. v‘. " iii v i", lasilluwlslgygi; can: .bll..-1Pl-|I new pLQni-iiflh glqthing should ulwayl be suit- i ‘sum d climax. A baby's Qilfsugs should‘ , Ill-mi onbush flung], M0 M31111. If 110 i! ‘(.00 ‘an; she‘ y will perapire; lf not 3° ‘ . wide d bet or become blue gmllld the mouth. young “was ‘need ‘to lie kept warm, and “usually Q90 {med 1o cooler wnditioiis, but o tier babies are of- w; overdrossed. A baby dressed in qlotlillll Whid-hiltoo warm be comes ‘pole and lhnguid and MIG liable to colds and bowel qouble-l than one ‘who is not over- grossed. The mother should feel ‘the pssyh body occasionally. and if, she finds it constantly moist, the cloth- qsg is too worm. in addition; cloth lug must ‘be ‘Score. so that all the little zrowins and 9XD1111<11H8‘musc- lee and organs may have plenty of room to develop. The clothing must also be soft and smooth, so that the tender flesh of the child iwill not be irrltsited. W en the clothing is of ‘this sort it cos not miter in the least how plain and simple are the garments. Finally, the clothing must be clean and dry. A siuruple. washable outfit should be selected for the..11.@W‘1w"1 @111"!- Egcopt during very warm weather, an infant should wear. s. H8111 01‘ ' medium weight skirt and stockings n! paitwool. This underwear and the diaper are the essential attic; les ofclothilig. A dress or nlsht- gowu i! lilllblly iifldbd 811d 111199111 weather a flannel A1111 5111111111 11*’- worn under these. While the baby is indoors he should be dressed lightly. he put on to suit the lower temper- nture when he is aired indoors. or is taken out. ' THE FIRGT OUTFIT For the first few months of life m; baby does little but eat, sleep, and grow. He needs many clean clothes and these should be of the simplest and mbst comfortable kind. . The following are necessary; Shirts. Three shirt-s of wool and cotton mixture. never all wool. For very hot weather, an all cotton shirt may be worn. The shirts should fit smoothly. They may either lap or button in front and the diaper may be P11111811- ly knitted o crocheted ‘wool, blanket. . are convenle weeks, prov ed it is not hot wea- ~ ther, diapers 18 inches square. ofi old. soft knitted wear. are very con- venient. Several dozen pieces of old shootings torn into pieces 10 inches square may be put inside. ‘When diapers are removed. they should be put into a covered pail of cold ‘water to which bomx has Ibsen added. later, ‘they should be wash- ed clean with oastile soap, boiled. rinsed ‘thoroughly, but not blnod. and hung in the sun to dry. Soap and biuing are very irritating to a baby's skin. ‘fine diapers should ibe folded end put eiway. A soiled or we tdiaper should never be used a second time without being washed. The urine contains substances which are very irritating "to ‘the s n. - amount of interest this great win- Wfll HQVQ 661d‘ is nine sport, which it has now prov- Additional sflrlnsnts may‘ ee pairs of b11014‘? ‘ cfib-IW R11 u’ us‘. 0 or sdtcsto-s willingness to divorcehthe "ea Bté-"(Gfdafibfinlk Treaty and leilve them for or‘arate negotiation with France ‘and made-from an old, soft woolen ‘the ‘Mosul question for negotiation Disipers. Four dozen diapers, two dozen 24-inch; two dozen 30-inch . For the first few 1Fiiiicell Years 0ur fsuscrie i Th; extraordinarily ‘large attend- snco of spectators st the nbeg- Wlb-Bussen hockey match this weal}. and the generally large at- éqkdince‘ n-t evegy hockey event bring the scash , ‘indicates the pi...- Jamie: Oliver Curwood. Ameri- ler spent is holding in Charlotte- town. Wliere it would be impose- ible to get inn attendance at a meeting or a concert performance, a game on the icc may be relied upon to draw a crowd together. This keen‘ interest in a sport which lsclesfi and manly. as well as arduous, is a healthy sign o; the imes. ’ "There is indeed an all-round} in- creased interest in sport of all kinds. A few years ago the bowl- inguslleys were just coining into popularity, and tile game was con. sldered more of a. fad than a gen. Wlllfltllflmllfll illlliraclis tlrom this Qfi-‘ltlle. which appears exclusively in ‘Canada. in the current issue entry Magazine," given. v We Americans are. and have been. a breed- of destroyers and of monumental egolsie; in the blind- bee! of self-conceit we have reap- ed but, we have not sown; on the treacherous sends of human "al- rnighitiness" we ‘have set ourselv- es up on pedestals, and we are only now beginning to see our sins and our weaknesses ‘My own life hale been typical of million-s whose oybood‘ began s. gene-ration ago. from t-he beginning. as a boyI did not need argument or education to tell mic that I was the greatest of all created things-hot my partic- ular brand of life. of all life on earth. was th‘e only life that God ,hndl intended to be inviolate. That are herewith ed itself to be. Basket bail was ‘lllot so long ago looked upon as a 1111s" same. fbut the league games which have been played this year in the city have been as strenuous as any nrdignt 1°79;- of athletics could desire. Th-is Illld medals to the winning ho 1118 and basket ball teams. there was a large attendance of promln. 