v i i _ .-.lar 2 . 1. .. il. i » no amor; or nod. auch M" 3° m.'\\f 'o.i'i» ‘f7.uo'£5i°-"°Tin1»":l'.;f 1" 0:3.” ¢i:°°.¢.‘l:l'.'.° ¢:|°ifl§°-4 Macdonald. son or sir .isbn Mac- 'rl - , if- `!nua'a\-w. caésmta. sugars” via-r-rr-rant-J. u.. uurm. d°1\!ld. removes one of the few _re- ` leuetary- aut. .eI. . L. llaehlnnoa. D. B. 0. mllning links cofinoou-BK the #W5- _ lllfli dnl linager-J. B. Burnett. Associate lsliaur-I), I. U\|-gk. _ ent gene" ,with me co_9,°du‘_ ` _ THURSDAY, APRIL 4_ 1929 tion era. Hugh John, as he was .fa- miliarly known and beloved. WM nearly eighty years of 180 It the MDP of Bs [elm W ..._~ ir' _ Ie - V . Condensed hom the Nation Dudley Nichols- ; _ s _ (Dudley Nichols) gn Thanksgiving day in 1927 a which is nothing more than the farmer some 20 miles down the Sus- witch’a besom which illustrators draw h Trail frorn‘York Pennsyl- against the moon for November ,mag- ' ' NINETY TODAY |motor-power machines operated each “U16 P11115 5031*”-I” M5 "fly YBUS que anna, _ Conlratulations are due to Mr., J. 3; B. M`cC/i‘ea.dy, the doyen of active Journalists in Canada, who cele- brates his 90th birthday today, Ap- rlul, in the enjoyment of excellent -health and still writing daily with effect and vigor a column of notes on current events. as he has done for the past seventy years. Mr. McCready is the'sole survivor of the Confeder- ation Parliament. As a young man on the St. John Telegraph he went to Ottawa. in 188'! to represent a group' of Maritime newspapers for which be rendered great and effect- ive service. He was in the Press Gal- lery during twenty of the earlier ‘parliamentary Sessions and was President of the Press Gallery 1881- 1B§2. Those were halcyon days at Ottawa. and Mr. McCready had no difficulty in receiving _an orliclai appointment as Secretary of Parlia- mentary Committees under the Clerk of the House and discharged those duties, in addition ro more of newspaper correspondent. About that time also Mr. John Rochester, the wealthy member of Parliament for Ottawa, began an agitation in favor of the introduction of \\~ater_ and sewerage intf.; the Capital, butf was opposed tooth-and-nail by thc then powers-that-be. Nothing daunt- ggl he started a paper of his own. "The Free Press,” and sbt MF- MC- Cready as its first editor. So vigor- ously did Mr. Mccready carry on 'Qty' agitation that within two years the vested interests rapitulated and Ottawa. obtained her sewerage sys- ter'n and water supply. He went from ottawa to st. John as editor or the Telegraph, and subsequently became the first editor of the Moncton Transcript, where he again started a successful campaign for sewerase- Later he came to Charlottetown where he found, although there was 'an bundant water supply. there was no sewerage, so here also he started a campaign and was opposed by the other newspapers and the majority of the property owners. I-le fought to Q finish and had the satisfaction oi seeing a. plebiscite carried in its favor two to one. He retired from the editorship of the Guardian -in 1912 to become Provincial Publicity agent but .daily since 1917 has contributed a column of Editorial Notes to the Guardian. Mr. McCready is as keen rnentally as he was twenty years ago and physically enjoys excellent health, visiting the oilice almost daily, taking the liveliest interest ini current events. Mr. Mccrcady has been known personally to every Go- vernor General and Prime Minister of Canada and has annually receiv- ed birthday congratulations from I-'fis Excellency the Govemor Gener-_ al, Rt. Hon. W. L. MacKenzie King,! Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen, Ex-Prime Minister and I-ion. R.. B. Bennett, Leader or moi Q__pp_osition and a host of others. Mr. | McCieady’s son, Mr. Emest Mc-i Qready. is a well known member of the Editorial Stal! of the Saint John Telegraph Journal. Mr. McCready is ably supported in his journalistic Ind public duties by his- wife, Mrs J. E. B. McCready, who is the reg- ont of the Royal Edward Chapter Imperial Order of the Daughters of ti"1e` Ihnpire, a member of the Wom- en’s Press.Club. honorary president of Prince fidward Island Wom- ¢n'| Liberal-Conservative Associa- tion, and a leader in public life in tharrovinoe. Pvnnrc worms naroivr report or tho siziuirier of Pub- Hon. J. P. Mclntyre, was this week At the outset the deals with the introduction road machinery and the di- of the province into 25 mad. *mn district being in of vnoui superintendent and Dill” Wdvidod with a District are six' double-unit machin- oonbiatlng of a heavy road- ' tllivm by a I0 I-LP. tractor. -hed and equipped for light traffic. with the 6 previously on hand etch Road Superintendent is provided with a one~man power' road-mv chine as well as with one or more horse-drawn road machines." There is also a motor expert for each couno ty, who is provided with a motor truck with which he delivers gaso- _line to the various machines in his county. For the storage of these -machines it was found necessary to purchase the Mclnnis property ld joining the Agricultural Hail, the latter not affording sufficient ac- commodation. The report states that the larger machines reconstructed and Widen- `ed 312 miles of road, ahd the smal- ler machines regraded 1134 miles. With respect to the gravel-surfac- ing of roads a total of 29 miles was thus treat/ed during the summer. A contract was entered into with Mr. H. J. Phillips to supply 60,000 tons during the next three years, at a cost of $2.15 per ton for the first _ year, and $2.65 for the two following liears. The first 20,000 tons was de- _livercd during the past season. The hope is expressed by the Mini-WH' ithat local gravel will Mhe available in large quantities in the future. Eight new steel bridges were pur- chased of which six were erected during the summer, making a total of 93 steel bridges in the province. Five of these of various lengthsare in`Pr~ince County, namely at Indian River, Duck River (Carleton), Big Brook Bridge (Mont Carmel), Mim- inegash, and Norway (Lot 1). Wood- en bridges were replaced by con- crete to thenumber of 29, making a total of 656 of these structures in the province. Corrugated steel pipes replaced smaller wooden culverts to the number of 268, the total now ning 1763. In addition, 'I4 of the larger wooden bridges and 276 of the smaller ones were rebuilt, and re- pairs made to 157, and 465 respect- ively. _ Details are given of work done on the Public buildings and also on the wharves and ferries of the province. THE HILLSBORO BRIDGE - . The local Liberal organ in its zeal to protect the government from sus- picion not infrequently becomes ri- diculous. ru its issue or april 15:. ‘April Fools’ Day) it declares as ab- solutely false, the Guardian's as- sumption tliat the government; had abandoned the idea of rebuilding the Hillsboro Bridge. In its issue of March 23rd the Patriot published the official explanation, given tg the Railway committee of the House of Commons, showing why the ten-mug line between Lake Verde and Pls- quid was about to be undertaken. The Guardian had published this of- ficial statement some weeks previous- ly. The exact wording of this state- ment. so far as it relates to the re- building of‘t‘he Hillsboro Bridge is as follows: “To handle the freight busi- ness over the Murray Harbour Subdivision with standard gauge equipment would have necessitat- ed renewing the Hillsborough Riv- er Bridge. just out of Charlotte- iowu. with a. much heavier struct- ure. which it is estimated would cost about $760,000." No hint is given in this official explanation of" any intentiort\on the part‘of the government, now or at any time within the measurable fu- ture ,to rebuild thebridge. At a meeting of the council of. the Board of Trade last week, Messrs. Iienirlus and siucidir, the mimi representatives said, according to thé Patriot's report, that the bridge .will be rebuilt. When or about when. whether within five, ten, or twen- ty years, was not hinted at; but iti the meantlmevthe road from Lake Verde to Charlottetown, over the Hillsboro Bridge. is in be standard- wniutuutboriiy hor the Patriot, or the Federal representatives, for ls- suming