__ rim GUARDIAN. CHARDOTTETOWN ... .- acrobat: 2s. 1949 $1.1m PS 1h mlw/ Evllllilllllllaadotfilze/zl" The value is all inside —-n full pound of Canongfi wholesome, delicious chocolates! The economy is all outside . . . complete absence of lrills in the package mahes it possible to price Ganong’s Evangeline Assortment economy-low- Tlie saving is psssed along to you in bigger value where it counts most -— in the chocolates Cianottg OANONO IROS. LIMITED, ST. STEPHEN, N-l. '5 Chocolates The Finest in the Land _ TlGNiSI-I C. W. L. The regular monthly meeting of Ire Tlgnlsh sub-division of the Catholic Women's league was held tn the Convention Friday evening October seventh nt seven-thirty with s-n attendance of ten members. Meeting was opened by the Presi- dont reciting the League prayer. Minutes of the previous meeting were read and adopted. The treasur- er and corresponding secretary were absent and no reports were given. letter from the Canadian National institute for the Blind, requestingl the C. W. L to be responsible for a. Tag Day to be held in ‘Tignish on Saturday October 22nd to help the blind of P. E. I. It was decided to cooperate in this matter and the president would ask the Girl Guides to sell the tags. A letter was read from Mrs. James Blake, chairman of the St. Duh- stans Girls Scholarship Fund. An exvprcssion of thanks was received from Mrs. J. J. McNally for the Correspondence was received and|kindness she received from her C. read at the meeting as follows; stw. L. sisters at the time of the i what is needed most for the children death of her dear husband. The Us- ual church work was carried on‘. during the month by the convenor Mrs. Fred FttnGerald and her oom- mittee. lal Service Gonvenor. Mrs. Joseph A. MacDonald decided -to wri-te the Reverend Superior of St. Vincent's Orphanage to find out‘ before the members would start to pack their reg-ulst- Christrnas box. Meeting adjourned with prayer. The first governor-general nt Canada was Viscount Monek, from 1%‘? to 1869. TIRE-H's!- \'\ "run nqm. 's ll Ir may seem fun to throw rocks and brocli street © American Phrases Traced To lloois In Negro Tongues By am Most CHICAGO. Oct. 21 —(AP) - A lore never revealed to white men has been wrcsted from his people by s painstaking Negro professor. His search uncovered astonishing survivals of African culture and more than 4.000 African words, names and numbers still spoken Hmong 250,000 Negroes in a. corner 0f the United states. Dr. Lorenzo Dew Turner, 54- year-old professor of English at Roosevelt Collage. Chlcaz". worked 17 years-and learned 32 African languages-to make the discoveries. They lay bare the probable ex- Planaiion of some of the oldest and newest Americanlsms from "tot-e" i0 "Jllke box". They reveal the identity, civilization and relative ill- fiuences of the peoples from which ' llan vs. llaturs . By F. H. MacArthur (Continued from Page l) creatures that were his bu! friends. 'Tbe great herds of bu!- fslos that once roamed the prairies are gone. Gone, too, are, many fur-bearing animals ruthlessly slaughtered to satisfy Dame, Fssb- ion. The same sad story is true of some of the world's most beauti- ful and useful birds. O O I Nature, left to herself, has ways of preserving and restoring her resources. Before the plowmanb folly turned countless acres _of rich fertile soil into unproductive wastes,‘ Nature had her own way of tying down the loose earth with I mantle of grass, or with matted vines, roots. etc. The dead leaves and plants return to the soil food that the living plants have drawn from it. Insects. animals, birds and fishes have enemies that prey upon them, but these seemingly most of the 13.000000 Negroes in the Uni-ted Slates descend. l ’l‘urner worked in "the black bor- der"—the Rice islands and the F-‘Bishboring coast for 240 miles b9- tween Georgetown. S.C., and St. Mary's. 6a., on the Florida state line. Same of its natives never have been 0ft the sea islands or seen a white man from c1050 up. Previous investigators disrnlsed as only bad English the c-dd Negro “Gullalfl or "$999110?" dialect spoken there Turner's first wartime reports roused scholars. The American Council of Learned Societies threw its resources behind him. li.l.. Mencken put Turner's first few words into his “supplement two“ to Wipe Out pages of arguments in earlier volumes of Mencken's "The American language", a masterpiece on the origin of words. Gullahs Suspicious At first Turner ‘was treated as an ou-tsidcr by the islanders. He says: “.