» U $78 ~ -`f.n'.=»= me-Men- .»..,.,,»t_ 's¥rw.lfi=reae.eii.es.a. ass; _ .us _ = 1 'of the rest. Cahadi;$___ai__,i§9_;_at£iiotin~m , I f . -~ _ i ui sgnai tribute to Great Britain ji .1 “_...=‘ _.2 _ I - Gum” NotesBy-Wie, Way A _ ':::`;1;"`f"” 1"” if ... .. ....;T....... ..... -133*-'ff-ff..K£'.f.$..t F11-‘TY YEARS Aon by o mpeny than by my other BY !'.J.I. ' force in our lives. And by com- AN D S ;» Pahli one does not necessarily mem l#¥` ,. | ww.. Queen Square by the Historic 131:39 and Monuments Board of ,|3|,§ada. They will arrive about inooh on the French liner “Cham- ipliii," and will probably leave in ithafevenlng for Gaspe. It is hoped alsb to have a visitation of the French destroyer “Vauquelin" as wel), as of Canadian and British cruis- ersj The detailed l1r0€ramme of the celebration here has not ,yet been - unced, but it is ln`charge of rnpetent committee headed by H Honour Lieutenant Governor De ois, and there is eviery reason to grpect that it will bein keeping wi the great importance of the occasion, Id view of the world publicity at- tending this event, it would seem advisable to have earliest possible pubhcation of the full programme of the J'-,Charlottetown celebration. The bulletin issued by the Montreal noininittee, which gives complete detws of the celebrations at Gaspe Lndltother Quebec centres, mentions oniyltthat “Charlottetown -is - -pie- pariégto greet the French delega- tion..on the.aiteijnoon.of_ August B4th*1‘lVIf we' expect to keep in the f ight, we must give more at- teiit n to the pubi1eityL'end‘oi the sell ration in the next few weeks. J;-iss' FUR Plznsrzm/ii' 'Though the bison is gone forever, Ind, the beaver and the marten are slowly lollowing, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics notes that the fin'-_itrade of Canada is in no im- mediate danger of extinction. A ceiftury ago the value of the export trail# in furs exceeded that of any otlidr product. This has been great- ly itlianged, yet the total output has nolldeclined and Canada may still iieaescribed as the last great .fur pr rvo of the world. __ H 1667 exports of furs to Tkirnce anlfthe West Indies, were valued at sso,6oo francs, rn iaso, the first ye# for which trade tables of the C 'toms Department are available, thigh/alue of raw furs exported was 1a,:§p?i- pounds for the tweiiie months ending June ao, 1920, the value was $20,417,329; for 1925, $17,131,172 T01' 1930, $17,187,399; and for 1932 $11,495,086. Raw furs to the value of $11,180,- 052 were exported during the twelve months ending June 3,0,-1938,'th'e` British market abs_0!l'bl.ng _$'Ij!,22L§'l4 worth and the united tatep‘,li:bst‘. of furs and the homéhdnbdmption are annually increasing with the growth of wealth and population. grin rmzrrsfr WAY _,_ _ l1as_;paid recently by Mussolini, Itaiyfg; dynamic Fascist leader. nitagpiriting out the definite facts of improvement that have taken p1ahi_.‘,’fn Britain, --I1 Dude" said: “The English temple had three columns; the dynasty, the navy and the pound sterling. At a certain moment, one of these crumbled. In any other country everyone would have rushed to the bank. counters or to buy things in order to have hing tangible. But not so in nd. The Englishman was a bit , as he always is when he gets blow, but he displayed a magnifi- calm. There was no race to shops or the bank doors. The ishman revealed the rare qual- of his character-the outcome an agc~old training." T YPHOID CA RRI ERS The census of persons listed as carriers-those who carry transmit the germs of the dis- without themselves suffering New York State at the 1033 showed 340 in New York city, 307 in the State outside the city but not in State instltuioris, and 15 in Stato institutions. The total, $62. was 42 greater than that of the'end of 1932 and 103 greater than that at the end of 1933. This does not mean that num- ber of carriers is increasing; it means that the authorities :ms steadily improving the system which discloses the carriers. The health departments, state and city, are consistently strengthening the san- itary requirements. F0111 of the persons newly listed by the State Heirth Department had to do with production of milk. One e in the unveiling of the Tomorrow Midsummer Day. morrow. ' lovelieet. night, cl on Monday. sei the