that the govemment has changed its mind since issuing the' above official statement and why I it "arubormiy im* to ton the _to time --is limit until government at ns own word? _ esteem in which he was held by Can- "As lawyer, legislator, member of Drocourt are under arrest and await trail. It is just that this should be in war time. calmly genial and accepts defeat or tion drawing near. "I remember on- retire-You may die but you may not tention of doing either at presen,t.j’ that the case is otherwise with him,4 twenty times the energy that is ‘ex to continue work longer and harder, killed in the railway collision at _ d str ngthens _me stiticn. but lsnghtens an e engagements during the war of 1812-14 took place on the lst" of June, stone. granite monument, which was British Government. When before have the.M:\rii.imaa had so many electric storms so early Many inquiries from the Opposi- at Waterloo is said to have _prayed ` _ _ U 1 adians from every part oi the Do- handed by the b0dy Under 1\°1'm3‘; LQSSOII ln minion, He was quite overcome by restful conditions. Now this means._ the Warmth of his reception, , , ' that training will give you the ability, ly W. B. Gordon to do this much extra work when. mriismont,_M1uisur of the crown, needed. Abd `Hb°ib@f mini they ‘°' WORDS OP:-fi.3N MISUSED. D0 p,-emi” of Maniwba, and Judgg he cord is that this tremendous amount not Say MI am real Bhd _D hear wui mug be .remembered by the of work required from thirty to Sixty uhm ,I .. say .my glad.. country he loved and seryed sowell. P@l'C€1'lt m°f€ UNSC" than the lungs OFTEN MI'SPRONoUI$CED, ap_ It might be said in truth of Sir Hugh bt;;i.`lv1e; hl;e _nd they get this My- p1.ec;_ate; pronounce mira syllable ‘é_°h“ dth“_;°:1 fa: U: _f_;*:t’;55 _gf _Zen if me lungs did not breathe it shi, i as in "lt,” not ap-pre-si-ate. *ma “ W 11 ° Y “P e : . or'rnN MISSPELLED: h WHS the P55005 Of hi-S life, And in? They simply wok it from the .(relating to man)' humane tbielrrigfl-1|' those who know i-.im intimately win muscles and “SSW °f the ‘°°°Y ‘°’ own., ' ' sorrow at the -death or a sreat sen-. me time hem' °" “S Drs' Henifmln syNoNyMs: advise. ddmouish.. t1°m““' “' °h“ml“3'h°“t' ° mm °! and Ha'ig?rf1bDut it' theglékiwd 62;; caution. exhort. counsel. warn. re- human sympathies with a. capacity W °“.i 5.". _"5'g°“ “re ' “ __ mm'd_ for friendship unrivalled ` amongst in .debt t° th? exwnt °fd4__t°__? WOR.D STUDY: “Use a word three! .i I 1 » contemporaneous Canadians' igmiittlfiiii ddt1lS;ttii;ti:iuesyaft§r` the “mes and it is y°“"i" Let "5 ""1 Th . -i- _*_ e;;____°___g_s Over crease our vocabulary by mastering e survivors of the crew of train ' one word each day. Today's word: 3- who are held responsible for the The “‘°“g“” fm" 'S that “2;';:,‘;§ mrbr-:x1BLE: risid: firm; stubborn. ‘death of nearly a score of, persons Wm mt ‘my “crease ywr “It is a foolish and inflexible super- si ' oxygen credit of the body. ___ ' » so. Doubtless they are 'already suf- ' , _ /£6 » " iering mental anguish, perhaps. ----*_ 1 | ," _ greater than any punishment the » ‘ court may allot to them should they THE LAND WE LOV‘E .Q f be found guilty as charged. A great _ V _BY 1.-RANK YEIGII E ~ ` responsibility 'rests upon railway THE EAGLE THAT ls ¥‘.`Z.i...‘.’“"..‘.’L‘f.”§§IZ...Z“".°.§‘ .‘Z$` '*"‘1'='m'”°“"”‘f'“ "°““°"“" ers neglect .of watchful 'alertness ` ` ‘ CHESAPEAKE "' ` ' ° Sleep softly . _ . eagle forgotten . . . forgetfulness or sleeplnihaxvhile on Q what is me history of the ,fmder me sw“e_ duty can no more be tolefawd m Shannon and Chcsapeakeiir Time has its way with you there. me “uw” "mee mm in ‘he amy A. One of the memorable naval and the clay 119-5 if-S °W11- “We have buried him now,” thought M““’ “un” M'“‘“'°" °f gm" isis, on Boston harbor between your 1065. and in secret re- ability have sat in the British Par- H_ M_ S_ Shannon and the U_ s_ J0|ced_ . _ Hamem’ wma °f them endwed Wm’ frigate, the Chesapeiike. After a fierce They made R brave Sh0W Of ` U19" B' m"v°u°“s gm °f impremu '10' conflict, the latter was overcome and mournin8» their hiifed Un' quence which Stanley Baldwin docs captured and ,owed as a_u.ophy of v01¢ed_ ' ' “°" P°“°“» ‘"1" he “Peaks W°'d5 °’ war into Halifax Harbor. A-bronze They hm s“a’l°d “i you. barked at W’°d°m md °°mm““d“ the °l°5° M7' tablet was recently unveiled on the you. foamed at you. day after tention of all his auditory both high grounds of }_dmh.a“_y House to com_ day_ “nd 1°W- 3° *S b Ph“°H°Ph°"- W- memoruto this important historic Now you were ended- They praised “~'~‘1°d 0! 