‘ 1 rim -- mitilaaionrrown eouannnau Icadli”. (heath U. Islam Iulell. Ylll-Pfllllfii. I. IIIUIK ‘century-Lien. lid. D. L lulalnnu. u I. 0. . llllllll ldsau—v. L ollflfl , (In assessor mule-l b ouu us flame sau- wg: n’: ueuaan ale?) sun II ‘yell (an advances tells-rel TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 1930 . Two Voices, One Singer When it comes in describing prohib- ition conditions in Prince Edward niand, Premier Saunders, like the ardent wooer in Shakespeare's ballad, "can sing both high and low." From the deep bass in which he chanted the dismal failure of prohibition en- forcement a month ago"in the Legis- lature he shifts nimbly to high alto on arriving at Ottawa, and his cheery ditty is broadcast for the en- tertainment of the 8061110081 April l8 OTTAWA, On- tario. April l8.- iCanadian Press) "Because Prohi- tion is working out satisfactorily in Prince Edward Island there is little possibility of the establish- ment of Govern- ment Liquor Con- trol in that Pro- vince," said Hon- orable Albert C. Saunders, K. C.. Premier of Prince Edward Island, who is making a personal visit in the Capital. "The population is largly agricultur- al and conse- quently prohibi- tionist," he said. "The Province has all the benefits oi the dry laws but few oi the evils." Summing up con- ditions in the Isl- and, Mr. Saund- ers declared: “There is no un- employment, no labor trouble and while there are March 13. "1 am not going to say that the conditions in the Jails of this Pro- vince have been all that we desire. Conditions h a v e been intensified a hundred fold. yes a thousand fold, to what they were a few years ago The operators in the booze business are resorting to every imaginable thing. We have moon- shinera and boot- leggere in every Province; but I re- member only a few years ago of reading for the first time of those stills in our Pro- vince. That thing has grow-n and the nrethods they re- sort to are almost beyond the com- prehension of man. and it is ex- tremely diflicult now to cope with conditlonsP-Pre- mier Saunders, in the debate on the Draft Address. Provincial legis- no millionaires lature, March there is no pover- lsth. ty." Mr. Dutchman's Campaign w. It. J. Deachrnan, Ottawa, walking and talking delegate and sole visible representative oi "the Consumers‘ League of Canada," is visiting the city. This is the gentle- man who most persistently opposed the application oi the National Dairy Council for adequate tariff protection against New Zealancl butter be- fore the Tariff Advisory Board. The National Dairy Council is well known and represented among the dairymen oi this Province, but whom does Mr. Deachman represent? One looks in vain through his reported utteran- ces here and elsewhere for the slight- est hint of the composition of the organization he purports to represent. The only» known facts about the Consumers’ League are that the pres- ident and secretary are two Liberal Members of Parliament from Sask- atchewan and, apart from the sec- retary, the only other known active members are three additional Liberal Members of Parliament from the same Province. The ulrole organ- isation is purely and simply a, prop- ‘aganda device of the western wing of the Liberal party. The Govern- ment permits them to use a namc which deceiveathe general public as to Ia natwe and purpose oi the or- [Animation and the Tariff Board grants the head oi this propaganda ‘organization the rights oi counsel at , hearings before the Tariff Board. l Premier King's Problem I The question lnfore the King Gov- ernment, says a Montreal contem- porary is not one oi choosing the -rnost.__ ‘,'“ moment for an ap- "peel to the country, but of hitting ‘upon the least unpropiiious, and in regard the omens are unfavor- able. It may be that when the l-lousc Commons reasocmbles after the foami- holidays, it will meet but w ‘part again, to exchange a word, or ‘two of consolation with the Governq - ‘lrieitfllidfiifriaee forth to the hi..