annually). 1929 ~RECORDS Onn- Stale To-day 411B "LET'S DO IT" “The Land of Going To Bu" ‘I at“!!! ‘all. llzugrtheetru 4140 "CROSS ROADS" "Blue Shadows" Glen Wiel- Tenne with Ovchutvu 1152 “l CANTGIVE YOU ANYTHING BUT LOVE" “Sonny Boy" n n ~";.":.“...'..=f:".'::. 5.1:‘. > < > 4126 “HAPPY DAYS AND LONELY NIGHTS" "High up on n Hill-top" J P n, I. ~‘ifi"'vv'i°fq.‘?°‘i“u'l“'c.n"ii.f- 2 Good Selections on Iver! BRUNSWICK Record NEW RELBABI IVIBY THURSDAY Let your Brunswick Dealer " demonstrate the new BRUNSWICK LltlBT-SOCKIFI‘ RADIO —bnllt to the Ugh IUSICAL etnnderdr of the PANATBOPE limr these over C. F. C. Y. Radio Station or at i ISLAND RADIO CO. 143 Great George Street, Clflovvh then order your copy at once. . HIDES Bring or ehip n: your hides.‘ oslfskins. lamb and sheep pelts, and receive iop value. ‘ i Boneless , I Horsemeat We i can supply boneless horeemeot in ear-loan! lots or len- Wriu or 'phone us fol’ price. ISLAND COLD STORAGE 00.. LTD. Boy’s OilTanned Mocassins $1.850 Boys, we have all sizes in these first class moccasins, and you; know how com- " fortable they are. some of these are the ‘ lones but most of t em ~ are regular height. the sizes run from size one in boys to size 11 in mens, all at $01.85. Small boys l1 to 13_ only\,$i-50 i By Mail Post Free \ i 4 f l l Central Guardian TEACHERS 8TUDY GROUP -'I‘he third meeting of the Bonsbaw Teach- ers Study Group was held on Dec. l7 with an attendance of five teachers. The President, Miss Beatrice MacKay opencd the ‘meeting with a brief speech and then called on the secre- tary, to read the minutes oi the pre- vious meeting. , vious meeting. After this the date of next meeting also the topic were ar- ranged. Inspector MacPhall then ex- plained the assignmnt of a lesson. Then the Time Tables were explained and discussed. The next meeting will b\ January tho 22nd at 1.30 p. m.-— Patriot Please Copy-D LEFT Sl50.000.—The will of Rev. - Dr. l-Iccrtz of Amherst has been pro- bftted showing an estate valued in the vicinity of $150,000. A consid- erable proportion of this is in bank strain; which have appreciated great- ly in vuluc since thc purchase was made. Dr. lienrtz was a very gener- ous giver to church. missionary and omega enterprises during his life- time, and no further bequest, is made of this nature with the exception of owe to nfgniand View hospital and $500 to thc hospital in Yarmouth. The estate is left to his six children Edgar Heartz. Charlottetown; Mrs. iDr.) Jane Bell, Halifax, ; Mrs. (Dr.) Williamson, Yannouth; and Mrs. T. N. Campbell, Mrs. G. W. O'Brien". and Mrs. Lena l-leartz John- son, all of Amherst. The execution- orsuare Edgar Heartz and Mrs. <Dr.) Be . --——-¢o¢-—--- Mrs. Penaio A. Ford, Milton, was a visitor to the city yesterday. Minards Linirnent for the Grippe a Flu ONE QUARTER OF FATAL ACCIDENTS HAPPEN AT HOME Remarkable Booklet Shows How Ac- cidents Happen and May Be Pre- . vented on the Farm We arc apt to ascribe most of the fatal accidents these days to auto- mobiles, but statistics showthat one , in four of all the people killed on this continent last year were killed by ac- cidents in their own homes. Much has done in towns and cities in recent years to minimize the dan- ger from accidents in homes, but ~ little has been done in an organized _ way to prevent accidents in country homes and on the forms, where the hazards of life and limb are manifold. A welcome movement to prevent accidents in and around the conutry home has now been inauguratcd by the Bank of Montreal which, through its branches, is distributing a remark- _- able booklet entitled "Farm Hazards" showing innumerable ways in which accidents are caused and 1n which they may be prevented. It has been said that accidents never happen slowly, and that is true. They happen in the flash of an eye. But the things that cause accidents often do develop slowly-the sagging stair, the slow decay of building sup- ports, thc little acts of carelessness that sow the seeds of accidents-these things develop slowly, preparing the way for sudden dlsablemcnt or death. No one looking through this booklet can wonder that accidents so often happen in and around the home, for over 300 actual photographs, of the causes of accidents are reproduced. and many of these potential accident- farm. The booklet is an amazing re- velation of common hazards and an amazing recital of facts and remedies. It also contains an extremely useful chapter on first aid, telling exactly "what to do when we get hurt". Wc- do not doubt that much sorrow and suffering will be Drove-film by tho distribution of this booklet, a full copy of which is available to anyone on application to the branch 0f the Bank of Montreal. .._-_.