mllllioiierowil allllanlill I’!!! (II oclvnnrrl mlllrll lLllLv tfonnilrn U017] 86.00 Camilla van: H!!! fllll In hf? Pulled gel-morn and (\I| elifiav-n. cumin-i- n. Ill-Lille ) . l » ream" and nianpr_'.|. u. "IIFIIIIY ‘ . FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1929 l b lvr-rlu-uidvnl-i-J. It. Burrvtl. Ilrrrntary-Llc-iit. Pol. l). A, Mm klnllnn. l) cl. fi. Ammo-inn lf-Mn-r-lr. K. (‘nu-rm IUFEIVISED PLAYGROUNDS In a short time the siuiuncr holi- days will be with us, and the school children will have overfiowed into the sweets. The matter of providing safer playground-s than iilu streets, l has been discussed _y-r'.lr txflcr yrar, out so far it has resulted only in dis- wssion. . There are few cities of the SIZE‘ of ‘Iharlottetoixn that are wlihoilt play- grounds and there is no reason why! his city should b: WlZllDlI! one. We‘, rlave a. number of squares in the city; my one or more of which could b?‘ ittcd up at l.:tie expense as a mic edéoz i little ones. Children of ill ages .t.st have outdoor exercise ind in many parts of the city nt iresent the. only available place for ihls is the street. here have already been many acct-I lelzhrsolme ct them fatal. and IIYNICI‘? xrescrit conditions we ifhefs. The cost oi a supciwissd troimd need not be excessive. i. .'*'.\' Pry-nu“: of tlik; may expect‘ p‘.1i_v- l rwings. one or two slides, a .-.\ andpila‘, and a stlpervisor would b: nactiaally all .!iat l5 HFJCCSJLITY. . I Parents of little children who hay: lo play grounds except. the streets. vould gladly contribute or this plirp Owners cf auloliio-l, wiles would, we fecl tribute to any szlicme that would them of the cvcr-prcsozit ‘fear of to a fluid m». silrc. ivillinz. lining over a t~llil.l clhtllo street. rd citizens i;enc.“allv whoa": sympa- hles are with Li!) children would no loubt. assist in the undsrtaking. Eaerwone recognizes the nced of upervised playgrounds but what is ylclrybodys business is iiobodys bus- What is nceded in this case ‘is Oflgononevtx) lead, to formulate a de-l lnéto 1min, mid appeal to the cili- aniiiwe are quite sure the citi-j, ‘qmyfviliiioil in line. iii-re l~.,.-.h op-, piltugity for some pliilanthro lrln the gratitude 0f childrrn flilfl ‘helrvpnrerits. and civzens generally ‘Hi0 will start it? to‘ WEAK-KNEED POLICY r Senator Bar-ah of Idaho, on: 0 he most colistiicurlus iLllrt-s iii thr- Jnlted States Senate, declared i'cc-, nlily that he would support reason- .blc tariff increases on agricultural. moducts. This. he said. ivould prob-l vbly be disadvantageous to Caiiadi BM, but his responsibility iii-as to his‘ .vwn‘coilntry and cillliltliilllfildllllSi. 00k oiit for tlis-liisclil-s. 1 This is not the altitude of Mlfii ufaclcenzic King and his covcrnliienti Phcy profess to be afraid that, lI: hey raise the tariff on United States‘ iroducls, the people of that calm-r ‘ry will be offended, and probably ‘also the tariff againstCancda still, iigher. What a contcmptiblc mug jude for the governnic-lii 0|‘ any self- fespecting country to assume! What respect can the pcoplc of the United, States or of any other country, have‘ tor such pusillanimous legislators? 1 'The United States is framing its ariff to suit its own pecptz, ivithou: my regard to the tariffs of other Bountries. They found by experience that their protective tariff had silmé ilated industry and developed it lin- ll the country is now the grcatcstf ndustrial country in the world. They ire now going to apply the protect»! ye tariff to agriculture, with the? Hew no doubt. of making the United Rates one of the greatest agricultur- -~.l countries in the world. if not the ‘greatest. In order to do thii, they!’ purpose denying, except over a high; Fnriff wall, access to the afrriciiluiral uct-c of other countries. Encour- t .- by the meek attitude of the ‘ - dim government. they also hope, retain and gobble up the markeml the Canadian farmers both at,’ ~-~ 01nd abroad. I Mr. Mackenzie King announced _~~ I the present session that ihe A Ipollcy was "low tariff and whim waiting." What he meant low tariff is eully understood.