One Big Noise. this than by airplane. ri t to expect. Just fancy the director and ex- o has fallen in prohibitionists eyes. ier first landed. le.r‘s present plight. an meant when he declared the Nazi victims were working in league with a foreign power. It was poor, har- assed Austria which lies between the deep sea of Italy and Germany, afraid almost to make a move lest she be swamped by Nazis or Fas- cists. What worries Hitler about the world press is that having forced "a trlfilrig sum of $2,000" on a U.B. publicist and writer for propaganda, he later discovered France had voted 18,000,000 francs for s. like ever reaches the newspapers. “Beware ofthe Greeks bringing gifts" as a waming is nothing to new governments allegedly cutting down salaries and reducing staffs. Pre- mier- Macdonald in Nova. Scotia tarted to do so, but they soon mies. Other appointments and po- sitions "for the faithful" .soon more than absorbed the spectacular sav- ings, with the result Nova. Scotia is worse off financially today than when Mr. Harrington vacated the Premiership. Premier Hepburn has started slashing with his pruning there, too, new offices, new ap- is a way democratic governments have. ml _‘ President Roosevelt today enjoys io a. greater extent the confidence of the Unit/ed Statq than he did when elected by his record break- i-H8 majority. This was proved re- every State but one to his N_R.A. count on this to insure their candi- dates election is another question. People responding to straw vote ap- peals are not usually the proletariat. N.R.A. considerably in the inter- onment of the price fixing and fair practice provisions is a. recognition that it is impracticable to enforce them, and since it is equally im- practicable for these industries to pay the prescribed hourly wage, un- less they can also control prices some of them have already given up their codes. The second prin- cipal modiflcation is the decision to give up price-fixing (except for emergency provisions) in all future codes, with the intent that existing codes where possible shall gradually be modified to conform to the new of them was detected in a routine i ruling. We want rain, but let it come at $2 Hitler undoubtedly considers him- f ndiior ef 'rho Toronto Globe serv- “W e fWouldn‘t it be fine to have the 5,, harbour full of yachts and motor boato when the 8.5. Champlain an-ives from France? Otherwise our tl magnificent harbour will be as ber- pac NB 0! lik H5 When. JHOQUCS Cbrt- any reason to suspect that we may with herself for having oonunitted some egregious blunder she cries till vita she becomes hysterical. and then have a fleet able to meet the Brit- screams at the pitch of her voice sumcient to waken the dead or answer "° each °! ‘hes qusmns 1’ It now appears that it was not Fr cently by the Literary Digest "straw ballot" which gave endcrsatlori in policy. Whether the Democrats can The President, too, has modified his_ ests of successful business. Aband-`| " Bbujlry QQUNTS . examination of dairy farm workers. | _ _ 1”” . _ _.. ti-.......... ..... ..........i..._ 0... ,°,3°,,‘;,;‘;;,f ,=,:,°;‘°,,';‘§,,°,,'°,',°,_:f:=,'; ,gee ideas, and their accumulated know land of New Jersey declared :that no such claim could be sus sur bringing more persons to the com- pletion of the old normal life span, in _ no According to, recent reports it is which is something quite different more dangerous and risky coming to If o province by auto and train It lengthening the span , is a disturbing commentary on prevailing standards of national ho r where a country like France saturday-for-sunday eontributed had-s it necessary t<> pwie-st her in- editorials are now eerisorabie in 11°C Germany. Thnt's what editors who up g of another country with which she “Mrk their "5P°n5ibum°5 uve 5 maintains diplomatic relations. It h never occurred to most people that France could have done anything of the sort. The French may not ays understand their neighbor, but they are an honorable people. in beer and wine by the class! Evidently, however, it was so freely H w the mighty prohibition orgm asserted-for domestic political ends no doubt_-that France seduced the “traitors” against Hitler, that I. declaration denying it had to be is- ed--Exchamo. Wo ought to look at the interim.