.: 2: -..::.-.::- -. :'.;p;y;,.-H V " THE GUARDIAN iauniiotea at-cry via-an Inanuu ll iu Prlncn sum. cm.-;......tnwn. r r:.i. by the Thunium cum:-my l.Id.. M King St. w.. '1'urm-lu. ...,,,.,e,t om”, .25 University Town Bldg, ”(4-iv-rs Prince Edwlrl llllld LII: ha DI-" htlilnr. Frank Wulkcr t..-in-1.-I Manager. Ian A Human Iiclitlit-1 l.i11'dIllIll Daily fxewxpuper Puhlislurrs Association ll:-mhcr at me L";-nndian Plum llvtiilwr Autlll Hureau uf nu-ulnuuus .-.-4 at suinnieraidu. Managua Iutl ilbcrlon. .l as Sctontl Class Mail M” the Post Otficl ll:-pzirlxnent. muma. (lll-illtilll-ltiiiu. 51.200 lwf an- utliIP1"r ill F. iii. 1. 59.00. other Province: Ind ll s. 312.00 per annum it miniinersidc nuui. "Tile strong:-.st iuemory is weaker than - the weakest ink." NIONID.-ll, Alli. 29. 19.3.") The Lane Memorial Alllioitgli he incd his adult life in the l'nitt-(l Slates. Franklin K. l.:iiie uas an Islztiitler, and his outstantluig c.ii'e-er in public life reflects lltttill tits native Province and coun- ll"). Tile memorial iiiiveiled at lie- smtlc by the lilx'ltll'l(' and ll-itiiiiiiont Floard of ('tinatla is a fit- l.l'.l( reonglllllnn Of ll'll5 fFlt'i. In l'lil trtvtlo read at yesterday's . Dr. (lheatham s-ttiphasized not l.i-lllPlS promtiieiice as a --i-i"---man. but the fact that he put the .ipil'llllHl before the economic or the political in human affairs. In this matter he was I true son of the Ill.'111S9. ill one of the national parks he helped to found. says Dr. Cheatham, there is I mountain peak which ll)-tars his name. Franklin Lune has no such cmtstanding monument in this country, but his name has been a household word here, and the memorial at Desable will serve to perpetuate it, and bring also to mind the achievements of many other Prinoe Edward Islanders abroad. who have risen to promin- ence in ohurch and state. in the pro- 'f9sSlf)ll5 and in various other walks of life. We like he think that some part, 84 least. of their sttooo-as has been clue to early ttphringins: and as- soci'-itions. Our only l'PETFl is that the opportunities they found so far afield have not been available It home. Perhaps we can change this trend in the years to come. and cap- ifaliye to our own advantage on the brains we now produce for export. cretlit fillets 091'?- gtv mi. p 1'. F. Hurricane Defences (lite of the lessoiis lP:ll'll(”tl from the lllll'l'lt'allP damage in the lliiited States in recent weeks is the inade- tlll7'l".l' Of the riot)-iiso-' ttgtiiiisi this kind of vtsitzitioit. The l liiiterl Status is not alone in lt-arniiig litm defic- lent are its systems of riot":-rise against such storins. (latuitia has the sharp Min-tiit-iitie of l-lurricane Irlazel lieI'orc it. This nation, no less than its iieiizlilioip iiiitst be prt-puretl to spoiitl more on weatlicr lilo-ai'cli and wzirntiig as wcll as on pltysical pi'olct-live nicasiires. The Now York 'llinie.-' takcs as its tcxt the 'it'llIEP which had struck nit-lropolitart New York in lilo wake of liitrrit-aiic ('oiiniP a week eai'Iicr, and notes the t'orecast of that day's Vl'H:llllPl'I ”(Tloudy with occasioital slitiiwrs." It feels that much more lillttl'lllHllt')ll is iteotlerl about the up- pPl' air riitrrt-nts and that wltt-re ltiiowlvtlgv is lackiiig in-st-ai'cli must lie ttntlcrltiktiii. "Lack of titlt-qitaln fiiuiitr-e," stiys the Tiiiit-s, ”is l'llP pdiil-ipnl roarl-lilnck to iiiiugro-ss in l'llll'l'l(':ltll'l'(N(-'2l1'llll. For oxaniplo, tho ntitirc Wt-atlit-i' Bllftlflll ;ippropi'i- alum this year is loss than 3 par t't'l'll of tho rl;uit;tg(' rloiiti by (';u'ol- l'.'tlii.i and llrtzcl in loss tlitiii six uctilxs last fall." I-Lit-n while thosc words iw-re lin- ing written, another lllI1'l'lt"rlll9, Diane, was apparently blowing itself otit to the south and already its obit- HA1") itotict-s were lining writtt-ii. Yet