‘ _ a manning of watchful waiting ls s l l \ 4 ‘lo char, union he meant it 0o ‘ inn. he would do lumethlng -l llllllllhlllhllldllllklOoh- ' v carried out the pro-electing ‘stations, the low ivzromise of President Hoover, to in- crcase the tariff on agricultural pro- dut-is. ' The time to ilLi\€ clone something ivas when he discovered, as he musz, indlistri’ ‘l have, that United Slates liiul algrit-llllllre were injuring those 0' his own (uilllllPy. To do something littcr the Americans have givcn their tariff another upward turn will look like the very thing he feared being accilscd of. namely, retaliation. RAIL VS. AUTO On this side of the Atlantic, the automobile is. entering into riirzilry with the railway. Hundreds of thoils- ands of autos are turned out each mat“ by huge factories all over the l-czitinciil. Irccli in this small prov- ince we are the possessors of, roughly, Naturally competition between the 5.000 of these machines. tiierc is two fwrrhs of rapid transit and while it has not yet assumed an acute form on the American continent with its it is sufficiently great to cause alarm to railway-cir- t-Ics» izi Europe, and especially in France. There. railway officials dc- ciare, revellers use their lines in de- bcundles space-s. creasing numbers each war. This is. say their critics, became of ‘the friv capacity of the trains, the inflexibility of the sys- tem and the undue time taken over the journey. Paris liar. only 8 sta- ticzis, izhlle r1 t): or more higliwmvs run ili imiolzs F‘i'oui ClllilOIl5~°""-M8.TII3 to '...ers rc- qilires eleven hours by train; the auto docs it in six. And so the crit- iss conclude that. the railway i: moribund. To them says M. Bcrzhaud: "You ilrrgratefill wretclies! Have you then forgotten how the iuiilraall has irausformctl the world? H25 the au- tomobile hitherto perform-rd tlic slightest piibli? service? L; it capable of any?“ Aliri his opinion is that the ‘precise schedule‘ of the train, ihc few personnel required to carry vast crowds and freight. the strength of its niat-liiii<-ry' and miiing; sloz-k, its: orgiiliicdlihli. its stability and its or- der, will own with all the competi- tiCn ranged against it, ensure it a long future. THE UNIVERSAL LANGUAGE In a Canadian newspaper, a day or two ago, a correspondent made an appeal for litc study of I}; Jlflllllf“. ivllirh lie considt-‘rs the lauguzigtv-ii we can allow the title-which is des- tined to replace the confusion of tongues that the world suffers from at the llrasent day. This was DTPTISC- ly the claim of ‘the adherents of the older Volapuk ‘language,’ now rele- gated to the limbo of forgotten illlllflii. Meciiilvliile llie Englisliltiigilagc with its capacity for absorbiii. iid lisslmilaing to itself all that. ls best in 0th.": ‘tongues, gocs steadily on. incl'cr.."..tig in me and utility’. 1t acids lo ifl», lcnz list of glorious‘litcraturc, rcplec with an elegance ivliich riv- als that of France and is immeasur- ubly sailyil-riol’ to that of other coun- lrirs. Vfillllll, in its forms of speech, excels al others in condsnsalion; brevity in the spoken thought and in command, distinguishes it. Its virile sons have carried it to ‘the four cor- ners of the earth and its inlicrciit qualities have made it acceptable to all races. It marches on’ to the day when all the earth shall be of on:- tongue. As with all vital things, l‘. selects, i: rejects. it changes, it grows. Dia- lact expressions, foreign words, and sometimes even slung, become cur- rent usage. Others become archaic, then obsolete, It is the duly of all to ace that nothing is admitted that would tend to impair the beauty and lower the dignity of our glorious In- bcritence. It is interesting to note that din- lecic are nearly non-existent in Prirm Edward Island. Despite the heterogeneous mixture of races noth- ing is found that is comparable with