m oinvlaii" who fathered the gonilia~iriviinit Ill- eaiili ii-ulio‘... .<.op,nu;,~ hi! 0t 3.1- .-.~.pe.<- on. I ivondei- it otirPrui‘ i'\'i -<‘ - - . t- . . -’l'-'i"llfil.i l > 2 q‘ D l ‘t’ ‘ll '\~ll¢ (ullff-ZE antima" and it“.,sm,d~- hi,“ m, m". pm,‘ Pint) llilill p.u.|-t.. llllla pi. lltlkmflakluilnllltz‘ it‘ Mlm ‘lllllmlllllxllzlv- “ llllll ‘ - m“ '1'“ L"l\“l‘-"l." 31"’ l“ ll"‘,\-;n,.,,_ ' _:in.'; 1.1 runw- in» tempt-sit. oi in“ I I fouitd on the night-sit levels. Flt)‘. §y~¢~<>o>4o~+o 4 l1 is IlIIIlt"."-‘.~“ l" : -' ‘ » I A ' - r- '- .3 l‘ - - a . ‘ ~ a I o to into a d» " The dfltfllllg of Iarlianieni. Th: New Brunswick Premier all: _ x lllltll humor; oi this ].l(.]'l0(|. One thi> time last year '\\.l5 on .1 {Zldllilfin has; showmg more courage z Fck Illliwt‘ Hi‘ It wIl-I suffice for the pre- HIIL. It \\"lll be rQ-"Hilntbemd ma, ivli -u one young man after another l‘l"- 11-“ ‘IIY ‘WY 0f our colleges and uur unii~i=r I lea and won fame and tl'-.-‘.'iiil-tlr:ii in their chosen calling, a ll'llt'l‘ill wnnplainl tvent up that our whouls and colleges were a (‘Hr-w rti-Ii<-i' than a blessing as. llI(‘_V WUTU- in the language of (ho time. "educating our sons and daughter». away from the farm." SUIIIP wrll meaning reformers un. durook to corre-dt this alleged cvil find the sriutly of ag-rltrulture Wag in. iirnilut-ctl iii-to our schools and mp) Prince of Walla! College. Men and women on Lhclr away lo the "nwer. sillii-u lo take ‘tlpthe study of mam. cine. theology, luiw, engmeering, "Ill-W. art. while passing through lhiinci: of Wtlles ‘College tan-rm"; [Q have ii year in .the university. were (llll-lllvtl agriculture, to learn the formulae for rations for hows, dairy cows, hwtf came 35¢, i-itiidluii wflrich could never by an filtwlltfl 0f a-coitlcivt or mlsfontune b0 ‘of any BilFIillly-IISQ to them Many of these will declare to ‘this day that these tiilt-ud-Ies were a dislI-nct lIlIlllfIlIICe to them and In mlany to study case-s caused them liq .1059 a yam. in ‘Prince otf Wales College, , . This course of study has been to a certain extend. modified but we still have prospective farmers, doc. tors. carpenters, teachers. laiwyers. flrtlsts and al-I one otiher profes- sions male and female, through a grinding curriculum wlrioh in- bltltlcs teacher training, agriculture, stock rallying my] “m1; media‘ The albsurdlty of (MS is apparom 0" l!“ fflve- ‘We need teacher train- "IK- mlwh more or it than we get. for lwvhc-rs: It -wiii (be ‘lost on those wiho ara not going M igeach We need mo ‘Influence wherever ‘PPBMIWW 61h‘ rows ‘People u» wards farm ‘life wIrIIe going ‘MIMI!!! ml!‘ sdhoola and colleges but we will drive them more nirely ftiomilzbe trim by lillfllfllflu; their will») ivm-Ii with themot-Icfl hflllr In: yiiiui at om II m doubtful WW. “to {mu a reunion of our emu-t- pense. them to be obliged ‘to pay for two‘ years tuition and board In the city‘ when one year should have ‘been The elimination of all. handicap which i.»- at tvhy This is a vital inaltltler. ending iht" ~ It is a serious ufficleut. ion which would overcome itlie very VA thorough enquiry they are aiming tire-sen‘. vimes the entrance ellmivfltlvfllt-ti from 2.‘. u, 2.5m- yearly. Amy twill have at least a fifty pev-lpract. cw.- hag aflffiilll to (‘unada and‘ con-t opportunity w pass the F9313 final examination. Men and women in the country districts are sons anid daughters -to college at very considerable ex- Illilli l9!