_ ‘J. Miiucunv " $9cks ‘Wonderland OF l Eastern Canada (By The Cllllflllh ‘Pull . _ Til ., ,5 the s w," tell :11“- uirill loving travellers. you are 5K , gliadowl’ 8 .4 .da. "flncques col-tier first. ~ . v Md years 3,50, and until 1028, any- thing. p. ilic some ll been chanied- d‘ m, m5 The ,__ u, a country hitherto practically ., unexplored. I "1 think Gaspe can best be qual- ' med as a land of surprises. One " y, ooniiuunlly brought face to face i ‘my, mo unexpected. First of nil _' 1n the matter of scenery. After T tygvcilillg for milca along their .' beach the road suddenly soars up almost vertically and lo! you're in the mountains; Perhaps you have ' been in the Alps or the Buckles Mid _ therefore know what mountains ghollid be; putting things in their pfgpfif proportion, you will find “min points nf resemblance in the Shickshock and Appalacian nngas of Gaspe. 'I‘rue there is no snail’, at this season oi’ the year. but there is c. wealth of color un- surpassed anywhere in the world. Dark greens, sombre blacks, rich . pulpit’; and blues, brilliant yel- lows, and if after climbing steadily for about three miles you should look down-two thousand feet or so, you will see the St. Lawrence shimmering in the sunlight, and streaked with patches of pole irri- descent green. You are not al- ways in“ the cloifds, however; after carecring up and down like a scen- , ie railway, the road suddenly de- cides to compromise and winds up round and round, clinging precar- fously to the sides. of deeply over hanging cliffs, passing over deep gorges and bottomless ravines until it once more skirts the beach. ‘Fhc i. n. f. 7; is breath taking. Most people have agreed that it cannot be des- cribcd, so we will leave _ poets, th'e proper people to with the indescribable. "We next meet the unexpected in the villages. They are inhabit- ed almost entirely by the fisher folk, living in little box like hou- ses clustered together like a. hand- V ful oi toys tossed down by some i mizhty giant from his mountain " haunts. They are all more or less alike: white washed wood with fiiiiiiiiril; roofs, two‘ windows lnpfhe front. two in the back, one at cacli end, and a door in some convenient 5PM. facing any point of the com- pass the owner may chance to fa- ver. Between the houses are long , . NW5 oi racks or "flakes" piled high wiih cod drying in the sun. Nets are of course, everywhere in evi- dence and the fleets of brightly ool °Y°<i ii-shins boats which lic hud- dled in every tiny harbor make you p. deal ~= i»: .3 think or those nice pictures you hi!" Probably admired in some art gallery. “But wait until you have seen "i" People; There are not many .______ IIAS i, p i so‘ g Zia . ' ‘Gaspe Se/en Asp’ m, Vsept, 1a- writing in QUEBi-oniclc-Tcklflm "hilt" i!" i cu , _ manna‘ “Gaspe, canadaa Won- lieiilmd" porntliy Smith, B. A., '. d” .190 you believe in fairness? u t“ a my w be said for them, r wd fisherfolk of QasPB Not theiatory book m“ 03mg’ put bold hobgoblins .0 “d strange devils who haunt the mild coast of the peninsula and l i“, n o place of fear and Joy to Even i! gpflOaI of the "Gou-Gou” hugs, the ghostly visitors to 51c etc,‘ Gaspc still deserves a w, for its own merits. It is U112 ‘ Lyn. Wonderland 0f Eastern Ca- sailed ‘m; me coast -nearly four hun ’ one having business in Gaspe did Now however, j bugging of a highway encirclinli “f m, peninsula has opened the door sheer magnificence of the scenery? it t0 the-i H For Sale By PROWSE 0008., LIMITED Charlottetown "WM II I rifle. indeed at first lllht the villages appear forlorn lad lifeless. If. however, you lhiliild IWD l-ud Iak a solitary u:- chin in an apparently uninhabited Vllilue for a pail of water for your thirsty rwdiator, you will sudden‘; mid Your car swarming with chil- dren e! Wm assoc sine, attired in such nondescripi clothing u you have never imagined could exist- There will be boys and girls and others whose sex is not quite clear. and in the buckgmund a collection of mothers and