the varieties of speech in the United States and in England: ‘M-‘nk wri- Pv/otes Bflhe Way Ikvlay, it is presumed the Saund-; crs Government aiitizipate “s. happy‘ issue (for the present: out of all their troublts" by the prorcgation. Th: lcgslattlre has been in session tar a month. probably the most hec- tic lnonh cf the parliamentary hLs- lory of the province. Perhaps the cutivard and visible sign that they have profited by the lessons taught iicni by ‘the Opposition ls the "lncnzifili; oi their ways" ’by gravel siurouziding the Provincial Building. In order that they may not appear " ' d scpulchres’ it will be for the Government and §',(‘.'i‘t'l'llIIli'lli supporters as individ- llill". and a whole i0 live up to ciltward appearances. llvL .;.>'dl'_\.' Pa‘. Al. the oulsct of this session sym- patliy was expressed in this column for Prctnicr Saiuzdcrs, and at the conclusion this sympathy is deepen- ccl. ..é load he has ‘to carry is more than lie can bear. The trouble lies in the fact, of course, that instead of keeping abreast of thc work through- out the year. zlie Government dilly- dallics. and ihcn when the House meets there is is an accumulation of "tell-o": ‘ and lack of information Qflti ]“t‘(‘1‘fil‘{‘.f'.ll8$.§ that makes the v. or}; t-i’ the sosmi tedious, exasper- atirig and to a certain extent useless. If the Government i5 to make any lieadivay in the coining year there niust be ‘llzas padding about by min- is.cr.; and li"2’.l.S of departments and more attention tn details of govern- ment between sessions. No progress was ever made in business or govern- ment by absciiti-tirlti. In auswcr in it calccliisl. a liitlo boy cncc answered: "A lie is an ever-present. help iii the time of the fact that the lrcubio 1S only niill- tipiicd \\‘l‘.€.‘il the lie is revealed, No statesman. and ccrtctiiily no reliable newspaper can afford t0 lie and re- tain p-ziblic confidence and respect. Sclnetinit-s one or the other. and srmcizziics bolli, are lllifllfi to appear to diverge from tlic truth. but usual- ly it is because their opinicns have been based on wrong data or erron- ccus information. To lie out cf whole cloth is so repugnant to political and icurnalltic ctliics a". to put the of- fender put the pale of respect- ability. "Rde I‘ is llli iiult- fur our esteemed (‘IIl‘-.ClI‘ll)Ol' that i: has. been made to appear to be guilty of ihe latter of- frncc iii its anxiety‘ to placate its Fort. Angus 4S party supporters and flCfCllfl the tjucciis County Liberal ‘membcrs. It har- got its thanks in its hands by being repudiated both by the ltfinister of Railways and Hon- est John Slilt iii". The Nice Mr. Jen- k ("11P is . ire a nice mall") WAS "Polly sir t when‘ the question The Faarioils veracity ivas under discussion in the House. Vvhat lire the taxpayers to think crsay about. the latest barefaced attempt to expio’ them by the Saunders Goijemment? We are to be asked to fool the bill for ihe $8.030 out of ‘ch tlic British Civil scr- irnL-t w..'i~ defrauded by the Andrciv Pl-a cr alitrlilll schnnc? The public as a rill: has sliort memory. but .. ‘cly the Saun ' s Government is presuming too n when it imag- that cv " body has forgotten about "the thri g town of Emerald" winch vxas to provide a. market for tlte crap the retired Civil Ser- v2.1‘- l “:- fo prcduce on_ the rancli- " \ rc t0 acquire from Ml‘. J inns Siiil-lti l‘ his bi-olhcr the Hon. Peter and Mr. Cccrgc and Mr. \'lm. lvlaync. Llr. Iilmchcll stayxi with Mi‘. J. E. S.ncle.ir from a Friday till Sllntl"_‘,'. and there the foundation v.11»; laid for the present incubus of SYIOO. T‘ foilmving confession by Mr. S.i it‘ before Commission in- vestigating the matter is sufiiciently illunuiatng to show who were to be the principal bcncficiaries lierc under Andrew Fraser Mitchell's scheme I-Ion J. I]. Sinclair I drove him lMitcheih to Emerald (from his farlii» cn Sunday morning; I think that WCllld b: from Friday till Sun- day morning ttliat Mitchell was his "3 