- tqwovygae other band, w. King pain-fisherman 1mm Mam ln,‘,_i"bl"oflaoy_pelfltiltboirtermof pain w m one. as» n w» ever, has never been regarded as the better part of valor, and it has not been exercised except by auch gov- ernments as have listened to the counsels oi despair. It has always been considered good strategy for the government to choose its own time, however narrow the choice may be, and there is an impression abroad that Mr. King will adhere to precedent in this respect. The immediate need is an issue‘, there are, of course, issues now, but Mr. King and his friends are on the wrong side of them; hence the ne- cessity of something new. The bud- get has been delayed, clearly in the hope that some final and conclusive action would be taken by the United states Congress upon the Hawley- Smoot tarifl bill, but although this bill has reached the conference stage there remains a doubt as to what the ultimate decision may be. Mr. King, in his western speeches, clung to the hope that the United States would not carry out its tarifl proposals, and that there would be no casion ior tarii! action at Ottawa, his conten- tion being that Canada was prosper- ous under the existing tariff arrange- ment which facilitates the entry of American manufacturers to Canada and of Canadian raw materials to the United States, and that to in- crease the Canadian tarli! before the adoption of the l-lawley-Smoot bill would be a. provocative action, an unneighborly thing, l. possible men- ace to the peace oi the world. So Ot- tawa has waited upon Washington and Washingtm ha: xadct‘. with great deliberation to frame its own legislation in its own way, without regard to the possible provocation of friendly neighbors, and with com- plete indifference to the possibility of injurious effects upon world peace. The result has been that the bud- get has been delayed at a time when the condition of business in Canada is peculiarly sensitive, and very much in need oi the stabilizing and con- structive influence of a strong govern- mental policy. Have We No Steel.’ ‘ It is rather surprising to note that the steel framework used by the Can- adian Vickers Company in the con- struction oi the Canadian National Hotel in Charlottetown bears the stamp oi an Illinois, United States plant. One naturally asks; Are there no steel plants in this country that could produce this material? Are thcrc none in the Maritime Provinc- es? Could not the contract with the building company have been so word- ed as to provide that Canadian ma- terial and workmanship be employed exclusively? At the present time the Canadian Pacific Railway is featuring the fact that wherever possible it uses exclusively the output of Canad- ian factories, mills, mines and farms. The maintenance of friendly relations’ with our Southern neighbors surely does not require the erection by the Canadian National Railways of a lasting monument in this Province to the United states steel industry. Xt may be that the requirements in this particular case could not be fuiiilled in Canada. Ii this be so, it is passing strange, and would seem to call for an explanation. Editorial Notes A Baltimore clergyman says that there is no more reason for being a chaplain in an army than there is for being a chaplain in a. speak- easy. so iar as American speakcasles are concerned, there would not be half _“ chaplains to go round. . " "Posing the buck" would be a mild term m the local Liberal cram‘: pt- tempt to ahiit upon the Conservative Opposition the reaponaibiliity of tbs Saunders Governaieiit in taking ae- ucn in on matter or the rubud Isab Diflftllht liiamlal. Noumea! ltaiflaaatshaaraisifif lllvlllltaa- Notes Bylhe The labors d: the London cm... enca for the reduction of naval ar- ilve power agreement covering all the points embraced in the negotiations _ was not reached, but the three pow- eu, Britain, the United States and Japan, were able to nnd g hula o1 agreement in Nllrd to these points. The representatives of all five pow- ers subscribed to a. pact of narrow- er compass. The capital ahlp limi- tations adopted acthe Washington conference of 1m are to hold among the nve powers ior an additional flve years. There will be no building of battleships before 1936. Aircraft carriers under the ten thousand ton mark are also to be included in the limitations prescribed by the Wash- ington treaty, as the carrlerrover the ten thousand mark have been for the last eight years. Among the hve barbarous. The main point of can. tcntion as between the United States and Britain was over the a-incirgun has to be given out before the "public can know all the particulars oi the agreement. Of course nothing is concluded in so far as the United states is con- cerned untii the Senate of, that coun- try passes on the terms. As that body is strong for a big navy, it may not flPDrove the agreement in regard ‘to the limitation as to ten-thousand ton cruisers. Considerable speculation is being indulged in as to the relative sizes of the ten largest cities of the United States which will be revealed by the next census. New York, it is predicted will show a population of 6,110,000 as compared with 5,020,000 in i020. Chicago is conceded to be the second largest city followed by Phila- delphia, Detroit, Doa Angeles, Cleve- land, st. Louis. Baltimore, Boston and Pittsburgh in the order named. The English Channel ‘ ' pro- ject long discussed has been given another set back by an eminent en- gineer who has- been making a study oi the subject. He intimates the pfl- sibility of water percolating through the chalk formation at such a rate as to be uncontrollable. He also doubts that the amount of traffic secured by the proposed tunnel would be sufficient to mI-ko it profitable. The tunnel would probably increase the number of ,‘ -seekers going from Great Britain to the Continent but not from the Continent to Great Britain, c. ntinen‘ l people he declar- lively as those on the Continent. supply of wild ducks decreasing fall by fall will be interested to hear that the official game warden of the State of Maryland estimates that during the past hunting season on Chesa- peake Bay, and tributary waters, about half a. million wild ducks ‘and geese were killed, largely by sports- men irom New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. When one takes into account the middle west and Cali- lower Mississippi, the slaughter of wild fowl must have run into mil- lions. N0 wonder that the U. S. led- eral Government lately made a na- tion-wlde law limiting the bag of wild ducks to l5 per day, per gunner. The Toronto incident in connection with bord Willingdorfs deliverance on the West Indies question, has re- vived discussions as to the desirabil- ity of future governors-gen _al being Canadian, and Sir Robert Borden's name is again mentioned. Until now a commons. has never been sent by Great Britain as governor-general of Canada, despite the knowledge that titles are not popular here. The Irish Free state has had nothing but commoners and some Ottawa opinion favors its example being followed here. Legislation may be passed permit- ting the erection of a 01,000,000 bridge across the 5t. Lawrence river. The bridge. Arnold Smith, 'M..P., ex- plained to the private bills committee while it starts in Ontario and ends in Quebec, is only soo yards from the New York state high-way on the Quebec aide.- A similar bill had been passed two years ago for an $1.1M"!!