-¢-o&--,-- MAY SAVE GAS ROUTE VICTIMS Attempts at committing inhaling illuminating gas will be r thwarted and victims oi monoxide asphyxiation ln closed garages will be fewer if‘ the new resuscitation nfethod of Dr. Ludwig Schmidt-Kohl comes to his expectations. The inventor, ho is connected with the University fof Wumberg. claims to have revived bats almost dead from carbon monoxide poison- ing by placing them to a closed chamber of pure oxygen Pres- ‘ sure which was increased de- tn time with the animals natural breathing rote. Dr. Bchfmdt- Khel says that carbon monoxide poisoning is caused by the abnormal appetite of the led bloodcorimwl" m- the unwholesome gas,"and the oxygen trearttnent offsets this. fllghways recently " 090119411 in Bung. make it possible for the first time to enjoy a. thousand-mile auto trip in that count-ry- ...- EUZIEMA fern » AND guru out... of a [so creators can be seen on almost any. i THE cuancodrcrows Mqwuxannui i Dr. Florence First flip Chow: How Difleront D lrle ' Mi t i . like uiiili-Iiylifl Jriiuif’ i’?- n scientific combination vipliruven medicines. Very lileunnt to take. yet. liternll: net: like a flash in relieving Cough». Colds, Bran. chitin l-lrrinne. "Flu" and other deuteron: ocvelnlllnenu. The ilret done stone n coughing sperm —-an|i..th:re are 40 doses in a nt bottle. At all drulgillfr —-onll illlamnieadl. w. x. a kl , f. , iii Katee?‘ Tahiti? I BucsssYs .4=1.=.l"=.=.¢ M-h- ’ I single elp prov l: p‘ - 75c AND 40c. TO AMEND BAR AC1" MONTREAL, Que, Jamil. (By can. udian Press) interviews held with Prcfnler TIXSCilCIIKlll on the question of admission of women to thc practice oi law huvc so for immortalized that the proznise of a member of the legislature that he will introduce a bill p; zunemi the Bar Act has been secured. This was announced aha meeting of the Pro- vinhial Franchise Committee. Eliseo Theriault, M. L. A. for I/Ls- let, will sponsor the bill which aims a". redressing a long standing griev- ance, i: was stated Women in tins province have been admitted to the study of law at tin, fmiversities for some time past and have ‘been granted degrees; by those institutions, cnly to be prevented by thc fact oi their sex from iullnissicn to the bar. Many were said to be employed by legal firms in this province and thus far only find some scope for their professional training. It was recalled at a met-Ling that :1 test case was brought some years 08o by u. woman gnuluaic in law. who sought to be admitted to the -bar, but "that it was held by thc court we decision bring concurred in later by the count of appeal, that the Am disqualified ivcmen from being ad- mit >d as eanldatts by the Bur As- mciatlon. A report m1 the conference held‘ utkh Premier Taschercau during the ccursecf thc week at which amend- ments to "the ccdc were asked. “'95 lilpGlild by, biadame Pierre Cusgrain Tm- Taschercaff anemia-ted, had 9mm" iced Just F0111" th if t“‘ lililiiBf-i q;(;n1i))_o_lne(\ o‘ no specifically lie‘?- pd h." u-rulgl c: sidcr thrill. 1i stated. Madame H. Germ-Lucie had prspcvicl such u list and u- Wwi 0P3: sensed 1o Mr ‘lhsuhcreau. It WM askqd ma; women be accorded Same fights mum- the cofnmuffiti- regime as in separation nf FY1500"!- lt. was also urflfli T111" ‘Wmw be admitted to family m0“: mm it being pointed cu.- m... Sim-rs and aunts of chime“ are now (leburiurd, and also thlil women. flhnllld be ‘nude . e ' ramble m 1m‘. ‘u, 13v; guardians cf their uruldrezi. The ll! nzattzcr taken up W118 m“ ‘1 , husbnd should not be allowed to dis: pose of mo goods of the without the consent of his wife. m. Tuscherenu Pwmisedf” Q“! “mm; erguon to these ilitLhTS, ft _\‘<'8/$ 9 " m’ . IN MEMORIAM tms J. RANKIN nun. fffhc funeral of l/frs. J. Rankin tuck’ place on Tuesday. January from her late residence at Murray “"3751. 