guest». Q. In the meantime he had taken cpllons from those men (the 1W0 llfayncs and Peter Sinclair) A. Yes, I think sill: seeing Mr. Llaync. ‘ ' Q. Did he preys- thoso in‘ your ho "c? A. I think he did. At least he had copies in his bags. I dont’ think be prepared the‘ options there. Q. He would have to write them out? A. lqea. Q. He could ciily have bfaiilcs pre- pared in advance? A. Well, I think it was the blanks he had. They signed them there. Q. Did Mitchell procure all than men to sign? A. Ho had arranged with them to me:t' them cn Saturday a‘. m’: licusel \ ‘ ~ ijiu‘. - CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN '_THO,EILAND w: LOVE ax FRANK YEIGB ' Condensed Mm .. SUSANNA MOODIE Tobacco Among‘ The. Ilnldiclzgrlzs‘ curry-Cornelia II. Dam The Amerlcln Mer- Q. Who was Susanna Moodie? A- Busam“ M°°dl° Wm“ °"B °i That tobacco, unknown outside of F!" be“ descrllmflm 0! P1011591‘ 1156 America before the voyage of Colum- m 03mm“ under Fhelm” °t "R°“3h'| bus. had been widely used by the In- m3 “Vibe Bus“? m‘ Fqrest Pu“ mldians from time inimemo ial is evi-. Canada based on her experiences asi dense‘; by the frequent discovery o; an early settler in the Peterborough» crate organization and ino end of rules and regulations. At. the time ct planting. the official mixers of the various chapters met to discuss the site fpr planting and the formulae district. She was one of- the famous! pipes iii very ancient graves, and by for mixing the seed, which had been the apparent antiquity of many o! grevellud YD $316131 m V1510!!! during . l Strickland Sisters who enriched Eng: the myms. beliefs and ceremonies lish literature by their works. Bhewmmectcd with 14s us, ‘was also a- poet’ o‘ no mean orden‘ For the Indian everywhere it had and a ivriter on other phases of early ,3 ‘mystical charflcml. and was “Nah Canlidcian gfeklgoBlafi-DL-ll: new 13ml iably rcprcsciitctl be divinely created was ma '5 e e“ " e nee’ as and revealed to man. or first obtain- lexpressed m one of her “mg poems’ ed through some miraculous adven- ture of a legendary hero of the tribe. The‘ Indian, psycliically sensitive, ever conscious of the mysteries of . ‘the physical world in which he mov- M . . ,ers everywhere About him, in ani- gilssskgksfgetgclkltv“izjggoggitbghfirz: ,mal.=,' the wind.‘ the water, and in 8 "v ° l . ‘ th lill. d.‘- o ti f ~t- it smelt. Eskimos caught great. num- ‘ e m“ u n us opera ms o "a _ Jure which he realized himself so bers of eulachon, a. species o! smelt l l itifull, izn bl t in cs - whichJs sometimes called the candle- ‘fro, H", hfmierpg 11.23;,‘ 12°21‘; fish because it contains so much oll. imidst of a vast Spirit world, In ‘vmch The” they plamd m m!“ uned lWEVCII the suinllest insect could see heifcctiadroctliiis’ all-arm; m; n?‘ gfour days ahead.’ ‘and in which lie c By e pa“ n alone was powerless. But under the covered baskets on which the women ' effect of ‘mum, deep =narcotic droughts of tobacco smoke, he felt, i FISH-OIL ICE CREAM A TREAT Ice cream made from fish oil,‘ trod with bare feet to extract the oil. l During cold weather the oil h ‘lthe year. Periodic inspection o! the illeld, according to formula, and lniore ceremonies. at the harvest, as- sured the maximum quantity and magic quality of. the crop. Every self-respecting Indian pos- sessed his well-made pipe and relied upon the precious weed to refresh 'him, but in spite of its universal use ltobacco never lost. its supernatural character in the Indians mind. The sacred character of tobacco made the act of smoking a pledge of mut- ual confidence and the pledge of the _pcace pipe was seldom broken‘ until lthe white man came to teach the iindian the advantages of perfidy. This stranger profited no end from the exploitation of the Indians most _valued possession and in a short time ‘the cultivation and use .0! tobacco yliad spread around the world. Spanish, French and English all ‘claimed ‘to have been the first to in- “ln the pleasant dizziness that over- ltroduce it into Eilrope. Jean Nicot, trouble." Thr- fallacy is of course, in ‘ much the consistency of butter. To . make the ice cream, the oil was melted, and sug added. then stirred in. Sweden claims that; more than 2.