tlic in-4-lwiitl lirouglil tlrt-iicliiiig rains and tlcyastating floods to at least six noi'tlic;istcrn states. Once again warnings were inadequate. Some 200 people have died and property losses are immense. Foroknowledge of the likely be- havior of I hurricane can do much to prest-we human life. Other meas- ures. such as permanent flood con- trol works. are of course necessary to minimize the effects of torrciitial rains that are frequently its by-pro- duct. Encl Of A Struggle A little news item from Vancou- Ver provides another reminder of the almost universal authority of technology and utilitarianism in this age of the machine. For something like ten years campers and fisher- men at Buttlo Luke, not far from the city, have Ind lighting hedo- af the Brltkh Columbia Power b rub the level of the mm by fifteen feet for the purpose of meeting growing demands for elt-c'ri(-al They were joined in their campaign by members of an organization railed the Conserva- tion lmzigiir. ulio claimed that the propo.-zcd dcvelopiitvm. would not only spoil the site for camping and fishing but would be a serious detri- ment to fish propagation. In any case. they argucd. there are many places, lcss attractive titan Bottle Lake. where new sources of power might be developed. The dispute has been a long and bitter one. with both groups calling on expel"! engineers from time to time to bolster their respective argu- ments. Provincial authorities hesi- tatctl to issue an edict one way or the ollit-r: and iintlcrstaiidalily. for of coiirse there were votes as well as logic on both sides of the contro- vei:-ay; to I government-any gov- Pl'lllllHlll---lllkil is I matter worth poiitloriiig and wt-igliing with care and discretion. However. the de- cision could not be delayed indefin- itely: and at long last it has been liantlod down. By that wonderftll device. an order-iii-council. the Pro- vincial Cabinet has given the go- ahead signal to the Power Commis- sion. Buttle I.ake will soon take its place among the producers of in- dustrial power, before which 30th century man bows down in adora- tion. No doubt, it had to be. But, uiilt-sx one is greatly mistaken. many an outdoor enthusiast will be glad to hear that his fraternal brothers around Buttle Lake held on for ten years in what they must have known in their hearts was I lost cause. A Submerged City Cyprus, considerably in the head- lines of late owing to the demand of the Greek population for reunion with Greece. possesses I small edi- t.-ibn of the fabled Atlantis in its lost oity of Salamis. The city originated in the early history of the Aegean as: a colony of the island of Salamis, forever famous as the scene of the pflll Pl". disastrous naval defeat of the Pers- 1 ians under Xerxes in 480 BC. began prior even to the naval battle, for Greek traditions place the found- ing prior to the Trojan war. It was the city state of the enterprising prince Idxagoras. whose independent rule is the sole title of Cyprus to be coiisiderr-rl Greek. The (7) priot Salamis remained an iittportaitt city and harbor till. in the lotirtlt ccittury AD. it was destroy- ed by an cartliquake. For ten cen- ttiiitw the ruins remained a monit- inc-iu to its l'a1'lliSllP(i greatness; till in the loitrte-enth century I tidal waie subnu-rgod most of the former city area. It still rests. as does the fabled Atlantis. beneath the sea. Tlic British today are merely the lust of at long mcccssion of rulers of (Iypi-us.' but--unlike their predeces- sors-tliey have been taking an Part In Born-xnnndrnll BLOOD DONOR DRIVE Sir,--lllay 1. through the 001"- mns of your valuab" newspapor call the attention of all good citwens to the Red Gross Blood Donor (ll1nIl'S which Ire to take place at five different centres during the first l'ntn' days ill llllll week. and urgc maximum attend- Ince at them Ior the following reasons.