0W1“; to the prevalefnce o1 sickness in the villailfi. "W "M" was a private one. only a W" film“ mug presentat the house. Bu?’ I rmg-gqmpanydoi neighbors 81ml?“ w. m "eves, e. avtrhef-sgtaivfce was conducted by m9- ntv. Robert Smart. new" “bézhf Unitedfihurch. There was a ll tiful crescent of flowers from the loc- a1" wbmerrs Institute. a wreath from an Missldii Circle of the Chlifitlll-lé? another from the Young P”? "9 “$.51; self was held in high esteem by the residents of Murray 35mm” and, m. m; death removes one who was ever active in home and church to promote thc best interests of all ' concerned:- Besides her husband and he! few. ily ofsix "little children. she Mil/QB W mourn her father and mother. M1’- md 'M1‘5,' Thos. Davey of Guernsey dove. her tight sisters and-five bro- thers. One of hcr brothers Clifton Davey, and a sisterivliss Persy Davey returned from Boston for the funer- 511‘ M15; Davey will make her home for the time bciiig at herlatc sister's residence. ' "The Pall Bearers warez-James Shiruin. Lorne Bueli, Kenneth Beck. (fem-Be cgopet, y Brooks and Ger- ald Prowse. The funeral arrange- ments were carried out by James» Herring. (Patriot please ytjlll!) if one rosy-cores" A iuloawu from to ‘care for or cure 01°91“ Wh“ . tie "habituollly was atefihent M313“? be oven y W " ' Tligsraroblem was brought to light by the announcement of one theatre l i Murray, Korean ' ~Missionary WRITES OF IIER WORK IN THE CANADIAN MISSIVON IIOSPITAL. Dr. Florence Murray of the Can- adian Mission Hospital at Ham Hu- eng, Korea, under date of Oct. 25, in writing to her friend. Mrs. ‘M. Swain of this city. says that:- There was quite a crowd of people -I knew on board the boat. crossing . the Pacific and we had a fine voy- age with pleasant companions and no storms. When I got back home again I got such a. welcome as was worth coming a. long way for. The work in the hospital had gone on very well dur- fng my absence. The new home for the Korean nurses is nearly fin- ished and is very nice. The nurses are very much pleased about it and are eager to move in. . The girls school building that I worked for while I was at home. is also now under construction and cv- cryone is pleased about that. \ _ We are taking on some new nurses to train, and have one new Bible woman. who is starting to do follow- up work among the new Christians in their own homes. so you see there are a few signs of progress. THE WORK IN KOREA "Leaving Nova. Scotla. the 25th of August. I had a good iflurnev m me coast and a fine passage in the "Em- DP°S< of Canada." across the Pacific. There were several parties of mis- sionaries on board. including about I twenty-five United Church of Con- ada pfllple on their way back to Ja- pan. Korea. Hanan. and West China. In the Korea party were Rev. D: A. Mar-donald and family, Rev. R. M. McMnllin and fnrnilv. Miss Thomas. Miss Rose. and mvself returning from furlo and Rev. Chester Sutherland golmz out for the first time. It did seem good to be back in the Orient anmin. Aitho some of the novelty and glamour or the first days in the East had worn off. that was quite made up for by the sense of homo-coming eoxerlenccd. And the velmrmc at Humheung was worth coming a long way to receive. I vras the only one of the party bound for Hamhcung. and arrived in the midst of the packing and bustle occasioned by the unexpected dc- parturc of the McRnnsi, owing to thc illness in Canada of Mrs. Mama's mother. 'l'hoy left our station sadly depict- cd in numbers. When about thc Sallie time Miss Sundcll and Mr. and Mrs. Bruce went to Seoul to the lan- guage school, there remained on this, the central station of the mission. only Mr. Scott, principal of the Boys‘ Academy. thé ,MacHf1t.tir-s borrow- ed ‘from the Honinl mission, lvliss Robb. Miss NLcMillan, and myself.‘ Two households when: formerly were five. It seems scawely possible that so many changes could take place in q few months. Tho-old W. M. S. house-has had to be torn down to make room for the new Girls’ High School, the foun- dation of which is now completed. It is wonderful to see that building ao- tually going up often nll the years we have waited and hoped and pray- ed for it. ' No-rezrcts need be wasted on the old house either. as it was much ‘too small. having only two tiny rn"ms while we have ordinarily five W. M. S. workers on the station. Robb had to sleep in her study while Miss Currie and I had our rooms in the hospital. ,' Nothing is to be wast;- ed even tho the building had to be demolished. 