- 503.000 swedish cream separators are new in use in all parts of the world. A. We did not mention ‘George May-he's name; it was Mr. Mayne and my brother. signed options. A. George lvI-ayne was not in the matter at. that time? Q. George‘ Mayne says he never saw Mitchell until last August? A. Yes. Q.’ Who was it made the bargain ivitl-hGeorge Iifayne about taking the option? A. Quiie probably he met the oth- er men in the meantime. Q. The other men did not say so ili their evidence? Did you have any talk with George Lfayiie on behalf of Mitchell? A. Yes, I did, in the presence of William Mayne and Peter Sinclair. Q. And you made the bargain wilh George Mayne for lviitchell? A. Well it was not one any more than another; it was Just a general discussion. llcini Mayne and made a bargain with him. himself, and your brother Peter. George Mayne says that he did not see lvlitchell at that time. Who was it acted on behalf of Mil- chell and made the bargain with Geogre Mayne? A. The three of us-were present and Mr. Mayne was there. I think that was at William Mayne's house. Q. George Mayne says he ‘signed the option at your house. A. Well, piWhapg that might have been so. I think perhaps it. was at my house that option was completed. Q. Who filled out the option pap- er for George Mayne? A. I think it was my daughter, to be exact; ‘ Q. That was done after Mitchell left? A. Yes. Q. Who witnessed it’! A. I dmft know that. Q. It must have been somebody in ' your house? A. Scmebody that was there at that time, yes. Q. Did hc make any proposal to you to buy your place? ‘ A. Yea, similar to the other ones. Q. Did you make any agreement with him? A. Just the same agreement that was made with the other men. Q. He look an option on your farm too? t ‘ ' A. Not separately.‘ Q; Yours was included? A. Yes. Q. Well, he took an option from William Mayne and George Mayne; he must have ‘taken separate 0p- tions. You could not be bound in any other wily. ‘You signed an option too. did, you not? A. Yo; with lhc other men. 'Q. Wu there l. separate option piper for each man? 'A. No. Q. I though you slid that each one algnéd? A. No. Q. Well. tell us liowit was. VA. George Mayne was separate. Q. And the other three were to- gether, you and William Mayne and Peter Sinclair?‘ - A. That ls correct. This was the beginning of the nbbemcvwhich has landed us infer 881200 and which the Saunders Gov~ of supernatural French ambassador to the Portu- eral education and his coming iii ccii- scnality in_ him that draws trade. Mr. Inca is also‘ fortunate in having an other man of education as his as- sistant. This is C. P. Smith, who was at one time a popular school teacher of Kinkora, P. E. I. Before coming‘ to , Calif ornla. Mr. eminent nine years. His father, Rob- ert Ince, was Clerk of the Count)’ Court at Bonsliaiv, P. E. I.. and also a school teacher. The maiden name of Mrs. Joseph Inca was Clara Swen- son, native uf Nliillltfstltfl. ' They live with every modern comfort. Two progressive business men at. Huntington Park are sons of Mrs. P. l3. I. They are Harold and Jos- eph Large. Hamid is the president of of Los Angeies. Their ‘mother, Mrs. Lily Large. livcs with cvcry modern comfort at Hollyivood. She has been here tlW-‘c years. With her are Wilfred. Gene" and Prank. Both Harold niid Jo?»- eph are mzirricd. ‘Airs. Harold B. Lang; is a native cl‘ Al" n. mid a ltclpniatc. Titcy l: ‘c a little. 111W» Mrs. Joseph Large, is :i native of Cal- gary‘, Alberta, licr maiden name be- ing Volney Ilcnslcy. Before coming to California six years alto Hilfflid and Joseph liver‘. in Sjrzlney, C. B. M151 New Glasgow, N. ass Lcute ol South Gate. His lib-, III- I ' ' tact with the best people of Califor- a a ig T I 0 N ma. have developed that. kind of per- . Iiice was a. resident of Nome, Seward’. * ‘ and Anchorage. AlB-Skfl- While “WW3 he was employed by the U. S. Gov- 1 ,. Lily Large. formerly of Charlottctmvn ‘ the Western Water Heater Company 1;: V‘ SIB!!