\ly first recordings of the speech of the Gullahs contain fewer Afri- can words by far than those made when I was no longer a stranger to thcni." The University of Chicago has just published 'l‘umer‘s completed FEDOTL. “Africanlsms in the Gullah Dia- loci" is too technical for lay read- ers. But students of American Eng- lish found Gullah is the missing link that introduced many Amer- icanisms used by people who nev- er dream they're talking African. For instance. there is "goober" or "pindcr" for peanut icalled "guba" and “plnda" in Gullah). or "toggle- boat-d" for see-saw (meaning rising board in Gullah from a Senegalese word "joggal." to rise). The list covers many live things. like “cooter“ for tortoise i"kuta” in Gullah fro-m two French West African tongue-st. southern "poor Joe" or “p_o' Joe" for heron ("pojof from the Val language of Liberia). "biddy-biddy" for chick (it means a bird in Kontzolose), “jigger" (a bug known as "jigs" in six African tongues). It may start with the first known Amcricanisnt. The word "tote." mCatllng “carry," has been found in print within 70 years after the first settlement at Jamestown. Va. ‘fur- ner found it moons pick up or carry in Gullah and five West African languages. The first Negroes landed at Jamestown a ycar and a half before the Mayflower at Plymouth Rock. Down to our latest "Juke boxes." the word "Mike" is Gullah from a Senegalese tenn implying s. wild time. Turner studied a2 West African languages. sometimes writing his own lexioons and grammars. He. went to London and Paris to learn half of them from actual speakers. including 20 natives and several “ltanolaon and ilncls Elitv destructive forces only serve to keep a lust balance between them. However, man by his ignor- ance of nature's laws, has upset this balance. One cannot destroy without rebuilding. When forests are ruthlessly cut down or burn- ed by careless campers, birds are driven away and the insect world takes over and destroys valuable crops. Cutting off the forests also af- fects our water supply. Springs dry up or retreat underground; the water that the trees held in the ground runs off the surface into other streams, carrying away the valuable topsoil with it. Some of the disastrous floods we have road about in recent years can be traced to the excess water escap- ing from its former prison-cell, the forests roots. The soil that is carried away leaves the land poor and ls deposited by the streams in shallow places and in the mouths of rivers, making navi- gation difficult and often requir- ing dredging at great expense. O O O The world is full of examples of thc plowman's folly and abuse of the good earth. Perhaps one of the best examples of this abuse is to be seen in China, where ce - turies of tilllng the earth with- out conservation have impoverish- ed both land and p hi: to such an extent that families occur fre- qucntly. It can be chalked up to the wisdom of the North American In- dians that they knew more about conservation than the whites who followed them, for during their regime our continent was no‘. lacking in all kinds of animal and plant life. Stately forests stretch- ed as far as the human eye could reach, and lush grass spread its protecting mat over the earth. furnishing food to vast herds of buffalos and other animals. With the coming of white men Africa-reared members of mission- aries’ families. He found that "Gullah" and "Geechee" themselves are the nam- es of two Liberian languages. Among whites today, South Car- olinens call charlestonisns "Gee- cheer." RETURNING FROM RUSSIA GOEIITINGEN. Germany, Oct. 2'7—(A.P)-German generals cap- tured during the war are return- ing in increasing