- onal situation with extreme care and ask ourselves just what we ex- t to do with our navy. Have we want to use it against Great Brit- iwhen a woman is mrmrcan mm such. differences as may arise be- e _ en the two nations ca.n’t be set __ ein? Is here -any indication that ed peaoeably ls it, in short, s ily important thing for us to ish fleet on even terms? Unless the emphatic “Yes," there is small mB.\f¢ tl'i8`d6&f hélr. ThAt 15 Hit-' 2:1155 in getting disturbed abc!" England’s decision to expand her XIBVY.-U. S. Exchange. Bermuda/s liatchef. murderer. Mar- oe, or Italy, or Germany Hitler .tha Annum o,m,,.bndge_ Neem W” hanged June 25th-the first woman to be executed on the island in more than two centuries. She had killed ia suitor with an axe.. Doc- tors counted 119 wounds on his body, any one of a. dozen of which might have been fatal. It has been 21 years since -a. death sentence of any kind was carried out in Ber- muda. Hamilton Herald; The sneers and jeers of the United States at Great Britain’s pauperizing dole are sink- ing intci silence. Britain on due consideration. has decided not only to maintain the dole but to extend and increase it. The economists over ol ‘~pu,-pose, Strange how Mme or my there now recognize that it was the -of these secret propaganda funds d e that saved the day for the na- tion. The standard of living has been raised. There is no misery such as .formerly was to be found everywhere. The circulation of the money distributed in this way has kept business going on steadily, and the result has been altogether beneficial. Observers give lloyd George the credit for this reform, 8-nd the “ninepence for fourpence” s turned outio be temporary emu. is a. highly popular measure. The o dole is, of course, not a dole but a form of insurance of which the worker, the employer and the gov- emment each pay a share. . In the world of science each new invention reminds us of possibilit- ies of which we seem to stand .at the edge. There was a time when the world felt that all the' possibil- |m1fe_ but before long we Shan ne Luis of scientific discoveries had advanced political thought in those n exhausted, but now, we feel that new worlds are about to be pointments, new extravegances. It opened at our fee,” "As a man thinks, so is he " If he things with other peole‘s minds j poor mental parasite lf you take all your ideas and all your convictions from °i-hers. even if the others happen to be intelligent people. Mark Twain was right when he said that it is difference of opinion that make horse races. But it makes many other things, among them hatreds and wars. Your mind was made to use. But it ought to be functioning at a good steady speed._Exc1-range. ln it submarine of his own make, Byron Connett. amateur Chicago inventor, travelled a miie under the surface of Wolf Lake at Hammond, Indiana. The craft is twenty inches wide, thirty-four inches high, has an air regular and automatic pump siphon sys cm and is powered by an eightcrii-volt. molor. Only twenty feet long, the craft weighs legs thpn 1,000 pou.1rls. Great Britain hndg to the exist. ing Loc'->.;no treaties, but will not extend her obligations in that or like royard. Simultaneously the fi8ht1r1g forces of Great Britain, that have been allowed to become somewhat anaemic, will be built up with a strong iron tonic. This prob- ably may be taken as a statement of Britain's European poiicy. Io- cnrno treaties, be it remembered act both ways. They demand sup- port of Germany, were the latfer attrirkeil by France, just as much ledge from observation and read- E Big open air militia service io- m3~°"n"°h”U°- are discussing again the question of d° coluinbtu Dispatch. 'rho doctors °‘y oardens and lawns are at their wh “" ether their efforts have really gd extended the span of life-meaning for of course, the normal span. In the un vention of the New York State .. »» dicai society Dr. Harrison s. "°‘§,“ B"“°”`“ My' 113'” hz: » _ SP tained; that what rnedicine and ‘if gery had been doing was merely. I ence in the matter of stirring Archangel or smuand (written in strife against the govemment collaboration with ms W,fe,_ --A he isn't much. You are ust st ' "R..B." was genial and entranclng- tat srlitti3‘“wit&.. e iireneir t_§;é:_= ui "ne me ui other un;dZ_1_l;ir_§aie;t_si§ts to mwktftdmwhvgkfg ?.