Kiki viimrares AP rah FAA a at pa hi es erin Tragedy at Demers Centre Spreads Terror in Ottawa Valley & Citizens Arm as Fear Grips Witness Slaying of One of Victims Pembroke, Ont.," July 21.--A wave MM horror swept the whole Ottawa Valley today as, piece by piece, the jragedy of Demers Centre, on Allu- piette Island, which exacted a toll of five lives, became known, and it was definitely established that an entire family had been wiped out by some murderer. Joseph Bradley, 65; his wife, Mary Bradley, 68, and their two children, Johanna, aged 35, and Tom, 45, are dead, Slain also is John, Bradley, brother of Joseph, who lived with the family. ~All five are the victims of some unknown killer, and all five met their death by shooting. : Terror grips the entire island, The doors of every home are locked, and behind them frightened women and children cower. EMPTY SHELL. FOUND. While no trace has yet been found of the weapon, Detective-Sergeant Joseph Dalpe of the Quebec provin- cial police, is in possession of four empty shells and one undischarged shell of .32 calibre which he found in the Bradley yard. %s Opinion among the island folk is that the=murder follows an 'island feud" that had been brewing in a cauldron of hatred and malice for many years, : There were three witnesses, at least, 'to .the murder of Johanna Bradley. One was Mrs. Joseph Allard, whose abode is a short distance from the Bradley home. Mrs. Allard heard a shot, while she was in her house. She was giving Island Homes .-- Neighbors her . husband breakfast at the time, she said, She looked through the side windows of her home, and saw a wo- 1. = running, pursued by a 'man, "She screamed, 'I'm being murder- ed!"" Mrs. Allard said, man, a blanket, I think, over his head and a rifle in his hands. He fired deliberdtely at the -vioman, whom 1 could not quite recognize, although I'm pretty sure it was Miss Johanna SECOND WITNESS. i The woman's story found corrobora- tion in Francis Vaillancourt, another neighbor, Vaillancourt was startled at his morning chores by .the sound of shots, He turned to see u woman flecing from an armed man through the 'yard of the Bradley farm, "He suddenly stopped and, levelling the vifle, fired at the woman," said Vaillancourt. "She screamed, 'I'm being murdered,' and disappeared into the house, The man followed her in- side, and I did not see him again." Vaillancourt said he had not gone to tha Bradley house because he fear- ed the man was Tom Bradley, who 'was mentally defective. The eye-witness was afraid Tom had run amok, Vail- lancourt heard more shots--he did not know how many. He was terrified, he confessed, and he did not "wish to get mixed up with a 'crazy man, loose with a gun." "Pembroke, July 23.--Michael Brad- ley, 42-year-old sole survivor of the family of which five members were murdered early Friday morning, was taken by Quebec provincial police late today to Montreal for questioning. me p-- Train Traverses Quebec Washout Forty Passengers and Crew - Haye Miraculous Escape ; Sherbrooke, July 23.--TForty passen- __ gers and the erew of;a Quebec Central trai' had a miraculous escape from - death when the engine and two cars ran over' a washout 10 fee, deep six ,. miles from here. The washout was but a small part of the damege caused by a violent electric storm, accompan- ied by wind and torrertial rain which swep . over this istrict late Saturday. The train, bound from Sherbrooke for Quebee, had just swept around a curve at Ascot, when the éngineer, _ Alfred Spry, saw the washout in front. He applied the 'emergency brakes, but it was too late to stop the train. ; ) Luckily the rails still spanned the decp gulley and the engine, a mixed rer and first class passengdér car reach- el.the other side erect. The buffet parlor car, at the rear, however, turn- ed over on its side and rolled part way down the bank. No'one was injured. , oe oronto Man Third -in the King's Prize Jizley Camp, Enzland, July 23.-- To youthlul Cadel Officer Woods o No cingham University's 0.T.C., a 25- yewr-old chemistry student, Saturds came the highest honor for marks- ship the Empire has to offer--IHis Ma jestp the King's Prize, p Woods scored a total of 287 out of a possible 300 points in the gruelling 70th 'renewal of the greatest event at the big Imperial meeting of the Na- tional Rifle- Association, to win the prize of $1,250 and the N.R.A.'s gold cross and badge. The Canadian team broke into the prize lists thanks to the ccnsistently xcellent marksmanship of Sgt.-Maj, . J. Mcleod of Toronto and Lt.-Col. . W. Gibson of Hamilton. On the hole, however, the Canadian team wound up the fortnight's meeting with : ittle to show for their efforts. --_-- on § Fight in Canoe ~ Causes Tragedy and Wife Drown in Georgian Bay ', Sudbury, July 21.