./ ~31. death could not only mpply can“; Jflelltnutiouinbothprovineesisas (ll adv-up) Inllod in Canada‘ and United Statua- —IJIII. O01. WEDNESDAY, JULY 11, 1928 Pullout-I. (lento! s. uonm. 'vlo..rmla.n:-.l.. n. Burnett. Boundary ii. 0. 2 _ Illtn and Imago-J. I. Burnett.‘ Auuocluta isulruh-u. K. Curr-u I). A. Inolllnnon, I). ..__.._ I ELECTIONS AND PBAYERS. IT 18 senerally conceded, and has indeed become a proverb, that elections are not won by prayers. This is not intended in any way to minimize the efficacy of prayer, nor is it meant to insinuate that the "party or the individual that loses an election is beyond the influence of prayer. ' There are many factors which en- ter into the winning or the losing of elections. Humanly speaking, the party having a straightforward pol- icy and men of high integrity and u. A acumen should wholesome democratic constituency. This has not always been the case. Parties more less given intrigue and men of less than average capacity in statesnlanship, have more than once secured the reins of office in this as well as in other countries. It has ever been true that “the race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the strong." Of In every democracy there are the intelligent and the ignorant, the honest and the dishonest. Unfortun- ately, too often, the designing and self-serving have played upon those various strings and have succeeded in winning the support of men and women who were ready t0 believe that the black of one party was the white of the other, and vice versa. In the last analysis, the factors that must be depended upon in the winning of an election are a clear- by men of probity and statesman-I ship, honest men who can be de- pended upon to stand by their pro- fessed principles, and a carefully- seiected organization which can be depended upon to put the honest intentions of the party intelligently before the electorate. The appeal to the ignorant and the gullible must be discountennnced and ex- posed. Pre-election promises are proverb- ially like pie crust. made to be brok- en. The people must be taught to discriminate between the gold brick and the pure gold, must be taught to discern between the possible and the impossible, between the prob- able and the improbable. The pol- itician who promises too much may always be regarded with suspicion as a man with an axe to grind. There is enough intelligence in ‘every constituency, if properly ap- pealed to, to carry into power a party that has a reasonable policy to present and men of honor and in- tegrity to carry it through. Such a presentation can best be made by systematic organization, and no party or individual can hope to win worthily without such an organiza- tion. _--<-o->--__ THE COAL SITUATION. ERE has been much talk about the coal situation in Canada. We have solne of the richest coal areas in the world and yet our collieries are not affording either the employ- ment or the coal that might be ex- pected from them. The Glace Bay Gazette, which is Liberal in politics, and not inclined to throw stones at the King Government, admits vary frankly in a recent issue that there 1| something wrong, and says in part, "For the six months ending Sat- urday, June 30, the Dominion Coal Oofs output was 1,700,064 tons. The figures are from the Gazette's flies. For the same period in 1000 the output was 1,910,764 tons. Thus after!!! years we find the local col- liories producing 200.000 tons less cool for the first hair of the year. Nor is there any particular reason in local conditions for this decline, unions it is that the steel works are taking smaller shipments." The situation in Alberta islittle, if any better. Alberta and Nova .U§‘l\ln!ge proportion of the needs mothicouruln-iuwlzh ml and yet win in a to‘ journey and section of streets, but too many fall when over the sunset and the sunrise, over the clouds and over the sea. infrequently he rises early, if indeed he has not sat up the night before ostensibly to see the beautiful sun- rise and the gorgeous coloring. He it is who enthusiastically sings, "Go seewhut l have sawn. Go feel what policy, can see ‘the reason for this stagnation in the coal business. Wfi are using foreign coal, chiefly from the United States instead of using our own. A duty sufllcient to meet the advantage of a shorter haul in transportation would remedy this stagnation and place the Canadian coal fields on a firm and solid busi- 08$ basis. Such a duty does not suit the political opinions which constitute the policy followed by the MacKhenzie King Government. Ev- entually, no doubt, our people will awaken to the fact that they have been strangled by the makeshift policy of the conglomerated party now holding the reins of