8°°‘| Wm 1°' H11- Umffbid event. The tablet is dfnxed to a out you - . . and laid you away, victory with equal complacency. erected by thc National Historic Sites The others, that mourned you in sil- There is an exciting general elec- Committee. _, ence' and terror and truth, The widow bereft of her crust, and ly the other dly." he said in I fell- report thereon. _when ‘he returns. *»h° b°y_without y°ui-11. me gpegah, -'a 1ady 01 3|-ea; angina. Meanwhile Capmn'§'Ranqa|1 of me The mocked and the scorned and the tim and of arent power said to me. runirrn vo.-.sci is imzngiuud and his Wblmdw- tl" Ima and the 'A mm in your nbsitibn van never given his version of tnouinir to the P°°f» That should have remembered for- rotirc: 1 have not the slightest in- ___ ever- -~ - Remember be mm. Where are those lovers of yours, on A mu' "50 0'” l 55"- lim! °V‘ in the- spring season? But Ontario what name do they cm' The lost that in armies 'wept over efdue. when armed by his creditors. :md muon worse. Dorputohes wil ' sive themmn unsecured note. and or a iuriourfstorm throughout that y°“' ‘““°'9' mm . Ulm With millfh lm-Bltlbflttivh province doing vast damage. electric They cm on tm mm" °f ° hundred slid to himself. "Thank Hw/so wires down. wiioio districts buried in ' h““"’“""“'°“°" that debt is acid." can it bo ibut" mow, irtrhwdyr .biocked. telegraph A ”“"g_'°° ;£“:, °:f_‘r°’m:_‘:"° “°°“' Premier Saunders is in' like fashion and telephone communications dis- B B Y ." The zeal in their wings ia a zeal that 003111?-llllbilil hirhlelf over the set- ruptbd. We ire fortunate to escape tlemvnt of his debt to the school rucb disastrous weather troubles. 'y°“' °'°”'“”' mm’ The valor that wore out your soul in teachers? Host sincerely do we hope \ M. me service of muh although to wait until after the .neat tion benches have kept our prov1nc~ , moron or on nsgimturo for tm so-' ni inbbtm wide .write during tb. 51"" ',,§cf,';;f,l,' f°'“°"”“ ' ' ' t ' S A » » ' Ml payment may M the patience mont sittings oi tho regulators nm, hu "_, ,my ,ml you m,,5_ md bf _t-be mltiy creditors. and the one it not yet. woniu¢ton___ _ ca, any has its own Sleep on, O brave-hearted, O wise Pfam!!! KID( il lliflilbel' of lltlr- for "night or Blucher." The story nd Armin' 'rin "ransom" is an may not be authentic. but there is rro'uv:1:: ;‘:\:&'ddlt:'f:°m1TL external _aifair-very _iiiticii so. We no doubt that the Saunders Gov- -gp ny, in a mm, *f* W4 t-bl* 91°' Pfim WMM- vommt is anxiously desirous to get ro tivo in mankind, rar. nr more who is umpomiiy orient from me we anion d mam °-»-»-» -u ru M- » fo -~°X?..‘”o.“2.-lr “"i ‘"‘“~ - -Mother Noll, an old woman who Hex is but verb and noun, and comes from the German “hexenbesen" . - ` ---- by one man, were procured so that h° W” ‘°“"° 1" b°m1°°“‘“d !°d` '_*‘ . vania, heard his neighbors cattle azine covers. Anybody in York _can - ° ' » °"1,,P°“"°-’- Huh mbuw W his ` ' lowing, and going to investigate give you names of,powwows.Some are memory has since been paid by Sir BORROWINGWOXYGEN FROM !°m,a"t§e Mock unfed and hu muh. Ggorgg 1"aSt__e1‘, HOD. R. B. Bennett 9 YOUR TISSUES bor' lying dead and .man-ed on the and many other eminent Public men kitchen noor ot his solitary house. who were shocked by the news of You have run for a, car and al- Rural murdemrs are no great his death. He w_ns__no_t only one of though you did not apparently get shakes as ne.