--Five Indian child. n, the eldest a grl of 14, are orphans the result of a brawl near Collins let which ended in the drowning of oir parents, Louis Merawlash and 1s wife, Rose, as their canoe upset, . According to the police, it appeared o couple, both intoxicated, had start- a fight in their frail craft as they ddled in the dark, and the ganoe BVerturned. fiver police 'who investigated Indian lared Madawiash waa. bruised bove the right eye, and expressed Pho:belief his wife struck him with a addle and both plunged into the ator. ».Madawlash and his wife went to kull Point, three miles from their arly the next day the Indian ife embarked for home. Later ound their overturned canoe Oil King Seized By Kidnappers Four Men Take Victim from Bridge Table Oklahoma City, July 23.--Kidnap- pers who entered his home while a bridge game was in session held C; I". Urschel, multimillionaire oil oper- ator, a captive, . "Police, making every effort to gain some clue to_-the kidnappers' hide- out were puzzled by a mystery plane which flew over the Urschel home at noon Sunday. The plane dipped its nose directly over the house and then disappeared. Urschel and WW, R. Jarrett, .with their wives, were pluving bridge when four men walked into the screened porch-of the Urschel house, armed with sub-machine guns, They forced both Urschel and Jer- rett to enter an automobile and drove away. An hour later they-released Jarrett, after taking $52 from him and admoniohing him not to tell the direction they were taking. vl. a Mollisons Crash In Connecticut ircle Bridgeport Field Five Times Trying to Find Runways Bridegeport, Conn., July 23.--After quering the North Atlantic and fly- ing within 60 miles of their goal, the British air aces," Amy and Jim Molli- son, crashed their black biplane at the airfield near here to-night hut escaped with slight injuries. The couple, who._had set out from! Pendine, Wales, Saturday in an effort to fly non-stop to New York, circltd the airport five times in an apparent effort to find a safe landing pace. The airport is located in the village of Stratford, near here. Teacher Circles Globe Liverpool, Eng.--George W. Pigott, retired Liverpool schoolmaster, has a globe-trotting hobby. He tours .the world in search of former pupils, who total 65,500, and has just started for South Africa, "I have traveled 650,000 miles in my quest," he said, "and renewed contact with my boys in the United States, Canada, the West Indies, Australia and New Zealand. t+ "I am having announcements put in South African newspapers asking old scholars there to let me know their whereabouts and I will visit them. After South Africa will come Australia--and so until the end of my days." SIRE WTAE REL Germans Exhibit Wallpaper Depicting American Scenes Kassel, --Wallpaper showing Amer- ican scenes, including. the Western frontier of a century ago and Niagara Falls, were on exhibition here at' the tenth anniversary of the German Wallpaper Museum, | The museum is the only one of its kind" in Europe. Private collectors "I saw thel|" Visiting Former Pupils | Croustos smiles her approval, It is no longer Seventh St. in "Chicago. Balbo Ave.--in honor of the leader of the visting, air armada. Ann - Voice of Canada, The LS Ea the Press - - 7 " Ay CANADA > Kipling ; Mr. Rudyard Kipling's address of welcome to the Canadian Authors' As- sociation in 'London was listened. to with pleasure by tens of thousands of radio users all across Canada, For well over forty years the celebrated Anglo Indian's name has been a house Hereafter the name is Heat Kills One, : Eleven Drown Tragedy and Heroism Mark Week-end at Crowded Beach Toronto.--Continuing ho: weather over the week-end was the direct and indirect cause of 12 deaths in Ontario one a straight case cf heat prostra- tion and 11 by drowning. Scores of rescues from drowning were reportad at watering places throughout the pro- vince. It was an almost unprecedented stretch of hot weather that sént tens of thousands of Ontario citizens to the beaches for relief. While 92 degrees was the highest temperature reached in Toronto Sun- day (not the record for'the year), the effect of the heat was increased, offi- cials at the Meteoroligical Bureau ex- plained; because of lowered resistance and 'the "baking" the city' had under- gone during an unusually long stretch of -hot weather, Upon none of five days hus the mer- cury failed to reach 85 degrees. STRUCK LAST WEDNESDAY. The hot weather, wltich has been coming from «the south, struck -To- ronto last Wednesday and sent she mercury up to 85 degrees, Thursday was the hottest day of the year with 94.3 degrees. I'riday struck 91 de- grees, and Saturday came not far be- hind with 88 degrees. Sundey's "high" of 92 degrees was reached at about 2 pan, At 10 o'clock Inst night the temperature had not slipped below 80 degrees, Hundreds of people slept in parks, cnd there were groups who preferred to spend the night on the beaches to returning to their heat-baked homes. Irom early morning Sunday the beaches throughout - the city were crowded. I'amilies came with lunches 'and spent the day. Every tree in every park was used as a shelter from the sun's rays, and even boulevards bqast- ing bushes had their share of suffer- irg neople. just as it takes energy to make ice cubes in the kitchen refrigerator, Air stitute energy for fuel in our. think- ing. It takes energy to cool a home, eee Move to Raise | Price of Silver Producers to Absorb Equiv- 'alent to Sales of Hold- ing Nations London, July 23.