power in This is being realized more and more as the clays go by. and no doubt there will be a radical change in the fiscal policy of Can- ada as soon as the opportunity pre- lscnts itself, ‘tvhloh will, no doubt, be at the next general election. <0}- TIIE WORLD ON WHEELS. Canada. N no other department has the motor car radical changes as in the tourist business. Before the advent of the cars tour- ists came or went by train or steam- er to a favorite watering place, kept comparatively quiet and returned to their homes and to their work rest- ed and rejuvenated. Today the tourist takes his party and his car, goes the whole day, puts up at night, and after a hasty breakfast in the morning leaves for another day's another resting At the end of a vacation oi caused such cut and definite policy, enunciated‘ for place. work or home after what they de- ‘clare was a pleasant outing, but it is doubtful whether the nerves have been soothed or the brain cleared by the experience. The world is on wheels today and we have perhaps unconsciously tak- ‘en on the auto pace. We have no time for rest or recreation other than flitting from place to place. We may become accustomed to it in time. We may become a nation of chronic runabouts or we may be- come a nation of shattered nerves. Does it pay to keep up the auto The human animal needs action, but he also needs time and rest for thinking. Both the physical and the mental make-up demand this, and if it is denied there is a penalty due. We require to take our vacations like our work, seri- ously and only drop our seriousness occasionally. It is not good to be either serious or lacking in seri- ousness too long at a time. Life is diversified and our condition of mind like our condition of body requires both rest and work. pace? ————-—{O-}~~~——— EDITORIAL NOTES. The nightly showers would be wei- come again. The somewhat prolonged drought has caused the dust on the roads to be a little more conspicuous than is absolutely needed for comfort. Speeding at street crossings is entirely too common in this city. Very few autoists slow up when they come to a crossing. This is one of the dangers which should be ‘pre- vented by the police. Every driver has a right to slow up at the inter- todoso. lr‘ 1' This is the season of the year the nature-lover enthuses Not In Anyone who h not politically I have felt. Walk through the fields at early dawn. and smell ‘what I two or three weeks they return to Notes by the Wag WHY are Canadians still ‘moving to the States? More than four thousand removed from Canada southward during the month of May, having declared their irlten- tion of becoming permanent resi- dents of the Republic. Of these 8,908 were born in the Dominion. As pointed out by the Toronto Globe, this loss is continued month after month, is going on steadily and is too serious to pass without official consideration and study. This move- ment is going on while employment in Canada is better than it has been at any time in the past eight years, and in the United States unem- ploymcnt is at its worst and has be- come a matter of grave national concern. These are understand. , That climate has something w d» with it has been suggested. but the during ' the Spring, Summer and Autumn months is as good if not better than that of the States. An- other moving cause is that in the Republic there is a preference for Canadian workers over those from any other country. For that reason the quota law which limits the im- migration from all other ‘countries is not applied to Canadians. More- over, the two millions of Canadians now resident in the States are in many cases recruiting agents for the promotion of the exodus. A young Canadian who is capable and ambitious and makes good in any employ over there is valued highly by his employer, who is desirous to engage others like him. He is visited there by ills Canadian brothers, or sisters, or other near relatives, or he returns to visit them at the old homestead. He tolls them there are other opportunities there equally as promising as he has found. The result is that a number of his relatives one by one ormore, join him there, and are more or less successful in obtaining a good job. We all know how it is here in Prince Edward Island where the newspapers kindly publish stories of “Successful Islanders Ahroat All of which tends to in- duce qthers also to go abroad. But there ls another side to all’, this. We read from time to time in the newspapers which support the Government of the day about Can-l adians who had lived in the States‘ returning to Canada-so many thall- iififldS in a month or a year. All conditions which make the continued exodus of native-born Cahaqiians hard to climate on this side of the border -—r-=z|n m. 0B3 [ulna W. M. MD d‘ I-IEROINE OF GAS GANGRENE Some months ago I wrote about the heroic deed of a private soldier John Kissinger in the United States army, who allowed himself to be bitten by a mosquito which had been in contact with a patient with yellow fever. This caused yellow fever. His life was saved by irnmed- iate treatment and the nation now has given him an adequate pension, because he proved the mosquito to be the cause of yellow fever. And now there comes to hand the act of a laboratory worker Miss K. M. G. Davies, an Englishwoman who in i915 was working in the Ameri- can Hospital, Neviliy, Paris, under Dr. Taylor of the Imperial Cancer Research.’ Dr. Taylor was investigating the cause and treatment of gas gan- grene. He was experimenting with guinea pigs but could not obtain re- sults which would justify him in trying out these experiments, on a human being. The crucial experi- ment of inoculating a human being with a pure culture seemed impos- sible. Miss Davies had seen 209 fatal cases of gas gangrene, had seen some guinea pigs die and some recover under Dr. Taylor's experi- ment. - - Without a word to anyone gflS gangrene. with which he had been working— quinine hydrochloride. She was re- moved to the American Hospital and in twenty four hours was pro- nounced out of danger. By her extraordinary self sacrifice in taking the risk of a painful and" lingering death, she proved the ef- h m read in the daily Pavel‘ the ad- of rest and worship. This old settle- 4 The Public Forum I? This column ln- open for tbo discussion by cp- , ndentl olqueutions of interest. The t“ lotieiown Guardian dou not uocoaurily undone the opinions of correspondents I ausv rmas a-r AVONLEA Shy-The residents of Caveudislé and vicinity were greatly surprise vcrtisenlent of a restaurant ready for business at Cawrllfife Balm" under the name of Avonlea and to be kept open on Sundays. It was not only a. surprise, but a sllock l-l many who regard Sunday I13 ‘l ‘my mcnt has lollg been noted for it“ The best buy on t h e ma rlc e t — I Rosebud smoking , tobacco all ready cut for your pipe. —— and valuable a step has been taken. a week day picnic as there W011? about sixty cars Parked l)" bank. IION. MR. McINTYRE'S fillfilElflfill last month to nominate a took a room near the hospital, gavetLiberal candidate for L herself iwo injections of the cul- District. and according l" "w P“ ' ture deep into the thigh and then rio" severa sent for Dr. Taylor. She had thus Sllilfidlei H°“~J-P-M°I“§1yre'D(/i“nl; furnished him with a case of pure 181-61‘ 0f Public WDFRS. (19 lie"? _ speech of more tllhan riigdinalyrintel- - at. 1' fact, t e sa 511969 was He promptly inflected the remedy the mgst remarkable ever delivered in this Province, and should excite the most lively interest everywhere. 30th ult., Mr. McIntyre stated that "So far they (the new machines)‘ of road, which have been piety and regular attendance a} church. We understand it is n0» against the law of the country,‘ we know that it is against (rods law. We read in our Bibles, that six days shalt thoulubour and do all thy work, and the seveni h was made for rest. It certainly is showing =1 bad example to the young P901)“:- And it is vcry regrettable that sucu Oil Sunday last it was more like the I am, Silz, etc., CITIZEN. \ WONDERFUL sralscrl Sir,—_Thcre was a convention at the Belfast prominent men made According to the Patriot of the ave been ovcr twelve hundred miles “poker hands” every package. - “Poker hands" with each J flcacy of the treatment and thus saved thousands of lives. Th“ treatment was Smlseqmmtly gineers estimate that under the old used by the American ambulance System the cosy, would be $10,000," but the modesty of Miss Davies pre- And ngaim “Even if every one of vented any honor being elven l0 the machines were Scrapped now, m, became conscious o; the 1am,“ herself. She desired that the treatment and improved.“ and he went on to state: “The cost for widening by the machines was only $500. and tllc on- tlley have already , accomplished cncugh work to pay for their cost. f orlns should be preventive and wrote an article showing that if the govern- nlcut cloth issued for military uni- was treated with (luinine the machines The $500 and $10,000 mentioned above must mean per mile. Other- wise, Mr. McIntyre could not say had already done hydrochloride, gangrene might be prevented. Ibwas portions of this cloth get- ting into wounds that was the big factor in causing gas gangrene. When we think of this self sacri- fice, also that of Private Kissinger illlll also of that when Drs. Banting and Best were working on insulin as a cure for diabetes, Banting ill- sisted upon being the first