w, ca‘ some tuinluulipvn ilililillli (In nlvnnoo) lolivarocl. nil ‘United States. WN GUARDIAN Notes By The Way The ‘Poses River country, lying in north west Alberta is occupy- ius vspace in the Liberal press of 01 lario, the Prairie Provinces and British Columbia. They tell that there ls a vast tract of excellent Land, in exent some 30,000,000 acres, that while the winters are, of course very cold still excellent ' 3' ‘ wheat of the hardier sorts can be‘ B. [um W_ 34",", ALB.‘ grown and there is abundant grass and forage for live stock. There, VALUE 0F A ls also the fact that all these landsl A chap wal The Public Forum liliilat 00p "of Pours lhllr (founded rosin u - psa- you (in vanes) Ililfll YX-Pii, l. LIlllllill-l-O. l. ‘about 3- ""51 Qoorst . Iliad. Onl- D- ,“ ha,“ ans-nu Illtos, n. x. Oar-via. In York lQrsssnhttsr-Ironk l. Iortlrap 05kg». japraassanafvo-I. J. Pour W. P. W. C. HALF HOLIDAY l In _ Sir.-l am addressing you a few ltnes to draw your attention to Pnnce of Wales College. Now the case is this. Students go in there from- the country and are naturally quite lonely and home- “ck- 119551111)’ never becg away from home before. They have "bu" 9'91’! day whereas they used to have Monday a holiday and students got a chance to spend their week-ends at home. l! 1119)’ must have school every day W11)’ 110w‘- have it on Monday afternoons and give the students ,unanuas ‘us; In mo... Iro- ca» following agents AMERICAN "" ‘ASSURANCE CO. A ' nun omcs - ronorrro," cannon‘.- I-IE oxcollsnt results achiavod by tho North American lifs Assuranca Company during I924 were gratifying alihs to olflclals and policyholders. Tho substantial gains shown b,*,Eh. following figures will ba a source of continued satisfaction and confidence to all intaroatsd in tho Cowl“!!- rouctrs ISSUED AND nsvrvso AMOUNT OF INSURANCE IN FORCE . ASSETS . PAYMENTS TO POLICYHOLDERS ........... .............. suartus NORTH Stationers. Gruhos 5t. ‘ d 00.. Queen street ' Btlunn Vendor "Daily. Richmond Street Bookatall L. Doucntto, 80 Spring Park Bil. MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2_ 1925 ARE WE GROWING P. l‘. Iarpby, Prince Si... Grocery > l. P. Duly, Qaaan etrost W. 0. Wright. Ions Street West B. Thunsno Whito, I16 Elm Ave. Fred Gaadst, Great Goorao street I. D. " . Grafton Street. "CHILL" - and whatrver oil, gas or vruineraislone day to“ utwfilsiiyficttlgiliiyliiflfé l.e beneath "them are under federal as the weather was not com he was cohtzol and hence should be at 8g a 10s; u, 3990111", (or n__ once opined up by a National Rail-l As he continued on his way he \v:iy ii‘. order that the lands may?“ 76811518;“(alilllfrgléffliigllgllf the _ , -,,_ , ody. an e ec e o go ome. bc LUOHLUI, settled and develop‘ Arriving there he announced to “1- the family that he was solos to s masons-too '_' 120.025.049.00 ' 21.232.020.05 2.aa1,4oo.12z 4.o59.14s.s1 ' port from the Progressives. ‘was flu- aily achieved and the Progressives ‘ l haps we shall grow out , care‘ no doubt growing in Can- ibirt still very young and, m1!’ may it? qtiilg- ch ldish- as com- ’ u, say, with 0m England. The i-= day, for lnstanm- the Con- ative‘ government there confer- ’ a. peerage upon ext-Premier As- Irwho for the past thirty years -= ‘been a leading Liberal who, in rifavnent and ou: of it, had fouill" e Conservatives tooth and nail- rrd the Conservative rank and file. ' ny of them iuligible for a peer- e, never whimpered- never howl- a-bout the unfairness of the dis- Jbntlon of patronage. Of course l -Premier Asqui h was and still is n of ability. a err-by in evtry way of any honour man outstanding ‘hat a British ‘government of any‘ tical shade could confer upon lflilaldwln government is Conserva- ‘I . iyfive and. with us at least. "it is not ‘jmeet ‘than bread " hould be given to the dogs." the children's he Mackenzie King government should hand out a senators-hip or "even a clerkship in the Civil Ser- vice ~10 a Conservative? We shud- kder to think of it. Every Liberal in l the country would voice his indign- ' otlon in tones terrific and the wires connecting Ouawn with every farth- est-corner of the dominion would bu kept blazing hot with protests. And we fare nc-t sure that if such a thing uld happen after .