‘A wcplvlgslz 10. 1932 THE CHARLOTTET OWN GUARDIAN “Check The List” Yardlefs Toilets. Three Flowers Toilets. Ashes of Roses. Gay Paree Sets. Waterman Pen Pencil Sets. Manicure Sets. Toilet Sets. Kodak: S Brownies. Chocolates in Fancy Packs. Pipes. Tobacco and Cigarettes. (Iomlmts, all kinds, Bath Salts. Toilet Waters and Perfumes. "will: Powders. Suggestions Cliiars in Fancy Boxes. And many articles. many other "err-rs ron EVERYBODY" ‘msrsor ova STOCK" J. Ernest H. Worth 5 —DBUGGlSTS-. I42 Prince Si». mmmmm Phone 82 Seventeen Assorted PAOLYS KENSINGTON SCHOOL lorembr-r : -- Gfidr X Sl‘.——1. Gladys Baker; i-il-lrsorot Gillis: s. Louise John- In‘. i. Donaliowness. _ Grade X Jr--1. Norma Clark; 2. rgorct Hunter: ,1. Evelyn MM- Piii; i. Grace Clark, Glide IX--1. Ruby Kelly; 2. orjorie Kennedy; 3. Harold Mac- “IMTPI 4- George Loring. Glide VIII-l. Claire Somcrs; 2. n Pmfiii: 3. Adele Brown; 4. ziia McKcnna. lode vii-l. Willa Casley; 2. 5 saimdm; 3. Reta Clark; 4. t Braham. _r:‘X'l'iiA SPECIAL vimggit ‘hi: srorra SATURDAY torso-cs 39c “'5°5ilB----;......, xiii“ 15c & 20c 49c 901m . , BIJGAR m Lin. AIOLASSEB "u"... iiiltrrrrrs"""'-- 25° §,L"I2g*£s;;A.......... 25c l.”.%’§"..*.".rrt'""""" 98° zénggzrlt............ 6c sauna. 19c §';§{;E=*F;€;JI.T......... 25° 25c iizfikflses. small ,M'::: gsglétoalvs soar giévior suns B" 000K for 22c E as om. 29c MIMNS looses . in». its. &Alhert Keys tr Richmond s» Pownsi i ii- W. ii. Carson CIIIIIOPItACTQfl, n. 1mm: on..." Graduate “an 54- Phone i012 r can. mm. Cheap Lumber We have just purchased on our latest Buying Trip - iiiiisillsion School honor roll for Gerloaris of Lumber at the lowest prices in thirty years. Our new Price List will be issued on Tuesday next. L. M. POOLE & CO. WHARVES Grade VI-l. Mary Caseley: 2. Annie Delaney; 3. Mary McKenna; 4. ROS Iflrlng. Grade V--1. Keith Kennedy; 2. David Muclaesn; 3. Ralph Somers and Lily Hunter; 4. Georgie Ken- nedy. , Grade IV sr.--1. Glen Clark: 2. Leo McKenna; 3. Laird Mwcdonaldi 4. Anna Caseley. Grade IV Jr-l. Vina Higgins; 2. Eric Duvar: 8. Frances Kelly; 4. Lowell Clark. Grade III Sr.—l. Joyce Howard and Lorraine McMahon; 8. Francis Thibeau: 4. Yvonne LeBlanc; 5. Elwood Clark. . Grade III Jr-l. Georgie Proiitt; 2. Carmen Champion: 3. Gladys LGBIBIIC; i. Billie Sims. . Grade II Sr-l. Ingham Mac- Neill; 2. Gussie MacDonald; 3. Geraldine MacLean; 4. Wilna De- lauey. Grade Tl Jr-l. Freddie Fbiland; 2. Eric Watson: o. Billie Toombs and Eric Flahaven; ii. Ethel Cham- pion. - Grade I A—l. Norman Mill; 2. Patricia Ponder-gust; 3. Leslie Clark; i. Emmett Braham. Grade I B-l. Andrew Humphrey; 2. Lois Macdonaldi 8. Malcolm Kon- nedy; 4. Allison MaoLean. Grade I C-i. Inghsm Chisholm: 2. Minnie Gill: 3. Lowell MacLean. Perfect attendance: Grade I- Leslie Clark, Jean liiolland, George Wadman. Lois ‘Maodonsid, Andrew Humphrey, Minnie Gill, Allison Chisholm, Lowell Madman, Mal- colm Kennedy. PLEASANT GROVI SCHOOL ‘Honor Roll of Pleasant Grove School for the month of October: Grade X-l. Marie Doyle. Grade VII-d. Helen Cnswsil. Grade VI-l. James curl-an; a, Enid Nicolle. » Grade V-l. Everett Glow. (Tad; IV--l. Willard Murrey; Pearl Roberts; a. Doris Curran; Kathleen Curran. Grade III-d. Norman Casweli; 2. L10!!! Olow. Grade II-l. Alice Rita Murray. Noreen Cullen, T ‘- 2. t.