- V l. Princr hidxsani island is oval 1.000 bottles in debt to the Mn!- . . i ' ' 11.11 "and atients The colony in Cyprus seemingly i "me Depm M mun p in our Island Hospitals continue to need blood at the rate of 250 bottles per month. The situation is "DESPERATE" ---- it. needs ever)" i one's support to make it. possible to continue this service. Those who can't he donors should be booster! and get others interested. 2. This free blood transfusion set-i' c is for the benefit of ALL. and for this reason ALL should f c e l pruiiding it of the Canadian Red Cross. 3. It's very easy to be I Blood Donor - it you are in good health and betwccn the ages of 18 and 65 years. 4 There is no pain or no . after effects of going blood. The active iittcrest in the submerged city. 1 Local divers have already traced 1 two TYlhjt)l' harliors. one a C0mmer- . cial port. the other a naval base; and a team of British underwater ex- ploi'e.rs will try to further chart the liarliur mills and extend operations into water as deep as ten fathoms. (frititvitlr-ittly uith this. work. the (Typrits department of antiquities will PM'.'-ll':llt-' the portion of Sstlanus bttrit-d urtrior the land. The exploration has. it is said, a coiiimc-rcial angle, which will take llic form of a search for sunken ships and valuable cargoes. It seems that in 1371, after the Turks looted the city of Nicosia. three ships laden with plunder. including valuable art. obj:-cts, blow up off shore from Sal- amis; and storms and naval battles at various times have taken toll of ships in the surrounding waters. EDITORIAL NOTES Maurice Maeterlinck, Belgian dramatist and poet, born this date 1862. I O D Ir-elandeis have at long last got around to giving the Irish their due. Their schoolbooks now give the in- formation that Queen Aud, widow of Olaf the White, bmught the first. settlers to the island some time be- fore the Norsemen arrived. 0 C C If Senator Neubergergof Oregon has his,way, party campaign funds will soon be a thing of the past. He is going to ask Congress to enact,- legislation which would apportion funds from the U. S. Treasury on I 50-50 basis to both major parties. It is not exactly I new proposal, hav- ing been suggested by President Theodore Roosevelt in 1908. .1. small auiounl taken is cumpletely replaced by lite avt.-i'zll!.e DEF-S0" "l forty -eight hours 5. Every (lay fusions dramatically save llvel pat-Iiciilzirly of those who are se- vt-rcly injtired in accidents. those who liavc sew-re hacmorrhaile. jaundiced babies whose blood must be replaced inuucdiately after birth. those who have operations which cannot hr performed with- out blood to replace that which is lost during the operation. Blood is also used in a great many cases as a Ilu-rapy which lessens the period of liospilalizatinn and con- valescciice and makes it possible for the patient to resume his or her earninll power at a much i earlier datc than would otherwise personally responsible -for i - through the medium : blood tranI- .- l he possiblr This represents a I savlrs: on all sides. - .1 ll Tlic R l o o d Ti':uistusI(in . l S('l'll(T also provide: - free of any i cliaugo - tnmplr-to Rll investigation fltr pr:-gmnu uomon at the rcdtu-st of the faintly pliysictan. 