‘ ‘l0 subjects not required for the proft-s-l Si-TlOIIS lllt’ cause of wel-I found-rd complaint. imn the ‘whole subject would go far towards ’ m-aking the work of our schools and college more effective and szttlsftic- .0ry than It is at present. EDITORIAL NOTES .\Ir. J. .I. Hughes, M. P.. has been of the Massachusetts Toronto Globe ‘yuan-to to know the Fraser-tilt scale. DHPWHI‘ days. and we \\' OUT any IIIIHQCGSSHFY happy ni-edlum. tlons. much. another Europe. It has ary tlll now. Lt Is Greek Patriarch was - fidgmfon. danger ,to Britain from honoured with a seat un the floor Legislature chell should he kept ilang-Iing over (‘an- larlzfs head in London as an ever i-Jverytthing “'85 done to ex- lllt . ccl the brilliance and diisplay‘ oft- (‘IEIQVllUlL i» smuggling in ii ere told th King government was justified inghh l . . the extravagance lllflilillfip 102i wasiylpiln my, , U... rm; “y _.p...,,,,_- and industrial cxpaneiitin ‘in (‘armada The year belied Mr. King's tintIt-ip- utlons. and now we are ‘told the new z-tiassiou is to be ‘inaugurated ‘Willi- tlisplay an with their scarlet land gold ‘and no back to kh-aiktsackcloth and ashes, its it were. The tlwo extremes, no Lot us trust this yea-r a-liso Will lbcllo the anticipar Reference Wits made here to the Vancouver Sun's warning as ‘to the 10.000 airplanes ready for action. We now learn than. ‘the airplane-at- tack proof battleship is Britain's answer to the aviation thread. Like. waterproof ralment, fireproof con- struction and fool-proof devices of all sorts, the new British Cfllprlfll fighting vessels. the Nelson and the Rodney, of course may not IDFOVI‘ to be 100 per cent. [proof againsti til. _ ‘s Notes By The Way as a means of disposing of the livcie isreiirated in England. The liiiisi cuuinatury .u the [Suited Stat- ics was established In Penn- ‘Sylfliillfl in, 1876 and in 2U years tlicieafter the uumbur of persons‘ Whfla‘: hDtliL-s were burned Iiicreas-| The . Illlxil. of tilt: civibzed (‘Ulllllfltflw of‘ the ivuilr not-iv i-thstandiug much prc judme auainsi it, I. wan" PTSXCIl-hlifll among the (inc-ks and Humans in the IlLI_\'.\' before iht- intiuiluctiun of Flnimiaiiiity. On auxiliary and other ..~ nitich Ill he said l l l The marvellous twcnLeth cert-l terry I‘ rs! tpiarttfin-Of which is nearing ils close. has alrsady given the \\'l.'Illl the moat fllllllillll and ill-vast: Fug war ii: all liiiiiiau hi..- ‘toiy, along utth ii vimt ]]l'i)',',I'(.5.~‘ in ' " iliscurery and IIIVOIIQOII ldi-i fair to eclipse anything, l(lI0\\II .n past iig‘ a. Wt,- ri-ad £Il~i most daily of I\t'\\' triumphs that men LLB tit-llitfillji: on earth and sou and in the air. in truii- partu- .ii electric lll‘\'tflO|)lll"Xll, iii, Klulllllls there in ' t.i..ii'.‘ ,ion, tlic liuinan voice h-iirill the coniuienit. and and in tli- conquest’. of dist-asc- and making ilkilflin 5011b pain» \\'liu t-.in guess what new, ivoiiil r~z will yet b1 zivlii-vt-il fore llll‘ l‘i‘llilll"_\".\‘ (‘ludV-t’ lll‘ l I The giant Zcppeim Shenandoah‘, hill: fit; ltlil‘: Illlll will have a git“ “use capacity of in-ir- than Tiytllllntlvlti m cithic Ilurl uiiil u‘ ll be tiiopt-llwil b_\. Irllglllits oi I000 hone potter. lI ‘~' lnotliei‘ l‘ri~iiill-i~ oi‘ Nova 'I‘ii:- latter, .n fear or ii by- ncu la through the bark ilooi‘ of, (‘ount-l, I llll‘l' i_\ii~..;..-i.-i .‘ ‘glslati\‘t‘ wit; badly kiioi-ltetl down iii Alou- uton recently) in his own eons Luciicy oi‘ (iluucc ‘icr, tvhi ri- tlPll . ll illfttillfldl- iii next 'l‘liiti'sdaiy‘ iilzlil aflvi" the polite close. d nhat the nrl-lltary are to dispense . Mr. Balding and his eta-delegate, sent westtvzirtl by the TV-lcizrzipli- Journal and the 'l‘iuii..