‘§,1ifl°'il.i'r'°'sf'1enwilo"llti§l‘i1'i.yenfi'.°°f\ It oh lttetow bein; the _f ear ers. was unaware o a . e _oi-mer wro _e t t ,kim it might be of interest to the port of ca? the delelgation will' plight until the laboratory revealed {_‘_°1_fm°f F;'E';f5'?_m'-:_r¥_;1_::_3'*;f-immvglsiha mrgfey 11;” ugmzg :guard h:,g_ Canadian public' - if I were to ‘° ‘ f ~ his _ here on August 24 and will it. because of his religious convictions. lgiylga an ?,, whim owurmd whim 1 wg, in at t 5" Fggtlrmézlfmotwrotehu hgervwimlms "md 1"” th’ "1°“"° °‘ ”‘ “”°1°°' °°"v° ummm' 'uk 'MV d cairn which is to be erec - EDITORIAL N015 C’ W ¢ E spmm, cl, Lum. ,upped out og ng beiiind_prlson walls. The company nsmm Th; mam” Bppromh to °‘ “W” me” W” th” ”"“°"- “"1” him in personsi appearance and historical or political imnvri-mee. ' nhomie I have met this side of e Atlantic is the genial. lesil-heart- ed, Mr. ir. H. iicaciuin, President the Winnipeg Free Press and en director of the Canadian . “R..B." has been aptly de- bed as "a modern Conquisator," his sympathies are with the der-dog. Having happily 1112-1' ape t a great part of l e a.`n and in the Spanish countries. central and South America. He an expert in horses, the outcome o his many lonely rides on the pam- P38. The m3J°rity of his books take South America as their background and deal with the feats and derrlng- dn of the early heroes and pion- eers. A mere list of his publications would oocupy ii, good quarter col- umn of this paper, and cover a. pro- duction pericd of 35 years. Among the more outstanding are: "Father vanished Arcadia," "Fait.h;" "Hope"; "oharityz" "nie conquest 01 New Granadai" “Writ in Sand.’ He has been a voluminous contributor to the literary weeklies and mcrithlies; and his sociallstlc tendencies lend piquancy to the enthusiasm with which he usually expresses his views and convictions. In early days lie represented North Lanarkshire as s Liberal li(.P. but, developing Fabian ideas and ideals, he was turned down by that party, and aligned himself with Labour, fight- ing no feW¢r than three unsuccess- fu.l contests against his former~po1- itical friends. It was in th_e 1892 general election I met “R..B." 'I‘hc late Mr. H. H. Champion, Associate Editor of the Nineteenth Century and ex-Lieu- tenant of His Majesty’s Horse Guards was adopted in North Aber- deen as Labour and Socialist cand- idate agaxg the sitting Liberal member, a literary man and journalist. Dr. Robert Hunter, Editor of the London Weekly Dispatch. Curiously enough in South Aber- deen the fight was between other two literary men, Mr. James Bryce (afterwards Lord Bryce, Ambassa- dor to Washington) and a Mr. W I- llsm Dickson, lawyer and literary reviewer. Mr- Henry Hyde Cham- pion never had a. ghost of a chance, but fought gamely and determined- ly all the same. Most of his speeches were delivered out-of-doors, as at that time Socialist leaders had to go to the masses preaching their gospel, few working men bothering their heads about new political or socfal doctrines, Whig and Tory beirlgeitlier quite good or had enough for them. "H1-I.” was one of the most brilliant, and also one of the fast- est, speakers it has ever been my lot to report. He maintained an average of 240 words a minute by the clock, and rarely repeated him- self. IH f-11650 dlys there were few So- cialist speakers cf any note to come to the platform aid of candidates, but Mr. R. B. Cunninghame Gra- ham was one of them. He came to Aberdeen from Glasgow, where he himself was fighting a, forlorn hope, Bhd Spent two days helping his friend. His manner of speech was quite is. contrast. Instead of being fast and furious. it was langurous and deliberate, not dillttante, for it had a modicum of pep and mis- sionary zeal throughout. After each address he lit a. cigar, and his eyes developed a far away look, as though in spirit and inclination he was on the distant pampas_ Ap- lJ1'0Mhing midnight on the first day when he had addressed a dozen meetings, "HJ-I." held an informal reception in honor of "R,.B." the 81-lests being mostly literary and newspaper men, for the leaders in GHYS. as in this. were first and fore- most, litterateurg and journalists, irrespective of political alignments. on the principle, no