},s_ but this crime was the "Old Guard of the Conservative out oi breath while you were run- to bring to light ,_ medmval cloud party- but °f the Wblscley cxaedi- bins. aft" YW 'wb it y°\1 find or darimes which hangs over the tion of which he was a member. yourself almost, gasping for breath. mum,-y of those fme_ u~,rmy_ devout Thus early in iifg aaw Western Can. After a minute or two you fnid that fa,-m__;°;k_ the pennsylvania Dutch add and having established himself y0\-if brvathins iS HOHHRI again- NUW. Na; muah attention was paid ga the in his profession in Winnipeg, he BS y0l1 know. the 0XyE€n YOU takem' murder at first. The real detonator of b°°°~me ¢l°68ly idelii-liled with the W the lim” Pufmes the b]°°d 5° the ensuing publicity seems to have _ life of Manitoba and the west' for that the b1°°d can °°“iiI}“¢ i° ba _been william noiithob column on wer fifty years ._ U55;-d __ ___ ___ __ witchcraft in the world. so ou rea ’ enou ox - A It is 515° ’°°°u°d “"3” °m‘°“5h gentojustynicely keeii the blogd purl- I,:;;l?e1,§ n,i;;,:ev;yd;3;idt;eo1;%;r} he Ions embed political 111°. ‘he fied, and this brood goes to' tb.. muse- ,,,,,,m ,mm P,,,,m,ph,,,_ New Yom .eventuauy yielded t'° uw wish” °f 16-S and SUPPUES mem With °"Y¥°“~ Baltimore. and other cities, and 1155 f¢ll0W ¢it1¢€l1S. WB-S 0l€C%€d YO Even when the muscle is ai; rest it 15 though York first rejoiced at this th' H°“°° °f c°mm°“° “nd h° b°` °1'€l'-1118 0“°f8Y “`1°h 55 °°“-Wi by me 'countrywide attention the community C5318 M-ihi5|¢l‘ Of the 111161101' in U16 burning up of this oxygen. ~ _ soon began to wince when the stories Conservative Government which was Thus while you are asleep you stiu and editorials appeared defeated in 1896., Later he became need tg breathe ga taiiéin enough Here were the facm In Yom Premier of Manitoba and when he .axygen to keep things gcnig_ an amazingly prosperous and may resisned that office. found scope fOr 1: you are doing. iight work which my of nearly 50_0o0 p°pum,on_ Huy his scuvmes 11°” °“]y in the P’“°tl°e Permits y0\1 £0 Sit d°Wn» 5'0" “S9 “Y” with '10 churches and a million-dollar of the law but as Police Masbtfate a little more oxygen than when you high schooh the third my in the 0! Winnipeg. And he WM 8-* rarely are lying dvvm State in the diversity of its manu- S°°d Magmnih W0 3°* 5” 55" °f If YOU Walk Y°l1 need m°\`e» *md U facturing interests, and a city not his high personal character from Mr. you run you need still more. - wanting 5,, its proper pmopormn. of Bennetts words: ' - Now it is possible for any one that speak_eaSies_ here in York were at "It was as Magistrate that he WHS is used to it, to walk practically all _the fairest estimate B hundred puw- afforded a. real opportunity to exer- day, and.some men have been known Wow, openly p,.acucmg_ The editor cise his truly great human qualities. to run for hours at a time. _ of a. local paper is my authority for He was almost uncanny in detecting This means then that they are ask-_ the statement that in me countryside the unthinklng offender from the ing the lungs to pump in HS mum 35 there are thousands of believers 1;. hardened criminal. Many an erring tentimes the amount of oxygen as p°Ww,,w3_ ' youth. now a useful citizen will think when they are resting. The methods of the powwaws are ot Sir Hugh John as the instrument _ Drs. Henderson and Haggard of ,,m.ious_ sometimes one Wm ml B under Providence who gave fresh Yale University, from_d study of the simpmmmded fellow he is bewitchem impulse and new direction to life. I crew representing the United States he is hexed_1-,as a spell put “mn him recall that though weak, he attend-` at the Olympic games in 1924, tell us ed the National Convention and re- that in H rave of 1-1|3 miie-5. the” ..