~;-Stai' of Si. John have CllllfiUll no small silt‘ iii iliteil‘ Illicit-lily," toward the sunset and aippcai‘ io have uiet with a most cordial and sympathetic re- irtptioii, This is really promising. A full recognition of Maritime LlKllL}; can neither iuvuatrt: nor iii- inlon. Antony those rights la that (fiintilliiis export and Import livid‘.- tlial all the your round (‘nntidiiin [torts shall be pri-ft-rr- d to ftyireign that the average efllefilfllloll l-iu 1.. now twenty five years long- .,. years ago. pox, iliptlieria, typhoid fever, and ll. llt Lin: leiigil.=iii>tl_ SUL tli > are cleaner. buck yards must be kept in ii mnltary conditou, gar- bage "n; rcinovetl two or thiee tlni» is‘ tvililn: luiillh tliiercftii‘. any l(:llL(~.'I'i'li1IlI oi‘ Lie, than the niiiii oi‘ lllllltllKfilh of yczins ago? flight at t~\‘i:|‘-iiici'ea.<iii_i.-, apct-d. in tiun of Lie univ an much longer‘! _ ltiun of It) p. (iplt- burn, at a lu-rtiilii Linc, and ihi-ii reckon ._;iiii->‘ ~lIUW that more p-euple of \l M] Guardia a One bombardment from the sky. that ‘WES ‘their designers’ idea, and from all] United States "naval in- telligence" can ‘learn, it twill take more formidafble aeronautics than are known at present to harm them The Turko-Greek situation is menace to the been llflOmlfllOllfl. and th-erearo many ‘anomalies In the Near East, that the head of the Greek Church should Cathedral sent iin me Turkl-izh city of Constantinople. the capital o! the leading Mohammedan na-tlon. Hut. such Is ‘the fortune of war. and no Interference with the arrange nient. has (been considered necess- fell. that ‘the Russian Bolshevlsts, fearing the fell designs against their rule Ii‘ Russia. di-aa instigated the action of the Tirnlu In expelling hlni from the hiatorlc city of Constantine. Be flint as itmuy Turkey's action bu added no the gravity of the alt- uaiiun iii tholNeu Ilhot which m idffady chum! at lihgpoint of con-l]- But that half 0t‘ Canada's splendid hur- vest that lH exported over srrn should be sent over railways and through ports of a foreign land. It is pleasing to note that our Inland compatriots and the mewspapera tlr.=y tread endorse ilili-i vleiv of the tiirse when it is calmly presented to them and cheerfully pledge. themselves to prtfer (lunadiau ports in future. This tenth-i to Hil- tubllsh a better feeling throughout the Dominion. peace of Ottawa hears ofTmore borrow- irg on National Railways account. It In lllnUPll that a big srum, ID058- lbly mnny millllons may he needed to make good lust year's deficit, pay for more rolling stock and for the building of new mileage. AI- really contracts for more cnrs have been itllottod tn Nova SCOHI! amp other parts where they may he politically helpful In this elec- tion your! An Ottawa despatch tells that the proposed new borrow- ilng if carried out. will make the capital ‘Investment on National Railway GCOOII-IIII. nlnoe 1911 over a hill-Ion dollars, a sum equal to 60 per cent of the coat of the war to (‘anadnl Still the King Govern- ment and its Progressive allies call for more railways and our Big have his draitbourlng - our are expected to cheerfully _ _ about, portii as gates oi exit and eutrun- Am] uttered word“. M righteous cc. wrath ‘ -_ 1190111136 ‘tivas such a crooked It ls nothing short of shameful ill-Ill l; But ‘still they followed —- do not The first inigztitioiis of that calf. And ‘through THE caannoniszrowu GUARDIAN