doubt , of all wise men being of one religion, though following different routes. ll’ entertaining througliout the two hour conversozione, freely giving his €XI>eriences andfmpressions ot' lilo and conditions on three continents. Alas. both were defeated at the P011-S. "R..B." took off to his be- loved South America. while '-:»1_}{_'» resigned from the staff of me Nineteenth Century, emigrated to AU-m'H-U8. became ultimately editor cf the Melbourne Argus, and the deus ex machine. of the Labour movement there, then in its in. fancy. T0dBY "R.B.” is the Honorary Pfeildeht of the Scottish P.E.N., Eryptic initials referring io 5 World body of litterateurs of ac- cepted standing, comprising poets, Dlavwrlshts. essayists, editors and novelists." P-E.N. is one of the good things that emerged out or the welter- oi the World War. It was founded in london in 1921 by Mrs. Dawson Swtt. and it has now a membership °f nearly 4.000 writers, inclusive of many of the mos; famous authors Of the day. Mrs. scott, whose heart, was wrung by the sight of the in. describably cruel sufferings of the poor orphans of the fighting meh in Warsaw and elsewhere, believed with the f1rstP.E.N. president, the late Mr. John Galsworthy (the present President is Mr. H. G. Wells) that writers of all countries are the natural leaders and mould- #IBKMOPPHQ , " E°s .Et t iii E it could not, of course, be as intimate. offer in extenuation the excuse that the anecdotes in question have been garnered from the storehouse of recollection. and the incidents have been describ- ed as my memory recalls them. human beings but the company 0! Ml.. B. B CUNNINGIIAMI Q c ¢‘ 0 0 rr- » SATURDAY, JUL! li, UM. 0 our thoughts 'and the company of GRAHAM _ gg L y our surroundings, the things that -I4 9 \." Within an atmosphere of pain Ind By COOK grief nm .wk _ give us pleasure and happiness, our -(c””|‘,N 3'9",” ‘ H° "‘i’;°d°;f:’x;_Th° 'mx' ~ t ' e:.....C-i-;-::e=;;;....c-- - -~ - _.::-;::1=- sublimely selfish in their suffering. has been sllllestegi to me that clu-onicie some of the incidents which I had personal experience. particularly those which were of and which are now only remem- bered by the older generation. With this suggestion I have gladly complied in the hobo that these anecdotes will not only revive old memories among the older generation, but will also be cf in- terest of the present generation, as well as to those students of history and politics who may find some value in the personal touch which I have attempted to give. In extenuation for any tomer- ity on my part in appearing in print, may I interject something of a personal nature. I sat coin- tinuously in the Parliamentary Press Gallery at Ottawa. for thirty- five sessions, from 1883 until 1915. For the first five years during the seasional recess, I was chief outside man for the Toronto Mail, my as- signments taking me to every pro- vince of the Dominion. There was not a city or town in Ontario which I did not visit in connection with my varied reportorial duties. I attended public meetings. con- ventions and conferences by the thousand, reported banquets. Bild in those early days when the wo- men Journalist had not yet ma- terialized, I covered many of those social functions which are now regarded as being within her exclusive jurisdiction. But: all this was merely so much grist for the mill, so far as I was concerned. It was Parliament, ‘however which for me had the chief at- traction. I was ordered at very short notice to proceed to Ottawa in 1883, and, for my first four WMS in the Press Gallery. acted ls junior to George Johnson, later Dominion statistician, who headed the sessional staff of the Mail, my duties at first consisting of scout- ing for Mr. Johnson in the various departments, covering the Senate when it sat, and lending a hand to reporting the work of com- mittees After four years I received my appointment as resident cor- respondent for the Mail. The year 1883 saw the first session of the Fifth Parliament. and in those days there were Kfflii men in the House-in the com- mons, Slr. John MacDonald, Alexander MacKenzie, John Henry Pope, John Carling, Edward Blake. MacKenzie Bowell, John Costigan Sir. Hector Langevin, J . A' Chapleau, J. J. C. Abbott. Sir S. L- Alonzo