8s the ‘tiles of the roof, thc doors, windows, and timber is all being made use of elsewhere. The new nurses‘ dormitory is now completed but for the installation of the plumbing and the furnace. 'i‘he plumbing is being put in now. but we have to wait for the furnace till it comes from America. The din- ing room and one bedroom doc/n- stairs have Korean style hot floors. " The rest is foreign style with board floors, beds, and chairs. Even with} out the fumaoe the place is betticr than the temporary quarters they have been occupying and the nurses have almarw moved in. the cooking still has to be done in the old place. The new W. M. B. house with oi‘- fices for three of the workers is com- ing on well. We are looking for- warrltomovinginassoonasthe furnace arrives and can be installed. By next year we hope to have the normal number of workers on the station again and to fill the new house full. It was most gratifying to me to find how well everything had Gone on in the hospital during my absence. Dr. Allan and Mrs. Allan of West China took over when I went home on furlo ‘but both left some months before my, return. Miss Sandell is still at language study and the Kor- Golng Upstairs "l-lad to Sit Down Breath So Short hire. 1i. lirousscau, iilugoig, Que. writesw-"For many years l aulTi-m ‘ with shortness of ‘breath; then four yqgyrg "go l luul pulfntation of the heart, and was so bud I fad to sit dovm two or tlu-ec times when going upstairs. I reed about LBURNS Ml HFARI tout will 0 a E E l0 I got a box, and in better, an I took lb l_ have never had eh unee," » .5. it l Dunedin New Haven The shepherd shifts his mantles fold And wraps him closer from the cold, His dogs, no merry circles wheel. But shivering; follow at his heel, A cowering glance they often cast. As deeper moans thc blast. Now that Christmas and New Year's are over, we must face once again gathering , the grim and stem winter, for ton-c , months or more. The weather so for. has been comparatively mild, but we may expect something more severe in the near future. Mr. and Mrs. Hebcr lvfaolman, Df-n- cdin, were recent visitor: to ‘Long Creek. We welcome MI. Harold Murray buck from Western Canada. He is spending a pleasant holiday at Clyde River, with his mother, Mrs. Angus; Cameron. Many persons of this community are suffering from the "flu." Although the epidemic ‘is u mild one, irrecail- tions should be taken to check it. Mr. J. A. Berrigan, A.B., has rc- turned to Halifax, after spending a short vacation at Dunedin. Up to the present time, the smelt fishermen have not had anything like success. There is no thickness of ire yet to speak of and with thc first of January passed, it looks as if fisher-folk will have to wait for a time. New Haven. city on .Naw Mr, James Cnvanngh, was a visitor to the Year's eve. Mr. Leo Bcrrigon, Dunedin. has re- turned home aftrr spending his vaca- tion at Halifax and other points cn the South shore, N. S. The lack of ice, has prevented thc Smelt-Kings from having an organ- ized practice, yet all hone to be on the ice together very soon. M1". Clarence Frfzzell, New flavor. was in the city lately on business. We are sorry to hour of the cnriy demise of Muster Sterling . New Iiavcn, at the age of l: ye the ' The. sincere sympathy of thc \\'l‘l'\t.‘l‘ f is cxtc-ndcrl to the bereaved parents. Mr. Ralph Dari-sch was n visitor to _ Clyde River on New Year's Day. ' Miss Margaret. Docherty has rc- ‘ turned to thc city after spending thc - Chfistfnau holidays ut New Haven. — --»---¢oc-- »---- with her parent s Mlilfl-YEAR-OLD LAWS 18y The British United Press; LONDON. Jun. i-Four men in black s~ku1l rips and black clerical d1 ass sat in a lit:lc> court in Mulberry Street, White-chapel, in the East End of London, thc other day. ministering thc law oi Moses. They were the rabbis who must".