human true enough, hilt three-fourths of those who thus return arc of thcl class who were “unsuccessfulw abroad. That is [he saddest fell: IVE‘ of the Canadian migration acres-s the border. Of course, there are ex- ceptions to every rule, but, speak- ing broadly, it is too often the fail- ures and the wrecks, the worn-out and the helpless who return, older, wlrer and sruiaer than ville-n they went away. This matter of Canadian migration across the‘ border southward alld returning northward should be in- vestigated as it never has been. The Globe shows some realization of how things are working when it says:- “While the Government is spending imillions yearly to get new popula- ttion, it can well afford to spend a ‘few thousands to learn if there is not some way to keep the people at home. So far the present Govern- ment have done nothing to prevent or to stay the exodus. They have simply ignored it as if it did not exist. There is a Bureau of Statistics at Ottawa that gives out from time to time part of the truth in regard to the Canadians who cross the border and rlaturn . What the Bureau om- its to mention includes the many who are forced to return-those who have by reason of illness, accident, misfortune or incapability have be- come unable to make a living in the States have become a public charge. Every Canadian immigration agent knows about these uniortunates. some insane. others merely sick, aged. infirm or helpless. They had not been naturalized and hence, af- ter having given the best years of their lives to work in an alien land, they are sent back helpless to the land of their‘blrth. Canadians can- not complain of this. Deportation is the right of every sovereign state. The Bureau gives us the favorable statistics: much that is of the other sort is concealed or omitted from the compilation. Canadians at home have a right to know all the facts about the exodus and return. and what infonnation they get is but partial and misleading, both with regard to the movement of the native born and the immigrants from abroad who are brought into Canada‘ and mysteriously disappear within a year or two. a grandam human-shift “l have malt." l. n To our own Province but few im- migrants have come within thirty U ions of wafer. the water. to be injccird, and remember that in every case these sacrifices were made for the sake of "the other fei- low," our hearts must pride. Because after all to you all - ~———--@ 5#§O+0-004+Qovo+o-oo<~0o4 0 HOUSEHOLD SCRAPBOOK B ROBERTYA LEE O‘ Q§O'O4'O-O To Renew Old Jar Lids Boil old jar lids in a solution oi’ borax and ivory soap, using three tablespoonfuls of third cake of soap to about two gal- Put in just enough lids at a time to be well covered by Boil for thirty minu- tes, then rinse well with hot water. Lemons for Neuritis To a t of water add the juic of one mon and an even teaspoon of ‘cream of tartar. taste. Drink at least two glasses a day, either hot or cold. Cabbage Boil an onion with the cabbag and there will be very little of the usual disagreeable odor. 10% O-OO-O4OQO Modern Etiquette By ROBERTA LII v V9 .0 O-GQ-OMQ-O-OQ-PMOQ Q. Is it in good taste for the woman who marries a second time to have an elaborate wedding? A. No, she should avoid it. Q. ‘What does an introduction re quire of the persons introduced? A. Courteous acknowledgements. Q. Whatisthe most importan thing that the composition of a _u menu requires? A. Originality. even a quarter of them are here to- day. Canada is a truly lordiy land of almost boundless wealth and re- sources in soil, mine, forest and sel, but it is being steadily and need- lessly depopulated of its sturdy and energetic daughters, who are being replaced ‘by far less desirable people of alien blood and of different speech. The. Dominion has no greater need than I ediaie change and a re- vers V the insane policy th ‘has brouglllt’ about such aspmu ton- k ‘ years past, and not one-third, ff dltionn. _L_____ native-born sons ll the action of gas thrill with that body of |yours is what carries all you have i life. You can grasp therefore what these sacrifices mean yours. borax and one Sweeten to and ikiiiili work enough in pay for their cost. because even the $10,000 would be only about half the mysterious com- mission on said machines. Assum- ing then that Mr. McIntyre meant pr-r mile. when he used thc figures $500 and $10000, wmwill sec what enormous savings the llnn. gentle- man has effected. $500 per mile for twelve hundred miles would be sGOU,00Q-or sit-z times the cost of the machines-and if tho machines go on working at that rate for the whole Summer, the savings will amount to somewhere between $1,- 200,000'aud $1,500,000, at least. But this is not all. Mr. Mclntyre stated that