- tional structure; but the New York governor had ‘vetoed it. This bridge would be the only connecting link ba- tween the states and Canada-be- tween Montreal and Minn Pails. , . House and senate tariff Gunmen dealing with grain screeninaselwfl of which from Fort William and Port Arthur amounts ‘to litfllltllflb threw out the ‘M19001 770N515". raubrhauaccntsmundaadaub- stitutad i0 Ni‘ 6011i." ad vaiorlmr Th! following aunts increases. iiirdllflls compared‘ with Way», mamenta have not been fruitless. A‘ powers submarine warfare la to be subject to conditions to make it less type of cruisers. More infonnation ed thought England as well u‘ scot- land and Ireland too arid-Victorian. Their holiday resorts were not as Canadian sportsmen who see the fornia, Ind the large marshes of the- , pound. now I; dried cream. 1.214 Bylewm W. Burial. ILD.. wna-r mo: uesar noes. ‘ . l '%__ - . When you remember that ‘your heart has tn pump blood . through small tubes which. ifput and to end would reach‘ armlnd theearth a num- ber of times, you can recline what a tremendous‘ ‘ ' tofsvorlr it does. ‘There are about l0 or .11 pints of blood in trut-bodyo! yours: your heart pumps about 2 gallons a minufo. which u Juat ‘like lifting one‘ hair pound 4o inches in height with each beatOrassonaeonehl-lwellpaitit. theworkyaheartdoesinadayis equal toahovellingfltonsoicoalup a. three foot incline; , Now that is an ordmm day's work. but what about jhe days when hard physical work has idbe done? ' It has been ai-iown that the tissues of the body conuun many little blood vessels-capilllaa-iee-which only act un- der great necessity. . These tiny vessels whose walls Are much thinner than times P1988‘. In aitu/tedwiminmeflasueainmmsa way that they absorb the blood from the blood vesels coming from the heart, the arteries, use it to nourishthetissueinwhimthvyare situated, and then the veins carry the used blood beck to the heart again. Nowasamwteroffactthema- jority of these iiiitle blood vessels are in the ' ' because the ' tpart of that body of yours is muscle. The Danish scientist, Kroh. has been able to show us that muscle tdsue oom- tains seven times as many little blood vessels as are used during rest periods. During hard work or hard exercise thcselittlevemelaopenupandtknin the blood ‘in the timse, which explains the great ammmt of blood that cau- thus get into the muscle, ' Nowwhaltdoestbismean isyou? Thart if you-m not well, the very fact that you lie down and rest means that your heart does not haveas much work w do, pumpingblood to your muscles, and you canthua preserve mrn-enomtofiaMmeailn-icmuist is smoking _ On the other hand if you are in nu- health it means um any ener- cise-however, little-calls on your heart oosend rnoreblooduldiatpanand thus the heaztitselliandtiropartto which me blood u sent m both strengthened. _ - ._N0w moat individuals do not like the idea. of work or sot. exercises, but do enjoy games. However if you are unable in play any ovu“ or indoor games, when you see how a brisk walk or some simple home exercises-I tn i minutes - will open up these extra blood vuseis for you. and give you a strong heart it is certainly worth thflt much effort. THE LAND WE LOVE ay raaxx LIIGI CANADA'S REINDEER ENTERPRISE Q. What is Canada's reindeer enterprise? A. Canada's reindeer enterprise which is now under way involves the transfer of 3000 of‘ these lnlmnlg from Alaska to the delta of the Mac- kenzie River in order to provide food and clothing for the inhabitants of the Far North, Eskimo herders are overland. It is expected that the herd will reach their destination early in 1931 where corrals will be ready for them. The yauccess of this _ unique migration will mean much to the dwellers in Canada's northland, A woman. aged 30, who recently lDPM-lkd in pifiice court at Inlrmtfl Enslmd, could not read, wu-iu or tell the time I gallon, now 38-4. cream, see-lo cents a gallon, now 30. Bkilmmed milk and buttermilk, 21-: cents a alllon. now 1| unsweeb- condensed milkpls-lo cents a. pound now 1; sweetened condensed milk, 22-4 centam pounrbhow 1-1; m ether condensed milk. ass-loo centa a pound now 12-0. Dried whole milk, 01-12 cents a cents a Pflllnd. now 'Il dried skimmed and dried buttermilk, scents a pound now 11-2; malted milk, as per cent, no! 20. ' -- . ~ -- - siren-a ccmamnin ‘rats cl a sense-a Dwndbutuotial thlnsopsreentl ,”_ . or employed for the task, being driver. Cheese andeheaeesubstiiutaeware , .