lltihat $0112 of _ your: B, [mm W, Barton. MD. LIFE EXPECTATION toll us. of IlliilIYilIllJL‘ companies than 1t was some hundreds 0f 'l‘hii, with the control of small- liez- skilllfgfili the average life is 'I'heii wherever you go iioiv you the evideiz; s of the tvork of health (lUDIIPIIIIGLLS. Streets‘ a week. ilitinihing and drain- . regularly" ‘lllhlléttPfl. l.) v give ilt-parim. tits cuotlit the llll IlUiS lllfi ZIYRILIQ‘! lllilii‘ hflVe 'l'li s lius no. been pioven us yet. ll(:\\ .lii» 5 the average expecta- Tlie av t lllt: _ art-rage expecta- uoiv i much lotiger? 'i‘1.e tray the utiiig is done, its .ill\'I' ll lllllllfbtl, or il lllUlll-Sflnd number that are (‘lilillll utze- The llli‘ zilivi- .it ii huziilri d or thousand, now u <li-l'iiiit,- zinc, say fifty that at any time In Ii. story. -» ll ‘Ii the (‘llllll is -imp.oper fund too . or insufficient IIOIIIYSlI- fiuiu food. ' Ii Ills by BlIIIDlQ, Jzf-iitil r method. arr able to n Readers l Broker Takes Gamble On 17 Two-Year Olds tl-lorse racing Is a gamble and su l! horse breeding. The records bristle withithe names of men who spent fortunes In the attempt to breed or own the winner of a class- Ic rice. and failed. But despite the records the moat conspicuous and lasting successes have been made by men who spent large sums of money in buying the best bred horses that were In the. market. W. Averill Hurrlmun. a New York broker, made one of the most ini- portunt purchases of recent years when he bought for a quarter of-ii million ilollars nineteen horses that had been the property of the late A t Belmont. There was only 03s ke winner in the lot, namely Ladkin, and another horse‘ had raced. The others were two-year- olds, Probably it is the ttvo-yezir- oldn that iMr. Harrimziu is gamb- ling on with most of the money. There is no question about Lud- kin's class, for he wast lllo con- quei-er of Epinarrl in the second of the international special races last Summer. Sam ilililrctli says that luidltin is the best racing i-ttzil- lion in the United States. Mr. Winner's Hard Luck The llclnioiit youngsters tire per- haps thc best bred in Amerltvti. The Public Forum § ‘Illa colan- le open h: Ibo ninaumi by wrmnnluu 0f (notions of Interest. flic Charlottetown Guardian don not annually undone the op- Ilhu o! oornopuhatc. q+4o+vei “THE We: FREES" ' t Sin-lii your Issue of January 30th. tlici: appeared a letter 0n the “Wee Free" Church 6580611 "Pew". I have never yet repllzed to an anonymous correspondent- iind have no iintentlon of doing so iroiv- However if the individual who its Iildltig behind that "~00!!! tie plume" will be man enough re- veal hls iidentity l shall then glad- ly answer his letter and point out to hiui some info-statements con- iainal Iii it. In niy coniiiiiin-lcation of recent date i merely presented some staHlstIt-s on‘. of Prof. Catneroirs lions are llsieil ais vacant anti com- paitd its stiiiiistlcs with those of the United Free (‘hiirch of Scot- land. Moreover these facts W41! tuivcn wii-hout coin-meat or infer- elite and without reflection on any (Ihurcli nt- iiidivirlual. l-s it not very silgnlliicunt, Sir. that Iihe pub- lication of these plajr. statistics of Prof. Caineion has completely up- set the cqtianlm.-ty' of your Ant-i- l'iiinii cori-i-spoiirlent‘l I iini. Sh". etc J. S. BONNELL. St. John, N. It, Jnii,.'l1 1025 Li? breeding an tit-i-usioutil iboruiittli- 'I‘Iiey come from Iliv most IilllIlllIH stud. the Nursery mud; but hotv mitt-Ii of ii gamble is the purchase of even these flowers oi‘ ilie racing world is indicated by the exper- ience of (Icorge l). Widener, who of the slime ' stud In 1021i, the brothers and sisters of the colts and fillies bought by t.