\lr. Nleighen umes the premiership, a similar ‘l and protest Would not go up And then.- . v nhe Conservatives. e are. In England they have long since earned ito rcspect merit wherever it may be found whether in friend r foe. ln war and peace this is I the British way. Tlhe ‘body of the enemy slain on the ibatitlefield is given respectful soldier's burial. In ' important administrative positions Jnen are chosen for their fitness. When a peerage is avallaiblc it is handed to the most deserving be he n follower or an opponent. With us in Canada, so far at least w. acknowledge merit and fitness ifor office only in those ,who can [pronounce our shlibboloth. And we piion make a ‘sorry mess of it. Per- of it in l . . ime; perhaps -we shall elect as our l l-opreservtaitivcs and appoint as our l w officials the men lire-st flvtcd to per- orm the duties assigned them. {HOLLOW \ i "A marcifull Providence fashion- Ygd us ‘hollow in order that 'we could ;.0ur iprlnciplcs swallow" said the ‘Immortal Josiah Blgelow. There is I good deal of swallowing of iprin- ' ciples whose days and the capacity _of ‘the hollowness appears to the am- ‘m. Undoubtedly "there will be fmore of it ibofore the coming ses- " on of parliament closes. ' Mr. Mackenzie King has given us I ‘sort of Indefinite idea of Wlllfll. ‘he " filamentary programme is going ' ~ be. or rather what he intends it l ail lhe. if he can keep it wit-bin I e prescribed limits. There is not ~ ng to ibe any ‘further reduction Hubs dlsriff, he has announced, and railway freight rates are to be so Idiusted that ‘they will satisfy east, l comm and west. Those are thrr M10 Hams on Iwhich theyiProgr-os- ‘em; n“. been aha ‘still Bra dict- hwo items which have caus- a practically all the troimn, the demorallsirrg of Industry, the un- ‘yimpioynlm and the exodus of vthe three years. The Progres- ves alone are demanding a reduc- _ "intrhot-arfnf. us anathem- otldbersis or of Conservatives. tariff reduction, promised at acclaimed it as "the first ‘step in the right direction" while a jubilant “death Liberal ‘hailed it as ‘the knell of protection." find that the “first step in rlg-h‘t direction" is the last, when ‘mey upeumg up and developing The Liberal papers also tell us Jut the King Government is im- pressed with- the importance of the theiPeac-e River country and that the 1,1,6 building of a line of the Canadian- Progresgves Wm no doubt makeiNational from Edmonton thereto a noise and also same further de the speech from the Throne at the degrees, or fou mands. T118 will’ Premier has made DPB-‘ed by the necessary bill to author-I vision for this ‘by promising such.‘ an adjustment of freight rates ‘as will satisfy the west and, presum- ably. -be satisfactory to the rest of‘ who wan, we mad Canada. On this adjustment Prem- there are engineers who want jobs at ler King is building his hopes and |zhere will (be something doing wvhen parliament gets under vray. will probably receive mention in onculllg of Parliament to be follow- rsc its conslruct.on—u‘ith borrowed money, of course Of course also there are members of Parliament ffrom Alberta and British Columbia built, and and contractors who want con- tracts and a Government that likes to spend money all behind the pro- ject and urging it on. The only real question the iprem- ier ‘will have to face ls how to hold‘ ._ ‘ v h. the Progressive support and they I m' B“ he ls a Lberad and L e have. or think they have, some real ‘way grievances. The balancing of the budget "will be an easy matter. will fix that. If Premier King A hundred mII-. _ lions or so taken from the expendi- WW1’ Wfihat would hhlppen in Canada if _ I titres and charged ‘to the railway It so happens, however, that the ‘Canadian Pacific Railway is ai- i in pcssr-ssion. being the lessee and option holder 0n the Ed- monton and Dunvezan Railway. which taps the Peace River Dis- tric.. Asflvet the settlers on Peace are so comparatively few that one railway should supply , thefts with a sufficient outliw. The S projcct therefore is that the Nat- l programme is carried out, as laid mm, Runway ma]; bum a new. flown by him in his Massey Hail line to compete with the Canadian speech. the session will be snlooth one but where are unlimited possibilities and we she/ll ‘see What‘ we shall see. EDITORIAL NOTES The second month already. Andland waste to wh cars still running. Iiear Itcv. G. C. Taylor had grcatiifi bib‘- "11 3111111011915 ‘riaceptirm in Ilallfax crowded congregation aippreclative. As as lost soon it a hockey a intense hear lady intends opening and general department. bins. yesterday. and most hu interest much needed class for ‘boys dancing Tho prolonged spell 0f cold wea- Ither has iplayed havoc with the coal Hear ~Mlsa Earl‘; of the Dis- pensary is at ‘her wits end to know alPac-Ific Railway and divide the latterl.