‘ Casweli: I. MscLean, Charles Watson. Ingharn The Eel-Grass Situation On The Atlantic Coast BY Harrison F. Lewis. Chic! Federal Migratory Bird Oilicer, 011mm Hid Quebec, National Parks or Canada, Department of the Interior. Bel-Brass (Zostera marina L.) is a flowering plant. belonging to the Pond-weed tarnily, that grows in salt or brackish water along most sheltered shores of the sea in the middle north temperate zone, from about half-tide to a. depth o! a. few feetybelow low-tide mark. On the Atlantic coast of North Amerhea it rangu along the shore from south- ern Labrador to North Carolina, with outlying stations in Hudson Bay and on the west coast of Greenland. Where the inter-tidal zone includes extensive suitable flats. as it does in many shallow bays, harbours, and estuaries on the eastern coast of Canada and the United States, this plant is ot- ten found growing in dense masses over large areas. It is often two to four feet long above ground, with long narrow, ribbon-like leaves. Be- neath the surface of the soil each plant has a rootstock, about 3-16 of an inch in diameter and several inches long, furnished with numer- ous short roots. Eel-grass reproduc- es both by seeds and by vegetatve propagation, which involves the production of lateral buds that eventually become separated from the parent stem by death and ab- jointing of the older part of the rootstock. A plant grown from seed does not flower and produce seed until the second or third year. The rootstocks or rhizomes oi eel-grass form a very important River, nor on the north shore of the Gui! of St. Lawrence, nor along the coast of Newfoundland. so that the northern boundary of the sea of scarcity would seem to have been situated. in Septem‘ last, across the Gui! oi St. Lawrence, with its western extrcnfty just south of the Bale de Chaleur and its eastern extremity just north of Nova Scotia. Tidal fists that I have recently examined in the affected areas on the Atlantic coast of North America, where eel-grass ordinarily grows in enormous quantities, now show in most cases only a few scattered plants. most of which are s’ckly and evidently dying. In some places great mats of interlaced dead root- stocks may yet be found, black and brittle, in the mud and sand of the bottom, in other places such root- siocks are not ‘discoverable and have presumably decayed and dis- integrated. The living plants that remain are chiefly to be found near the shore, although in some areas some also occur, scattered singly or in small groups, at some distance from dry land. At points. such as estuaries, or the immediate vicinity of the mouth o1 brooks in sheltered places, where the sea- water is markedly diluted by fresh water, there still exist dense stands food of Canada Geese and Brant, and the seeds are eaten to a large extent by Black Ducks and go some extent by other_ species oi’ ducks. When in waters supplied with eel- grass, Erant feed upon it almost exclusively and Canada Geese rely upim it to a large extent. Eel-grass rootstocks constitute, under normal conditions, the‘ essential iood supply o! several thousand Canada Geese that customarily winter in south- western Nova Sootia, as well as oi large numbers of both Geese and Brant wintering on the eastern coast, of the United States. The leaves and stems o! eel-grass, when thoroughly dried are quite widely used in industry, especially for insulation and sound-proofing for buildings and for upholstering fumlture. Under normal conditions thousands of tons of this plant are gathered annually in eastern can- ada and United States for these industrial purposes. A great deal 0f eel-grass is also ilscd locally by farmers near the shore for fertilizer and ‘or banking the foundations of houses ld other buildings in cold weather. Unprecedented Scan-city At the present time there is a notable and unprecedented scarcity oi living eel-gass on the coastsbf Nova Scotla, Prince Edward Island. and all or New Brunswick except the extreme north, and arsimilar scarcity is reported from the cast- crn sea-coast of the United States. from Maine southward at least t0 Virginia. Scarcity of this plant in areas where it is usually abundant is lmown to extend as far north on the eastern shore of New Bruns- rhumberland County, which is no th of the estuary of the Miramichi River. In September, i932. I per- sonally observed this scarcity p3 Tabusintnc, bu; on the same cia failed to iiud any evidence of uny usual scarcity at Caraquet, which it ern side of the Bale de Chaleu. Such a scarcity of eel-grass h wick as Tabusintac Lagoon, Nor-- a little farther north, on the souihi-i of eel-grass that is apparently n01”- mal and healthy, but such eel- .grass beds are strictly limited in extent by the limits oi’ the marked dilution of the sea-water. The gen- eral character of the scarcity of an area such as Nova Sootla is in- dicated by the fact that a firm that usually ships 1500 tons of eel- grass annually from that province to Boston has not been able to ob- tain a single ton this year. New Growth at Buctouche In some places, as at Buctouche. New Brunswick, a few small scat- tered eel-grass plants that are ap- parently young and prrfeotly healthy are to be found on flat-i where all the original dense stand of eel-grass has died. , In south-western Nov Scotla. from Port Joli, Queens County, to Argyle, Yarmouth County- ma“? extensive tidal flats, some of which are known to have been neatly bare of eel-grass about June 1st, 1932. showed in late September of this year large areas covered with fl- falrly dense growth of young cel- grass plants, with leaves five or siX inches long. These plants look green and normal when viewed from a little distance, as from ihe shore, but on close examination show signs of an unhealthy condi- planis elsewhere. This makes ii» of young plants, which has been the biisis for popular r990?