911i Deilllle. lAnother s 1 3 a- D s» .. H’ m € '1 Q Q m l: .- s» s: Q i: O -- Q 5 s: U a W o € m Q u O = 5 i .1 o 5 o 0 o 5 O ... s the public schools; it was presch- ed o me in the churches. It was part and parcel of the great '11 Aim." For ma, all the universe had been built. ‘For me, ‘the Great Hereafter was solely created. All other life was merely incidental. and made especially for my bene- fit. It was’ mdne‘ to do with as I 11y 8- 16W old fogies," but now pleased. lin a millil son, of way the there are big meetings at the rink school and -the church told me t0 and the Club's membership l; gn.,have h‘ little chanlty and not to creasing with evéry season. |"hurt the poor little birdies." But Tobogganing and glfl-ing’ some, at the some time both religion and how, have not yet come mm the“. school instilled into me that I own. was next in place to God. and Qupdyqum; that all other life from the life of port which is coming into its own ‘here, is the royal Fame 0f Cllfllns. "the roarin’ 8111119." as the Scots call it, and ‘with reason. It used to be played for my special benefit, and that 11° cousrhivmgnn, Feb. 2z.- me Grgal, lchange wlith their own sembly at Angora today attributed two thirds qfa continent, my own cording to advices received fronrwim me has giwept upon us, and ‘of the‘ near eastern peace negotia-iaVbmtmn i" Canada -—--<q>-__,_ l and flowers to that. ' of beasts and birds. was 011 6111111 Blames Breakdown - . ‘ other life had a r1811! w 911151 1111' On The French ggg-"igg 111mm“ W“ c" i“ "’ For chose who have not seen fsmet Pasha. foreign Minister and eyes. and who have not been in a “M51 “T111911 1191981110 M 11.19 111111- position to witness the tragedy of sanne Peace Conference, in sd- degtnmflgn-nu only in a local en- dressing the Grand National As- vlrqmneun. bub ‘in u‘ scope covering the breakdown of the Conference ggpmllgngg 0g {menu years, l“ this to the unyielding attitude of France open lspacesi may‘ be of interest. if °11 1119 1111111101111 511d ecdlwmicfnnt of acute] value. in showing ‘terms 0i the proposed treaty. ac-lhow swiftly the destruction of our ‘the Capital. In the absence ofmow quickly we- must now not to Inews from Angora. the constantl-‘save it from uter annihilation. nople press generally is predicting} ‘the early approach of a. resumption. tions. The Akscam even discusses, ‘the probable place of the nexi pencei jmeeting and predicts it will " Constantinople. This newspaper al- iiiein half of our continent was should be made with tribe to which-Ill! “Y5 111° f°'11‘“°“‘1“g “me fmm one vast breeding ground of wild life, and: this in spite of ‘the fact ‘rrwodiundred years Bay Company had dily used‘ large areas 0i u, no trapping liic ithe Angomfiovernment to the Ilalu- .8ecrotl1r_1.11.l,-.W l1 sill-libs t 1s. .. position; t at"lt em in- m4, gflmw-g” otndnnnncial ‘ om ma, Se“ r hunting grounds. Fifteen _\‘8u.rs ago Buffalo were glone. it is true. will and with’ Great Britain. cr. and I hail unexcciled opporiun Will Bring Germany Kne§§........__.....itiszs_m.;coniina.in_sontnct uuilb the Wildl life between Montreal mAmg F911 zz__F;-sn¢e is pro-and the Pacific. 'On every railroad paring new sanctions in Germany then running in ivestern ‘Canada it the Ruhr resistance continues._,the dniliy recreation of passengers Premier Thunis of Belgium at axwa-s counting the coyotes and an- iuncheon with Premier Polncaredelopes. The ‘buffalo trails and “may approved on behalf _of hisinallows- were then, and even later Government, the additional unili-tsrylvisilble- from the our windows, and measures which Marshall Foch haslcver V884. M9115 1119 Prairies were planned to bring Germany to itsicrLss-cros-se-d with them. But in ‘mum The conflplqte closing of the tile face-pot this‘ tagedy of the rec- mcupieu territories to Germany is @111 1115-911!“ the buffalo. people one of the operations pvrposcd. marveled: at what seemed to be This will amount to a broonaile 0i the inexhaustible supply of wild Germany’ such as proved so emc. life still left. From the car .w‘ln- m“; during the war. down wiiidfowl could be seen not "c ongnin thgésando), but in countless "1 "115- 91'!’ 08 hole and lake AFTER rue olPboviA-rs was black Mm "hem. ‘one emy 2L Tragedy (ly JAmlo OLIVER cunwooo) , u’: leading literary exponent of the "Great Outdoors" has contri- buted‘ an article under the ‘ head- ing “Fifteen Years of Tragedy" to the canes of forest and wild use of “The [Illustrated Canadian For- With the beginnig o_f those fif- teen yeah-s, almost the entire nor- the exception of n few survivors in the Athabasca country. ln those iiflys I was employed by the Canavf isn Government as a ‘sort of "lest-liars bought s ‘bull for twenty-five frontier" investigator and explor- Breeding _.. C. E. iMsoKenzie. I i. -Not long ago while on] -;- individual cow testing wp k pened to get into conversdti one of our most progressive men on the subject _ot 11 1 and I do not think ‘I can do‘ - ~ than give ‘to the readers Guardian his ideas on the of breeding. and bow he in ‘success. ‘ ‘This gentleman did not g1 the tacts for publication, .