--Representatives of the silver producing and holding countries at the world Economic Con- 'ference signed a solemn agreemeut, the provisions of which zeek to raise the price of the white metal which is used for money by nearly halt the population of the globe. Representatives of. India, China and Spain, whose coffers were bulg- the United States, Mexico, .Australia and 2eru, the great world producers, ing with monetary silver, of Canada, L$ hold word: throughout the Dominion, Children have been enthralled by his Puck of Pook's Hill, x We note with pleasure that on June 24 last, Mr, Kipling was unanimously elected a Foreign Associate Member of the Academie de Sciences et Poll tiques. This distinction is shared by only two others, the King of the Bel- glans and the gallant Cardinal Mer- cier, In proposing Mr. Kipling for membership, M. Camille Barrere, form- erly French Ambassador to Italy, spoke of the English author as a great living poet, a philosopher who had deeply meditated upon human conduct, and a faithful friend of France, loving her for her virtues and full. df indul- gence or her shortcomings. His latest ed how these qualities had also led him to understand and love their coun- try.--Toronto Mail-Empire, SF - -- -- Motoring Ambiguities The Ottawa Journal observes: If a woman driver puts out her left hand it may be understood that she is going to (1) turn 18K;-<(2), turn right, (3) stop, (4) go straight ahead, (5) reverse, or knock the ash-off her cigarette. The same with a male driver." There are other ambiguities in con: nection with motoring conduct. When .a lady drivef alters the angle of the mirror she may be watching what traf- fic is coming up from behind, or asegr- 'has at last fallen asleep, or checking up on her own appearance. When she : Suns the-horn she may be issuing a completed a memorandum which calls for restriction of sflver sales for four years. When ratifie¢ by the home Gov- ernments the document will take the! form of a treaty. The big producers will abcorb from mine producticn amounts of silver equivalent to tha sales of hold- ing countries. They will hold this metal for monetary use while agreo- ing not tc sell any' monetary silver. When the accord is ratified -it will make effective a resolution adopted by the monetary commission of the conference under which states agreed to ceaso debasing silver coinage and to increase, where fesible, the use of the white metal for small pieces of money, : ", at Roosevelt Remarries 'Divorced a Week la, July 23.--Elliott Roosevelt, son of the President of the United States, and who was divorced early lasy" weel is homney- mooning 'with his second wife, the former Ruth Josephine Googins, of Forth Worth, Texas. A double ring ceremony was read Saturday in a flower bordered rock garden on the river bank estate of Mr, and Mrs. George C..Swiler, uncle Burlington, Oshorne, retired congregational min- ister, wien ®y Dust clouds raise more than 15,000,- 000,000 tons of earth in the United Kingdom every year; the soil is re- deposited by rain. Kills One, Point Edward, Ont.,, July 21.--Rus- sell Mair of Point Edward was instant- ly killed and 21 others were injured, several critically, when a spiral of wind difiped low over this village and left death and wreckage in its wake, With a cyclonic roar the twister swept along the mile-long Northern Navigation Company's freight sheds and sped on to Lake Huron, leaving only shattered remnants of the build: ing behind. For a time more than 100 workmen in' the shed were trapped in the wreckage, while others leaped into the 8t, Clair River hlongside and swam to safety, - " Pleces of the long frame building were carried for a quarter of a mile by the wind, Even yet, workmen are searching the debris, not sure whether all the men in the building are out, Villagers whd® had seen the crash rushed to the.scene and began hoists ing the timbers and boardg of the col: lapsed structure. - From the interior, cries of. panic-strickeh workmen re: sounded, 7 : ~iIn the river, on the west side, two or three men swam aimlessly about. Terrified, they