7 Tlimiks to mmlit ' research. atlrltlioual uses for blood and pro- ducts tlcrivr-rl dm-r-loporl- gamma the provoution and treatment of niczisclx and infectious jaiinclice. and in lessening the paralytic ef- fects of polio - fihrinolzen to help in controlling severe bleeding. and um albumin for the emergency trt-atnient of burns and serious inlury These are but I few of the import..t uses that are being made of blood and its components but should be sufficient to make us all realize how important it is for this province to provide its share in keeping this service run- ning smoothly. Let us hope that by : Thursday evening of this week the province's objective of 1350 will not only have been reached but surpassed. That this can be done was proved at tlw June Clinic. and this success can be easily dupli- cated this week. 1 Im. Sir. out. TRFZDERIC A. LARGE) Provincial Chairman Red Cross Blood Donor Committee. ACTRESS 'r'iu'-zs PILLS NEW YORK IAPl -Melinda Mar- key. of film star Joan Bennett. was in critical condition Sunday from an overdose of sleeping pills following an argument with her husband. po- lice 11:1. The 21-year-old brunette remained in I su.-ml-comItoIe state It Belevue hospital and officials advised the husband. DonIld flay- den. 19. nottomoveliertoIvrl- vale tnalllullon EAY .NTll0NY T0 HAIRY IIOLLYWOOD tA'Pi ,lctress M"iniI. Va.i Daren '”! sais ""' ill marry hanrllowrlrr Ttay Anthony ln Toledo. Ohio Monday. from blood havep glnhuhn for" pretty actress-model daughter i Speaking (lfg low Ikauge I part coincidence on tiny n this buninou of In queer surnames which persist h getting into the news! It hII been reported. for instance, that. I Mr. Wren has succeeded I Mr. Spar- row II chairman of the council It .wIltIrweight champion I HHMII VII ' T... Bnham. Cl1ing- Oueer Names of Great ford, BIIII. once hId I baker nImod Cakcbread Ind South Wales In undertaker named River Jor- dan. There luve boon 'doct.orI umed Pill, butoheu called Mut- Hadham. Devon. A Miss Sharonl tnu.,I policeman numcd Copp, slaughter in; been elected beautyl and I surgeon with the name of queen of I States, safety conference. One of the most entertaining in- stances of an apt name oe- currod in Johannesburg last you when I nan nnmod Johnny Glllon was fined 1 pounds for drunken- neu. To the prisoner It the bar the magistrate Inidz Michigan. United Gutwell. Dunstable wuther station I ”iI said to have I Mr. Snow and I Mr. Hale. O O 0 Iomolhnos there are odd com- biunions. M I dinner name given to holders If the Victoria Crou. Cpl. Vule sat with Pvt. Sage and in. Onions. One wonders if feath- Meckcally Speaking lHOW 1'0 PREPARE CEREAL Very often, cereals Ire the fiut solid food I baby gets. Your baby needs them, for the starch they provide gives him energy. By the time he II three month: old. or even earlier if your doctor advises it. you can begin feeding him oatmeal and farina. If you are going to prepare these cereal feedings yourself, here's how to do it. You'll need the following: One level tablespoonful of fI- rina or other cereal. or two table- spoonsful of oatmeal. Four ounces lb, glass) of milk. Four ounces of water. One-half teaspoon'ul of sugIr. A pinch of salt. Level Measures Use a knife to level ytiur spoon measures Pour the milk and water into the upper part of I double boiler and warm it. Then slowly add the cereal, salt and sugar. stirring all the time. Cook the mixture directly over the flame for about 10 minutes. stir- ring it to prevent burning. Next. rook it in ally requires about one-half to one hour It's a llll easier. however. to give your infant dry cereals espe- cially made for babies They are easily prepared in a few minutes. Cooking instructions are on the labels. Generally. add three to four tahlcspoonsful of warm milk mixture for each talilesptionful of dry cereal. If your baby is breast fed. and equal parts of milk and water boiled for three minutes. Add this mixture whilc it is still hot. Question and Answer Mrs. C What is the rause of cracking bum-s'.' Answer Cracking in the joints is probably due to the fact that there has been I disturbance known as fihrosllis in the liga- i ants. This may cause the liga- ments to become somewhat shorter. Whcn the bones move, the ligaments are stretched. which may cause the cracking sound. There iI no need to worry about this condition as it usually will cause