<bu records kept and creainery 1.‘ . I can vouch for the truth - wstement contained. I-Ie » ted p that previous to the yes/r 1 he bad not paid much attenti breeding. sometimes breedin Jersey and then perhaps Ay and even to a Shorthorn, and to a Holstein. iI-Ie says he g2" v n iry ins. tier "a Hi8 ire.i gain cows, and ‘in that way got ‘ ed nondescript class of oowsa! the spring of 1009 he bought, yrcg- lstered ‘Holstein -bull from n _ 0rd of merit dam. This ‘bull Whirl-IND! for three seasons and twelv wb er calves were raised from then he ‘bought another p1! Holstein; keeping him three s _ He was followed ‘by a thl fourth ‘bull of the same br each one having something behind him thnnhis prcd , and when if last saw this he were twelve of the nicest dairy cows one would fin where, comparing very fav with some of our pure-bred What this farmer says about is that heonow owns n_ grade for auction they wouldibring almost twice ns much money per cow as the ones he started with. They take no more feed nor care than did tho origins-l dozen cows, and the profits are about double what they were when he started the im- provement. ‘Now. this farmer docs success to improved bulls, but claims that record keeping had as much to do with improvement us hnd the improved ‘blood. Ci-Ie always fell off his poorest milker mend him for is that he gave the other fellow the butcher. Another point I might 1'0 to be n prejudice‘ against making for his pcor milking cows fls dill his neighbors for their rtail-feil1 stuff. iiil ‘speaking of prices he stulcJth have since been. -bu'if ‘and sixty for his" onc hundred for his third. _izeil eighty (iollars, and stated that :onc should never be particular about what one pays for an aiiimaLi but should figure out very carefully" what one is likely to gain by the transaction. ZHe said that he might l dollars in place of fifty, but whatl - would he have saved? the balance would have been 011' the wrong side of the ledger. is better late than never, but added that “it is ‘best never to be too late." _ Now, the res to boost any particular breed. Each tih breed ‘has some peculiar character- 1511111 111111 perhaps each reader may have some particular fancy for some certain breeds. out the breeds that you like the of Hit And us. 1 R 0C! lo White. nccornpanie B M:ss Mary served .1 . very good milkers, but a veryJmix- £8219 ‘"111 in . lliflffi second and gghnn] n,“ Thfliriuno first two he fattened and eac-hrcili- in] m“, ris 'Slll(‘ Just study M9" comers? ‘ ‘ sports 0f quilt. The resented its report. and the was servoill Fofrvicw-"llhc regular meeting uf Lliil club was held at the school ilcnse on Feb 7th. The minutes of ' i111‘ ilrcvious meeting 11nd adopted. It was decided to bny make u aprons. frlllggsstlnns were made re stir-ling the purchsing of prizes cotton in not give quite all the credit of his g¥dslarfifgegrjtfnslieinj°3fed- s pluck. The four r ‘the sink. ‘lute pins, purchased them. _ bee! from dalry breed; he clfllmgillfiXl. meeting will be hold at the “med 1n ‘he male 1mg‘ he always got as much per pound-home ni‘ Mrs. H. P. McNeil]. Georgetown-The regular meet- _ , ing of this Institute was lieirl’ at 1101159 played the" pa“ I” ‘he 1115' Them tory of their country. Patrick. the. that when he started HOISi-fllll-i theiwere sevi-ntcen members unil one “mm Lord Glmms‘ was created prices were not as high as they‘ vistmj prysiglli, Il-Ie told me that me lust he paid fifty dollars, foiyhl; first sup a 'i'0wn Hall 0n Fob. 8. at. this meeting. ROSENEATH -— The Ficd 9 three The minutes o Imam“ we“, read and unil testament 21.0.. some idea of 9104' Money was you,“ m u“, the establishment of a Scotch (eel Knitting was also nobleman of his time. Tile servants A s em mentioned are 2i principal servitor. ting is to he hem m ‘vnrk n. master stnlbular, two servriors, n .4111. coilifnlfs. Womelfilnstitutes The House 0f Glamis Sour": West-The regular meetq in; of thzi, institute was held at e ‘ W" the homo of Mrs n. J. McDonald a ’ on Jan. 12. Ten luembers and five l visitors were present. The mee'- ' 1115; opened with inc singing nf the ancient line institute Ode after which the lllkll- ‘ llleg 91' 1,1191“; meeting ml". r-eadime 300mm “m m» the Ear] of nrliclrs, i-micr the title, ‘The Mo- anii adopted. Some violin select-iStrathmore, Lady Elizabeth's home 11s were rendered by Miss Alice is synonymous with antiquity. The r1 by her sister, word is undoubtedly Celtic and White. In the. mean- means open jaws to snatch, or a time work was resumed on the au- black-smiths vice. Saint‘ Fergus. 