- 19. 1929 11mg P FOX OWNERS AND RANCHERS Now that litters of . arriving daily, what 511251;“ ~' are you taking for the ma? ment of ‘Vorms? A great many 9g g Veterinarians stnm mend either- BURROUGHS WELLCuvg c0 ' ‘ he leading 8|)’ rccnm. (Llndonrllugq wonlii CAPSULES, -on_ warm wonru (‘APSluycq , P111 up by PARKE, DAvls & u, Both these remedies an, guaranteed to destroy Round Worms, Ilcok Worms and Stomach Worms. DON'T DELAY, Price 75c and $1.00 Per Box, The 2 Macs DRUGSTORE 149 Great George Street Send in Your Mail Orders. Q. I was referring to all those who | Q. You say that Mitchell shw Wll- i ,c:imc liim, a sense lpower. He came to regard tobacco as M‘ “d mm” “We ‘a bridge to the spirit world, and the de Medici, in acknowledgement of lplant itself as a magic weed that in lyits death, by burniiijg, released a gspirit, the smoke, which carried his lprayers to the unseen world above. No wonder. then, that tobacco came to be his most precious pos- session; lie used it daily in his pri- ;vate prayers, and no ceremony was jconducted ivitliout it. At the end of ‘his life. so he behaved, it would be iimpossible without abundant offer- ‘lngs of tobacco and ceremonial ‘smoking at his fiuieri-il, for lils,spirit to start out on the lcng rcéid that Fall ghosts must travel. Before starting on a hunt the Ind- ‘tan offered tobacco to the spirits of {the animals he wished 1o kill. simi- ylarly. lie offered tobacco to the spir- ,ils of the animals whose aid he wish- Jcd in making medicine. No medicine ‘man went out to‘ pmctice without ihis pipe and tobacco. The Pinia Idcctol- begin; his treatment by put-l mug thick clouds of smoke over the] ,paticnt. in which he soon "sccs“ the' ‘nature of the disease. f The white man's trade tobacco was considered ivcrthless for cere- monial purposes. and most tribes grew their own according to triball ,ritu'.1l. The Yuki used wild tobacco. but the Yurok would not. for fear lihnt it. might b2 from ii graveyard ‘The Scutli-ivcstarii and some Cali- fornia Indians valued plants or seeds I ,in proportion to the distance they‘, ,had been brought, l 'Among the Crow the ceremony ofi ‘growing tobacco reached its most ‘elaborate form in the development ,of a Tobacco Society with an elab- THE OLD FAMILIAR FACES I have had playmates, 1 have had companions, L , In my days of childhood. in my joy- ful school-days; tAll, nll tire sum‘. the faces. old familiar ‘I have been laughing, I have been i ccirousing, Drinking late. sitting late, with my ‘ bosom cronies: ‘All. all are gone. the old familiar facts. I loved a lnve once, fairest among women; Closed are hcr doors on me. I must not see her- All. all are gone. the old familiar faces. i have a ti-lcnd, I kinder friend has no man; ' Like an ingratc, 1 left my friend ub- iuptly; Loft him, to muse on the old lam- iiiar laces. Ghost-like I paced round the haunts of mylchlldhood. Earth seemed a desert I was bound to traverse. Seeking to find the old familiar flcea. Friend of my bosom; thou more than a brother, Why were not thou born In my father's dwelling? Bo might. we‘ m: of the old funilidr laces- l-low some they have died. and come they have left me, And some are token from me: all are arnmcnt in making ul ply. while Q. Geoftc Mayne sold he nem- mot llltclitll at all not] Animal. ~ both the poll Government and ami- , O novel-mime mmclma it.‘ -__ __ W." departed: I All. Ill are gone, the old lflmllllll. 