- tut: the foremost of Jewish courts in Lanodcn, known as Beth Dinywhere day by day descendants of Moses in- terpretthc laws he gave to the Israe- - ll 5.000 years ago. ' . e larrs of Most 1. according to the Jews. provide the nfc-st complete (‘Ade of rules for personal conduct in ox- istenoe, an?!‘ while they are not TB.- nnqniwd‘ av u... laws of England, thby are‘ rigidly observed by orthodox Jews. " At 122th Din there was a little crowd of Jews waiting to present their problems to the wise men "T their race. There were l7 cases for the law givers to decide. Some had brought domestic difficulties: others wanted questions of business‘ morality settlfld‘. some had been called upon to explain their conduct. One man had called to who had decided to marry "I 9*!” tile. can staff were carrying on With Ml’- Moltae as superintendent oi’ the hos- pital. ‘They did so in a way that de- serves high praise. And they M on so well without ma; I mm w find plenty to do to keep me bll-By W?» Of our two doctois. Dr. H0118 h!“ gone to Canada to take 008% EFF-till" ate work in tuberculosis and is now studying in the Senator-tum in Tran- quille, B. C. Dr. Koh is remaining with me and is doing excellent work. The medical work is growing and yesterday we had twenty-six in-pa- tienis, and had to bring down a bed from the house to put the last comer in. The dispenmry is busier than ever too. Our nurses are over-work- ed. One of them has developed tu- berculosis. one was called home by illness in her fannily, still another is sick, and tho we have taken in some others to train in their places it will be sometime before they can take the place of the trained and experi- enced nurses we lost. One forward step, of which we are expecting great things, is in the ev- angelistic work in connection with the hospital. Thro thc generosity of Mrs. Schell of Montreal we have funds on hand in support for c. your a second Bible woman. who will do‘ follow up work among the new Chris- tains, visiting and teaching them 111 their homes after they leave the ‘hos- pital. Our mole evangelist who had m get, mmporarlly as treasurer and bookf keeper. has now been released from that responsibility and is at the present time in the country looking uo former patients who wish to be Christians. often naturist difficult and dis, surroundings. wt you not prey that we may all be faithful and earnest and be great- ly used in the Master's service? Wishing you ‘a very balmy Christ" mes, the birthday’ of our saviour. Oil”. .- Flififlfll I. MUIIAY. Prhglnntlnn of mini pictures l1? g [Mal fnnmnenv. is being discussed‘ in Argmtinawhieb heretofore her"- hart to import. practically all fl: - films. . champion the cause of his daughter . i I I l F UNIVERSE I HUTil|NE| AHYSS if 5PiB[ One Turn in 300,000,". 000 Years, Says Am- erican Scientist Vfho G‘i v e s Staggering Picture of tTosmos. NEW YORKjmJlziul 3.--The great, of stars and. universe or symtefn hlanets. of which our earth is rela- tively less than the needle in the hnyofuck. has been found within the lust year to be rotating and me time relllflred to complete a single turn is 300000.000 years. Profcmcr Harlow Shapley of the Harvard Observatory reported “his fact to the American Association for the Advancement of Science tonight, in thc closing address of the annual‘ meeting at the American Museum of Natural History. DT- Bhflllley gave a staggering pic- ture of the size of the comos of‘ which our universe is but a pebble 0n the beach, although presumably with its calculated ten billion stars‘ and innnumerable planets and sat» ellltes and comets and clouds of mo- Wirlc dust it ls the greatest group of rztars of which earthly astronomers yet have any knowledge. There are thousands of "island un-v fverses" drifting through the yawn- {HE abyss cf space, like svmrms of Jclly fish in a tropic sea. amongst them our own universe or galaxy is something of‘ a whale While the others are islands, said Dr. Shapley. ours appears to be a “continent? v The stupendous figures which the‘ _ I-farvard astronomer put bcforc his centre is tonight were a conso- uucnce of what he termed "a major discovery." Four Years’ Work. - I-lc suid that for four yours he and his assistant, Miss Adelaide Amos, "- had been working at Harvard on one special cloud- of star systems outside our llllllWfSl‘. in the