“ W" the eel-grass is “coming back” in this area, will somi, ill its turn suf- fer severe reduction in numbers. Eeel-grass plants that are crying in the regions whefe this scarcity exists shew black areas of consider- able size on the leaves, at first near iheir tips, subsequcrliiy nearer the leaf-bases. Eventually ouch lcui. with accompanying disintegration, is progressive from/rho lip to the base. so that leaves whose proxim- l al portions are still green and liv- ing while their distal portions are entirely missing are fzcquently ob- served. The extreme bast- of the leaf may rema'n green for some 110$ yet been reported from any: time after loss of allnoet all (he tion similar to that found in older‘ seem probable that this new growth‘ City Council Assists lain order that all children in the our City. This corliiliioir not-d not , y may have B“ oPlmriJ-mitll b0 exist, Many cities with populations lbe protected from Diphtheria, the many times that of our-g 11.1w. m; Cit . may; gflllltilihflil! made it possib‘e themselves o1 this unnecessary (115. "y c 1d ca“ be “my Pm‘ 9555- 1i 15 603115‘ from a financial children who are unable to pay this trifling amount will be done free. place in the Bale dc Qhglgur, nol-‘teiiied by three doses oi’ toxoid for standpoint as wefi as a nrerlurc in m the estuary o; m, 3L uwmncedihe sum of twenty-five cents. All good health. Toxold Clinics flltiil week ill are to he hclri the (liilr-rcui riiv The younger the child the great- schools commencing ut. “'0', 14.31,, ‘er u“ need I0!‘ Protection alirl the School this niturillrulr. fiuilw: {)1 Health Deliartment are anxious to the clinic appears cl: "slur-o m 3.4.. protect all children from six months day's edition. It is i0 hr inn-rm q..- i° twelve years. Cases o! Diphtheria all parents will make n arr-tr‘. ci- ne “curring almilsir "m? week in fort to prcserlt their rirtirirr-n for this much needed ]7i‘l.l'<i',l\|1_ l l CENTRAL GUARDIAN orrssrvr-ztl. nor: roun xlvus Piwivs- 7012—l2-l0-Ui. DRESSED POULTRY WANTED. "Hifliest prices. careful grading. Prompt returns. F‘. B. Conrad, 69l7-l2-6-0i. FOR. SELECT l’ It l V A T E CHRISTMAS CARDS call and see those on vicw at the Guardian Central Job Prirltery. Moderate Prices. Nov. ao-tr. - PlSQUln WEST SCHOOL The report for November of Pir. qrlid West School. Grade X-l Walter Jay. Grade IX-l Mary Halldruhun. Grade VII—1Ei'm3, Jay, g 1d; Coffin, 3 Ida l-larldrahan. Grade V~l Cllrir coffin, z Zn“ Handruhall. 3 Gcrrllci Hughes. Grade Ill-l lflimcr Hughes, 2 WBVBTiY Jay, 3 Laura Kelly, 4 Ivan Kelly. Grade IlI-l Evelyn Haildrallall, 2 Junior Coffin. Grade I (n) l Vernon liiiacKin- non, 2 Leona l-londrahan. Grade I (b) 1 Bertram MacKin- non. Perfect Attendance: Marv Han- drahan, Erma Jay. Giiraki Hughes. Filmer Hughes, Ivan Kelly, Laura Kelly, Evelyn Hrmdrzihan. Emily A. Stewart-Teacher rest of the lent. In a comparatively short time, however, a plrmt- be- comes elltirvlv stripped oi’ its leaves. while the rootstock dies and turns black; illo rierlih of the rootstock apparently coinciding with the loss of the leaves or following it very closely. According to lnformafion