‘ business with the probable result of having two roads that ‘will hot pay their operating @1- ipt-nse in place of one that is bar- ely paying its lvay, ' This ls the sort of extravagance ich the King Gov- lc-rnment is committing the country. |Whatcv0r extravagance it proposes will for, and its Progressive fil-IPDOFIBP! will vote for as well provided the money is spent in the west. 1191"‘ in Prince Edward Island We 801111 four Liberal members to the HOuti" of (‘cmmons- Was it ever Yfll known that any one of them ever yet vottd against all)’ 91100115111119 of public money proposed by the King Governmen"? Never! Voing with and for the Government every time and all the time, they have voted to build railways irrevcrY province but their own» and have been quite content apparently that half ourrailyvay mileage should re- main of the narrow gauge for four S ll |wllo admitted that vote ' bed, because he thought he was going to be sick. ~ And he was an unusually healthy individual this caused a laugh, but after taking a dose of Epsom Salts, he got an electric pad in bed with him, and covered up snugly, He then took out his watch, and Ihad a clinical thermometer brought to him. ‘In spite of his chiiliuess his temperature registered about 103 r degrees above nor- mal, and his pulse was beating very strongly, at about 120, or forty over his normal action. He hadn't a pain, nor an ache. ‘He tlien sent for his physician some infection had attacked him, but was unable to locate the cause. The patients pulse and temper- ure remained up for nearly a week, be felt rather deprcsflcd, but was really in no paln_ lle remained in the house for tvvo or three days longer. then got about his work, but felt very weak for a couple of mouths thereafter. What was the matter? Was he wise i0 go to bed as he did? The underlying causewvas never really discovered because the phy- sician was frank enough to admit ltbis, But something had entered liuto bis system that roused all his powers of resistance. The severe chills were direct evi deuce that all his forces, his bloat‘ stream, were being called upon to fight something inside his body thus leaving the surface of the skin "chilly." Then the heavy first beat lug of his heart told him and his physician, that his heart was doing its “bit" to ward off the intruder, by working harder and foster. I Further, the increase in temper- ature likewise showed that there lwas trouble because extra heat was necessary iu the battle, as bis ;bl0od corpuscics work better when ‘they are warm. in other words a real "chill" told fhis mun that something was or: lits way, anti be had sense enough to get ready for it. A real chill then is a because it i blessing in disguise, tells two things, - I-‘irs-t. that something is on its nvay, and i-lccnnii, that your system has found it out, untl is putting up a fight for you. i . §§OQ4 O-OO-OOOOO ' Daily Selections i FOR i Guardian Readers ~v February 2, 1925 what to do in. the case of many, poor people. The ‘Patriot's fund is still cipen through lan/gulshing. A years. the Prince Edward Theatre. Aft cais there ‘was inclined to be aible. management. on shipments from Halifax; Prince Rupert: 5 Winnipeg Toronto Ottawa Montreal] Ohioaso On Prince E mos 2.12% 1.04 1.s1 s.a1 8.15 4.0a, 4.02% $4.08 1.67 1.33 1.10 1.82 .88 1.14 1.24 dollar each from a. hundred people will go a ‘long ~way to ibrlnig relief. That studying the requirements of tho people and catering to their tastes ibrlng reward is lnstanced by the long run of legitimate thczhtri- emment‘! One might better slumlp in ordinary patronage. Mr. Gallagher immediately applied his bruins and training to the situa- tion. saw what was wamed, and now ‘ibusiness as usuad" ls the slog- an alt the Prince Edward the pro grammes of which are much enjoy- T-ho agitation over the discrimin- ation against the Maritime Prov- ince shippers in the matter of ex- press rates has now entered the fish territory. and ‘Halifax Herald says It ls the subject of vigorous protest registered with the C. N. It. The following ta-bie gives |tho empress rates, per .100 pounds of fish, at present in force also ‘the stilt-es as ‘tihey shoulli be figured on the sumo ‘basis "as those from Th“; {qui- qentlemcn have voted to spend in all many hundreds of mlliona .of Canadian. tax-payers money, including some millions contrzbutt-d by the lllX-Ilfll/QTS "t Prince Edward island. Where has the money gone that they have voted away in their survile and cringing support of the King Gov- u-sk a where it has not gone. It 11115 B0116 to build railways on tho. Prairies and beyond the Rocky Moirntaine. it has gone to fatten nabobs of the civil service at Ottawa with salar- ies unheard of before in Canada-—- aalarles of $15,000, $25,000 and $50,000. it has- gone to buy a Scribe Hotel in Park-l at a cost of $3,000,000, It has been r-lpent in hundreds of thousands on commissions on travelling 01111911- sos of ministers sent over the sev- en- iseus to the end of the earth. Cl‘ In ail this extravagance and waste which our island members have voted for how much has been 0f any special benefit to the provin- ce th‘ey misrepresent? A salary was got for Andrew Fraser Mit- chell in order that some good Lib- lerals might sell their lands at a big profit to some brave officers of the British military service. We all know the result. Has it not e0 besmirched the reputation of our province as a home for settlers that it is the last place on earth that a British immigrant will seek no a homo? .____. Those tour gentleman mombsrs have dons pretty well for their own. pockets but we cannot ‘lie- iieve that the voters of Prince Edward Island will elect them or any of them again. They seem to be of that opinion themselves. When th‘e Governiorship was vacant one or more of them were applicants for lths posi- tion according to common Joport Now that a Benatorsh-ip b 09011 two or more of tiumsre hot-foot ‘A ‘b Will-IRE IS YOUR TREASURE’! Where your treasure is. there will your heart be also. Matthew 6:21. PRAY-Bitz-Grucious ~ God, wo would surrender nll to thee for thy keeping and service. FRIENDQHIP When I have crossed the heavenly sea, To join the great majority, l only wielr that here below Some friend may miss me as l go. l hope that sometime in my life, Amid the trouble, care and strife, I may have been a friend in need, To one, at least, n. friend indeed. My pictures grace no hall of fame; No honor rolls contain my name; Tile recognition thut i craved Was ever spokon——not engraved. Nor wealth, nor learning, sire—— To friendship did my soul aspire; A friend, to mo, was worth fur ' more Than untold gold. or ages lore. my de- This thought then, shall I take with me, As l sail o'er that heavenly sea- “May one friend, left alone below. Feel sorry that l had to go." —-J. Hubbell. after it. Hankering for office and fear of the people when combined are powerful motives. To get of- fice they must continue ‘to sup- port the Kin-g Government. So we expect them to go to Ottawa and vote for the railway’ to Peace River, or to Hudson Bay, the Arctic Ocean or the moon, if the King Gove. p. , such works, and let Prince Edward Is- land shift for Itself. 1 NAME! ARE NEW NEW YORK. Jan. 29—l-Iere are the new shades in hosiery-see if you recognize ‘them, naturelle, horsie. puceiie. phantom, jeuncsse, Park avenue, discretion, foobilght romance. None is new. They range from the flesh tones repreacntd by "chair" to a rosy beige for "rom- once", to a silver IN! for ‘Milli- tom" “spans ‘a dark ‘tan for "discre- tioli." r a chance to go borne Saturday and back Mmldfl! a. m? vi believe they will do better work for i believe a large per. ("Elli-age of failures at Christmas is due to the fact that they didn't Pill forth their best endeavors so 1110mm! ~11 theyjail they can stay home. I am. Sir. etc ARENT. Former College Boy Wrestling Champion Less than a fortnight ago, the d5"? Diners announced under sig- "lflvamly moderate