fathers, grandmoth‘ era and grandfathers to the fourth Qenerfltion. Try taking a. picture of them; it will be well worth your Pains. ‘"1119? may look half savage, but the Uuide books assure us they are the politest people on the continent and I, with very little evidence, am inclined to agree with them. Never have I seen such doffing of caps, heard such eager greetings 01 "Bfllilcur Madame, Bonjour, Mbieu" as came from the young- sters at Riviera Renard, or in 1mg- lish, Fox River. "Nor is this politeness superficial Le Bon Dieu, is the first to be shown the courtesy accorded to His creatures. Ding ding—ding, ding —~the silvery tones of a. little bell announce the passing of a priest carrying the Last Sacrements to some humble fishermanls cottage. solemnly the little procession comes along the road; the altar boy ringing his bell, followed by the Driest with downcast eyes. Or if the mission is a far one, the priest hastens in a Ford, always heralded by the steady ding ding, Instantly every cap is doffed, many tholic and Protestant alike, stops whatever he may be doing and Datises in a moment of reverence at the sound of the little bell. As these rather primitive people are mainly descendant; of French set- tlers from Normandy, Brittany, and the Channel Islands. For years they have lived in their villages, seldom venturing far afield, and until recently, almost wholly iso- lated from the rcst of the world. It is not to be wondered at that they are so rich in folklore, so deeply crcdulous of the supernatural be- ings believed ‘to haunt their shores The grandeur, primitive and rug- ged of their surroundings has had its effects on their characters and they are simple but not ignm-ant. Indeed, they could hardly be that with so many schools scattered in and around the peninsula. Every village, however unali, has its sign "coole" accosting t‘ i motorist; and some even have two schools which, considering the size of the popula- tiou, would reveal in the Gaspec- inns a healthy thirst for knowledge "If you are romantic, or imagi- native, or merely curious, you will find the picturesque names of the villages and points along the Gaspe coast n joy. Gaspe itself means “Land's End." a. fit description for the huge neck of land thrusting itself forward into the ocean. And there‘ is “Grands and Petits Mech ins," (Great and Small Evil Ones) Cal! Chat, (Cape Cat), Arise Pleu- reuse, (Weeping Cove), Pointe a la Pregate, (Frigate Point), Clori- dorme, Manche d'Epee (Sword Han die), and so on to Cap des Rosi- ers. the extreme point of the penin- sula. where Cartier first landed. Every river, cape, island and vil- lage along the way is clearly mar ked. so you can be in no doubt of where you are or what you are see- lnK- It is on the North Shore that the ghostly visitors are aaid to mostly abound- Anse Pleureuse takes its name from tho moaning. or weeping which early settlers claimed issued from the woods. It was attributed to wandering souls and persisted until i844 when it was abruptly brought to a. stop by la priest passing through the place I 8- knee is bent, and everyone Ca» o The explanation of the phenome- non turned out‘ w be quite prosaic. but the good people of Ansc Pleu- reuso still cling to their belief in wandering souls, and indeed who wouldn't? "Legend l aches its height at Bonaventure Island, a. government bird y opposite Peres. Hero lived the Gnu-Goo, a monstrous witch who in one stride passed from the Island to the mainland, gathering up and devouring hand- fuls of Indians and other folk on her passage. Perhaps you too, will tee the qou-Gou if weather conditions are right; she come; in the form of a. mist hanging over the water but is nowadays quits harmless. "You will find the South Shore 0f Gaspe much more civilized. The scenery loses its mssedness an it takes on an almost pastoral aspect. culminating in the beautiful Mata pedia Valley. The villages grad- 1151b’ increase 1n size, the people are 1m: remote more of our own world. The country has