11 WKY-llih committee diflciple of the school of St. Pat-i y which arranged the social in the rick, after many years of labor in" school during the. Xmas holidays Ireland legend says, went to live Lunch w“ on the ‘banks 0'. Glamis burn and V “legging closer-l there is in the parish a well that is waoxillth‘ 111,, ghlging of 11m Natlom" known as the well of Saint Fergus. em. "y! Sour]. w°“__An0th9r meeting o; Saint Donald and his nine daugh- kept the ‘heifers from his "best ""8 1111b was held at the home oi 1°" We" 011110111194 111 “me Mrs. Edward ills-bar on Jan. 26th. eight members and visitors present. After the 51115111: of the Ode the minutes of _ llrcvicus meeting were rec'd and a‘ Kl“'z‘M“1°°lm 111 °5 swuand» fldQp-[gg]. q-he wmflnder m. the ev_ with the parish of Glamis and his . mung was spent m walking on the death in 1034, are the first definite ; aulflgfflph quilt, while selections “'91P given on the piano and vio- .|11"- Lunch "lilsllflz closed with the singing of the huiional Anthem. and the ‘were read l1 int quite a number cf which gi e us fr the school chilldlren. much milk per cow as many lire- breds, and if the herd were t up Travencrsr Rcn~_1.he Ingmar moo-ting cf this club WilS held at, he homo of Mrs. J. P. March-bank on Fen. 15. There were nineteen members and eleven visitors pre- "111- The first and second prize‘ stories of the "War Bride Contest" 3.1%" 11y MacLcanX-i Magazine were Thee r grit and Brit- acquired by his ancestors—no mean ne-w chairs achievement in the fifteenth cen- billlsht for the school in place of tury." Patrick, the next to succeed‘ desks were ordered.‘ to be paid for. to the title and and Apurrcl or clothing and other sllp- youth was a hostage for the ran- kem only the haters (‘mm his piles ‘was sent to Mi, Harbors Qp- som of King James -l. of ncotland. 1,95; produce“ 0m; thing 1 cgmwllhllllasc. A glrxbu of the latest m0- He was created a Lord of Parlia- neyerlliifi is lobe houiiht for ihc school. ment under the title Lord Glamniys DooiVA new exienson for the irlnckbourddn 1445- He “'89 1116 1115i 0f 501/911 milker. ‘She always went to the s ito Iic bought and a. son-p dislrllldges 01’ 111B 5110181116 (1011111111111111 Somg of we new the house of Glnmls has given to mention‘ ma; although there seems manxbcrs who did; nut have Ineti- 594711111111‘ 5111C‘? 111° 111119 01 Si" “ mm John Lyon the fnmilyi has never O f h regular 111°? I'll! of l is institute was ileld at the home of Miss KP-illfil Hur- and an Officer‘ inf Feb. i5. After the usual bli- ss it was ilecidled to workto- He estimfivaioii till;- ilfliiflilllg of a. balzLil-arhta , . 1c 111i some lllcgwliljhg fa :1 -_ ._ _ __ ______ ._ ' d . -_ "l,- stes. and estimates COITOKiii;—~i-iléit-l~gi;c:i_k w be cuvrfled on at the meemwolneri, an cnrtrroidcrcsu. a FNT“WHl>(-1~Cflll1l?13’1’gfi flgslnskthc evi ings. A 1)l‘0gl‘iiill‘lll(3 committee for- iIn finishing he told me that had 1"“ ."°-“ "‘EP1'"'=¥ ‘"5 1111101111811- he started herd improvement itllfllnurlng “Wm”? i‘ record keeping ten years Gamer cn the Auto Knitter was given by he "believes he would have been atimiss Hams- T11" last two thousand dollars in pocket. ‘V111 111-‘ “"111 511 111B 11 Winding up with the saying that it Austin Donahue- demonstration next meeting‘ Pc-lnt—l<‘lve members and ‘two visitors altrnilcif. the meeting my object in giving this foiol‘ this institute at the hump of ders of The Guardian is notiMrs. E. iS. Iiuso on Fcib. 12. IR - - ' ‘ _ . _ omantic History 0f THE MODERN MOLOGH ‘_ By . Jlmeu Maxwell Mus-filly . vooooooooe Th1‘. writer of the series. With the announcement-of the "Basement of the Duke ol’ York 11d Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, 11B eyes of the world have been focused upon the brlde-to-be and the from which ‘she lies- ‘oended. The very name of Glamis. iie.n lilt..n."ll"-. well Murphy, fourth son of press. 'l'2i‘zit the ,Anolher contemporary saint be- |lieved to have ‘lived alt Glamis was Canada is established ‘beyond ques lion of doubt. ‘Although the Canadian and Unit the nine; maidens. Three very ancient Celiic; stones in the parish indicate the sites of early Celtic lpiaces c-f Christian worship. The association a ed every effort, cooperating mag little success. Opium, Morphine. Heroin, dellle. Cannabis inciica historical falcLs that loom through the mists of tradition. There is no doubt that the King dried at Giamis, but whether he died a violentor natural death is not known. His- torians find no confirmation of the story stated -by Shakespeare that Macbeth was thane of Glsmis, al- though Giamis was a thanedom. In 1372 it was created a ibarony and was given -by King Robert ll to Sir John Lyon who four years Inter ° married the King's daughter. Many Stormy Incidents Stormy incidents abound in the history of Giamis. Sir John Lyon who, from his white complexion, lwas styled “Whyte Lyon." was kill- ed by Sir James Lindsay, whether the re-sult of a sudden quarrel or by pro-mediated action is not known Of Sir John's son, another Sir John, it lls said that “he transmitted un- e impaired to his posterity the lands lands. in early ecsli) canllibis saliva and peyote arc- tlie revcn little ilcvils tlllli- must he fluycil from the body so- ciul. How m do this and at the same time retain enough for med- |l¢inhl purposes is n question that ugitiites the nircotlc expert. lDuring the past six months n . - - _- great syndicate containing twenty all o’ Kmghor“ m 1606‘ “is Wm eight newspapers has niaiic an ex- stive survey of the evil in the ‘Lllileii. ‘Stzltcs. Dnringfour months of that time it was my privilege to direct lhi.» work in iii‘: Xerlll-WBB» musician, a steward, a. senlon. mns- 18m 5m”? “arm”: m 80110110131‘ 1ter. cook and brewster. a muster m.