headlines that an showing as tbay In conddorin. representative. I924 operations. L. GOLDMAN, President. W. KERR GEORGE, D. McCRAE, COL, 140 Richmond 8L, Charlottetown. P. E. I. ""1 World's heavyweight wrestling Chllmiilonslzlp liad been lost by "Strangler" Lewis to liVnyne Munn 111 a K8118“ City bout. The moder- ate headlines indicated that. the. 5011111115 editors did not think the matter of much general interest, “I'd ma! 15 1t W115 a matter of only relative importance who was the heavyweight ehhnlpihn o; m, world in what they so aptly call 'he "mat game." The sporting edi- [01 01 ‘the Brooklyn Eagle, a paper that has distinguished ltseiflnthe Snorting world by its bounding nf lake wrestlers; received the .foi- lowing telegra-m from J, C. Marsh, manager of Marin Picstina, a cou- tender ‘for the vbamp!onship:— "All wrestlers know that the Lewis-Munn itiatcil was the bunk 111111 thfltfboth men are managed hy the Baumzin Brothers. There are at least 50 men in America who can earsliy' defeat Munn. in all ‘history of sport there has never been ‘anything socbeap, be uncall- otl for and so brazen as this so- cailcrl match. I am willing that you publish this wire over my name." The Wrestling Trust What has been strspected and even flatly cborgrd ngztin-si th- - r The Dead A correspondent of the London Times writes that when in Paris re- cently hc visited the Cathedral 0f Notre Dame and noticed that the guides invariably stolp-ped groups of tourists before a tablet on one of the columns near the Jeanne d'Arc statue. The taibiet bears this in- scrlptlon. in English and in French: "To the Glory of God and to the memory of One Million Dead of the British Euipire,who fell in the Great War, 1914-1918, and of which the greater part rest in France." Empire’s his legs, but not in the spotwhere the boxer needs it, namely, In the jaw. He took to professional wrestling only last Spring, which is another romantic fact that the press agents may well exploit. But does it sec-m reasonable that a husky college ‘boy should in the course of a few months become wrestling champion .of the world’! is there nothing in the game but Strength? if so. it is not surpris- ing that recently Ned Pendletoti, one of tho leading wrestlers in the United States, drew only forty- eigbt people who paid to sec him perform in New York. A Tough Match 193111115’. hP-‘tvywcight wrestlers that they are. in a kind of trust or combination, managed by the same people. Jack Curley had a stable of them. in, -C:inada the late Geo. Kennedy had astulrle of thr-m, nil apparently bitter rivals, but all managed by the same man. Just who is the champion at any given time is something thut even well- po=terl sporting men might be ‘ig- norant of because the title has been so frequently switched around among S-tcicher. Lewis, Caddock and Zbyszko. The ‘theory was that each should ‘hold the champion- ship for a time. tour the country or invade the movies or ‘the stage for 1i. certain time to accumulate the money that the title would bring and then lose it to another member 0f the trou-pe. Those who bold to this theory say that the reason that Munn is now the champion is -l)€Cl\llS0 ‘he is just the sort of athlete to give the game a fllllp toward popularity. Tile old cham- pions were played out. The pub- llc is ready for a new one. Another Jess Willard it the match was on the level tlu-n Munn won by superior strength rather than ‘by- skill, lie stands six feet six inches and weighs 260 pound-s. He played on the University of Nebraska foot- ball team in 1923, which might in- tiionte that he has some speed. Otherwise, he ls a physical dupli- cato for less Willard. Afterleav- lng school he look part in several ‘boxing bouts, but made no head- wny, and his photograph shows that his jaw is not the jaw or 5 fighter. It is not the sort of jaw which powerful fists would bounce harmlessiy. l-Iis strength is in his arms and shoulders and also in EEBRURAY 2.—You have a powerful character, capable of great good or evil, but you are in- clined to ho a dreamer. Do not let your powers for g d be wasted by idle habits. Con taut and active employment should be your meth- od ofjfo, You are an excellent con- versatioualiat. and love to enter- tain. Curb your desire for revenge. Hour birth-stone ls_ an amethyst, which manna siucority., Your flower is a primrose. Your lucky colors are light blue and yellow. 