\lij Iliirrimiiii, In the int he hiid only one stake winner last year, and that stake winner of that race won no other. Another horse in the Iol -\\'t)ll ii S700 purse. and a filly took a (‘heap claiming rat-e. Tliiit was the year's record tiftlie most vhoici-ly bred lot itvo-yezir-olrlit in the Fiiiietl Stall-s last year. \Vlille Mt‘. \\'ide- uer was Iiaiviug this Int-It. \\"lllt'lI is by no means unusual, two other lIOTRIJH tvlioat- original] cost was {$137.50 with their IlilllIS thrown in. ‘run their total u-inningu up to SZIWJHIH. 'I'Iiese lim-st-s were Sui‘- azen and Wise (‘ouust-lliwr, The lai- ier has won $IILtl7o and heat lCpiu- aril I tithe First Special, wliili: Sur- uzen. winner oi‘ Ffililildlffll. Iieat Iiini .. ¢wQ64049£4Q0-0+¢§-0/§Q9-§-g-‘lll the Third Special FEBRUARV 3, 1925 SA l~‘l‘l'l‘ Y \\'l~lll.lll ASLEEI’! .~'ii.p: fol‘ thou, Lotti, ialttst lii" divell in stifety. Psulii 1x THE CALF PATH day through flit;- prinit- vii ts 00d ' .-\ cult’ iviilkotl home. as good calv- es should: llut made :1 trail all bent askeiv, -\ crooked path as all calves (lo- 'I‘ht~ I-lilll was taken tip next day lly u lone tray; dog Lliul Dilalhlrll lha And then a tviise btill-ivethei- 511....” France‘,- jtiriously affect the rights of tiny PllF-Slltvll the tral o'er vzile mp] r. 4:» Ouwr l_,r.m'mc"' and i“ "“_"e"“'““"3' m ltudsilrtllv tho floolt behind him. tlii- unity and Iiurmtiuy ul the Doin- w‘, .-\» good lieII-ivelliers always ilo. And fiuni that day our lull _ , _ __ , _ glude “hull pass through Si. John and .l.|"_m“_,‘“ '1|,,,_,,e “p1 ‘young- u path Hulitax when the St. Luyvri-iit-i- ‘ms “Hum - ports are (rloned in- wlnter. and And many men WDIIIIlI in illlfl oiil, laugh- thlln ivdndiug wood- ivuy tmilketl, Ii-ciiti-se his tvtihbletl tvlien he walk. ed. ’I‘Iii.=i forest path became II lane That hem and ‘turned and turned again. This crooked lane hccuinle ii road, \\’lim'o many ii poor hump with his load 'I‘oiled on beneath the btiming‘ . sun, Ail-d traveled some three mill.“ h, one: And thus a century and a half fhey trod the foolstepg of that calf. l‘-1"‘lI ‘lay a hundred thousand stout Followed the ig-zng ca]! uppuu and o'er this crooked journey wont. - _ . The truffle of a continent; A hundred thoirstinil men were pa] lly one calf near lhrw centuries dead; For thus such reverence is lent To troll-established IITGUHIIJIII. A moral lesson l-lllfl might teach Were I ordained and called preach- For men are pt0n'e to go It blind Along the calf pathoof the Ifhlllll; Ami wtork away from sun to sun To do what other men have done. SAM WALTER Foss. --{0>—-- to New coats for Bpflng frequently and Sarazen and Wise ‘Counsellor to usher Ina new era of prostperltybhe new AiiJftit-y (lent-nil, l\\'llllll will built lay ine down in peace, l-lllll oiilyl Stories of dw-spiseil mares boughfrule U“, mums“ m,“ 815mm “f l for a sting and aflerivurils hot-tun- ling the dams oi‘ vlizimpitnis are Willllfl mean ilsaaier. ll(l\\‘ he ahall‘ pu.\y|.;u-__we Lh-mkl “we [houlalightly more rnnrintit- lll‘IIl the‘ ‘ ~ - z ‘.' 