“ W11“ b11110“ Stu!“ were! Se” ed mckeys m the shunt’ a “new ilrug traffic in the United Slated These were Um Superior servants have been prepared from authoriz- 1m {he esmbushment for the lord of cibgovcrnment reports uni] the ac- me House‘ Her hdyshkfs 05w‘? tlvitics of the Wisconsin News llshment included tiwo and the Ipresent Earl is a direct lilies] d95- ‘cendnnt. - ~ Many distinguished soions of ‘the f E maker and two other swvantfl- .i'.io llflffffllif‘ ilnlg lid-bit has ni- whose (lungs are not specmmL The most tripled in volume in America dower of Anne the daughter of the 1“ m“ "us? “V” ye“,r5~ mm}, Lord Glam“, w“ me largest ill/e use in tho United States for- known M 1m“ “mil 40300 marki ty tlmC-sl more narcotic drugs pel’ John the eldest, identified himself 95111111 1111111 any 011181‘ white na- l °m° "r Mrs- with the convenanters although lie 11°11 ,‘wa.s M one time a firm friend of, We use seventeen times more the great Montrose. He volunteered P" c3911“ 111311 111B ‘(7111119-‘19. W11" w be Seoul-m- fm. the payment o; have ‘always lbeen considered the the expenses menu-ed 1n malumln. drug drenched nation of the world. mg ‘he army o; the Covenant Three tons and a half of narco- In again“ Montmse and l, was 5am tics are enough for the legitlmatei absence of the secretary the.“ mm that “he came “m, his m. practice of medicine for the wholel. _minutes were read by Mrs. A. W. hemance the wealthiest Garreltt. Then followed thc read-lug gmuand and 1e“ it the paomst» amounts used in hospitals, dispen- pspers, "Between You and H“ mm Patrick w“ the first E“; saries and private practice in tho P9811 11y MP8. A- W. (Eiffel-l; of Lord of ‘Session. Ho was oppos- 111F813 011168 0! 111B Aflefltic pee,- m world. This estimate is based upon 5B0- neona- of is Mr. James M-sx- the Hon. Senator P. C. Murphy, M.‘ D., flignish. Hn- was educated at St. Dunstan’s University and the ‘Art Institute of Chicago. and ser- ved two yeors overseas. l-le is now all artist and lecturer in Wisconsin and is a regular contributor to the narcotic drug habit has assumed the proportions of a very real and very dangerous me- nth-i) in both the United States and ed Sftates authorities have strain- nificently in a splendid attempt to stamp out the diabolical traffic in narcotics, they can report but Ci)- (hash-- gemm anti-narcotic ilepartmcnfs nation- AOOIDIlNTS flolfleilmsst en. embwnulnl situation urilemwbenci Silent doel. some ma], thoush unintentional. damage tn £180 rwncny of bio boot or hostess. il-le feels that ‘he ought to milks amends, yet he does not know whether Illa (ms-do this with- out giving offense. ' For instance, die 111:’? lawyer-arist- iy break somop co giaasor o- a- brsc. In dri a friends auto- mobile be my Benoit some slight" damage to come to the car. He may even forget to qiioee his bed- room window and feel responsible for the rain spots on the wail mil-PB!‘ or window lmnllngs. ~ Now tfih-e only real difficulty in meeting the situation lies in the awkwardness with W-h-ifllhw "m" Iof repayment is often made. To suggest ‘payment ‘in a hesitatins 111111 tentative manincr. Where the sub- ject has-to be mentioned ins in the case of injury l0 is car, in-‘ucntion of making good the damage must be positively asserted. The guest should in- form the owner of the‘ car concern- ing iiie damage. and then see that the necessary repairs are made- However if a mishsip occurs to the automobile that is obviously due to the previous condition of the .car this would halrdly be necessary. [f rne bric-albrac or glass is of trifling value the inciden is usually passed over without suzflefi- tioii of making amends. If gpossihle the broken article ‘should b6 rr-prlaced ‘by personally 111N108 0119 to takr- its place. If any demons 1s done to some article that "1181111011 be duplicated exactly 1-113 DQ111161"- g-ucat ‘should buy someflllnz 11131 be thinks will take its place and send it as coon as $511119 1° ‘m’ hostess, begging her b0 foffl" 111m his awkwardness.- chn conslgners to Japan by W35’ of Seattle alone during 1711‘ “V9 months‘ period, above mentioned. amounts to about ten doses to every niun, woman and -cliild ill Jilpbn. The Japanese do not use narco- li:s. ’i‘he§ sell them to other ns- tions tn use. What. are the HD1111- eso doing with all the narcotics? They are shipping some of it. to China. and some of it openly to America, and much of it is smug- glcd buck t0 America. China and Jripzill. ‘China woke up io the horrors of drug slavery some time ngo, and fought two wars to keep opium rulld its ilcrivitives out 0f China. l But the Indian opium monoply kept up its work, and now Japan ‘is drenchingChiua with drugs. and doing ii by means uf Japanese ‘post office-s‘ ‘ in China. Chinese- -<;-:0lic.