180ml- ____, —Charlea lamb. . . ‘ hails from Caledonia, P. E. I. I-Ie is . Hampton, P. EM. who new reside; guese court. sent seeds to Catherine -whic_h the plant was named Nico- itiaiiah No Indians. however, evcr lclaimed more extraordinary propor- ties for tobacco than those ascribed to it by the first Europeans, as is il- lustrated by this eloquent exposition by Harlot, in 1585: ' (The Indians used to take the fume or smoke thereof by sucking it through pipes made of claie into their stomacke and heade; from whence it puigeth superfluous fleanie 8: other grosse humors. openetli till the pores d: passages of the body . . . whereby their bodies are notab- ly preserved in health.) I ISLANDERS IN CALIFORNIA IN PETALUMA John A. McDonald of‘ Petaluma. a son of the lltc Alexander ‘McDon- ald of that place. People of North Rustico will remember his first wile‘ who was Miss Lucy Woolner, Tlic present Mrs. McDonald is a native cl Germany. Four months in P. E. I. a few years ago made her a full fledged “blue nose". I found both of them the height of hospitality. They are among the progressive chicken ranchers in Pctaluma with 3.500 white leghoms. A daughter of Mr. McDon- aid by his am. w. is Mrs. John Boyd, who livcs‘ next door. She has two nice children, a boy and girl. They make grandpa and grandma very happy. Mr. McDonald has an only sister in Alhambra. She is Mrs. Mc- Phcrson, u. widow. Her married sorl lives with her. . In speaking of chicken ranching, it will interest the Morltimers and Ca- nadians to know that over l12.000.000 dozens of eggs areproduced in Peta- luma per year and exported. This does not include several millions of young chickens hatched per year, lnost of them exported. One incubating plant alone has the capacity of one mil- lion eggs. I met in Glendale a native of Car- digan, P. E. I. This is Angus Mc- Donald, who has been 45 years awav from home. He was a. commercial salesman. traveling for wholesale groceries, most of his life. He ‘spent 1b years in Boston, 18 years in Den- ver, Colorado, anrf has been_1l years in the Golden State. He now lives retired in Glendale. He has a bro- ther, Din MacDonald, who lives 1n Lou Angeles; another brother, John T. McDonald. lives in Denver, Colo Hc has a sister" and a brother in Bos- ton. and a. sister at Cardigan, P. E. I He ctiil retains the old time hos- pitality. , ‘ St. Patrick's Day had a double sig- nificance for James P. Ryan of Santa Ana, who hails from 8t. Peter's Bay, P. E. I. This happened to be his birthday. They keep o first-class rooming house at 820 West Second street, Santa Aria. Mrs. Ryan is a native of Gcnnany and a most plea- nnt. woman. Tbcy are 32 year: in Santa Ana. 4 Reading: of IITAOIN E090 1890! Readers of The Maple 'Lcaf will remember a picture in this magazine a year ago of four heavyweight: who no all natives of P. E. I. They ag- gregated hllf-a-toh cvoirdupob. To- day I met one of the popular quay. rem. Bic well-known Joseph Ince of A visitor to Oakland and San Francirco this month is Mrs. Emmtiii uci lylacEacliem of Everett, Alums. ‘ . who sailed from New York a 11"‘! _ j lama 0mm. MD. mouths ago anti who ivrls on lirr will’ East after a tour which iiiCludCJ mum DIET lwLPING To u“; Panama and Mexico. Mrs. MacEacli- PKMPLES em met many relatives and frienus; in California who were delighted to 59c hcr. she is a ivorld-ivide travel- er and has made many trip; to Eu- ‘ w» . l ‘ ideii “filifivlniéiciaezgiljnas dnlrghtm, hood and womanhood, it causes lnucii Ken“ or sum,“ l embarrassment. . l‘ I- she is a nurse by WW The very fact that it comes at this m mm for 3n “m” has bow n,‘ linlc ivlic-n certain glands in tlic body ' are called on to begin work, or do c ' t t t D . H. J. Kinney, a. lead- ihs“ irlgiplilnl‘ rm, Everett WINS Her . extra work, is of itself an explanation “g p 5‘ “ ' ‘ of the cause oi the trouble. . M E. h , .‘s ‘ g ' ducts have been used with some suc- “s h‘ "m" c“ H” L‘ a "mm: n! ccss, but it. must be admitted that Priest Pond. P. E. I.. and a son 0f _ me law Alexander MacEMhemI on ‘ not give the results one might ~i ~.'~ ,l‘v‘.".]\IC‘.E¢.l'I‘.’I‘ m: ‘ff-l mini“? 1:48!“ gojgmerlo The trouble ofcourse is that the “u "m ‘ “m” n ' ‘ ' ' foods handled by_th'e system tire not “m1 0th“ 5mm“ properly taken care of, and the oil a 2221:;‘::.::.;::.