1 l , . . - - i’ full. ivill be kiioivu on‘lo\‘iii;:, Father, ma“ me ‘Hume's and shuns n for lhc ussitriiit-i- story of the fashionably Iired mare ' .. . . hm“, M, "my Sh“, mm‘), m‘ my non-winners. But the way to hicoil (‘RINK l ‘producing a great ivlnner. and‘ _\vhile they are common eniigli dliey fall to convince hnrnenien lllliut the way to Iirectl suit of such an ambitious experi ment. would be to breed a lot of rolls and fillies even more desert‘ i ing of contempt tliun their dams despised parents. Ilis dam bought by IMIsn Elizabeth Daingtn‘ purrhiiseil the entire yearling crlipl onewit‘ itt-r-ontlary iiuportiiiit-c, Thel cltiinipitins is to form an unrivalled collection of despised mares. Horsemen know only too well that the prbtible re- Sartizen was surely the product oflW-onderful Jefierso WIIQI iii-Id from u Kentucky furniei‘ for £117.50. Later i-ihe was bred to the horse High Time, whose HUYVlClJ-H bred, Both these inure-s were ex- ceptionally ivcll bred, and fir, Neel was admitted to ltuve iuatlc a good [bargain when lie not Ilium for $900. ltfinderelln Iiecaitio tho t!:i::i uf sev- len stake winners, mid Tkiiuiiiti-llii of nine stake wiuncrts, \vliil.- their ‘blood lIZlS come to t-‘zerciytz- n pru- found influence rpt-n tho \l!l€I'lL1IlI Assembly Report chewing that in ddrnble, are: - , f,li,ci,r'gg.t,i,tfll?;' 1120i: egg-ant], location in a neighbourhood where values art" ' congicgations and mission sta- 'ub|eorincremn" Facts for/ Investors,‘ in irsi Mortgage Real Estate Bonds The qualities that make a property valuable. and an Investment In the first mortgage bonds upon it ¢lnl4n4la Earning er baled u the eamln s of tl c gxopatyplogelf‘ or of fit: undertakiE-iga. anti the dc-nand for further like accommodation. ; Fined annual _ fund for retirement 0t Bend; no that the ratio of property value to bond: outstanding grown progreluively larger Adequate fire and liability inaurance: Bzpeflqtced. unagement. c pcroond cash Investment b borrowers. Igfinanclal integrity and buslnesg reputation. An Investment that fulfil: these re uirements is ti. be had in the 6M9‘, First Mortgage da of Mont- real Apartments, Limited, secured by first mcrt- ‘gg-_gfjjlpliprlfllLltgjvl‘P g an “The Chateau" which, when completed / on be! l. 1925, will be one of the lar est, most modem and desirable apartment bu! dings in The pioperty In located on the best known resi~ dentin! meet: in Montreal — Stierbrooke Street - iracdoally opposite the Ritz-Carlton Hotel. n» coal a u» cloud am mortgage In only $1,875,. 0U, a against I property valuation ‘of 3 .250.000. Net annual earnings are conservatively animated at $260,000 — more than double the Firnt Mortgage Band Intcolt requirement. Amplu ‘ in carried. The borrower has t1 _ . mhnuatlll each investment in the operty and an turf, Iror IIISIEIIIPP. the blooll of m-ndndy ‘ucceafu; "Con; m ‘a: "lanes 1‘ ‘ lin is to Ii-.- found in the oft-g: Manta-incl apartment buildings. Ln tin and Man u’ \\'.tr. We Call AttertLoI tc- . | I One of her early sous was Fer-l rier, winner of‘ fifLv-six rates at all‘ distances. Another was the great} racehorse and l'l'PiIlt‘l‘ _siri-. ll.i.~'t-‘ jugs. Another was Plillltlll. If .\Ir.' ilarrinian gets ii tfiudeiwrlli or it‘ lflarantellu in nls lot ivlll he well repaid, lie has i\\'l that Min. Belmont thought so lllflllly of iliiitl lic predicted they vsoulii be ilicl greatest horses lie over bred, and! lit \\'ill be recalled that he. was the ‘breeder of Man o‘ Win‘ and 'l‘r.ice _ ry. The likely colts are Ciiince‘ [Play and Festival, whose Illlllllf-Si linay be interestinti to any readi-rsi {who make an oi-caiaional bet UI" lctitirsc they tire beautifully bred] lund are ukiu to noted winners. Ilur 'it has not escaped uuticc llizit as .i lpi t-Iiutiipiuns are nn ordinary lot. lThey are on the whole little Iiotterl winners is to breed as winners iiru, Itred, In any event and under tiny‘ system winners are not to he I111)", ducetl regularly. If a mun breetlsi ‘three great horses In u long life- time and after spending" n‘ million dolltirii in the etiterpriuo. he may well feel that his efforts have been uniply vewurtletl Memorial Window " Leaves England (By Canadian Press) .