numbers from Russia. Eight have arrived st s transit camp near here. Four ur- rived a few days ago at a transit camp near Hof. They told camp authorities that s large prisoner- of-war camp for generals near Moscow is being closed. Iv Clifford McBride - HflnHA! VVELl-iOt-D ' THEY DID ‘rOU lCAVfh SLCl-l FA ion RENT IIOWITT Your than. Seuss! Remember those street lights ore titers for safety. A light titer is our might cause o bed eccl- donr and people might be killed or seriously lniurod- it could be someone from your own family. Leave rlto street lights olons so fltor I con curry on my work of providing safety Io rho public. ' ENJOY YOUR HALLOWEEN . . . ' IUT HAVE FUN SAFELY. \ YOURS FOB SAFETY ‘Ni’. Ydur Electric Servant MARITIME ELECTRIO CO. LTD. CRITIOS BADLV FOOLED A ‘W008i: PAINT’ SMEAES HE MADE. Wf-TH HIS ‘Dlll-s IT W83 RN RTAND SD NAPOLEON HAD Ti-E 4R!‘ W WHILE WITH OUT YOU GO; Ol-D BOY E BED. l KNOW TootioPour ' TDUG-‘H _OF THE LlMEL-IGrH 7 COUQNS IADlO i ' Phone 6-4 Let us “Winter Service” your Radio For the long evenings sliced. We carry s v complete stock of Batteries SALES It SERVICE Hunter River MEDIUM SllE 25¢| ‘iiliWfti l IANT SIZE “Because I changed to Pepsodent WITH IRIUM i" PEPSODENT WILL OIVI YOU. TOO. ‘IIII WIIITIII ‘IIIIII Why? Because only Fepsodcnr contains irium, the marvelous exclusive ingredient that give! you the greatest cleansing action ever odor-ed- Pepsodenl gets rid of cverykrsce of dull film. Tim's why New Pspsodear with irium gets your teeth cleanest-and when they're cleanest they're whitest" . ask [or Pepsodent Dental Crest-a today! 75¢ all this was gradually changed until a few wise persons saw the handwriting on the wall and pleaded for drastic conservation laws before all would be lost and man himself exterminated. So in 1871 the U.S. government created the Commission of Fish and Fisheries. Two years later the American Association for the Advancement of Science started a movement that etfentually led to the establishment of the USA. Forest Service with s view to na- tional forest reserves. This was followed up with a geological sur- vey that bad under hand the classification of the resources of the nation. In 1888 came the ir- rigation division, followed in 19M then STOP i: APPIARANCI '-k PERFORMANCE ~k ICONOMY IPARTON LEADS IN ALL THRII Wherever there's a carefully considered purchase of s radio, Spar-ton wins out. Yes . . . whenever you compare Spsrton with all others you'll agree that Spsrton gives you more for your money . . . not just today, but through the years to come. For all Spsrton festures are engineered to last. Styling is carefully chosen for its perma- nence . . . not gaudy, not effusive, but with s quiet dignity that bespealu good taste. by the mining technology division. which later became the Bureau of Mines. O O Profiting by the mistakes of her great neighbor to the south, Can- ada promptly took measures to protect her own national wealth before it became too late. In 1009 a Commission of Conservation was created by the Dominion Parlia- ment. The newly formed body was charged with the duty of dealing with sll questions con- cerning the preservation 'and bet- ter use of natural resources, etc. lls chief purpose, however, was to pass measures protecting forests, fish and game. conservation of water supply, mineral paying more for less than " Why arejyour teeth so much Whiter today 9"‘ m.» l-Esrieeih A and products of Mother EarthE Board of Wild Life Protection came into being in i016. cm“. has now set aside vast forest srm and has established s number d national and provincial pgflg game refuges snd bird sanctuaries Reforestation hss not been w‘. looked and the Great Plains its. gion. stretching from the Ocnadiu border to ‘Texas, has been plug. ed with over 85,000,000 you" trees since 1935. - But despite man's belt efforts, it will take several generations to offset the damage already dong, However, we may rest assured that never, again will men be ‘per- mitted waotefully to exploit our resources Inatural and God-given heritage. 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