=i rim step across twelve iii- :('1IBS of ground into i1 Japanese postal territory. and get a shot on liuorpliliie ‘fur less than u cent of lfimcricun money. _ l With incredible suriftlless China ‘ins fallen hack info th: clutch of the drug she fought so hard to lconquer. China is raising opium herself again, and We here in fAmcric-a are "Gventee-n times worse now by actual statisti . .y than thr- Chinese. {Doctors and C-.~ugg‘lsts._ l The best. doctors and ziruggisis in the country are olive to the terrible danger of the dope evil. ‘and ari- always eager to help any icrusude against the spread oi‘ this iplagne. But many unscrupulou- {doctors and drnggists make large sums dealing in "dope". in Peoria, olli, seventeen doctors and drug- gisls were convicted of illegal "dope" selling last year. In Chicago over thirty doctors ‘llld drliggiels were so convicted, oOne doctor was sent to the pene- itentiary for twenty years. At his trial it developed bhat he had six “The Work of the Women's lnsti- ed to 1571 Ho was instrumental m board. Bl s. For ovary-day ‘wear there bikinis beets ‘plain white slips. *§. 011 Miiebllt by the kimono- ‘ fibre ‘Mt ‘tin and e ‘wipe run '111‘°1l81,1'8i' 1W1.“ Efound the neck gm“ 51°“. 1.11531 are made 22 1111.119! 1011i shoulder to nem. they will not need shortening They should never he made longer [hill] 27 11101188. F01‘ wear undgf 1119 1111M bliiby used; also four nan. WASH-INGTON F011- (Norg lby foreign diplomats vote of 139 co 113. pioma tic establishments illicit liquor supply in Washington "91 53111."- 111711111"! style. For hot |NTTR¢EPT LETTER xgllsr ‘fl. s ‘may l: made or the flannel andjr: titan. mine: or mm Jerk ‘ls-silly “sol " ‘ - “Beds 1118s ‘align 13113:? “$7.31 kimonoksiseve pattern, or they may be knitted or crocheted was 01m 53mm.“- TM" 011911111 be no loose “i119!” °1' 51111-11011! or other trim- "Ul-n to catch on buttons or the bflbys fingers.‘ _ ‘t thmrt-of-‘door osmosis. u... hesi- y -- .1’ 1| l“. out-oMoors. so 11° "1 11111" l“ v and hood. T1111 Wrap la mace-like the ‘sleep: "Ir as arse t. 1 .lt is er white iissnei. It mfky. be ‘sewed together 0r bcllliiY-srbuliifiwith ribbon, 1i four mouths theuppei-‘csmgn w" be drones so as to allow the ssh to get its hands out freely. W115i billy begins to [with a very ‘com. fortabie coat mil? lie made from the ble- Qpcn lt and item it at the bot- 141111. shape the top loosely by a written by ‘Miss liiury MadSwi-ney tp Eamon ds Valera. iiesoribi-ni; H! ruinous _ his "proposed action." ,"l‘his, it is explained, apparently referred in de Vulcrak-i peace terms, published yesterday. GHEEBVI The aLnnfiicn ommibus driver has long beennoteil for his pecnllnr terse hillnor. Not long ago a funer- el- hearse out in front of an omni- iis. and barely avoided running| ovens ‘woman. The omnibus dri- gilr looked at the hearse driver. 81:11-11. then. greedy!" he ejaculat- 1011; and 27 inches uride. open down ea longer and the bottom 8 inches longer. .' Drew tapes may be run fillmugh» the sleeves and the hem and ‘baby's ‘hands and feet thus protected koln the cold. Gleepingjsngs are made 88 inches Q16 ifrontnThe baby is laid lin and 23 __ A“ autumn. when ‘I rode several ‘hun- lnquiry into the lml10T1a11°11 "1 11‘ was ordered today by the ‘liouss by 11 living H, Recently statements were made Iiy "drv" officials that foreign di- here formed. the source of much of tho mg (luck, and geese DUBLIN, Feb. '23 — The Free party thai._vis'ited_ n lake several $tate army authorities announce miles out in the prairies. Shooting today they had captured a letter began at iirod miles horseback from Medi- cine hat to film ‘Caribou Mountains to run down a rumor of buffalo ere. ‘i was not for an hour at a time where I wuld not hear the. thunder of tho wings of rising w-lldfoivl. For years l looked upon the tragedy of settlers slaughter literally by ~ the wagon load. At Dundurn. Sits- katchewan. l _wa.s-‘ the guest o: n wealthy- rancher when a hunt was plan n/ed‘. fllberswerc siix o-frus- ipi the d-nwn. Marksmanship was not necessary. illlfi by the time the evening she-tn‘ was over the kill nus‘ cvr-r fix hundred (fucks. and .i‘Ilie:l a ivagorn In those days- game was sflaughtei-ed in this way. clennc-i and placed in ice houses‘ for winter nsc. The Oluughter of ‘Wilid-Fowi i Occasionally, in the‘ yesrg that followed. l went over these same tramping grounds. Year by year I watched the going of the wild. fowl and the prairie chicken. Dur-~ lng a "flight" season of wild geesn I have counted as many as thirty‘ burning straw stocks on s siucir- nifim- krounri- which the silnughuercns were gathered to kill me geese nu circled low in the Illuminations. The result was appalling. Today at f-hs emi- nf those fetw years. Lf you ride from Winnipeg to the mountains» on either the Grand Trunk Pacific or the Canadian Pacific the probability is ma; you fleece. vvhriolr was not as many as the coming winten. not