\'ll‘.\\' Ytlltlx’, Feb. 2.—<A mentor- lIIl WlIllIllIIW to Joselph Jefferson Allll llllllkfld and llll'Il‘.'(l and bent by that route, but It will he found on Investigation that nine have ancestors of stout blond. who. hull been offered free to the neigh- boring Iioriicnien, but with little re- sult. They [ireferretl to puy. some nf them $2.500, for the sierviceii of horses of reputation rather than accept High Time for nothing, Iliit High Time and the furm nun-c be- came sire anti dam of Snriizcn, Two Great Mares Now and then champions do come times out of ten they are well lived if they are not fashionably bred They perhaps; for ncrgood reasons, have ceased to attract modern breeders. They are overlooked. just like men of merit are often overlooked In favor of their more llaiihy fellows. Two of the greatest mares whose history Is to he fodnd In the Am- erican ‘Stud Book were Clnilerellu and Tarantella. Both were bred lu England and were bought by Di‘. John B. Neet In Kentucky some forty years ago. fir, Neck had a largo practice, and his hobby was ,.i________.. FIIBflUARY 3.--Rnther Inclined to ‘thdn-k ‘too little of the bird l-n- the hand. and too much 0f the bird .ln the bush. Often good flt pig things, but careless of small dttalls, Good artistic sense. Many February 3 people make a success of house decoration or oome occupation of that. Itlnd. You will have}, very but)?! homo -Ilfe. Your bIrth-ltone Is a ’ Iona‘. have a perfectly plain ‘black but the a circular fluunce acrou x join ti. voting the money. front. whose IIZIIIIB srtziuilit w-it-h tIi-ut of lids eon-temlptiriiiy. Edwin Booth. anions [hQ gpf-upt-cst actoru of mhe world. lll-{lflllél nicnioriail vvi-ndow ever to llIIt-I been t-ouiploteil In England and will ‘be. Hlllptietl to this coiirn-try soon. It ls believed to Ibe the flit-sit re- incltide a secuilai‘ subject In ‘It-s rep- resentation. It depicts Jefferson I-n the long white beard nnd ragged In the convenient denomi- Bnndnmxhu notion! 1 woo-mum...- QK-Qd-cowued Interest, to yield 6.659’. Royal Securities Corporation i Limited ‘ 132V; .Great GeorgeStx-eet, Charlottetown Montreal Toronto Halifax‘ St. John Winnipeg Vancouver “Tis Not in Mortals to Command Success” But every man has it in his power to furnish ease‘ and comfort for his old age. or to provide a sufficiency for his‘ family. A smalLpercentage of your earnings, Invested annually for a limited period in a Great~West Life insurance policy. will yield a monthly income adeqliate for .your future needs. or hold that same amount in trust for your family should need arise.‘ Policies can be furnished to meet practically-any requirement. ' . Ilyntlman a. o... tit. I Charlottetown Points 61 Queen Street. Agents at all Principal PUBLIC,‘ AUCTION SALE it iiiani s. wants STARTS WEIIIIESIIIIY iioiiiiiiiti AT I0 A. M. BY oiiiini rump. $3M c». _Q-uj _ ___ 3552i .