1r » Later accounts of the match llrnve that it was a rough one, and lend to sIIOW that it was not fixed in advance. If it was, Munn an oven more successful year in 1925. interests are tho first consideration, ovar 99% oFtha furthsr Insurance, you will ha wall advi The attached coupon will bring you a mo }Vico-?residont Charlottetown Branch Office do, greater strength l Name HFSE records aro an indication of tho solid financial poaiti than one year a|o, ‘ In tho North American Life, policyliol rs’ rofita earned being n ' to call in _a rs detailed report on the Company's “Solid as the Continent" '---_--’---_-------- on of the Company ‘to-day they point the ‘way to "Gd ‘O l III- North American Life .v l Please mail Inn your complet I '_ : Report for 1924, also "Solid as the Continent" Booklet. Address Age . whom all peoples Contmorvweaith bear,in memory. curious that it conveys meaning to the ordinary mind. of the sacrifice. llrlllsh soldiers are buried. Tile Via S-cra may be traced t0 Swit- zerland, to Italy, where there are 93 burial-places. to Macedonia. where there are 21 then to the chain of 31 cemeteries on the west- ern shore of the Galli-poii Peninsula. through Asia Minor and Syria to Palestine, passing over the Mount of Olives, whence it branches off to the east into Mesopotamia and to the south into Egylpt and East Africa. Outside these well-known areas 0f military activity there are more than 50 countries. some in the Eastern, some in the Western Hemisphere, where the graves of British soldiers have been found", and in the United Kingdom there are at least 60,000 of their graves in some 5-000 cemeteries and churchyards. “As the names of dead and misa- double-crossed tho fixers. He, treat- ed Lewis very roughly. In ‘the first fall when Lewis ‘bulted Munn several times, his lower teeth were shaken loose. This surely did not indicate an amicable uu- iicrstantllng. It was shortly after this that Munn picked up Lewis and slammed him to the mat. He afterwards ‘told ills manager that Lewis’ butting started the rough work, and his ‘manager iold him to sail in the next time and take the full, I-Ie did so, for twisting free from a bcatilock be lifted Lewis high in the air with a body and crotch hold and hurled him outside the ropes on tho tmcoverad floor of the platform. Lewis hit the boards with ‘a terrific ‘thud and roll- ed to the concrete floor. His man- 111-161‘ protested that he had been fouled. and the referee awarded the foul to Lewis. Then there was a wait of twenty minutes, and Lewis was assisted through the ropes. Again he was hurled to the floor and the match ended. After the watch it was learned that Lewis has suffered a strain of the sacroiliac, which connects the spine and iii-p bone. i-Ie will have to wear a supporting belt, for a month, dud should he resume wrea- tiing (‘he injury will continue tn hamper him, ‘The unexpected end of the bout caused Lewis to cancel bouts booked for Europe, "but. so iar it has not led him to hand over to Munn his championship ‘belt. Lewis’ manager says that Munn ought to have lost ‘the match on n foul, instead of losing only a fall. The referee contends that when Lewis came back he condoned the foul. Had be refused to continue he might have retained the title on the ground that Munn had fouled him. However, Munn is now ac- cepted as the heavyweight cham- pion, not that it means a grv-at deal. J-ie could add F911“! tn his prestige by consenting to meet Pioatlna, a Serb, who says that he has been boycotted by the wrest-l- ing trust ,and who has become hoarse shouting his challenges to one world's champion after sn- other for several years past. The correspondent adds: “The tablet is surmounted by the arms of the Mother Country. am‘- ‘founded by those of thaOvu-saaa About-intone. one» are t he dead ing gathered throughout the war it was as if a cloud of darkness I ..-.. of the British Egypt lllg (zemieicrlts are fully con- structed and the Ziicuzoviril to tile Never in the annals of this coun-Iltirllair dead at the southern on» M‘_V'S wars has death laid so fierce trance to flu.