more and more charm, though perhaps less interest. "And when you have circled the highway from Ste. IPlavie and back you will feel a. real sense or Recon-h Diishmenk You will have seen Gaspe the unique, the unspoilt. But hurry up before civilization creeps in, and the ghosts and 131;. ies die out, and the legends are for gotten, for when that happens and which heaven forbid, Gaspe will no longer be a. land apart, but just another scenic tour." Eligibles For Series Named cinoscb, 1115., Sept 14- , crown GUARDIAN of the proletariat, self proclaimed. in the cap and over-long overcoat of his type, had been explaining to inc at great length and with dain- LONDON LETTER BY GLANVILLI.’ CARBW (British United Prd) his like would cure the country's ills in a. couple of hours or so. It was quite simple, he said. At that moment there came along the Street a large blue motor car. It stopped at No. 10, set down the Prime Minister, turned and slowly threaded its way out into White- hall. My omniscient neighbor look- ed at the registration plate at its rear. It was NY., followed by a ser- ial number. _ _ ‘There’ y'arei There y’a.re,"' he shouted “Just look a.’ that. Torkin‘ abaht British tride and abaht in a blinking American car. Garn away! Look, Guvnor, look! NYJ Noo York." It is at the risk of boring, but as this is a. Downing Street Edition perhaps a. little of its history may be worth recalling. ' No. 10 was once a royal resid- ence. It was originally planned by the‘ famousSir Christopher Wren when in 1674 the then newly creat- ed Earl of Lichfield married the daughter ‘by the left hand‘ of King Charles the Second and Barbara Villiers, Duchess of Cleve- land. The records of the time dis- LONDON, Sept !4—1n times of peace w; denizens of London have “ounnds of topics of conversation ready to our tongues! This week and for mapy weeks to come we have had and shall have but one: The crisis. and linked up with that, and all that it implies, is the more than two and o half centuries old dark red brick house-No. 10 Downing Street. Out of all London's millions I should think that there can hardly be one, other than tho blind, who has not been this week, i! never be- fore, to look atNo. 110 or studied its photograph in eevry edition of every newspaper. From the day when the King dc- cided, after 24 hours In Scotland, to return to London overnight from the day when the Cabinet, and lat- er, the heads of other parties be- gan to pay hurried and aembsur- reptitious visits to No. 10, from the day when great bankers whose names are household words began to call at No. 10 late at night and enter by back doors, we have thought and talked of nothing but "Number Ten." i nabls reiteration Just how, he and - a-ridin’! Pve smoked in Egyp Belgium, France, and along the blinkin’ Rhine. I've smoked Egyptian, Turkish, Russian- A ruddy league of nations in the smoking line. But one amoke‘s coo Smooth and refreshing-and it's just my style, And when the corporals chase and sergeants chivvy I just light up a Buckingham and smile, smile, smile. PA'GE_ SEVEN _-‘ t, India, Elsewhere, l as GreenlaniTs icy mountains, close the paternal interest taken by the incontinent Charles in the new home of his offspring which was| one day-about more than hair a century then to come-to be the home of [the Prime Ministers of England. . . Downing Street itself takes its~ name from Sir George Downing, a J brilliant scoundrel who died in i684 the owner of a conscience so flexib-i le that the Vicar of Bray had, so to speak ‘nothing on him.’ | It was not until the year 1732, that No. l0 first became an official‘ residence. The house was offered by Downing Street itself is virtually a. cul-de-sac, inasmuch as the only exit at one end is by a flight of stone steps leading to St. James’ Park. There are but two private houses in this short street of two or three hundred yards; they are No. 10, the official home of the Prime Minister, and N0. 