Wright, M. C. Cameron. U- C. Colby and many others, all of whom had been elected at the time of Confederation. In the Senate the leaders were Sir. Alex- ander Campbell, I-Ion. R. W, Scott and Hon. Frank Smith. Hon. Wil- frid Laurler had been in Parlia- ment sirice 1874, and Hon. Thomas White and Clark Wallaoe from 1878. At that time there were mak- ing thelr debut in parlianientalry life Mr. William Mulook, Mr. Louis Davies, M1-_ George E- F°Si=1' "ld Mr. C. I-I. Tupper, all of whom became outstanding men in Can- adian history, and were honored by their Sovereigns. I had ma-nv con- tacts with all these creat iizum. and with many others who suc- ceeded them in public life, but those which are particularly frag- rant and which are probably 0! the greatest interest. are the °1‘°° I had with Sir. John Macdonald, especially during the last five Wu! of his life. Sir. John was always most kindly disposed towards me. 110581511’ 01| account of the P01199-Bl °h°\’°'°` teristics of the newspaper whi<=h I represented, and I recollect with profoundest gratitude the mln? occasions on which he gave tan- gible evidence of these friendly relations. During the fifteen Y08-TS whim Sir. Wilfrid Laurier was Prime Minister my relations with him having regard to the political time of the newspapers which I repre- sented, but nothwitlistanding that these papers were supporters oi’ the opposition, Sir. Wil.frid's unfailing kindness and courtesy. whenever I approached him. were truly N!- markable, notwithstanding his in- herent characteristics in this re- ard. B The majority of these great men have passed on to their Juli reward, but. 50 I ha-V6 Blwldl' Stated, some of the incidents and events which occurred during the heyday of their public careers ari- kuown only to a few Of U5. Bhd D05' sibly some of these have never been recounted in Public. thoulh some of them may have been known to a few of my old Press Gallery associates. nearly all of whom have also passed away. li, in the reminiscences whch are to follow, the personal noto 'iupears .somewhat frequently, I (Signed) FRED COOK Ottawa, July 2nd, 1934. im _ that if these came together in a. bond of sympathy and friendliness they would prove it powerful factor GN el their n|tion's thmlghts. and. --i. *nf "-‘§'-;va~¢`v=ta'v;§r--»uv»-».-»§‘»~»f- ' '~'---"F ` " ` "' " ' in the prevention of futon wus. _ he ' r ' " 'TFT' 1 , 'round him and _ in todays issue are was a. butler and oooh, mother was ishly placed before our path in su men; ,efewrfce wi: 1 nmgwonp . I ni-at set-root en canadian sau I"‘P°“‘”‘“°° 9"” puns of the cartier it minister. 'rho ministers smite- dire°i1°11S. Uril°rtunst¢. indeed. is nsrwispwper outpour __ ,mt one who C and no wmpmy today, and been ' for __ in Avril. IW- I hm °°°°”‘° °”`°" 'rheir petuisnt eoinpuints into hu While e d an ru n 0! the most ,c_ t me smoke. and dm of 5, busy ~ should not remain in the body we celebration to take 1>1ace_at Ga-SP2. 011 WI-I V l'¢ C1' SWG for himself, Jgfn Bun am ce mln? y°ll‘S. ° 0 P 0 _ 0"- . .. urine chizrglugé n'1'li:m _ggriedwitgndwa mr- His veeryn Presence bi-inn s sense of out bythe .km in we rom M pm l_ , ' reepondence division consisting of And none may guess what weight of 511125910 ' “U md“°y° in "M 1°” Till DOCTOI minute, and writing -it swd ha-Hd mind QV' 1 was looking for new w°r_l;1esh ti; unbalanced by the been misery- TBP" . _ 1 gidmltlilfirkife Thaeeoe witlfglgaililitlmutghdeel what llilltel-uwzffibeu of soul me :nd bythe \>°W°1 °-‘ f°,f_°°'_;muy M W ss the body seems fl ”‘°°°"“ ""°"”‘°“ ’“°°h°d‘ md” by wh’ that th tiv itaeif of the perspiration. ui-ine. and one clerk and th,-ee expert typists. He hilimsskbehind Symlili e but ,liter #abit of Quilts rundsnvas nlismr Bloom ., _ A nsnrr - Nature intended that wasiol M En8lmd_ md Mm. ,mining a helps them `u_ tended that human beings should y |,»- yy-|~30DU(r_||| N mg norm _ long, nevertheless Nature never in mx R ,_ 9,,§,-_._.,,1, _attendants at s ¢ainp_naeetiug_wei-s_ ,,,,,,,,,_ ,md may others mu thou., ture-wus 8111;” in the 11i=1§=1‘¥ and _ 9 _ mauufloiurins 'DW 1° _ cheerful and tuna, he nears and ' A ' ' " ' ' I' - shorthand speed oi 150 W°fd° P” with subtle understanding of the M16” “°°°°“W '°*“"‘° " P“'““"“" _ ,_ . , ry day to keep the lower bowel you now the wastes are