thr- cost of the work by the new machines was only $500 a mile. and ills engineer's estimate was that the same work under the old sys- tem would have cost $10000 a mile. or $9,500 more. Nowjfwelve hun- dred miles at $9,500 a mile amounts to'$ll,400.il00. and at i.lle same rate .of work for the whole Summer the savings would be at least $22,800,000 —and Mr. McIntyre made this speech in a prohibition province! But even this is not ail. If I remem- ber correctly, tlle cost of doing the work llnder the old system was, say. two thousand dollars a mile, and the Minister states that his en- . glneer's estimate that under the new system with the new machines tile saving alone will be $9,500 a mile. Evidently some engineers, and some system! Mr. McIntyre did not tell us how many engineers he has in the de- partment. but he must have at least two. since he used the plural num- ber in speaking of them. I assume. therefore, that the figures they gave their Chief, were gone over very carefully, and that these men check- ed up against each other in their estimates. I would dearly love to meet these men or any of them. It would surely be a treattomeet the man or men who in an expenditure of two thousand dollars could figure out a saving of $9,500. Poor Mr. Mc- Intyre. I am afraid-his engineers have played a cruel joke upon him, and have induced 111m to exhibit himself as the laughing stock of the ll i1 6 e province. Our Minister of Public Works made another statement which should be considered. He stated that over twelve hundred miles of roads had been widened and improved al- ready this summer. Well, there have been two machines (a little one and that after a while when the fog time of his maiden effort in the Legislature still remains with him, ruld became Egyptian darkness at tile time of his last effort at Eldon. And that the intent statesmanship which he thought he possessed was but the hallucination which over- slladows solne men. Iwoulri like vol-y much to get an explanation of Mr. Mclni._vre‘s El- don speech from some one. and l would ask the Hon. Mr. Lea to tell me what it means. or if I did not know that that gentleman is so busy ad- tolcl us that thc first time he ad-in Mr. Saunders. dressed that august assembly that agive me a comprehensive and lucid thick fog enveloped him. so that lleexplanation, notwithstanding what could scarcely see the Speaker, butanybody may say to the contrary. I am, Sir, etc., hundred of Christie St, Hospital's soldier-patients and a "dozen of their comrades who are how en- loving thelake breezes at the Red Cross Island outposts guests of His lion. Lieut. Governor and Mrs. Ross ai. a garden party this afternoon. The nursing sister also attended with Miss McCalluln. assistant nlatron of the hospital. were ~—- -- —~' {-0-} I know he will lifted and he got more confidence, EQQNQM|ST_ plowers of oratory and statesman-S slip le possessed and which he af- 0 P t tCIWlIPLl-S‘ developed to a remarkable a’ s degree. The man who could talk itn tlllat siratiiu llifiibflllf no ilzitrIrlduction o .10 prac ca _o er. all am ill- clined to tlllhk tl t th r - li l . referring enveloped our wolffliy freicllotf rftntfld Tggxglsgxgto élrafigfilligiag) A OFTEN llcl-unl. although, standing. WORD the DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH s: w. r. Gcrdou i ewo-ooo-voo-enaw-o-ooou» WORDS OFTEN MISUSED.’ D0 110$ 88y "it_was a few days ago." A few days Since" is preferable when {Pronounce as OFTEN MISSPELLED: epidemic. SYNONYMS: three times and it is yours." let u: increase our vocabulary by master- int: one word each- day. l __ I___ word: ERUDITION; knowledge ob- ‘I'm- rllerlmnflllnlnaomlnurdu "IIIIIIQIIQ-lflflleedlnlgg grlepstllldy at b°°k5~ “They ro oun erudltion." 1928 M? JbLY 11, to recent events. MISPRONOUNCED: helnl spelled and not however, though. nevertheless, notwith- STUDYI “Use a word Today's miring himself and so occupied in eouteulplating his own greatness {lléitvltlgqlllpésq m; tinlento bother with o acoonlc. therefore compelled to theIPkf: nlier for an explanation. He ‘is a clear-headed, man and an able law- yer who delights in solving knotty questions. I respectfully ask Mr. tslmlndcrs l0 sale me the names of le engineers ho made up the es- timates for Mr. McIntyre, and to say whether Mr. McIntyre will go on savingmillions upon m} mad till 33151 "£§’.l§°°°‘“f,..'