-ii__--_------ ceived an ovation expressive of the men expanded from thirteen to mountebanks and rich, home -are self-deceived and poor. The richest powwow in York is "Doo" Lenhart, who is said to recieve as much as $50 for a treatment and whose home is a show-place of the town. A newspaper. woman went to a powwow woman of the self-deluded type' and was received in I. small lamp-lighted room. "Take off your clothes," said the powwow, a poor shrunken creature. “Don’t he afraid"-in answer to _a look of doubt- "I'm going to cure you." _ She laid the patient on n bed, and taking a. string began to "measure her.” When the division of the foot- length into body-length did not come out evenly, the powwow told her patient she had "opnemma." "what do you mean?" “Its the takin'-off. The skins too tight acrost the chest." There was no sense to be got. out oi this, and the visitor donned her clothing and paid her “gift” of ‘a dollar. The law keeps powwows from taking fees. Later the same woman visited alrichwpowwow, but did not Get through with the treatment when he began to blow down her dress and lay his hands upon her in an offens- ive manner. Nearly all the early re- porters visited powwows and all came away with similar yarns. The county medical society ap- pointed a-committee. to investigate powwow, but no action has ever been taken. A parson attending the witch- craft trials, pastor of the Church of God at a small town, told of his con- tinual combats of “the Book of Books” against the black books of the witches and powwows. For they have their books, “The Long Lost Friend” and the “Seven Books of Moses.". . . Strange reading: "Tle the heart of a bat. with a red string to the right arm, and you will win at cards.” And at front and back of “The Long Lost Friend" is this cross- guardcd verbal charm: "Whoever carries this bool: with him is safe from his enemies, visible or invisible; and wlioevcr has this book with him cannot die without the holy corpse of Jesus Christ, 'nor be drowned in any water. nor burnt up in any fire. nor can any unjust sentence be passed upon him." ` r 'When John Blymyer, a gentle. mild, inoifensive cigar-maker of 83 who six years ago escaped from the State insane asylum and never was return- ed,/was put on trial for the murder oi Nelson `Rehmeyer, a. farmer powwow. on November 27. he told with/intense sincerity and childlike candor the de- tails of his sickly, persecution- haunted life. Obviously a. psychopath, he told of visits for ten years to York powwows, paying out his five and ten dollars per visit, and receiving in re- tum iiie statement that he was be- witched. Somebody had put a. hex on him, and he was wasting away, slow- ly dying, from it. He took money to years ago had taught school but was now feared for her powers, and she told him Nelson Rehmeyer was do- ing it. g-‘or furtlier proof she took a dollar bill from the palm of his hand. told him to look, and there he saw Rehmcyer staring at him balefully, in the palm of his hand. There was two ways to break the spell; get Rehmeyer‘s “book" or take from hb head a lock of hair and "bury it eight foot underground." Theft of the witch‘s powers or sym- bolical murder. , Blymyer feared Rehmeyci' physic- lily. Also he feared him as a witch. f0l' Hpbarentiy the 60-year-old farmer was as _cracked on witchcraft as _Blymyer himself. The cigar-maker recruited two boys. John Curry, a 14. year-old Tom Sawyer, "wanted tp see _some of the witchcraft performed." wiibert Hess, 1a-, was tolli to go Blymyer when_ _‘ho told ` them they were also hexed by Rehmayer. Bly. myer set out to save his life. Hess to save his parents, and Curry to satisfy °“l’i°llty- - - - And then. at the fatal m°m°lit. fear blazed in the rabbit- hearted asyohointh and no did what all fear-stricken people will do, struck in a panic. The terrified bay, "fa °_“°“°d into the scoutina names or ~ murder and in a short time the witch ily dead on his kitchen floor. Hn;-|»|.` fied. they tried like the juveniles they W°fe'_t° nt rid 'of the ¢ruuome'evid- ance by arson. And two days iam, aa '1'_hlhU8ivln¢. the tinted stool in H°hm¢¥el"l barn drew. discovery of “I0 ¢l'im0. ands few hours later of alvhs by his parents. who believed - ._.,, _ - _-_ _ \ , 1 , ` _ < - - I - . known for dispeliing worms. lectin; to dose them on time? » - Ranchers Troubles I-‘axes are peculiarly nuioeptlble to infestation byolnteetinal Witlna of various forms from a very early age, even before they are born and throughout their lives. This problem cannot he ‘ urn too seriously by tba nnoiior ii no wishes to also healthy foxes and produce gpogl fur. The use of _ _ _ ' DR. ffrench's VERMICIDE _CAPSULES hal proved a great boon to the For Industry and is recognised by fox men throughout the world as the best, and safest remedy aoU1r2____ 1 , ’ . J c:UAanraN,_ ' » . `f V APRIL' 4. 