‘ » u‘ (s: a‘ solemn) -'-~-r.-vL..-.;,-.- "III MI!!! OI’ ‘III IIITIII. .. - L‘ |:“_.\". ' In the-Halifax Herald of 80th No‘- vember 1929, I contributed, over the plllldbnylaf 0f -"Old-".i'inier" a. hi‘! snatch reserpine the 1m so u- Page, the "Poet ‘Ifaureatev otth Pro- I vincef together‘ with‘ selections from birvolumemf poeins entitled; "m island Minstrel." Many or nu sr-F fusions werrwritbem-in u» aru In‘ this series of .~asmmus=ncu'-- I have considerably amplified his work, as will -be seen in several -of=these old-time sketches, particulaslyjdr, us...)- ‘description in rhyme" of "in: firs-t. , . .,i1°a", ., ,.‘. ' I desire nowltorroaerve recollec- i tlon of 7a'volumeof-poetry_ iaauadday a talented lady,’ in the year ‘i800, Miss l1. N. Locker-by, a native of Cav- endisb, who, later on‘, resided in Charlottetown.‘ It ‘is worth ‘while mentioning here that she ~was‘ a daughter of the late Mr. John lock- erby,~ who moved from Cavendiahto Charlottetown and was for a nuin- ber of years the senior Eider of Zion Presbyterian Church, a highly reé‘ spected citizen, who lived to the ra- markable age of ‘r think, one hund- " red and two years. shortly before he pissed away he was-honored by‘ a personal visit from their lxcellencies Lord and Lady Aberdeen, who’ at that time were the occupa ‘ efithe vice-regal residence in Ottawa. To return to the subject of the poems of Miss Lockerby, with whom 1 was well acquainted, being at the time of the printing of the volume a boy in the office of my brother George Bremner, from whose estab- lishment the book was issued, it might here be said that it received raikkoa plans etu- N,‘ a. Abru 1a.- DMW‘. fililqaly, ‘aftefifqon, claimed thoguurd veteran; inure’ ruidflc: Human-m‘ "in uie‘ three ‘Maritime Provinces in 'two"wee_k.a-' rffirolb each provincbiirf ‘thefperson b! James ‘ n. ci-ocliétt, presiaentl and mmlsinc of ‘rho/Cleaner. .- Ltd... which hegiopntded ,d_ half cen- tury m. and gulch, underlain m1- ful ‘direction gown ‘m; the 1954.1!!! daily. ncjwsosmr in-lthe, oeu- txjaljecyon of alayjruriawlck. <_ i Hilario: closely can Malina of o. 0. 1mm. publisher. o! the soil ‘tlie age of l2. on April i, and that of John I_.~ ar-moreasy; at-Charlotts- towrnwlgv. at, the or a1 was itill inactive ‘ediunafwritcr-ror the ohmoeurohn Guardian until within "“ "t?" i" hillfeiifusm Avril 15th. m; Crocketthnccumbed at aso p. ‘m. this afternoon at his home in Sala- he would have been ‘ll years of age. in; ‘Crockett was-taken ill with liron-i chitin about two weeks ‘ago, ‘death be- lfli due'to the development of ccm- plications. ‘ ~~ » - ' MriCi-ockett was‘ born at Camp- benton- in April; 1859. He began news- paper work ‘at the ie of sixteen. Two . yap laterfha took position on the stad 0i the Dilly News, Saint John. hater he returned to Fredericton and establishedvthe Gleaner with which he has béen connected for half a cen- tury. ‘He was also“ Manager of the laint sonnet-hand‘ whilst ‘conduct- ifll his own "raewspiper in "mum.