received this abnormal dying of the eel- gruss has been observed for two years at least. and possibly as many as forlrycars, on thc coast of the United States. from. Viiigiiiia ‘to New Jersey. Its occurrence was s0 unexpected that observers in that region ns clscvvllrre, did uni. realize lwhat was taking place and cannot now date with certainyv their first observations that related, as they lnow believe, to this destruction. A‘. the conclusion of 103i th,» scarcity of eel-grass was present from the plant on the coast of the United States nouhward to the extreme lsorlhcrn part of the Gull of Si. ‘VLYLWVCIICC, including Northulrlhcr- ‘of Cocagne, New Brunswick. Tire south coast of Prince Edward Island was included in the sea of scar- city in 103i. but the, eel-grass R- l i During r932 the nrcii grass scarcity ha= extended no iii- wvarri somculllai. lll thc Ciuil‘ of Si‘. Lawrence so as in ruciurlv iiur north ‘shore of Prince I‘i'i‘.\'il‘.'(i Island n‘. lilac east coast oi New‘ Rrunuvick Vfrom Cocagnc no tli i0 Tzlhusillirlc or beyond. (To Be Continued) BEANS, Stewart's Saturday special for your regular Saturday supper. Try them. 20c quart. PIES, are our specialty. Try them, you will be delighted with their crisp fluffy pastry, their creamy top and luscious filling. best bakers in town. CAKES, order your Christmas Cake now. We i have a most delicious selection. Baked by the Mrs. Knositall: “What do those sailors mean when they speak oi the dog watch?" Mr. Knositoil: "That's part of r the crew of an ocean greyhound." KENT ST. ~ S 7F WAR T’S ‘BAKER Y PHONE 211 southern limit of the range of iilil ,lnnd Strait as far as the vicilfly‘ long the north shore of that islullrl remained llcsliliy during ihri‘. year". of cel- Women ’s Music Club Meeting Tile monthly mecllrrq .31 Women's Niuse Club “his ill‘ ilhe ilome of tile Pros (IL-m. ,Keith ROgCrs. Beryl old Si. ' the business period, u mos iilg ruld untrue-ire pzlper on ‘ _ era" was road by lvlrs. J, A. Luv.- son. Mrs. Lawson in her ilzlpcr told oi‘. the devcloplucrlt ql‘ (lprru lll Franco, Italy, Civrmnny rrl i-Zrl; land. The follvxxfilrg pl _ ml W11.‘ their givent~ r 1. Piano S010, Parlilioll, Csricgfl Mrs. Leigh Dill§’,\\"‘.i. . 2. Ccnirnllo Sui/r, Rliiliull/Zi: (Frauen Gnuurrri, Air». .iur|~v*- .‘\i.u'- Millsu. 3. FY1110 301': Yul hizzurkn f I“ Illi.) ‘ 1hr Mazurka ‘A liiiu,» Chopin. l‘ ' r '.~; Solar (L2\‘ J. A. Law‘ son, , 5. Piano Solo lMusic from Rosa-i Villllllili, Schubert, l\lr~.. Keith Rog- DTS. i 6. SOpYMlO Sflli), lvion Cocur‘, SK/iuvia tit Voix lSnnlsorl Delilah) Ssirlts Sllfllfi, Mrs. l-l. S. Hellderxson. 7. Violin Solo (Secctions from Tl Trovrlterc. Vercl, Miss Knllilvcu Horl-rhy. Qeeooooovvvooovosovooooovooo Chopin, .\ii.=,; Lillian hincltcuzio. Soprano Solo. Air De Sakmlrn,’ (Hr-rsdiadei-Jtilaasenet, lvllrs. Fredi Nash. { i l r i i IN MEMORIAM DONAL!) ll. ‘MCPIIERFON’ Mr. Donald D. LICPIlETFOIl. Belle- vue passed alvay at his homo Nov», 12th, 193'.’ after‘ a law days illness‘, in his 70f}; your. Mr Me ‘ncrson must liavJbevn one of those for-I llrcrs who clearly i<)\".