11 usually that of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. In that cul-de-sac ror a week past there have waited from morning to night hundreds-thousands -— oi people. 1t is true that 99 out of a. 10) of them had not even a glimmerilik of intelligent comprehension of the Twenty-four Athletics and twenty- five St. Louis Cardinals today were , George the Second to Sir Robert Walpole, the first, and perhaps the greatest of British Prime Ministers, facts of the trouble; it is equally true that the same proportion of ‘$25,000 *7a,oo0,000 more Buckinghams sold every year more Packages sold every month Smoke Buckingham i’ The figures given are based on the named eugybye for the 1931 wm-lrpthem knew, and told their neigh- series by Commissioner Kenesaw M. I m" Piecisely h°w i” cure it‘ stm’ Landis on the almost certain as-|ii5 ROI One 01 them seemed m‘ list‘ sumptlon that the two clubs will en i0 any we siss- iii“ cabiii“ meet in the fail classic. Connie Mack and his assistantsfli" the Wisdilm l" m“ °'°Wd‘ Edd Collins and Ear T. Mack f“ alsolewere named in thohlaist as were| 311i? this Week Dpwnmg Street‘ manager “Gabby" Street of the h“ "mifleteiy dmnged l“ Chan” Cards and his coach, Clyde Ware. it"- Fmm 5 thwwghfue o’ the The Athletics eligible were: Maxlmmt sent“ and select kind it Bishop, John Boley, Mickey Coch- has been fined with movie picture “ma, mg“ cram“, Jimmy Dykesllvans, talkie vans, and press photo- George Eamshaw, Jimmy Fblflflrgraphers‘ Except mesa privileged Robert Grove George Haas, John ‘mesi ‘n the hmke" m‘ have been Heving Waite’ Hoyt, Lewis Krausse Biieilhemd b? ‘he 9°11“ °" m” Honk McDonald, Eric McNair, Le: Pavement oppposlte theidoor o! No‘ roy Mahaffey, Edmund Miller, 1° 5° "l" ‘he “m” w“ b‘ ‘mm James Moore‘ Jn Joseph Palm“ ed without obstruction. Even then, ano. James Peterson, Ed. Rommelnx: grrllgsfinirifigynzilcqgmrgilabg: ~ . a gérgnzrxféjngiggllll aiclifiggseorge w” has been the signal for a sudden , ' rush of the crowd across the road. so: B. TimIColline Paul ‘Derringer D'Arcy has but to take a‘ hop’ skip and Flowers Frankie Frisch ,Charles B‘ jump m be safely m harbor be- Gelberg, Mike Gonzales I Burleigh hind the ‘portals o‘ No’ 10' Grimes’ Chas l-lafey Jesse Haines Mingling with the crowd are Wm, ' H l, h 'd I h b’ gentlemen of Scotland Yard. Some am a a m’ An y Hg ' Sy of them are so obviously of the vester Jhonson, Tony Kaufrnann, Force that the“ appearance James Lndsey, Gus Manusoc, John probably designed m draw “term Martin, Ernest Orsatti, Flint Rhem, l u bl i. Waiter Roettger, Allyn Stout, Geo. mm“ as m c” e c” Wilson’ About midnight the crowd has SCHOOLS TRAIN 25.153. T. ii‘;“‘.i‘.§".§§'$§..‘.§?ZZ Street has been left until the morning with two or three police- men, a prowling cat or so, and to the two or three thousand cigarette ends-witnesses of the days‘ Vi!“ 0f the Press! LONDON, Sept 14—-A school for training young men for $10,000 to $50,000 a year posts-backed by the Bank of lilngland and the business magnates of Britain-is to be optin- ed in London. For many years the chiefs of the Bank of England, with the heads of the great business concerns, have been discussing the need for moulding young men inw future kings of commerce-and this is the result. Promisingyouths are at lasttobe given a chance oi’ reaching the top- most rungs of the ladder of com’ mercial and industrial succes. Birth and social status will not count. The sons o! dukes and dustmen, the heirs of industrial magnates, and boys born in the slums may sit together in the class. The 5011001, which is to be estab- lished as a branch of the London School of Economics, will be known as "The Department of Business administration." Jules Menken, former econrnic secretary to Mr. Lloyd George, is to be in charge of the school. He said to a reporter: "The brains behind the great British enterprises have long realized that the rule-of-thumb principle of business must g0. They know that broad administrative vision as well as the habit of clear-cut analysis and detailed knowledge of