been the Willy's trappers and‘ hunters the iilldians who ‘have the wild: life of Canada. which the United States have very largely drawn their supply. settles and the ‘hunter. w-lh political stilpidity and selfish ambition. have been. almost entir- ely responsible for tion. Just us- ‘these 831118 elements hrve been responsible in our own country. "hugged" the wild life of lake and stream and- forest, but as lcnK 115 their own immediate and wants have beenfilled they 611"“ but little for the future. They ha" 51111 your soil think Will pay the 3113i. in which the intfer zisk- ed ‘if he might purchase or trade 101' a supply of wild geese. as his Own luck had been poor that year In‘ Teddy. the factor at Churchill sent back wordthnt he could no: 5'1"" l11y geese. as his hunters had also lvad exceedingly bilii luck that Autumn, and. had only suc- fifldmd in killing eight thousand hi9 cou' l use in his district during And yet. in ite of this. fl fins udisiens Bey Com- OI‘ ilestrnyeil from The together the annihila- the)’ Not only have selfish best‘, the breeds that you think will and the breeds you the best, and when you ‘have made your decision, stick to it and always keep the host fo- ‘11111198. ‘make sure they are the best 11y actual record keeping, and do not sell them at any price until better are raised to tnkc their Places. ______~________ izel Rose and the home of ing of the National Anthem. Scarlctcwn- The regular meet- ing of tliis institute was held at the homo Ji Mrs. ilenry .8. Call- back on Feb. 7. Eleven members and eleven visitors were present. A commiftco was appointed to make plans for the holding of u concert. A paper, “The New Pro- fession o; Home-Making" was read by Mrs. Major Lowther. The remainder of the evening was 5116M in the serving nf lunch and in games Ono new member was added to lhc i-ilib. The next meet- ing‘ will be hold at the home of Mrs. Earl Lcard. Llnkietter —— Twenty one mem- bers and two visitors attended the meeting of this institute at the home ofdilrs. Archibald Linkictter on Feb. 1. The meeting opened with the singing oi’ the Ode. A very interesting paper,—-“’l‘ollay's lDress and Yesterdays was read 11y lilies Wondsiille. On account of the stormy weather n social which ‘"118 Planned for at the last meet- ing has not yet been lielil. A com- mittee is preparing a~ programme. and the date of the social will be announced later. Matters relating to community improvement were‘ discussed at this time. Ollc new member was added to ‘the clnh. (111111! 111 Cillllldfl" r9311‘ 11D 111155 1111- removing the great burden of oabt "rkcncmy in the which ills father had incurred -up- 811111111“ 936 ions of narcotics ‘Home’ rend by Mrs. E. S. Rose. on “m 95ml“ "m1 the 1M1; ‘pfud- year. China, ‘according to Englii-Ai The next IIWGHIIK will lbe held at ence, rmgality and tho faculty for| iMrs. ‘Silas Brat-low. finance which ho displayed nrc ful» The meeting closed‘ with the sing- ly shown in me interesting diary which he wrote. llo reduced the debt from £400,000 lo £l75.400 and also enlarged. niicred and greatly improved the Castle and was at the same lime fl Privy Coun- cillor and Extraordinary Lord of Session. He was opposed to the Revolution but not actively. John, the ninth Earl, in I767 mar- ried Mary Eleanor. only child and heiress of George Bowes ‘of ‘Street- lalm Castle nlld an Act of I'm-lin- mem was obtained to allow the isurname Howe-s to be used. Their son was created Baron Bowen of Strontium, iCounty lmrliam in the peerage in the United Kingdom but the bsrony expired with his Heath. and was ‘re-established ‘for Claude the thirteenth Earl in 1887 On succeeding to his estates the thirteenth Earl, father of the pres- ent Earl entered npou a systematic course bf remodelling the whose of‘ the farm buildings and annually spent large sums of money in this direction. He was most considerate and generous as a landlord. During the period of the great cattle plague he cheerfully bore with his tenants the heavy loss cnuseii ‘by ‘the rihderpest. ilf is stated that of hundred patients, all getting from Yhim‘ iWo prescriptions n. week at $2 a piece. In the offices of these (iOCiOTI convicted of illegal traffic in drugs ilwrc is always t0 ‘be found 1| strange and pathetic collection u! lli-rsonnl articles. Child Vllcfiml of Drug. iin ‘Deliver. six months ngn, me izrirml Jury asked an iflvegllggflgfl i-l "dons" lrflrties m the high school building. In Seattle not six months ago. fourteen Yflllni; sire were brought into court. all under the influenci- 0t done. and every ono of them w“ i119 4181-1811161‘ 0f u respectable farmer. A little milliner opens 2i new 5110i) in a little town. A pale young fellow esiabllshes n barber shop or a cigar stand in a country vii- lillze. And the list of victims and new customers begins to grow. Narcotlc officers say ilm mm little miliitier in n Miflnesnfw vil- 1118c P?" count twenty victims she has brought. into the rini! in loss 11111 =1 rear. and one or lhtrsg vic- ims is almost sure to bring in another. "nflilP" 'D_Pl11118l‘ti were arrested in tho Y. M. f‘. A. club house in oSan tFrilllClflCt) the oillvr (lav-mic In the university grounds hr- WJS ‘a student himself - anti twn on the steps of two well known 7111c government of fndizi ‘alone a reports, now produces 7.000 tons. in the last fiscal year, Turkey pro- duced 470 tons. and Persia 594 tolls. As shown ‘by the tabulation by lilo government experts, tho pee‘ pie uf the United States use on astonishing proportion of the nnr- cnfios so produced. ‘in Ailstriu, the coniiumpiion of llnriroiics per czipitn is one half gi-iliu. in Germany. two. In Purlu- giil, twn and u half. in France, ilioec. in ‘Holland, three and a lab’. ln United States. 