1929 -mar g F _ ___ ____, _ ~ ""-'li _ ii ---_-_i_ _#J . _ j Notes B:_v__T7|e Way what _ Vi/itches i'Vin In New York ~ The Worm Problem Greatest, of the Fox . Why should you allow a. fine litter of pups to be lost by neg- Une DB. FFBENCIYB VEBMI- CIDELCAPSULES at three weeks and again at live weeks and do any with lou and worry. '.l‘hey’re combined now for Round. Tape and' Hook-Worm. The one dosing does fer all. _ _._ $1.00 Boxes-20 Capsules-Prepaid to any E_* A_ Fggtgr control Drogstor¢,suuuyria- Sole Agent for Dr. Ffrenoh’s _Animal Remedies ° B R A H M I N iold only in Red, Hygienic, Airtight Pa " To get the real refreshing flavor. of ea 'V TRY . _.f fs- e W The community made great efforts to escape the limelight. Under the guise of preserving an orderly trial the Judges did their best to' exclude metropolitan reporters. All authorit- ies collaborated to rush the trial through at vertiginous speed. John Curry's whole trial took hardly more than a day. The York courthouse did the fastest washing of hands that has ever come to this writ/er's attention. The commonwealth in the person of District Attorney Amos Herrmann, buried its head in the sand of self- righteousness against the power; of darkness, and refused to allow to the jury that there was any motive be- hind the crime except plunder, as represented in-the dollar apiece the three spell-breakers carried off after ransacking Rehmeyer‘s h`6use or “the hook” Blymyer and Curry were sen- tenced to prison for life, Hess to from 10 to 20 years. The slain man, Rehmeyer, was a sacrifice to the powers of darkness. The three boys (Blymyer has a men- tal age of eight) were the victims of a. pharisaical society which suppress- ed the facts to protect its respect- ability. There is not. a straw to choose between the bloody idols. A VISION I passed by the hills of learning, Where youth. withrestless feet. Hurried out to Join the whirling On the world's wide rushing street. Some faces were sad and serious, But_t.heir dreamy eyes bespoke A vision of future glory - And a spirit still unbroke. Others passed me with heads high lifted And a smile that lit their eyes, As if for the first time gazing On the world and its mysteries. some passed me by more slowing As if to them now free, Could comc no greater freedom Than had been theirs t,o see. And my thought as I watched them PWIDB Ever onward. with anxious feet, - 1-low little they knew oi sorrow And the hardship they must meet. And a question seemed to press me How many, and how long, Will stand the world's great press- ure And shun the madding throng. Will those dreamy eyes keep the vision ‘ - Or go down in the whirling throng Finding life but a shadowy mirage And losing the notes of their song. \ Will the bright eyes lose their laughter That illuminates the face ` And find only tears of sorrow, Oi ruin and disgrace. r And my heart..~went out to the teachers - Whoholdin their strong white hands - ' ' 'rho norden threads or destiny ' Oi the youth of these glorinng landl. » And I prayed that' they mighthave And be guided from on high Til *Wt $90 young feet upward witb_ mes town-do tn, airy. ` And behind the teacher the parent" Stands with calm and trustfui (ice Iver aiding and helping onward The destiny of the race. And aa_I looked into the funn-o Iieimdaoaoedtosigin Porwhatnsttouever \\\0WlD1'it| ` ° f*§§" . ' ; V 3 DR. J. P. MILIAR DENTAL SURGEO Corner- Queen and Bic md ' l IIUURS-9 to 12.30 ~ z to so ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,ix_ H, i _ i _ f` '"3 ,.{, ~» . 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A lulul Public Auction Sales __.»....i‘» .'.‘..“`?.f5.i':.'..... r°r°‘.m'~'~..= ll ' ' mnusfe. ri. "“" , .ain§'57Fr'2.“.rf'i'..¢} pre- . 1 ... , ; , 5- ,, .._.»_~,.-, I-=I|-.-I--|»|r|“»~I»'|i >ii~|=~I>-~.‘»'~ f ' ef. _-», .. I-.-_ Ii ' , _ \ .1 .