facts are essential if current busi- ness problems are to bo success- fully attacked and solved. "This insight is not instilled at. the public schools and universities, and it is not likely to be acquired by ‘cramming’ dead languages or by specialization. And there have been humours. too, to entertain the crowd of wait- ers both at the front and the back doors. As this: The other day a sturdily built man of middle height. a man in the ‘sixties with a subtly humorous cast of expression walked along the street and turned off to get to the back door. He was wearing a lounge suit and a soft hat and was smoking a. cigarette. Ho bore o, burden. It was a bowler hat, a suit of clothes hanging over his arm, and-three pipes. Thus came to No. l0 none other than the Right Hon. Stanley Baldwin. M- P. ex-Prime Minister, late leader of the Opposition and now leader of the House of Commons in H. M. National Government. But Why he chose thus to arrive I dent lm<>W~ Anyhow, the crowd liked that un- ostentatious gentleman, and they cheered him lik¢ billy-ho. And there was another incident. in which I had a silent part. One executive positions, and our pwim is being supported by such Diilmm‘ cnt men as Sir Josiah Stamp. Di‘- C. S. Myers, sir Sidney Skinner, Mr. Henderson J. Neal, Mr. R. Burbidge, and Mr. H. Eric Miller. Lessons will b; based on Dietiti- cal expcrienco and will be wndiiii- ted on lines never before introduc- ed into any school curriculum. "We ore limiting the number 0! students to thirty for the first year." added Mr. Menkcn. "They will be selected by sub- scribing fimis and the universit- "It is men with all-round trlin- ies, and lpprcved by a committee ing instead of specialized know- or mogsgsment composed of busi- ledgs that the great firms Wimt for nesa and academic interests." as a private dwelling. Walpole, with average increased sales of Buckingham were presumably no better off for is- scruplcs not too common in those days, refused it except as an ap- , Cigarettes during rho pas: fivo years. —- and Smile 9 purtenance to the office of First Lord of the Treasury, in which right all subsequent Prime Minist- ers l-iave lived in it to this day. Walpole started to live there in 1735 and so began the longest list of famous residents which any house in London can boast. piece of wood, driven into the trunk of a cocoanut tree during ii typhoon, became source of relig- ious superstition in Tigbao, Occi- dental Negros, and attracted such a crowd that constabulary, with the consent of the tree owners ii- nally removed it. The strange piece of wood went unnoticed for months, according to report made by the constabulary. However, Julio Agapito, devout- ly religious, saw in the object some thing of religious significance. His children had been seriously ill and Agapito despaired of saving them. The strip oi wood was so fasten- ed to the tree that it made an odd shaped cross. One night Agapito took his children to the tree, and placed lighted candles about thei cross WIIICh the storm had made. and began to pray. Almost immediately his children] improved and soon they were fully recovered. Agapito attributed this to some miraculous property of the; cross, and spread the word. l. To change from Downing Street to the House of Commons. We are likely to have some choice bite of topsy-turvydorn when the National Government meets the Opposition in the House, to say nothing of scenes staged by the wild men. It is accurate to say that not all the late Ministers who have aband- oned Mr. MacDonald were really opposed to his policy —on some points or to the course which the National Government intend to take. Some of them, indeed, sup- ported him in council though they had not the‘ courage to stand by [him in the end. Yet in the new, gGovernment we shall have the spec tacle of former ministers attacking a former colleague on a policy which in private they had prevlous~ ly supported. We shall see Ramsay MacDonald on Hi8 Front Bench Soil Improvement . with