36. '1"1le 1111815181‘ dose of opium is loss illun one grain, but the amount consumed in llio United Slates nor annum, is sufficient to "M11511 111111)‘ six doses of one Brain each for every nian_ worm“, and child. Wneri it ls cimsfdercii that tllc Kl‘:'\'li.\"l' portion of our citizens ti" not lillfi‘ n single- fins-v uf Qpium Ycllr alibi" your. tiicsc figurrs tuli n startling story. The amount of cocaine, whlqh i producer] from nucna loaves. im- Ported imnuilly is approximately 150.000 ilimccs. ‘ lOnIy 25 per cent of this is used in (Icllinl miri other legitimate the cost of 1524.000 which the plague laid upon his tenhmry he‘ bore onehnlf. The present Earll came to the title in succession to his father in i904. lmolllhs. 64.000 ounces of morphine salts were shipped from San ‘Fran. i-‘rsctii-r. "lhvri-foro. 76 per Con; is ‘uscfl for illicit purposes. '11111'|lll< one period of churches where they made fireh- rcgulur rcndi-voils. It. takes thirty days m make an addict. and in more than uineiy- nine cases out of a hundred there is no cure for an addict but death. five 1118M to the Orient. In these same kimono-slip pattern. . F“. W111" 11w hood may be mans of the some or l-ae the wrsjp or it may s3?» _ or u- b ~ ‘Q For s er a cotton knitted dr “w. . booddfen open lace. i- tnd lined with the very s?’ . white Ill! i-il comfortable.‘ “all hobdo mo? made of soft s danzembroidmahwn end laun- without I . The ties on wtthu ‘ is 1.0M =-~°-,<;-~'1i'f.i...:h: ""1 zeal of their the b" ‘buttoned up. serum without inking him out of part vwoolon ‘garments must be washed very carefully. They should be pruned by band in tepid soup srils roams Iolp) rinsed l-in o. lit- thieesorwoter, and hung in the ‘He M" be will not see even s coyote. Surely you will not see In antelope. The pond-s and lakes once Jilack with wildfowi will‘ ooonlionally hold n family of ducks. or s small flock There are nowild geese; even prairie chicken! create an unnu- n] interest when their are. seen. The neatm brooding grounds ll he ‘bu. ‘ Woolurdsrments. All woolen or b Iloeyivsinootned with AIME‘ .9129 '11?- "1511911 11"" 11"?’ tb t North Alntfica he ever l went ahead of the ‘flinc or rail" fi" ‘$111M 01' film“ 191°- evzr known: 011g"! the ‘Arctic of the 0111.111 Trllllk P-Wmc‘ t. suns. are go o. In time drive through Yolloiwhead Puss and "is ballast any. ‘B9111 o wile. li-le permit; .1 saw a 10ft- ot made inteliligertt laws. and _ - five months. Scuttle shipped nn qilv One Hllnndy. when such Lswe have Occnrvionalll’ been made they have not used the enforcement of them. every (‘bounce true where ‘it has won at all. ride over rotten politics". smirk. warbeforo n mil. of steel dwer of their vote to demand an In almost conservation has to Within these same fifteen veers Columbia lmuntsins- T11"! had ‘Organisation-r Districts desiring fouinntloirregcrding the forming of ‘Women's institutes In their Council: —(‘.rocc nxtiminill‘! .complninant):——- "Was the ilefend- nnt's' air when he promised to 1m or 1 ‘baby til , hi “grins cs in»: t0 boil; he.“ "STFuYElJi .,. , mdlv-jlfll-fllrll- ‘at rerlr notary. war down cu Vwiilliiillted. bu‘ ‘rise 11> baby ceuldn‘ Jail. w-ul-Jhl t get st them." bu.» ~r - manna-sow»: cocaine and ‘l4S.000.000 dnsesof opium. amount equal in 379,000,000 dogeg °1 "Wfflllill": 23.000.000 doses o: average ‘Those who have mniio n dam, study oi‘ this matter both is thg Lnitcd Bistes and- eiggwhm-q, lKrce that the only way m m", a fiffili“ii'.'.llii‘."“iii.iiiiif°fé’. ii; rm- s‘ M- u'"."..’.'"‘i~.2112’...;“‘;‘iif...“i§"s.l'.'ii§ his; if: -.".1i““~i.‘i‘.“‘ " Charlottetown. olirlzmihaffifni?fili‘;fnk ma” S" awaiting shill, a» few cases consigll- off the supply ntyits agar]; to cut ____,,,,____ ‘it t... sii rushes with lilni running Sf‘, o-‘jfgitgsrl; 21nd Phiiadol- miners‘ Z11; u... palm; new, ‘is ‘MM thou“ 11'" cnlEs contained. Giinfigflgdiign: "m"! 12:". ‘fan up gm gbqoa nhmflh 'Mloiher:-"Jsck. why are you ._.__.¢..>--- milfllllifls‘ 81111! 111111 1'7 500 a "d:- th: urlutiltklndmghrlcareezlznetfl; out all ifiose apples!" e‘ r ' l‘ ' Mich - I li-"Wéll. ‘ 111011191‘. 7011 1-0161 We can all be thankful we are also: 0' thiigrsliiillpiiieienthvtfls angina’: tglollphlnfvm‘ ‘who’ “n” W!‘ me input mm out of sight ‘where not Among are 103,200 who are III ed to Japan. '1' 9‘ '- - ~ - The amount Shippgd ‘s, 5mm. (cw