- Suez (‘Milli is l)"lll}.', a hand on one generation-and the built. Tho c. me number of those who fell is so stup- and hicsopoinmia will br- compltti-d no clearlthi-s year. tcrics in Palestini- "Tin: COllSlFllClilIlllll activity-s of “A map of the world, on which'the (‘oulmisjsioil will thou be tunin- are marked the 700.000 graves oflly COIICPIHI‘ tltosetwho received known burial. gium. illustrates forcibly the magnitude cemr-tierlt-s are fully compintul, ill‘ In France and finished. Belgium there are not fewer than,and 21H actually under consum- 900 Bullish war cemeteries and 'tl0n; 250000 hcridstumsllztvlubt-i-ii churchyards, in which numlbcrs of|ruadc and czrrvxd iu fin-at Britain atoll lu l."l‘llll(.‘i\ and ill-I- ln those ltvo (‘ilillllfifis i100 but wiliinul llfillllilbllffn‘, and sent out to vibes,- (7i‘lll(‘ftJI‘ll‘.~Z Along the old French and lit-Isiah front will be built fir: arluy‘s tilt-m- oriais, corresponding to the naval lueulorials iu this country; work has begun on the hlcuin g:ito\v:ry' at Yprts “To the Armies of the liri- tish Empire, who stood lit-re from 1914-1918, and to those of their dead who have not known graves." Thr- great archway bus been designed to bear the names of 50.000 missing who fell ncnr Yprcs, most of whom have no graves, some only a grave marked: "A soldier of llii.‘ (lrcut War. Known uuiu find." iQ-i-i-i For First .\|<r-\r|hhi-.|'§‘ -— ‘at. llMcn Loved Her‘ Only To Regret- i QTThe White Moth” 11%: iiii were spreading ‘over the land, and‘ I I I I I I I v»:;"“‘* it was cvon before victory was as- surcd that the governments of tho Empire pledged themselves, in duty to this generation which had given its sons, to maintain these graves in perpetuity. an lvioiablo record for the generations to comic of the tlon; to maintain them as far as possible where the circumstances of war had placed them, in equal honor, irrespective of rank or creed. “it was In 1917 that the Im-perlnl War Conference created a new or- gnnlzatlon to carry out, fully and faithfully. this sacred trust. The Imperial Wnr Graves Commission. then permanently established, in- stituted anew delparture in Imper- ial cooperation, based on the prin- clple that financial] participation demands joint control of flnancc and administration. To this prin- ciple the Mother Country wisely agreed. and from i918 onwards the Commission's estimates have been ornmenfs of the Empire, the bur- the number of their respective posed of representatives participating Dominlons in the same rela-tlve proportion. Tile Commission submitter] to the imperial War Conference of 1918 pletiod in ten years after the ter- mination of the war at a cost of £10 a grave, The following data. which has been furnished by the Con-mission. indicates the extent progress made up to date. 011B. where there had been diffi- culty In acquiring the land, are con- structed and a Memorial to=the Mis- llnxyhas been erected at Giavera. n Macedonia all the cemeteries are "Omoieted. and at flake Doirsn a combined Memorial to the Missing and to theBaionlira Army to which the soldiers of that force subscrib- ed. has been built. In Galiipoll, the cemeteries and monuments are con- "11101011. the name tablets alone being wanted to completp the great Helios. thinly-is vial-hie to all ship! D3591"! "lmlllli the Dardaneiios. Ifi cost of modern warfare to cl»vi‘llza-. C. M. Luntpson 8r Co. 64 Queen Street, London, E.C. 4., England Public Auction Sales of Raw Furs Represented by voted annually by each of the gov- den being shared in proportion to _ dead. and its staff has been com- 0f the of ihielr vropt- while showing the in Italy the cemeteries all but ~ estimates which showed that its constructional work would be com- Alfred Fraser, 212 Fifth Avenue New York Ofi-OOOO-OGO 1057-12-11! tnwthffiirho. We are paying highest cash Prices for r QEED if"! FEED CATO QEED flfld FEED WHEAT SEED and FEED BARLEY SEED and FEED BUCK- WHEAT BALED HAY and STRAW We are selling all kinds of Feeds“- For HORSES, CATTLE. sneer and Hoes, A big variety of from "r Poultry tSupplles Got our prloaa before buy- Ing. w. sail rtbtm (but brands) cams/u”. noct- co oars, not: conu- MEAL. unAHMt. Ftoun, WHOLIWHIAT ‘ toua. I:ro.. snot lovmt pocslbls prices, , Memorial to the Missing at Cape ‘_ CARTER-o, 00.,’ I