- very flattering comments from, "not only Island newspapers, but several others issued from diflerent parts _o_f the Lower Provinces as well as Upper Canada. The following from [the "Montreal Saturday Reader" of Febl; ruary 24th, 186a may be taken as a_ specimen of the opinions of news-i paper critics: , " "we have Juwt received a volume of Poems, the production of a young lady» Miss Lockerby, who is nowhrat i introduced to the Literary. Pubuci The "Wild Brier" is a model of 'ex-, oellence, coming as it does from our-I "tight little Island" on the seaboard,‘ The. printing and bindibg is neatly‘ if not elegantly done, and the work has been stereotyped too, and all on the Island. . . . . The descriptive powers of Miss L. are considerable,‘ : . . . Her versiflcation is pleasant and smooth. The book breathes a! spirit of religious quiet and content- ment throughout. . . . . The fact that anything written in the lower .Provinces at the present time, when ' we are probably on the point of being united with them, ought to receive 'ouperior consideration and welcome." The title page of the book reads thus: ~ “The Wild Brier: or Lays by an Untaught Minstrel-E. N. L. . . . clmrlottctown. P. E. L. Geo. Brem- ner, ‘Excelsior Printing Oflice, Prince Street, 1866.". The volume was dedicated to Ilka. Dundas, wife of the Lieutenant Cov- ernor of the Province. ~ A few samples of the contents ‘are here given: "The fragrant blushing brler, ‘A modest wildling, grows Beside the glassy river, Where sunbcams seek repose. "And gives its grateful fragrance To every passer by, Its beauteous tints unfolding To glad the weary eye. INTEGIB VITLI The man of life upright Whose guiitlua heart is free From all dishonest deeds, (Jr-thought oi vanity; Tho man whose silent days 1n harmless ioys are spent , Whom hopes cannot delude, Nor sorrow discontent; ' That man needs neither towers Nor. armor. for, defence; Nor secret vaults to fly; . ham thundark violence; . l " Y‘: Baenlycanbehc , ;_ '. With-unliirlflatedoyas ._. fisher-marinas». QQIlUHWIOIQIIIKIII-r .-..>.* ' i..! "ml"- Fsfimlflltlllllilll ill-W. ofrbatiauqrfermauiaq. n-wqaqu- non-a ... . ., "so may this little casket They came; we ask you now ic come n» 6m. .. _.,,~;,§,yd.é6.m€w . - ( ton. Hejwaisucceeded in saint John llyihe lat; Mr. Hedley B. MacKin- nbn after the piper had been organ- ized.‘ For many years he was closely tive party and occupied a position near his leaders in both Dominion idéhtified, with the Liberal Conserva- v andflProvincial circles. ____.__..,_..__.i. _... .. . Of- crude; untutor'd thought, Like wildflower on the wayside, By wearrpilgrlm sought, "Refresh the wayworn spirit Alongliiefla-tliorny road;- - And point each youthful trawler To vinueksweot abode. The piece par.- exoellence of the volume occupies nearly one-third of tna ‘entire book of nearly --two hund- rod vases" ind ~ in entitled, "George- and Amanda-a aketch- from real life." . The story, which is a love story, as well as a. part description of the terrible gala that destroyed‘ overnity fishing vessels, mostly of the Ameri- can‘ fleet, of! Cavendish shoals in 1651, begins thus: ' ~ “Ye who have never drunk of aor- ' . rowfa cup, ' Nor feltthe sting that disappoint- ‘ment brings, . Nor bowddn-meek submission to the voice That badfyou lay your lov’d onea in the dust, ' - ' Nor uttered the loud wail as ye con- ; signed ~ Them to the cold, dark,.mouldering~ clay from whence around Us, ‘and. a listening circle, alt and ' < hear ‘ A tale of fair Prince Edward isle; a .‘ 4 “IQ v v ey one who dwelt hard by its atl- beat strand,“ Asa was» its ceaseless waters rippling glide, And play. and dance beneath the early beams; , Meridian heat," and aoft declining ' raya ’ . 0f heaven's all-glorious orb; and . rise in Wllht. And curling little eddies up, and . Mp _ . Upon the sparkling pebbles as they . . .1". . I in interspersed with pearls, ruby, " amber.‘ And divlra colored‘ stones, and eur- bill ihlill. ‘ Add aeaweacrmoacnsinutaly dglicgte; or chase“ each other up tad gbldali ‘flashback receding, hurry down. and I l...‘ .\ a '¢' ,-"- Bewrd5r.‘8a11;as,,whp_,dicd it i mince. -‘ ma he lived until’ suhdiy, ~. 