no trouble. Still An island (Sydney Pout-Recordl The Canso Causeway-now that it has been piper-piped into con- tinent-wide recognition-is the sub- ject of I rash of published oom- menl about Cape Breton Island no longer being In island. This island now lI being described II a "man-made peninsula." Fiddle- stzicks. Peninsula? Don't no telling t it to the Marines they know other- ”1 suggest you change your in: were worn at the Poi-thcawl i Wlst Those who believe so are in- name to 'Pinc', which Inv II- mind you not to drink Io mueli in future." U 0 0 Sometimes advertisers make use of I happy combination of bizarre surnames. Thus London's biggest caterers last year brought together I Mr. Fried. I Mr. Egg. I Mr. Ham and I Mr. Bacon for I celebration breakfuf to mark the opening of I west. end "bacon i and egg” restaurant. How happily some names go with their owner! jobs! Thu: I former Rusdak Invisible - wedding Iomo years ago of I Miss lPlioIIInt Ind I Mr. Partridge. when Mlu Dove was I bridesmaid. Oountlou liIvI vied with one In- othor h possessing the oddeIt names. Here Sussex must enter I firm claim to fame. "Solid Sus- sex" names have included Pitch- forlu, Slybody, Devil. Llu, Sweet- ume. Juglery, Ilollowbone, Fldgo. Padge. Beap Ind Whiskey. . Sussex, too. shared the strange Puritan fuhion of lacking theo- logical descriptions in rustic sur- names. Harvest wnnopqrmriou Under the hot sun of southern RusslI he grain hIrveIt in coming in. and with it. I political harvest of incIlculIbie dimensions. The Russian peanut may not lunow it, but the long-1-Inge plans of his government. perhaps of world mmunism itself. are naked on In agricultural revolution of which the current crop is the first lnItIlment. Mr. Khlushchev, I plumber by trade, has risen to power among Stalin's heirs II the expert who can reconcile he contradiction: of the communilt agriculture Ind cure I food crisis now publicly Id- mitted. While delivering In emer- gency increase in food production this year. the Khrushchnv plan promises to complete Stalin's orig- inal program I few years hence by converting the peasant into I kind of factory worker and the farm into I smoothly-working cog of the central Itgte machine. Prob- ably no dictatorship in history has undertaken I project so fast. com- plex and doubtful. Can Mr. Krush- chav succeed where even Stalin failed? - i The Krr.-mlin's anxiety on ti: 1! score wIii indicated last spring by its loaded and mialudingly optim- istic figures issued for public con- sumplion but then followed by I sudden silence in the prose. Mun- while. the government bu pren- cd its program i'l two directions. Every existing auto and private in m in under orders to increase th s yeIr's output by expanded acreage and more Intensive culti- vation. A huge new Io:-cage lI the east. which has never felt the plow before. in being colonlud by I mass movement of settlers com- parable to the oonquut of North American West half I century Igo. The tecbnlcIl objective: of this program are to break now had. to produce corn II food for llvutock. Ind to complete the mechnlutlon of agriculture everywhere. Mr. KhI'lJShCllOVl8 lmmodlue tIrutI Ire ImbltlouI- I doubled neI! Ind milk production by mo, Iomo seventeen mllllon becura of can this year In IgIlnIt leII thIn four mllllonl In 1054. Ind nineteen mil- lion extra nectIreI of grain cur- rently planted on old pIsture lInd. But myslcal Ind ntatlntlcal ob- jectives Ire only the outer Iurflco of I pollllcnl Ind bumIn upbeIv- Il designed to ti-Ituform the In- clent life of the Russia soil. The farmer ll well Is the turn fl in he mecliunlud. re-molded II I IervInt of the ante. This will tIkI PINTAGON ITIIP WASHINGTON (AP)-Tile Putn- gou II building in own helicopter lmdlng In-lp In IIHII tIxlcIbI won't spoil the gun. The con- crete strip lneuuring ltli