region of camo- virgo. and that in mialvzifiz thcsc clouds and nebulous; blobs which lie L‘. this region, he and ‘Miss “had hit upon thc major discovery of‘ all our work" thc apparent proof thul inter-galactic spncc 1s offer:- itult" transparent. "This gives lossurmice." he "that the distances we are mengl, - inc his currcci and lilac veils ui mu- fcorfc dust and clrctrom cannot ob- scurc the light of remote systems and lead to false conclusions. concerning their distances." He gave a process of the transpar- t-nny oi space outsido of our ov-"n galaxy and said "This _\vi11 pcnnit us to say with more confidence than we have here- tofore admitted. that the rcmotest galaxies we study are more than 100000.000 light years distant; that the greet como-vfrgo in galaxy of galaxies is ten million light years awtiy and extends through two mil~ lion ‘light years of space, which a ten ‘es "the greatest diameter of‘ the rltrthly ‘galaxy: and that the indiv- ai star-systems in this organiza- can 1 have diameters from five to twenty thousand light years." The‘ light year is a measure of space. not time. and is the distance traversed in a year by a beam of light travelling 186000 miles per se- cond. in short (if that idiom be not too paradoxical) it is six million miles. “The greatest diameter of our own univcrseflssid Dr. shapely, probab- ly exceeds 200000 light years? Outer Space Transparent His major discovery of the trans- parency of outer spam, despite the probable drifting there of clouds of theraw material of stars and planets alike, means that man is not shut up even in his own great galaxy. For ages men looked up at the milky way and thought it merely a greet lumin- ous streak accross the "heavens." In time the astronomers turned their telescopes along that ghostly river of light and found it revolved itself into millions and millions of great suns. intimately they concluded that this was nothing outside our uni- verse. but was indeed our own uni- verse which has somewhat the shone of a great watch more than 200000 light years across the “dial" and above 50.000 light years "thick." ff one imagines an insect placed ih a disc of fog or luminous dust. then one sees how that insect would sec only scattered particles on looking out to either side, but would oer- celve what seemed to be a dense streak of massed particles on looking out edgewise, or into the very disc of our great universe. when we look up- ward at night and see the milky way. ’I‘l1at milky way. our galaxy. is the great system of fen billion stars. of which our sun is one. from which Dr. Shancly and his assistants have been peering out into thc unimaginable . dceos beyond. He told how, peering outward in tho direction of the como-virgo con- stellations he and his assistants had resolved those dim blobs of luminous matter into a‘ gigantic cloud composed ofseveral hundred galaxies. all of them smaller than our milky way. yet in their aggregation making up a super-system of majestic dimensions. Smaller Galaxia Merged. I fie considered the possibility of ani enormous galaxy like ours resulting. froth the u ndansatlon or amalgama- tied of many smaller galaxies-for in- stiiioe from the members of such e tuber-mien as lies beer ceme-virgo. Oi’; he speculated. do these clouds of galaxies, these galaxies of galaxies es he celled them. ant-shell theor- selvel together in some hieher order. income super-sumo of why-b we vet can have no inklifmfi Until e few l years ego our univerre was consid- but. Amer. ‘ i)1\(;i‘. Si‘. \ \-N "cred to molar up the totality 0i " nhings. Then the island universe were perceived. Shapely puts these outer universes into higher aggregations. and these may g0 still up the ladder of magnificence. The rotation of our own universe will at any rate give fundamentalists a new figure to deal with. The day of any orb in space is naturally the period of its rotation. For example. ,tllc earth rotates once in 24 hours, which becomes its day. If the uni- jrcrsc turns once in 300,000,000 years. ‘then that may be called a. cosmic day. and six of such days would be a reasonable time for the evolution-of a world. _........