had leaped Into the St. Clair and, still terrified, they seemed to make no efforts to. reach shore. Cyclone at Point Edward Ruins Litter Mile of Docks After Twister -- Hospital Improvised on Scene -- Loss is Heavy Injures Twenty-one had swarmed to the riverside, just west of the village, and to nearby Lake Huron beaches, There was a eoncon- trated rush for home sas the ®ark clouds swirled up from the south at terrific speed. ; In the sheds, shouts of the "straw bosses" mingled with the rumble 'of truck wheels, The clouds seemed to divide just below Sarnia Bay an "tion | to swing together as they tra elled north to the sheds. They passed over the towering coal dock at the south end ofthe long buildings, then merged in a terrific spinning spout which seemed to hover slowly along the top of the building, : Timbers cracked in warning, and then suddenly the entire structure col- lapsed like a house of cards, It halt rosé In a sickening, concertina -motion, and then the heavy timbers seemed to move, ' ; In the sheds, electric wires twis hd broke amid the wretkage. Someone pulled all the switches, The 100. or more men in the bugs tried to reach outdoors and safety, but the collapse came too suddenly. Parts of | the roof hung crazily down. The ; walls turned in. But for the fact there were large piles of flour and freight in and aunt of the bride, by Rev. Nabolh |- warning, a rebuke, an eal, a sum: mong or just giving eXpres to her ego's response to the stimulu§ of the joy of life. But when Bhe deigns to look at the dashboard instruments, {t means" butione thing: she i§ already in trouble, And once again, much the same applies to the male driver, -- Saint Johu Telegraph-Journal, New Scottish Trains - - With "The Royal Scot," a famous British train, commanding attention at 'the World's Fair in Chicago, it is not without interest to know that "The Granite City," "The John O'Groat," "The Hebridean," "The Lewisman"" "The Irishman," "The Fast Belfast" and "The Tinto" have been recent ad- ditions to Scotland's "distinctively named trains, "The John O'Groat," a Summer-only thrice-weekly express from Inverness to Wick and back, has the distinction of penetrating farthest north of any express in.the British Empire. SE "The Hebridean" and "The Lewis- man" are Summer-only expresses be- tween Inverness and Kyle of Lochalsn, connecting with steamers to and from the Isle of Syke and Stornoway, while "The Granite City" runs between Glos- gow (Buchanan Street) and Aberdeen, "The Irish man" ind "The Fast Bel fast" are boat expresses between Glasgow and Stranraer, "The Tinto," from Tinto Hill, a fa- mous landmark near Symington,.is a residential express between Lockerbie * and Glasgow.--Brockville Recorder. - Holiday Fatalities We are proud of our wealth of rivers and lakes in this province. Buf one wondefs why the gorgeous beauty of these gems of our mountain' 'land: scapes should so often be draped with mourning as a result.pf holiday-trage- dies, It is not for want of warning, Every year wise advice is reiterated with insistence. Newspapers, maga- zines, preachers, teachers, everyone gives the warning. Take Anse a Foul on as an example, There is an intense publicity given to safety warnings: 'barricades have been set up to keep bathers within limits; 'there Is a life- saving service maintained. And yet there are fatalities. It is not that our lakes and rivers'are dangerous. It is the thirst for danger on the part of so of our bathers that is the cause of the trouble, There Is' a great edu- cation to be carried out there. -- Le Soleil (Quebec), = - Ls 17 Quite! A doctor warns that too much hy bathing is dangerous. In this case, apparenily,~ignorante. {is Ottawa Journal, ) The Rhubarb Season The Wiarton Echo's = usually filled columns were white and cold- except for a little note in the 'centre of the page, headed, "Sick As a Dog," where. in the explanation was made that the editor had eaten too much rhubarb for breakfast, and was in-tfit kind of a state where he didn't care whether the Echo eyer came out or not.--~Fer- gus News-Record, - : ~ Empire and The World at Large volume, "Memories of France," show: | taining whether the back-seat driver, nd >> bam ae a Xo SY Improvement over the same week last year, it Is the first time in a long while that a loss has not been regis. | tered. Consequently, there is some hope that this marks the turning of the corner, The raflways have shown A new' aggressiveness in recent months, --Simcoe Reformer. * THE EMPIRE Post Office Humor An amusing story designed to illus: trate the acuteness of post office meth- ods, was told by Mr. I, J. Simons at the Philatelic Congress in London re- cently, ; Sr ' A party of thirty or forty -soldiers were stranded at Archangel after the war, he said, with jobs awaiting them at home. They had been promised a speedy passage, but after many weeks there was still no sign of a steamer. Finally they sent an army postcard home, saying they were there, It was addressed simply to: "The Muddlers, London." - » The post office wrote on it: the War Office!" . "It you do not beleve the story," added Mr, Simons, "I have got the postcard."