former opponents and-miracle Slaeciai Train i of miracles-unless some change is made in the meantime, we shall in _ i a month or two see Mr. Lloyd (Canadmn Press) George restored to health and sit- QIYTEBEC’ QM‘? Sept" _ II_EX“ ting on a back bench among back tending itsVcampoign for improve bmchers and supporting ms sup merit of soil fertility on Quebec porters Sir Herbert Samuel! “m? m” 9mm” ,D°p“tm,em’ 9t! Agriculture has decided again thlS‘ year to operate a “soil improvement‘ special train" similar to that oper-i ated last fall in co-operation Mthl the Canadian National Railways, the Dominion Experimental Farm, the federal seed branch, the agri- cultural colleges of the province. and other agencies. so successful W115 the train operated last year through southwestern Quebec and the Eastern Townships in bringing vai- uable lessons on soil fertility to the doors of the farmer that the D6- partmcnt decided this year to re- peat the movement, this time OPBP atlng through the territory east 0f Levis on the south of the St. Law- rence and in GBSDC- i spa CONSCIOUSNESS IS NOT rosrrsnsn ’ (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL, Sept l4——1t is de- plorable in the opinion oi Rev. Canon A. P. Gower-Rees, M. A,‘ M. O~, that sea-consciousness has not been fostered to a greater ex- tent in Canada. He mentioned this in the course oi a short add- ress delivered at St. GEOYZFS Church before a group of‘ Sea Ca- dets a short time ago. Sea consciousness, he said, had never been fostered in the Domin- ion as it had been in the Old Coun try but it should be, for it is essen- tial to the welfare oi’ tlfE"Cb.'nbdiai-i‘| national life. ‘The preacher rc- marked that when people talked oi special DETROIT EXPECTS 100,000 VETS OF THE WORLD WAR. WILL autonomy, a custom, he said, com- MARCH mon these days, they should not forget that Canada has always en- __ Joyed the protection of the Brit- (United Prrss) DETROIT, Sept lilo-More than 100,000 veterans of the World War members of the American Legion and its auxiliaries will parade here on Sept. 22 while more than 2,000- ogl) persons will look on. The great column. which this your is expected to be numerically dets received was of the very bestygrontcr than over, will move from type for combating the menace of [Belle Isle bridge on the eastern Communism, concluded the Canon side Of the city. sweeping down the qowebgaes, ibroad Jefferson avenue toward the i iii- downtown section. ‘There it Wiii iTllE TYPl-IOON CROSS DRAWS saving north on to Wooclwad. prin- ISLE’S RELIGIOUS FANATICS cipal business artery. and disbimd . _-__ a mile north. (United Press) At the convention in Boston last ish Navy. It was true, he stated, thatCanada must be prepared and equally true that ii the time came when England, the mother, called upon Canada, the daughter, the latter should be ready to lend as- sistance. I Training of the kind the Bea Ca‘- i l CROP REPOR T Below will be found a. brief syn- opsis oi telegraph reports received at the Head Office of the Bank of Montreal from its Branches. '1' he Branch Managers have complete and intimate knowledge of each loc- al situation and are in close touch with crop conditions in all sections of the districts mentioned. Saskatchewan Southern and Central Area. Some threshing is completed Many farmers are not attempting to thrash, but are stacking for win- ter feed. Early returns have been discouraging and the late growth of weeds is interfering with harv- esting. Manitoba—Threshing is nearly completed in the southern areas, and is under rvay in the North. Wheat yields vary widely, the average probably being 10 to l2 bushels per acre, grading l and 2 Northern. Coarse grains generally are poor. and much has been cut for feed. The average yield of oats and barley is l5 to l8 bushels per acre. A shortage of feed and seed is indicated in some southern and suothwestem areas. GENERAL » Apart, from the drought-stricken areas of the Prairie Provinces, crops generally throughout