‘<l rrr-g nuiy- llis ironic but his nzlfivc proviucrxi, He never left P. l. (‘xcrrpl for about two months; iu N<~w Bruns- ‘wivk in his young day.» ll.‘ fmucd Pndusiriously, careful. ‘um! reinvi- micnliy. He reared h;.~: iuruilv in comfort, training ilu-ru in {he wars of sobriety and viriu» uiq. rzvililt; ‘parental nilthority 111m ‘illc fzlnllly zlltili" lll if: mun and in the daily duties of ih"i:' ileum"- nblc Cililillg on {he fnrnl m‘ decili- ed Presbyterian C'il‘r\'l(".l[l!l$ iv. luv. cri the church of his run . the Presbyterian Cllurr-il ('.iil.‘i(i‘.i. H0 was all adllcrl-ill ru< .2 ‘l J 0i Caledonia. Tlicrc Sili‘\'i\‘f‘.\' to 111011111 and miss a gcllilr‘ lilld kind llil'~'h€iil<l and Eu)‘ A Chrisfirrlosi 1 ‘til Christmas l3 O~§Q§G§G§O 04 06 0-0 Q-Q-O §O 6440 The Presbyterian (‘rhurclr In Canada iii...- i sr. JAMES‘ clrrluzu Minister: ltev. R. Moorhcad Legato, 8.9. Public Worship: Morning at Eleven O'clock. Evening at Scvr-n (Tr-lock. Sunday Schnnl 2.10 lYr lock. TORS CORDIALLY INVITED. §§O§Oi§§OOO §OGOOQOQOOOOQO QOO- iSTR/INGERS AND VISI- vi Florence hlcmiersou also n; hour"; {hum n? r mid faillvl", his ulidnu‘. Iww soils, nlrri one (l. arrllfcl‘. 17ml. \\~‘ llmul iliiil Norman nu |i\,. fin-r, \l;.=~.*» mos rrlralzlz _ Ivfiwtla v fr‘... , I . mfilrflfi f‘ i .. The Queen s Meat Market” f??? if You're economizing ill’; Then you'll be glad l0 know, .i,, The Queen's Meat Market prices " , Are very, very low. Bu)’ your vegetables and meat At 22.3 Queen Street. Our store is alwrrfvs clean and noni l< or cleanliness we can't be bout, Th“ l"'"i1l‘i9lill"s wide experienci- \\'o’ll brine; [lrnnlplly 1,, Wm. (‘mm y J. R. SE VCIK Phillie 1301 22:: (luvvrl w. :- h l! _ crllzriilcklri also one sister M s. James .\l" H, r1... ha"... of Lewis. Tlll- mrrrilxrllt . VuIlPiTicki Piuricterv. The h -\Z~‘l~>c were Messrs. Kenneth “ mrrl Nil hlrficth, Archie hizlllrrsoil. .7, A. Iiflfllec, J. J. Mr-Pilon nllri Aruzus Nil-Kay. Rev. Allisic‘; :i.lll!".'(l_‘.', llzs; r uqurvnl rrvlfliiil u‘. ‘P21111111 0L3 ‘ Is ii fact you shiluid remember, ‘- 1'01‘ i"! kflilws how in cul the mcui ‘i . lo make it good and lender. ' If you Willli quick service ti’? Just. Phone 16in], ,, ,, .\ilfi your order from our Nillflv l §§O¥Or§§-Q-O§§§b§-O§$§§§§QiQQQ-OQ~O-O4OQOOO-QO~QQ—QOO404Q G St. Paul ’s Church 3rd SUNDAY IN ADVENT 8.30 .\. BL-Iloly Communion. 10.00 A. .\l.-—'I'hc Sunday School and Bihll- (‘lasarm ll.00 A, liL-‘Alnrning Prayer and Sermon, Antllonl-“Scck Yo the Lorri“ . . . . . . . . . . . J. \'. Itclrcris 7.00 P. I\l.—l£venlng Prayer and Sermon. Antllcln-“Abide With Mo“ . . . . . . . . .. I’. II. Frllrlr-rirrr EVERYBODY WELCODIE REV. II. D. RAYMOND, hi. A., HECTOR. v v rvw ¢~“4 voeooeaossoaa.t an_a~\,l.A.§.