thrown ni by , by the lungs in the breath, th, it is natural to expect that il When they "fused lf’ "“’g°" “ig ' should :id itself of the wastes mm **,’_ °°“,`f,’,°"°“df,’,‘§’°,_,,f,°,§,,2,'f;, I with touching faith in his otmiis- tbe~b°w°.1i“='-lN“1°‘='>'-°“°“‘*“'-‘I t a cou use - be Itlv\?;\°§e§r`e?;ry}?ev3?ili‘lul"l vggeefoxl and of ing :ei-taiifliight beyond tba °f f°°d Bend' “H ”“P“‘“ *‘" th” ""1- iti it r promptly accepted day. 4 21% rl:-,lgsingllred when I could start Sustain him to its miserable end. "Now," I replied. itnnrediately called upon Mr- W ' hem, the iungs, and in the bladder for liam wwf- Wh° had ’°°°""y '°' For inati tint die dfui isth wma ti»ed'f“>m the ‘“P°"‘“*"‘d°"°’ °‘ ' B °' °° ' ° outor tnaboay. tte ob room. and *.0 Wh°m Now the' lower or large bowel that lhleiiigareléfitejf °f m“'°d“°M°“' He so Aefdlzttleisgoum' with dum" md holds the,.wastes from the food if iw/0 me B °°"dl“1 W°°°m°» Wt 5°°“ 'rhat scarce can be endure, and to 51X N0* UP! ‘md it W” mt mend' ascertained that there was no time before they are thrown t this six feet should be com- ms up, ed tha opening for S. 11111101' NWYWT °“ Comes that exceeding bitter er-y of DICMIY °\'D?°1¢d °n°9 °" twice “ dn’ the Gazette staff. Mr. Salter there- old: , as is some imes thought. upon went to Mr. Hush Graham "My ood why hidest 'niou 'ray me Nabil” intended th" °°“‘° °’ ‘hi fthe present Lord Athoistani on 1-,.,,},, m,,¢»» waste should be thrown out twiee 5 nw behalf. Next day Mr. Salter and but the thoughts of others' day; °H°° ii d°Y- °" °“°° ‘“ ‘W h . There are some individuals iii cm waste is thrown out immed- after each meal as the eatin ownthecanal. ni-_ walter Alvarez. Mayo Clin me years ago, showed that th so __ "heavy" feeling Whlilh WB-S SUPPOB 'I‘he answer eviiigli-ly D_ft°°iS°d£_1;’y‘ But agufgtigrmd wmeth tm mm to be due to absorption of waste H-hdheaekedme ’°P° °’ niini hispe' fur dh .in _ _ Heli m°mm¥- 'I'i1‘l-oilaglyi wnowel.-l|ng1;’loom°in.gn crop: tim. ¢°U1d 13 “Used if “b5°"b°“ I spent thlfe P1€_BSa“f» m°1\tl"-‘i ,mendqg h¢,nd-¢1ggp, cotton or other substance were pu W"-h him- It W” 1” a “"5” an A lilt of music or a child’s clear in education to me. Mr. Graham told ls_ugh_ Wd me that I had the nm °f the bm' Yee, in a. thousand, thousand gno- noss 0ffi°¢. Bhd that if 1 Wmwd ious ways, _ fl to sei any 1nf°rmH:i°f1 ight; Staff ner the same spirit worbeth an in Lien wwe# “main in °“° ‘W *M was instructed to g ve me. “_ And then the opporimity for which G°d_ :ho hem-,weth We mpg; png- Therefore the bowel should be edu- I had been looking came. ious gift, cate ___ d From the moment I entered the Th, an of begun; mm, ghgrowmg the wastes and so ush t em own este to the bioo` from the large intes- tc th bo due simply to th( ght. gf “fl,i1ellless" of the bowel. However absorption of waste! om the bowel does take plaoe if ng and do not move downward. d to contract or squeeze upon P gm- omee 1 had been anxious to combines and out of the body. rt :.°:ii° P~°‘°".::.:.“::,_""°=°*‘» “fl °°° ..,... ........... ...i n when anythina' in the WHY Of new# With trust renewed, the doctor goes W “me under my obsltvmoll mt: His ltlgomstrowm' d with 1 in f 111" gm ‘mp “squeeze and the 1 ro ' lilolililgd “xx lat icoolilhe eeliiy eilltor. afabxlec we ° hours until more wastes arrive. This Taking a strong purgative cleanse! for the muscles of the intes- Y ii. thusremairi idle for 24 to 4! e usiness office o the Star in der ea er idleness lessens the strength of the Th b f And un n th the Ev lasting 'those days was ton tth(thsm;211‘t;iT (1 Arm' T of St. James sree: e 1 B office was on Fortificatlon _'{._a;1e. I '“Mud'°d 1°"- wss gratified to observe a my teen or twenty mmutes “turd éiagfnglfnvtgilfguggzifg utgedfhe news War ' In The Jungle ni ements can besecured by t some weeks after I had com- (m°1.m_ns,e) ' menoed this amateur reporting, I l had a call from a gentleman wht' Down on me undusgde ng was a stranger to me. He said he Worm un” at mm, ,Mu in was A. P. Miller, the city editor. ar cmuchedmtnnohesom making trades about M, He was grateful for the news items e steaming of I had forwarded to him and as at the muck me ' uayari jungle. that particular time he was short- H “mth _ Need _ they handed. on the reporters' side would mmm: guns as h.