by ill feel la now under cmutructlon and will be ready for III urht II lept- I Illbd. time but the tltlmale obJecEve is tlon of the Iovkboni or state farm. It is because the Russian Gov- ernment il so deeply involved in this culmination of the 1917 revolu- tion. Ind becIuIe Io much do- ponds on its outcome. that one all! rndily believe that some years of stability in foreign affairs are ur- gently required by the men of the Kremlin. Thus their peace offen- sive ln diplomacy may be seen In the counterpart of the offensive against the earth and against the stubborn indlvldunlints who it 8 v e long tilled it, in their own fashion. oloIr. It i the complete and all the print: furm, the full substltu- . vlled to witness the opening of the Cause Navigation Canal which verily ll terms of tidal flow If III! sea water keeps Cape Breton an island. 'I'hey,wiIl see the bridge hot spans the canal. swing open to permit the passage of an ocean vessel. and there will be many Iuch passage: between the Gulf of st. Lawrence and the Atlantic to the south. The causeway-crosser won't complete his orossing to this ialand until the ship has passed and the bridge swings back again on high- way position. A fact 3 I fuct. Period. The Age Old Story This is the book If the genui- Iilous of Adun And Aqua lived II hundred and thinly yuan, Ind begat I Ion ll lulu own like- ness. Ifter his image; and called his name Seth: Ind the why: of Adult after he lIId begotten Seth were eight hundred years: and be bent Ion: Ind daughters. SITTDJGBURNE. England (CF) -Workmen unearthed 14 skelet- ons near I chalk quarry outside this Kent town. Archaeologists believe the site was I Roman burial ground. VI-I YOUTH AND AGE When 1 wu young?-Ah. woeful When' Ali. for the change 'l.wixt New and Then! , 'HItI breathing house not built will hIn This body Nut does In grievous wrong, O'Ir Iery cliff: Ind gilt-tarlug sands, Row llghuy than it bod Ilong:- Like those trim I . unknown of you. On winding lIkII Ind rivers wide. TbItIIk MIN ofIIil ox-oIr. Thatgdfeect no spite of wind or 1 Noughtcurodthlubowforwlnd orwoa Wlsullloutla IndIllvodlI't lo- AUTHORIZED & DEALER Llcansod Wlrliig contractors REFRIGERATION We sell. install and ser- vice refrigerated counters. walk-in coolers. also House- hold refrigerators. C. G. E. Vacuum Clelnor Ind Polisher Rental Service. MOTORS & APPLIANCES We sell and repair Ilt motors. walbers and electrical appliances. Storey Electric III Gr-Iflou street Iulhu. i IIIIIII 'lIylIr Coleridge PHONE 8237 your old bill: a l wit an NFC loin OI&Ulmuuudn&nmim.mmQ ';g.,nQ&u Houudiold Rance ndiout ...-d"'.".,&w,,.y.n(-y-&vIrnaInbIhrcpoy.SIIrI fIIII&IlnIIionE'C..PboIIIteouenIodI)d IONIVCUNYOUVHQW w. I. whubv. M-0-ow I I0 Croat Course In. who I. HM” "'7 CWIILOYTITOWN: P.I.l- the double : boiler until it is ready. This usu- 1 hp 1 Gun-dlnn. NOTES BY THE WAY TIIII couple who DOOIIC Metal: providing I robot to kiss you, . . . I p lostl-nafhconlxnheeueilt. but added "'1' " hum” ' .”'"d"” '" tlml up u Stutford. omrio, could W" fl” "5 ”,'"c- The re-on .. luvo done worn. After Ill. they "ill" n” he” c”"l.ld9'" "1-it mum kw. "dad up It nnuord. bell find markets for it at home England-.9t.CIt1iIrlneI Standard. "ll ”,l”'”'d- "95 P1'0l18bl)' Hutu. There: a growing izeneraunn of with the Fall fair season under-lfishermen who really prefer pad. way and pie-eating contests among gels to fishing itself. - Milwau- the many interesting events. I 11- kee Journal port of I huge pie in timely. At. H the Monroc County Fair. near. Am l MOI 0!! my rt-cnrtI'.''' - Rochester, N.Y., I pic 15 foot intasked I Prisoner 1" magisn-aw. diameter was baked and served. teourt. The question and its tim- -The pic was part apple and part W112 Indicated lhat he "had .1 cor- peach and cherry, providing 2.500 951" Bvilllalnlance Wllh law and servings. Baked in I huge grill court PT0t39dlll'e. however acquir- over 86 gas burners and under 20 ed. All accused person is not tried infra-red lImpI. It had 150 pounds on his record. Each charge stands of flour, 110 pounds shortening. on its own; but if convicted hi, four pounds salt, 22 quarts of wat- rc.:ird ll properly taken into (''in. 1 er. 760 pounds of fruit filling andysideration by magistrate or ludge l 330 feet of pastry strips for thelln passing sentence. - Port. Ar. top in addition to the shell.