-¢-0->~-—--- Roseneath School’ Christmas Tree i The children of Hoseneath, their harents and friends, met in the school room on Friday evening Dec. 21s: to meet sumo Claus after a .well rendered program by thc chil- dren. The programme follows: Opening Chorus-Old 3mm; clans —8cho:l. Recitation-The Christmas Two- Margaret Munn, Rita Donahue, Laur. etw. Sullivan. Recitation-wt Jolly Christmas VLs- ftor-Joseph Sullivan. Recitation-I Hang up my Little jStcckhfg-Cathcrine Sullivan, | Radiation-vi letter to Santa— Laurefm Donahue. Recitation-Manor's Christmas Gift - Liufgurem Sanphy. Recitation-Christmas Bells Across the snow-Regina Donahue, Recitation-oi Kiss—Frances'Su1li- \':.fi. Recitation—A Surprise For Santa- Flcrmce Donahue. After this part of the programme the Leachrr Mr. Bruce McLaren had in physical drill by the school. By tins time Santa arrived and pry-seeded at once to the heavy laden .4. and distributed the gifts to the eiciycctafft. children. A vote of thanks was given to Mrs. J. C. Martin ior ,t'.~.;>. painstaking way m which she iriiillcrl thc children. ‘ 'Il1c Women's. Institute furnished a bovntiftil luncheon and candy. "Flzz- ore-rung of entertainment, en- ; ed by all was ended with the N11- tionnl fmtlri-m. BRITAIN MAY HAVE ELECT- TiG-N BEFORE JUNE l0 LONDON. Jan. 7-H. is understood that thc (lovernmefit. is planning to no to thc country for the election on or bsiorc Juno 10, but Linlcss Parlia- mcnt is dissolved by that date, it is id- hL-iiuvwi they will dcfcr thc election until October. Mr. Buldirins administration must gt“. the Buduet cleared ‘neforc they =~-.-f1 appeal to the people. in the meantime. however. on the ugsumptiofi that. the election will b6 in Jurm, all political parties have re- sumed intopsu activity after 0. périfld of comparative lethargy during the‘ Chrruinus lfolidayvs. The (ionsena- tfvc machinery throughout thc coun- ;,1'\- Lu 4.0 well organized that the Tories‘ chief coffccrn is to see it well maintained and secure a Willi-ll" "y- On the other hand, thc Liberals, a"! having" u hard fight to cnsrndvr I'v- thusiasrn, and Lloyd George is ap- parently placing his gfiliili-‘at ifllih in publicity methods, in which he hi)?» several experts. ' Labor's greatest anxiety is not ‘i0 create enthusiasm, for they have volunteer workers in fllefliy. Wt m secure funds. Tlicy have been try- ing m obtain $500000 for a bid-fol‘- power fund. but it is understood that not more than 8150.000 has been col- lected to date. Labor has selected more than 500 candidates. “m! H“ ‘spite of the inroads caused by .109 general strike and losses due to the Government's bill restricting 1M "59 of trade union funds for political Pill‘- posee. it is believed that Ml‘. Ram!" MacDonald's followers will be ablcto finance all of these standard-bearers. 333m}; Jan, s-Amazing discov- Mics about insect life have been made by Dr. Robert stsegar. the W6": ‘ nown scientist. who has been ma!‘ ing study of the lives of diiifli?" varieties of ants. Dr. Stasgars discoveries occurféfi while on an exploration triP- N0" _ a nest of large red ants. he 6M1“! to watch their manoeuvres. 50159:” to his astonisment. m? “s”: H; gan to emit tiny Imlsicl" 5mm - decided to mvestizflllf- ‘ | Suddenly s, number of the ants bi!- ‘ gan knocking with the end of tile l. ' domen upon thc thin resonant , of the homestzad, thus Producing 3 sound that was evidently 5°? B" “ma? signal. Dr. stncsar also dlmffu that sometoi the ants perform f" '1 instrumen a mus c. n a . "All of these musicians, he ‘WW “make use cf g similar instrument. differing only l“ buns atfiulnmmf higher and lower Piwh- T15 . men; ggngists of two diffcrents P536 ml‘:- which I have named the lu.c an v plcctrum. _ _ “The lute is situated on the) men, and consists of mlvftlic F“ the. fine grooves. The plecifllm t‘ hed ,3 shape 0f 11 "d m" pine“ M “gdomcn ...... and thc thoruk. When d down u“ its abdomen rapidly "l: Lima“ “emu mm *r.:':::." l "liil-‘ifihil ensues a sort of hum- le ming chirp which is permit!" . h rm» e»- cv "he = ber of the little musicians gymphony." Keep Your Health ‘PO-NIGHT TRY I Minard’: Linueent m that an end on wen-known. . KILL . by using the 0L0 Ill-Mill! , linen“ LlnimentCo. Ml». nr- ' _y_ an...» ,. c! ' my...‘ -.. . ..c..-.-. .-. i ~ - f <— ' . ."..........<..,.'.o_.,fl-_._ W“ < var-w‘ . r t.» a 1-7“ —