0110001000 Saucer, v Bob 111G Oil-rt, etc. iletyoursjnow. . 4 hi»... .11. . 4 . -. OI-OQOO-QOOOOOY i a injurilioe no.1», mania - ‘palladium, l Q ‘, ‘A1461 my. varietyof ohm-y ugh, Traits, Nuts and cream Eggs, 10o, 25¢ l m .. -....,,, bo-oo-oo-oo-yogooow eeceies e 1-0 o one 0e“ e Qqq. DON'T FORGET - ‘ _TEA IS i . A l, Orange Pekoe Sold Only in Red Airtight Package; oeeoooooooooooeoooooooooooovooooooooaeee, Boost for at Grcater'T.Provincaf, »-a ‘w... I - . A sec our won: Fishy‘ f . ‘tpaasrrzagjuovlsLrms = m»; lrwi thixiin ti ~ “Novsltids thzt oonsngoulci wig 1:02;??? $1.3,‘ . "i§2§"’i§1;.’£'%2”2"u§“?"““‘ I nsxmyma. 8mm shrug, con n33»,- 375.152‘ .' ' ‘ Q i (54: each) ' and 50o , "5 ,E~..A,.-_.F°S'"‘ §>iv="-'l'~u“" sllflflysi "Llhv "Prince Edward, island's i “Golden Future’, A Booster Feature . I .. TdStimulate Business and Business Lion.“ diiions in Prince Edward Island. published by The Charlottetown- Guardian We are Soliciting the Cooperation of the.“ Business Firms and Leading Men of -. Charlottetown. Summerside and the Province. . ,_A Mr. Frank Walker, Assistant Editor of the Guarb, ian editing this Special Feature Edition, which - , now m/ihe course of publication, andMr. J. iil~ Kirk. _.I a. s__ -a.-.._. _e n..a.|r_; __ lam. an aaa manna‘: va a sauna-slum‘ _ _ o.‘ w. ' toldlaliwmately in Thyme and blank verse. Here is another iittlegem; ' "TO ANTOINETTE" - "We met but oncee-‘at a festal board. And light were our spirits then: 1111M eyes met miriez~to thy mur- mured word r A "Mi rtlmnse in my heart was stirr'd, A deep vibration swept its chord:-- But ohl shall we meet again? "There are hours that come-mud the aching heart _ Forgetsylilre s. dream, its pan-m. when I aléwn oi Joy, like the golden sun, As h! calmly sinks, when the day is done, . .. illumes our path; and this was one:-- But, say, shall we meet again?" "AUTUMN" written at the age 0".‘ fourteen. "O‘cr the dark waters of the troubled deem ., The billows tumble to and fro, And o'er its heaving bosom, hy-‘eeq and blue, The waves in wild confusion flow‘. O Q I I O "See how they leap and play areunq yon rock; Then bound, the glistening pebbles o'er; ' ’ Hark! how they roar, with hob-go and hollow sound, And dash upon the rocky shore, O O O O I ‘ "All, all thesweete of summerusw are fled; ‘_ The wild flowers, blooming in their _ pride,. 7 an rudely swept by piping windp, And, eddying, scam.- m- and wid -- o -0 1o o a. - - "Yet joyous epringfa delightful gale: jhall blow, ~ And bud and bloasim deck the ~ 503th: ' . _ \ And beauteousjgrnu phail bum the t‘ dlnscme sleds y ‘.1 ' not wrap thou mcumrins than .,now.~f ' i- -,-e.ee e a , i’ Theamaalectlloaa ‘could hfudu, aimed. um mm zcnisaonniv: 8511M manly, to-put especial-tinny ’ Monro: ihumncaarbya ca." "F'"",' _");' e'._.y\.s. i,‘ ._', -.. trio w. same}?- -i'§'l i. '-l'<"\~'§, ,4 . v , “Fair artistl we would bid ward? q Pursue thy glorious art, 5g Till thy ibvcd name be deeply en v On every gentle heart. N‘ t} K "And we an come toair lady, And gather round thee ma‘, To wreaths a garland-scant let 5,, And bind it round thy hail] ill Titian deem us not, dear truslve: g. But, from a pupil's hand. P» Accept this humble preferred By fond affection Dianna"; 1:. ° Grandmother of the - _ Irving-Grafton street. ‘, ' TThe "arena," "Ecce ~~' other celebrated pain ~- cuted in 185B. i‘, (To be continued) Al‘ .By the proposed llrl! i cling time between RM" Italy, will be four hours. ~ vhui u hours by rail . l More women doriors an 4 to West Africa by the British lal office than lo all other i colonies and protector-ates 1 ___.___.._-5- M "m" iii , , PROTECT i YOUR F0 i’ Agaiiist the ravlfilll ' " round worms and N“ by treatment with _ Q- PNEMA CAPSULES . 1n. Jflectl". e-‘Ziciclll. ; puma remedy. . \ ‘ wnfil- “W” ‘ recommended by ll" ; veterinarians for u" . h d flrulu‘ o“ is!‘ till] .°\°"°' " ans