|_g_ ,ssl I oblige him by taking a night as- mdd 1 of hh mu, mm in l signment once in a. while, until he khaff mms ° er ° could get me transferred to his hh u th” mn! staff? I replied that I would br ¢h?;;1wesafm?wd:,?d“’=;1hmwh me k KTM 9° d0 5°- tro ical tang a bayonet cha . mbgb "wen, what about tonight?" he <§’,.,_,.,,,,,,,f.fj,y1“m,y mm, ,,.,,"§,°, P asked. “Oscar Wilde is lecturing at she]_1_bu|.5t5 from “mem zum ,amp the Academy of Music. would you ge, death among ghem_ 5 °U"¢1' it 1°’ 91° St”-‘"7" A thousand died 'that way last clerk "wants a pane o' glass nine I accepted the assignment will- w¢¢k_s3y,;he¢1,pat,°1,,$_ qev,,§,_-- ' inslv. whatlsitaii about? mom our There was a large audience at vanmge p0,1nt_ha_1f way around the '_ the Academy, probably attracted by g|0b¢_ we mm “wh with me ,noch 3 curiosity more than anything else. ness of me pl-oveyolai mm (mm Wilde at that time was the chief Mars, And wonder, apostle of the aesthetic movement. Letgmed W,-ite), ten us gm, 15 n I took a full note of the lecture jug; angndmnry wg;-_ Ighasm gc- Mid Ntumed to my 10113100 1101188 onomlc lbasls. On Bolivian torritory to prepare my report. I worked at they have discovered oil. it until three a,m., and then pro- so the Bquvigm are seek”-,g an ceeded to the Star office, dropping outlet to the sea. They claim hs I ` the manuscrlit, addressed to Mr. theinss. slice of the Paragueyan _ 1 ,_ Miner in the letter box. r get to iungieand the Parsguavans do not ' -_° bed about three-thirty. My story like it. ci’ the Wilde lecture made two Evidently these matter; an im.. columns of nonpareil type,-equi- portantor iiiielittle men in H-|p,|¢| valent to three columns of the would not -be fighting and dyhig,; ordinary newspaper of today. threre in the jungle. The following aftemoon Mr. Gra- But doesn't it seem Strange that M' ham went over to the editorial of- they cannot see that all their fight- G I fice and handed a telegram to Mr. _l_I_1__g__and dying will not settle the , O'Connor, the managing editor. It e, which finally will be settled, if was from Oscar Wilde and was of it is. by elderly gentlemen sitting MONDAY EVENING B very cmnpllmentaw n8_ture_ He _ A| B|,.n¢hl|»d’s 0|»c}|¢¢¢|-3 , was much pleased with the Star’s he wanted me on his staff. It was Slvwill Lllhlilll Effect!- report, he said, and wanted one so decided then and there, and Dlhvilll 9-12- h\.;n$'ed_toopies of the issue con- _lgiift morgiing I reported gt the ¢di-_ Tickets 50|: Each. - H1 B . al of ce for regular umalistic " ' ` "I suppose". said Mr. Graham, work, thanks to the klgdly tele- [ISA GYR0 DANCE 1 “Miller reported it.” gram of Oscar Wilde. Mr. O'Connor replied that he did, 1-- - ' ' ' -Y W ,,d,,m_ gave me ,un mm, for me For Full Strength and Fine Flavor report and told Mr. Graham that Use = BRAHMIN ORANGE PEKOE TEA _ The Answer ._ -.e _ _ l not know. l-le sent for Miller, and the city T0 Boiis Pimples Skin Diseases Saliow Complexion Nervousness Loss of Muscular T Anaemia Impaired Appetite Run Down Condiiio Stomach Disorders Irnnized Yea The 2 Ma DRUGSTORE 149 Great George S I gilt uscles and purgatives thus become necessity. _ By going to stool at a “regulai-’l time each day and remaining fif ov hird or fourth day. _ around a table and talkills W °V¢\ And isn't it stranger still thai most cf the young men in the j e do not no what all the fislhtg for, at least as iihe leamed wri _ lrplain it? And that some of them never will now? And that if they' did know, they ly would not be fighting Resins was sent to the genera tore. "My boss," he said to t "Hsin't got none that sire. R us," said the joking clenk “but £3 ’leven by nine pane doll” "I'i1 try ’er," replied Rastus; “ma be if we slip ‘er in sideways nobodyq otico it.”-Sunshine Magazine. t J Ceylon Small Leaf 1 HAVE- You A SILENT PARTNER ? Man’s' silent partner,' in business or at home, is insurance. A wonderful ally that stands ready, with- out a whimper, to bear the bu may come at any time from bile Accident, Ship or Train rden of financial loss that Fire, Lightning, Automo- wreck, or other disaster. Insurance is the modern ‘safeguard ejjainst all contingencies. Consult our nearest Agent or 'write Hyndrnan & The Oldest Insurance C0., Limited Agency in P. E L Lower Queen Street, Charlottetown