-St. -thur News-Chronicle Thomas Times-Journal. There remain those um,-gnu, . Hun-lcune rIl.u II not the recofdlpeople who think it is fun to for density in the United States. speed up to prevent someone else The ralniest single minute in the from turning safely into an Inter- Weather Bureau's history occurred section n-1 who refuse to am. 011 April 5- 1935- When in 30 590- signals of their own l1ltL'lllll)ns. onds almost two-thirds of an inch There are gem umge tdtms who I fell at 0Dlfl'5 C8mP- Calllr H0"-.Ire willing to risk several Iivg. Mc.. in only 42 minutes-on June ta. gain . few mjnutgs ma. nm. 22. 1947. was drenched by I foot haven-1 30. mp brains ,0 use (0 of rain. and Smlthpart. Pu, by 30.8 good advantage These an, the inches in four and a half hours on penpk. who pass on ,.un.l.s mm M July Ill. 1942. Among high figures similar stupid mugs. ,. Sp Jnhn. for the Northeast. which was ul.- N,” terly unprepared for what hit it in the last few days. are: Boston. One Ieu VIII low Irhdmllll 11.91 inches of rain in 40 hours. through We country. these dnyu, and Hartford. 12.12 inches in 24 And on I great many farm. the hours --New York Herald-Tribune. old hand pump has disappeared .' - t, This is becoming ti push button :Lc.f1li:,-yp:i,l!.:l-J: ofl vfatglnle villi: world much faster than most of farms hm", 91.6,,-k.,11y.0pem,,d us imagine. In Ladysmitli - Smith pumps and, in 3 In" many on” Africa, not Wisconsi -- a retired their water "stem is P,-awn", meteorologist has just taken out equal to that of the my 0, mm 1 I patenl on a new type of fishing home. Not only are the homel rt ' It's automatic and brings in thus served. but the water gen”. fish by itself. This strikes us as ally la pumped throughout the p the pinnacle of gadgetry. Now it gm-,1”, Wu; 1340 hm aw.” i,, someone would invent I self-cash many cued. In fact there In lnll rod I fisherman wouldn't have those farm: where then lItter to move a muscle. Nor would 'ie buildings have running water while jhave much fun. Landing a fish the house does not.-Sherbrooko lautomatically is something like Record. Y J - mil. 5:14 cil- - I it for Liv tn: '.i':)'i'.'l. mwt ”.0C.Vt'v" '- utli Ni HAi ".7" g: ill .i gtti PROFESSIONAL CARDS BARRlsii:ks. SOLICITORS. Etc.wJ;a TRi.Mstneson&itT-Sic: . OPTOMSETRISTS, -me -rm"s"ms s--m , . u eson k(' 150 Richmond St. & g D .1. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. r. c.. aurcuasou. u.o. g 105 Queen BC. Phone 4232153 Grafton St. Dial ttlfl M. A. Farmer, Q.C., 1.1.3. .1. A. Carrutheis. Il.()..m Bunk of Commerce Bldg. Km! 81- 0"" " Allis M. Gilli: u..n. - Byron 4- G3;-It:40-D-. no Rlchcizlilond su ' out 4143' ELLlF"l 3” 9”" ”"" A. Walthen Guudet, u..n. co,:;,sk?,?Yl”3uf,fg... Phllllpp Bldg. 111 Bin om” "H;JE.:u”g475s-w Pnlmer I llaslnm H. J. Mabon. R.0. E I Ink If Non scam um. 1M0I"I"' Pt ' ' Ihtllelon. Peske & obon ' 133 CHIITD-PRACTOR : Dr. W. B. CIrscbl.Iu Gm CIIII. B. MGQIIAM, ILA. I G. Keith ricuarti. ICC .kHIIi In Dill Illl I; ARI. M.Il.A.I.6.. WM dummernlde. P.E.I l)lIl -- (YIII-lotletowl. iuesdnyf "'"' MIeP'hII I Tninor 1! Qug I. Dial 4131: Prlthn. DIII Mill CHARTERED ACCOUNTANH IIIDONALD, 0038!! I 00. one Ila. ' Charlottetown Itfijji nbfooann I oourA1T" 16 (iron! George St. CIIHIOIIOIII ' my III - In P- 0- W "1 ABIIIUBJ. Gm lloetrlc I Q-use-. hh"1nlI-all-.:II-' U"'T