‘\'\_L3A, clothes of Itdp Van Wilnkle, It-be role which giave iliilm his m ‘ on the affections of his pulhlic. ilie (‘hurch of ‘the Transfiguration- East 291m Street, which Jellfeison Rilp Van WIu-lrle surround the cent. made famous an "The liftibie Church ie. panels. At the top left Rip Is Around the Corner." ‘By this name shown with his greenest friend. his (Very pit-rt. 0f the World, INTI] till-e iwt 1m: tie-dilly from ‘the flaizmi which‘ ‘land. actor and long a friend of RIP ltlllml howling at nliieplns In a \ 224-2-3.“ 2i. ~ holld of It wvonva-n but represent-s the gplir- N The window wil-I be lnotalled In It of George Holland. Little vl-gnettles of the career of PASTOWS SO WORCESTER, Mans, Fab Alhort L. M. Gross, 22, aon Rev. and Mrs. C. III- Gross 0 Barre. pleaded guilty to ehnlp rffllbefyyjliflflllgfilll fear . sniilt, lnfiiipiiome Court todlf. Feb 22, 1034, omciiiitemtt. jewelry. store F and after bl and a cugtotnfl 0lf~Wl~Ih iiiiimofi [he Chump is now known in almost dog. Wolf. Next he is shown drink- tliut led to its peou-Ilar renaming sent hhii upon his twenty 3'91"!’- Below _tlie centre paneni _i\l'i) shown the strange ‘llltltile men In costiumes. r whom its made ‘an importa-nifpart. of the iii-‘. -nioninil viiintioiw. ill. was In 1870 tlhalt. George Hol- libel!‘ irrfltemlte Jedfgrfson, (“my Jgflgrggn -w9n1 m ravine of the Knot-skill Moiintalm. lli.‘ ‘CIIIITGII of the Ntoneneiit. now The great lllflgflll from which Rln exuncp and asked u; rector. 1).; diunk Is iihown beside some of tho Sabine to conduct the funeral ser-lbuwlers. Some illneiilns have fallen. vices for his drlenti. Dr. -Sii~bIne So has oltc oi’ the lltitle men. Below declined when he learned the ftztires are Jefferson's words: Holland had been 0n the stage. He “God lbIe-sg t-hall. lllftlc chuirch around referred Je-fferosn to " the little the corner." ' tihurch gmund um, comer, when The window wits executed by =_;# -- -- they may ammonium yup," James Powell & Sons of London. ‘ ' » ‘ ac" “god pig” 11mg ymp; 451mm}; noted itor such work. Its coat is be- C. M. 1481RPM)" 64 Quasi Strut PM Bu" p|_u|'u_,flia lilnlmuit. i . s‘ -.., around the corner," Jflerson re- ‘Ing mined thy popular subscription / spondcd. Holland 1mm iburied from BJIIIOITK ‘l-lle theatrical] profession and ‘chat churdh. Dr. Salt-Inc's refit-sail laymen- w-gg g vvorldtwiido subject of Indllg- ——-——-<+O——i nation, JGMGTBOIYB remark gave t-he GURGLARS CARRY Church of the Transfiguration a GIRL FROM HOUSE new name. and the church ‘became »~-- b’ ‘lflho centre of the rellgltoue life of OKLAHOMA CITY, 01th., , 371%»- nshe tahoiiltnfcail Iprofenslon. Feb. 2.-—Ma.ry Ellen Mellon, 20, ‘ha; ngiemonllal vvlndowwziivncelved step-daughter of wealthy Oklahoma . u. , N . ,, . mu engnedi y alter .I-aon,ac- City merchant an b nd ' " v at; of ‘rhl; Alvenxa. the Iillflvd tem-ly toll-y bytoutnxo men 1 by nx. o B01188 iiccn- he ‘eved by the puma; i9 jgyg " ~'* *’ ‘ Alfred-Fraser. ~tral theme. The loft ipanel deplotsll) Iyi l _, _ | mum. vtlnfllns an m» int-m. of i§§"'i......'§.“§§l .l.? gtliinrdotntmtlnr l (the Little Church Around the Cor- later by W. l), '14:“, {mu tat‘ ner- Iooklng with compassion upon guard. lying In g gffgaf, Th“ 1gp Jwwuh Jefferson In the rlsm nan- Minion was kidnapped by birflhrl ' ' lilztlril 1W hdlliliftlf." prim Your lucky coloragnre lint blue and yellow. e1, In his role of Rilp Van Winkle. In order to old than: I-b [etfllj leading to the church a a oil luv ' (h p‘ n. ‘ ' p, figure which looks much like‘ l. t‘ todaayynmm a o f o‘ Anni-rs i-iotvll it _ valued ‘l1 .3‘, He was arrested IIn CiiIIfoflll-ij‘ -— , M LMa.;;;;-iz:c. 4.. BMW i»....‘i. tan... n» 1g _q u; rx-zlqj-‘uvd ---_.¢_4>_ _~...¢_. "m." i-Q-ia-‘Q >_.... I o. 1 ‘ .