°l}i°'“' “d ne w e money in the end. I have every confidence 4+OOQ4DFGGOOFOVvO4+OO§k The Land We Love B! Frank Yeigh H+M+w++++o++e woo-er» ARCHIBALD LAMPMAN Q- Who was Archibald Lamp- marl? A. Archibald Lampmnn we; a glstinguished Canadian poet who ved from 1861-1899. He published three volumes of verse which have won for him the title of "The Can- adian Keats”.and as one of the most outstanding examples of national nlilum Poets. Recent editions of his “’°"< "We been Published and which gfilntinue to find a wide reading. i-le ‘ed a position in the Dominion C vii Service at Ottawa for a num- ber oi’ year-g a big one) at work in this district, or territory. since early Spring. and the two of them have done less than twenty miles of the roads, and I suppose this is an average district for the Island. l ,But we will he generous in our; calculation. and will suppose that each one of the new 30 or iii mach-I ines has gone over 20 miles of the, roads; this would be only hall of what Mr. McIntyre says has been‘ done. Evidently our worthy Minis- ter has some imagination when he, goes to Eldon, or the men operating! the road machines in this locality are doing next to nothing. 'l‘lle Hon. Minister told the people of Eldon that many persons had in- formed him that the new machines had been very successful. and that lie-had not half enough of them. I am therefore afraid that some ilne M01111"! Mr: McIntyre will grab the telephone and older another hlln- dred thousand dollal-u worth of these machines to be delivered by um. alum. A man of Mr. Mclntyres imagination and credulity might do anything. particularly to save a fat commission. ‘ t For Weak Stomachs For loss of weak- or dlsorderedpm: "h You need Evan's Stomach Mixture, This ll l propqrgtlqm "l" fllfilltlherls ild tones Ill! the entire dlgegtlwg "7816!!! strengthens the stomach and improves the IPlM-Ite. ‘ It has worked wonderful rcuuliu in hunu. relic of canal and in en- ‘mlfil b! uvuf! one who ha: ever used bottle The 2 Macs DRUGSTORE l“ Gliatlloorgoltreet ~ In one other. Mofhtyrvs speech” theHu-Ilsiaturefiult“ session he .fl!lllly_m spend f(llll'IL'\‘ll. uollc. rally l0 coulplcic m try, of kuovvillg tho 1 and (lclighlflll friends, my lhullksl in the morning bright and earl You could see the birds n- "There's going to be a clam-bake on the The clams in Who in spite of wind and‘ the home beyond “U595 I Eight (lay? in Prince lidlvzirll Island. ] value with lhc isle: of spending foul", and l leave with regret that l did not arrange i0 (foluparisolls are uniorirlusly odious. livrrylvllul'c l have gone in discharge of thc llllSSlOll, ‘lml which I “as i-ulrusicd by ihe Royal lilupirc Society iu C-Zlllillllhl have llccu illc recipient of such ovcrlvhelnliug courtesy and hoi- llll-‘llily that l would not, if 1 could, say i0 whom I am most grate- Ncilhcl‘ will I risk all expression of opinion as i0 which Province holds the palm for its wholly British character. 'l'llei‘¢i§ such infinite wtrieiy in Canada in the cousiiiulioll and composition of its splendid people that no two provinces are alike, and lfiht .\’lfll‘llllll(‘S arc (lisposerl to challenge llriiish (Yolulnbia, the challengt is after ull nothing more than ihc claim of, say, Dcvonshirc io bt illv cradle of ltilglililllyS lulpcrizil greatness feel l could pill ill a good case for Iizist Anglia. I can only say lllill it has been an unqualified joy to me llfflfill‘ _ y luissiou in the llriiish atmosphere of Prifl l'-(l\\’|'ll'il island. As for the island itself, with its perfect rur peace and beauty, I feel ihal only a (ioldslniih or a Gray coul possibly do cvcll a nlcnsurc of justice to its charms. Tllcjoy 0f llfe is in, its people, though none of them, with the exception of all occasional nlolorist, attempts to put up speed record“ old London ll0\v often shall I rcczrll its ability to g0 about its buii" llCSS without that feverish rush which lllarks ulodern Progress, sp¢|i with abig .l'_ ' To all who have jllyllllgtglilMn-Biliiiblllflf Sllilili B: Frederick J. Nab. - "The Maple Leaf" The heather is ori fire and the news You can hear it on the ocean b And the people of fair Keppoch are For there's going to be u o]; And All nature llbd thrown pristine Juice and g Are provided for the people, 8 ‘Prllloess as she looms Al W"?! BWPY- song and laughter, We shall linger round the clam-bake on thu ‘lllon here's to lovel Jteppoeh m4 go May we meet m Riv And mm eternal given me illc opportunity of seeing the cauli- u-oplu lll their homes, . i ts t not“! panied by a fine illustraltirlripbflxa he“ popular ppm] ‘mm!’ shore scene: rs’ roar; ga hering far and near m-bake on the shore. y. when the dew was on the eras-l. linen wide her door; Wllllllls. and hear law.- flch and h And enjoy the gloriouswfiutlngfhaigloglg: m. The bonfire will be bl , y ‘ . M m "in! and n dance to follow um. more. and "f our lbw“ “Huffman no is in the w. them all u-singing: shore." ' without aid of om or Tory. nour- frient , in when this brief life n ‘ d n d.“ I luake though I an Essex ma" Back i, and making many no! sow/mo SALMON. Q.» e u a WW0 ~. "W... i