--London News-Chronicle, > Luscious Lobsters Lobsters, by a new method, can be frozen In South Africa and guaranteed to decelve the very elect a month later into thinking that they were, as the strawberry vendors put \it, "morning gathered." This {s excellent news and We wish all success to the ew branch of Empire trade, South.Afrl cans maintain: that the local lohster has to be eaten to be beliéved, others that the best.come from the western shores of Ireland, Before the war the local price on the coast of Mayo was balf-a-crown a dozen and the big ones at that! - Has the _local method of dressing ever been tried in Englahd--: stewed in milk with potatoes, with Irish whisky stirred-in' by the hardier natives? Here'is a free tip to an en- terprising English restaurant. -- Lon. don Saturday Review. "Try The Talking - Automobile It is perhaps good news that motor- dsts are soon to have a grammar -of | tooting, They are not going to make 1 less noise, but their noise Is to have more precise and subtle meaning than it has to-day and the vocabulary with the horn isto be greatly enriched. But these things are going to happen only it, and insofar as, a certain ingenious Czechoslovakian inventor gets his way. What he plans is to teach driv- ers to use a Morse code so that they can talk to each other. Motorists are a competitive lot. Unfortunately, there is all too little scope for their preten- slong, because the prices of cars gnd their powers are not secrets. But the owner-driver of ths small car will be able to outshine the best in wit and rhetoric and new reputations can be made.--London Times. % : Shearing 8,000,000 Sheep In a few weeks, South Australia's 8,000,000 sheep will be yielding their. fleeces to shearers in hundreds of shearing sheds, Many of the most im. portant stations have installed shear- ing machines, but some owners still retain "blades," believing that the fleeces are cut better by that means and that the sheep are damaged less, In Koomooloo Station, 45 miles east of Burra and in the heart ef the best grazing country," South Australia has the 'biggest "blade" shearing shed in the Commonwealth, There a team of 20 men selected by the proprietor, Mr, I. J. Warnes, shore-38,000 sheep be- tween April 5 and May 6. * In addition to the quality of its fleeces, Koomooloo has an enviable re- putation for the excellence of the classing of its clip.- That department was in charge of nine students from | the Adelaide School of Mines under the superintendence of their instructor (Mr." A, H. Codrington). Koomooloo ig one of the first sheds to "cut out," for, Mr. Warngs has inaugurated Aut umn shearing there with eminently satisfactory results, but other station owners do not begin until a little later, From the end of May until Auglst shearing will 'be in full-swing through: out the northeast, north and north- west and highly-trained classes from the School ot Mines will do the,class- ing at all the more Important sheds, -- Australian Empire Press Bulletin, "XL y > ¢ 'THE UNITED STARES _ 3 Retort Shavian 'Bernard Shaw, in his speech here, remarked that he remembered reading newspaper headlines about the Civil War, A captious member of the sudi- ence, 'recalling that Shaw. was born in 1866, wrote and asked him how he had been able to read so well at the age of five, This is the reply he got from Shaw's secretary: ; "Mr, Bernard Shaw asks me to say that he cannot -believe that there is anything extraordinary in a child of five being able to read.' .He has ho ro- ---- [R) sea % collection of any time at which a.print. | ed page was unintelligible to him, or of learning to read. The faculty must' nee The Dominion + Coast-To-Co- ot Charlottetown, P.E.ii--At the re: cent annual meeting <f the Holslein Friesian Association of Prifce KJ. ward Ictland, it was decided co hold the annual field day this -vear at Tryon. A considerable amount of ex- tension werk has been arrangea for the summer mor.ths, Gs . Fredericton,. N.B.--A- provincia organization of mayle products mana- ficturers in New Brunswic has, been started, and it is hoped. to 'complete the forr.ation of a New Brunswick. Maple Sugar Producers' Association in the autum with the idea of estab- lishing standardization. and uniform- ity of the products, ; > Montreal, Ques.