%'::r.:i:;z.:“::.:". pimple results. ' Iii a certain number of cases the use of yeast has been of help in that it _ has helped the system to take (‘are of the foods. Tho avoidance of certain foods has As that dlstvcrsliig ailmctz, pim- plcza, or imic as it is called. usually come."- to young folks, boys and girls, Just as they are approochingman- A delightful entertainment and sale of candy under the auspices of tho Park Corner and Spring Brook school was licld in theliall on Friday. Mm‘- 29‘. Much of the credit for the Sllfi- i ccss of the entertainment is due to lhoumd 0th" cases. THEN foods are m9 teummrs- ML” B9551“ “lurks mm ‘pm-k. lobmoi-s pvaters frcsli 1.1- liot lift‘. llruest Diliuzilig, who Airrliiigtrti ‘_ broad Gamma], ‘mid geld {runs- and directed the progrtiliinit‘, all lab, Sorieone has remembered rwmuy Cm being ‘mmribumd hm“ ‘he m‘) that one of the slandathe main gland 5°h°°1 di5mcti Charles Ma“ liii fact. that takes poisons out of the Kay carried out in an efficient Illflll- l blood, is the “V”. nev the duties of chairman. lvfr.‘ Geo. A Dr. R‘ l“ Sutton. Kansas Cm,’ Mo“ F. Ferguson auctioned the boxes 0t reports on ms eXp-eflen-ce with “w, "may l“ m5 “sum pxeasfln‘ manner‘ land liver extract in the treatment of Judgm! by the P?!" 59mg 4’! the lpimplcs, and of boils also. young men paid for their boxes; they The “vex. extract was used (my m value lluzii" swecis very highly. pnrtxcularly obstinate cases. Among the iiluiibcrs worthy of nojc The x1105‘, Sfluéfd-Etélw-resulh were “'85 u ‘Stile 511ml" “Li” 51°!’ m“ KLCCUPGKI iii those cases where the pim- cing by Nlias Hattie Fogarty. The lines were slow m com“; find gains. following is the list of programme: ‘ 1 common in patients "whose skins were Remarks by chairman, i PM“ mms: and flabby. Instrumental muslfl- The amount of extract given only ' PHnIOHflmE-The F139 _ _= was equal to a quarter of a ppulid 0! Dialogue-Ilia Coontoivn ‘Mllllflfl- ‘ liver, taken twiéa ‘any for we“, Blfe- days. Sold-Mm MHTY MEW- i This was followed by a rest isiriod Headline-Mrs. ills"? G"l“sl>1@- I of one or two weeks,‘ andJhen‘ lfhilev- . Still‘ Bhflw- ‘csstiry another twelve days trcuuncnt Dancinp-Miss Hattie Fogiirty. “~35 git-ML Instrumental Music. At no time did the taking‘ of the Musical I-‘aading-B@55\9-M11Yk5- liver or the extract, glvc rise tn any Solo-Lucy Iliiines. unusual symptoms, DiaiozuwThe New School Mlfam- This is certainly good news L0 all Pantomime —My Old Iielitucky i suflerefs "um pimples or buns. be. Home. g cause liver has been one of thegfoods Plano Solo-Mrs. I-Iarry Underhill. thought to be a causcof skin irrita- Maypolc Drill. tions. Solo-Miss Hazel Bernard. Iiowcvcr. you will remember that ii Mciiolcguc-Jtitbe spinach. ivrlter sonic years ago referred to the Flat! Drill-B Girls. HYPI‘ as the “washwomam of the 5y?‘ The Kins. , tcm as it took or washed out some o! It is the intention to have this en- , the harmful substances in the blood. tcrtainmenl; repeated as soon as roads i I am passing Dr. Sultan's expor- permlt. Notice of which will appear I mice along, with the hope that itgnl! in this paper at a. later date. be of help to young folks suficrinl i with this miserable ailment. Jimnilo Kelly. Grit“ I: l. Arthur Con-Icon. / TEN MILE HOUSE SCHOOL ' Following is the standing of Ten Mile House School for the month of March: Mamie llfacDoniild- Grad-a viii: Tflflch" 1. Ethel McQuaid. Grade VI; 1. Alfred Smith; 2, Fred Corrig- an. Grade V:_ _ . i. Anna Smith: 2, Cecilia Burke; 3. Blanche Walsh; MEmmct Aus- tin: b. Pearl Vlulsli. Grade IV: I. Melvin ktcQuald; 2. l-Iarold Smith: 3. IIci-bcrt Carrigan; 4. Irwin Mullen. Grads iii: at. south Gala City. Calif. Years ago he" was the school tucker of Hamp- ton. P- E. 1- He l! the proprietor oi the Arrow Market, the leading bulli- I. Hazel Mullen: 2. Cecil Corrfgan. rad: II: l. John Smith: fl Lea Mullen; l. Tz-na Fitzpatrick niid Vlilfrzd Carri- m» (Mimi); 4. Moi-y Oorrigm; l. ' c1 w"- G