~A~>¢l§ 0 V QQQ§O§QQQO+OQ£QOQ O00 §§O'%O—§—§4§-§§§%~O U-O-OQ-O-OOQ O44 6 CO’ 8. Piano Solo. Zllszi-rrka (No, l3>,< e oosaaaoaaaaaasaaaaaassooeooovooeeoesogpn. ‘ ' urrxci‘ asp g r . . ; Eb: fisptlst diburrl) g MINISTER-REL A. (t. VINCENT i). D. z ORGANIST-MRS. G. ELLIOTT FULL t MORNING WORSHIP ll 0'CLO(JK z Anthcm-“Slveet is Thy Men-y" . . . . . . . . . . .. lviarnbl‘ i Sermon—"l\l_v lit-st for Cilrist“ . . . . . . . . . . . ._ 13H‘- Villvtfii g Alithcm-“(l Love Tllat Will Not Let Me (-0 Shanks t SUNDAY SCHOOL 2.30 P. M. 1 The average attendance htS been keeping high. luur 0 regular attendance to the en of the _vcar will help the I School establish s. new high record. i (zvissjgr. wonslrl.» . o’cr.ocx.. ‘ t Male Qunrtcttrv-Jfilust Outside iirc. Door". :\(Titii‘_l‘ i Messrs. Quigivy, (‘nlilr-r, “llliIWPll and Stcrrrs i Sermon-Wllow lo Date Prospr-ritfs Return" Dr. Vincent Anthcm-"(l Givi- 'I‘h:\rlks" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. Smart 1 The Evening Service uili lu- Broaulcrlst hy F. ll. (.‘. Ii. z You Arc ‘Ylifllliy Woiconrc. veoo+++o w» o o +0.04 o0 o4 +0 ~+++¢+o+ so o-o o ore-owe w»; s v QO+UGQQ-O'§OQQQOQOO>OCQOO Q44‘ §§‘f§—O- 3§§§§O¥§ 00-00 §-0'§§ Zion Presbyterian Church REV. G. CARLYLE WEBSTER. MINISTER. PROF. LOUIS I). THOMPSON-Organist and Choirlcndcr. MORNING IYOIISIIII‘ ‘iu- Character ui lire liirlgrlmu" 11.00 .\. hL-ifllr-ml- Iluulee. Arrllronr—“t‘omr* lfillu He" . .. liuriiuuc soio-wnlurrlinr: mid livvnirlu" ——(‘;ri'rii' JiVLfillS llului .\lr. Wendell Phillips ‘Lilli I‘. .'\l.—-.\‘nl\li:li|r Rvlllrnl and Iliilii- (‘izlswx IZYIINING “TIIINIIIP 'l'hr-lvll-: "The Purpnsr- ni‘ (‘Irvin's llwzxfr‘ 7.00 P, Al l h. '. .\l1ilii‘li‘l—- Rcioirr in "l" i-rilii" "The Lorri i\llil\\I‘iiI i‘ r‘ \\.‘.,v oi ilu~ viglitvurn l. ii ill- war ni‘ the uugurlil’ silnil perish.“ |"~'i\iill i:ii. q cocoa>000e-oooroooo-oo-ooeeoooooooooo 04400-0000-0-0404000-00404000 e __._._¢___.__..._ oovoowoeo+$o+ooooooooo0004 04000400000444 THE SAL VA Ti ON .4131?! ADJUTANT‘ .\Nli MRS. (‘. .j‘\. KIDI.\ll.\\ (iilircrs in (‘llurgc Rriurrlirv, 8.00 l’. .\l.-—l'rrli.~.r~ .\l<-<-iilly;. Surlrirl), 11.00 .-\. WL-llulirlcsa Dior-ting. “ 2.00 I‘. DL-Silililay Sl-iuuvl illlii llilril- iii ~ " 3.00 l'. .\i.—l<'rr-r- and Easy Blocking, “ 7.00 I’, .\I.—-(lrr:ll Szllvutioil Mccliru. (lot rrurly fur iilr- Szrvioilris rr-iurrl. 4000QQOQOOOOQOOOOQOOQOQO Q§Q§FFOOOOQO§§§OOGOOOOQOOOOO000040600060Qtbéotb O§Q§@§O-§§§-Q'§§§+¢4§OOQO-GOQOOOQOQCQO~QGQQO04 0060 b 0 t Trinity United Church Ministers-Rev. E. ll. Rlmisnyulhl). Rev. (‘. N. Iimuu, ii ‘.. Organist-Prof. A. Roy Kendall. L. ll. A. 3L, .\. .\. (-. i». 10.00 A. lit-Prayer hie-cling. 11.00 A. .\l.—l’ullilc Worship. Srrmlm-“A New Ilozlvcn uilrl .\ New Eur-lll" Dr. liunrsay ‘ .\niiil~rrl-—“Grcat is The Lord" . . . . . . . . . . . . . .\i.rrl~ir.uri 2.30 l‘. DIP-Sunday School and Adult liihlo time. 7.00 l’. ZiL-Puhllc Worship. Sermnn-"Gnrl ill Thr- Shadows" Rev. (‘. N. llrnun, M. .\. Anthclrl-Wliiit 1'11 Your lll-nth“ . . . . . . .. l1. .i, ll ‘plius Solo-wills (Bond Silr-rvill-rll" . . . . . . . . . .. \'.ln llr- “uivr Miss Mary Ferguson Visitors and Siurlruis (‘orrlizrlly Weir-nine. 's9||tiiins pun hump-y vooovooooooooovooooovooo mags...’ o- Ass-ab)» zsssstsleqsleooesveoeoogeqq eoooooeoeovooeoac-oooo oooaeoeoi. .oa4a.a>aaas....-.aaaa..-..I-.-.aa- e~< - >---A---~a.-a.1...-.- f _,. e I i I ~ r “ISCL-Ggssilis“ t =--:- ....._,,_ ' if». I’ . ..’_t‘"-"-I¢“.r-\