--Mining of soap- stone in the Broughton district, East- ern Townships, Quebec, which began in -a small way and under difficult circumstances a decaac ago, is now a definitely established industry: Be- couse of the high quality of the stone produced, fost of the kraft pulp mills . in Eastern Canada now use this stone instead of the imported article, At present, practically the whole of the Canadian product goes to the pulp ifdustry, but as soap-stone® has a variety of industrial uses, ¢ broaden- ing of the present market is in pros- pect, ; = < Toronto, Ont.--Reports from Lon- don quote Major D. J. Colville, secre: tary of the Overseas Trade Depart- ment in Great Britain, as stating that . his Department will establish a Com- 'mercial Information Bureau at the Toronto - Exhibition this year, under the direction of Mr. A. M, Wiseman, H.M. Trade Commissioner in Toronto, Steps have been taken by the Federa- tion of British Industries to maintain the fullest possibl¢ representation of manufacturers at the Exhibition, - Regina, Sask.--Saskatchewan's coal. production in 1932 amounted to 875, 432 tons, with a value of $1,211,638, This was a considerable increase over the previous year when the output was 657,723 tons «nd the value $936,918, Moose Jaw, Sask, --Livestock re-- ceipts at the yards at Moosc Jaw dur- ing April and the first four months of the present: year show- an increase [over the corresponding periods'of last vear, as follows: ek 7 i» 1933 1932. 1933 3,600 1,321 7,986 5,779 61 98 179 335 Hogs ... 17,854 13,285 55,958 45,724 Sheep .. 8,052 17,558 44,660 36,731 Horses . - 976 2,247 2,782 5,469 1932 Cattle .. Calves . Total .. 30,643 24,509 111,664 94,03% Edmonton, Alta.--TFor the first five months 'of 1933, 'Alberta's creamery Lutter production amounted to 7,831, 000 pounds, compared with 7,395,226 pounds in the corresponding period of* 1: .¢ year, a gain of 5.9 per cent. The May output amounted to 2,373,000 pounds against 2;281,824 pounds in May, 1932, .an increase of 4 per cent, ~ Calgary, Alta.--Alberta's hog in- dustry was considered at a recent.con- ference of Dominion and Provincial Government officials, - The meeting was mainly for the purpose of gathar- ing facts and figures about the indus- try in the province in order to supply information that has been asked for by the British Department of Agri- culture in view of the British hog quota to Canada, Marketing condi- tions and prospects were the chief subjects of investigation. 5% Victoria, B.C.--Believing that there is a. good market in the Orient for cut flowers, Mr, F. R. E. DeHart, a prominent horticulturist of Kelowna, sent three boxes of cut peonies to China and Japan on the liner Em- press of Asia as' an . experimental shipment, % : Guests Survive Futurist Menu Culinary futurism had its little fling recently at a banquet arranged by some of the more modernistic ex- hibitors at the Triennial Exposition at Milan, Italy, says" The Associated Press," inti so Guests invited to partake of "The real soul of kitchen artistry" were gathered by the futurist, Fillia Mun--° asi, and a group of friends. The party was called "the eatable plastic art." % & Nothing was said about digestion. -These were same. of the delicacies - offered: 1 Cocktail--"Clarion Call = From on High," an unpredictable drink strong- ly injected with cologne and red pep- per, yr Ly Jot d'Aeuvres--""'Architecture of Gastronomy," an allegedly significant arrangement of mussels and clams, Then "followec an "Alimentary Mes teor," a side dish of corn mixed with pineapple; and, an "Austral Synthes sis," consisting of orange shells stuff- ed with salt meat, % Ordinary beef lost its identity in undefinable. sauce$; salads, dessertd and chéese became just so many mys tic 'gastronomical interpretations. is the courses that followed. i According to reports, a good™tima April April 4mos.4mos.. - the shed, the casualty list would have C.N.R. Gam been much higher; Fortunately thal The gross revenue of the Canadian floor did not break, too, or many.would National "Railways system for the have heen precipitated into, the river weék ending June 21, showed a gafn below, y | ; of $19,483, While this is a very slight the/bodies of the two were recov" The five children are being placed nder the care of the Department of indian affairs, . They were finally assisted to the bank, Meanwhile the entire shed had tu $ rned until it was talfsot over on the rall: way sidings, 3 i Sweltering In terrific heat, villagers | 3 J and industrial concerns were among the exhibitors. One department demon- strated the methods of printing wall paper from the earliest days to the present. have come to him like sight and os ha } : ! | ad by all ially after the Lrg Yours faithfully, Blanche punch began Yor citenlate; This wad' ih ' Seretary. & | called "The Rose and the Sun" If at held the man.--The New York: consisted of. rose leaves abundantly wo : + scattered in some liquid or other.