the Dominion are fulfilling earlier promises of good yields of high quality- HEY‘ vesting in most districts is now well advanced and conditions con- tinue favorable for late maturing crops of fruit and roots. With 118i‘- vesting 65 per cent comPiEied in Alberta, 75 per cent in Saskatchew- an and 90 per cent in Maniiflbfl. the estimated Prairie wheat crop now stands at 250000.000 bushels. In Quebec most crops are well up to average, or above it, and conditions continue favorable. In Ontario. cutting is under way oi a heavy second crop of alfalfa oi good qual- ity, and an excellent crop of corn. In the Maritime Provinces. crops generally are in good condition. In British Columbia, grain crops are estimated at 100 per cent of aver- age. Details follow: PROVINCE OF QUEBEC Cutting of grain is well advanc- ed 5nd threshing operations reveal a. god average yield of oats and barley. A heavy crop of good qual- ity corn is indicated. Pciiatoes, geri- erally, and other root crops look promising. A good yield of apple! is in sight. The tobacco crop is reported above average and o! good quality. PROVINCE OF ONTARIO The bean crop is proving better than anticipated. Sixty per cent of a better than average tobacco crop is cut and being cured- Recent showers have been beneficial to I promising root crop and have im- A t proved the pasture land. Fall Alberta Northeastern Area- bou ploughing ,5 p,.og,,,&,,-ng_ 50mg 6° Der 06M 0f Cutting is completr , {oil wheat has been sou-n but more gd_ Threshing has commenced and lmmsture ,5 requh-m pnms are will bckeneralnext week. ESiIlIQBtlid lplenfinm A better than average wheat yields are from 5t0 30 us - g crop of grapes ,5 progresqng sans. P15 Alberta Southeaswm Area‘_ i factorilv. Apples of the late variet- Cuitifig i5 Cilmliiflcd and 6° p" “i: ies promise better than an average of the threshing. The average y e Crop of good quality is 7 bushels oi god quality wheat. Alberta Western Area-Threshing is general in the southern section. with wheat yields of from 6 to 25g Indjcauons point m a good aver. bushels- Mm“ 50 P“ cent °i cuhiage yield of oats. Earl? varieties “"5 15 wmpieied m m“ "Ormemiof apples are being picked. Late “lid “PM?” secémns- “here the apples are coloring ivell, but some c")? Eenemny is heavy and is mm‘ spotting is noticeable: the crop is maturing. An average crop of sugar estimated t0 be “bow, wverage, bee“ i5’ flpccted" Saskatchewan Warm. wet weather has caused N°Tm°m Area—wheat cutting wsome blight on potatoes but it is nearing completion, and with con- expected the field “.511 be about tinned fine weather threshing will Even“ om" mo, crops are WW be iimwii: "g" wekekt" Ems’ ‘hieig; grossing satisfactorily. ing nort o Saaaoon s gv wheat yields of from l5 to 25 bush- els, grading No. i and 2 NOflhPm- PRAIRIE PROVINCE S MARITIME PROVINCES PROVINCE OF BRITISH COL- ‘UEWIBIA passing the reviewing stand. but with Detroit's wider streets and with but one or two turns to bei made, the procession should move in quick order. of onmns gs hemp shlpppd, The Alon: Jefferson avenue 40.000 view of 90mm“ ls avpragQ‘ but; grand stand seats are to be erectedime quality 1s on“. fa“; Olym- rqot and each seat is to be sold. The re icmp; an» in good condition. Apples viewine stand for visiiihe iliiidaisiaro in excellent condition and the and officers will be at the City Halliyyeyd y, 5p ppr (‘fiflt of average. General John J. Pershing is to lead ‘Peaches, pears and plums are mov- ihe parade from the start to this ing freely: yields are estimated at point, where he will leave his car 75 per cent, 90 per cent. and U It is estimated that not more than 35 per cont of the tomato crop will be used. owing i0 the @105- ing down of cannorics. A izcod crop MANILA, Sept l4—A broken year the parade was six hours in and take a place in the stands. per cent of average, respectively. x riati 1' f day loul viv [IEO Sti ;Bri irgl To) 10!‘ 3W1 " i.- - nausea-unis‘ 375:5, ._;'..-..'..'.'.- w; ... -... 1 -. "m. L,_,. . _¢~§--_-¢-