x s-‘a-eatn- . '”‘" ~ —.l'l' EQQ. »1 PAGE FOUR mm. CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN SEPA-EMBPQK 3, 11);“) The Charlottetown Guardian Pn-sidcllt, LleuL-(VII. \\'. ( lint-tel‘ S. XICLIIIB \.v1--l'r1'~i||r|1i, J. If. Ilurnelt. l". J. l. Brrru-tur-y, l. iL-fol. ll .\. Alnelilnuun, l). S. 0. or. J. R. Burnett, F. J. I. “Allin-r and l). K. Currie. Montim; 111.111 tfuululrll 1mm $1.110 111-1- 1-1-11: (in IMIVBIWG) dl'll\s‘l"l'll .11 tit_\. $1.1m pt-r ,\ 1r tin titlvnrtu-l nuciied In Print-a fitlwu-tl lsluurl. st 1| |wr yeur [in ndvunce) .\l.1il1-tl 111 1111-11-11- llllll l'nltt-rl stun-n ’l‘l|l'RSI).-\\', SEPTEMBER 3. 193G. 111111.11 1.11.1 11111-111111... 1m. 1\\!4lll‘lll|t' Hililttru. lfilllls Park Beautification Suggested the iiUittl Rozuls .'\S.~'t'it'itlllt)ll lit :11l<l1.'11-- (lt'lf‘_i_,'lilt‘\ at 11.1-- opuiiiii-g- >e<~io11 of tl1e conven- , {inn 1111 1r11.-..1..»_ _\l.11_v1-r 'i'1'11.\1-:11 took occasion to >trc~s the tun-pic iitturv-t attaching to this} l’r11\i'11-'t- :t:1l thy 11s "ic tir-t tilt-ciiiig-plztvt- of l tlic hall-tn 1-1‘ t‘1-111't-1l1-1-:.1i1»11_ where thc vision of a l>--111i11§--11 of .1111-l:1 \\:1< t‘tlllt't'l\'t‘tl. l1 is h-tpc-l 1-- haw 1.11m dc rvmeu-Iti-ut of this fact, by tl11-1,-1---pl1 1.1 t la, through the lh-ntiiii-mj (i--\111‘1-111.11t. |-'t1-t-~t11'.1tti--11.~‘ ltritt- :1c-‘oril:11gl_v lu-c11111:1-lt-l-i t 11v tl-uuvil f1-1-:1j_-‘r:111t from the lit »111-.r1- -1 t; -\--1‘i11111-111 for 1l11- purpt-st- 11ft‘ lteautifv 1.1111111 ll-lt‘. \111--11g other i111- ]1l"1\t'llit‘il . ' - 11 1111111-11 1l"i-.-~\v:1\- ar-uttid l the l'1Z':\ 1 -- 11111 t-i ih-usc 1-111‘ lti-‘h-riv relics. au-l g1 :-.'1tiii1":11i--1t 11f tlu- l'.1rl\ Lfrtvtuuls.’ F111. t1p111>1-111-1,i1'\- 11f pi-cs-ntin-g the claims 1.1 1 '..-\-::11:--1-11.11<;l 111131-1-1? ~hri111- will i 11-1 tl- t-V‘ l ‘nth-ti wit-ti l" .\lllll\lt‘l'j l11'\‘ 11 ' ~ the l’rt-\i111-t- .-.:1.1.i11 the ucxt - ~111;-;1--1i--1: -~-1-1- with .\lr. ‘-_ ,-1 -'_- --> 1'-t1'1\‘a1‘.l will _ .-, - l. ll 1 -1- l11.'lt'1l nfl '|‘1-;1rh~ 1 ,. -1 . 1 lu-rc. and the‘ prop-w lit‘ tlisctusc-l 1 around ‘i 1' 1t.-. - ,\ l‘11lt\- Hid Problem ; 111 .\'11\1<1is111-i.\111:‘s “First l-l-urth" takes place in .\ carrier. with :1 iutiw-duce-l. who 111-111- . iht- most \'lll.'ill1tll~" 1. r-nL-l for fleas." »l-‘ d1 lc-gzitt-s 1---\-,' iw-uit-iiing, l f-utl titt- fi-rvq- 11g 1111-1- or-linz t-- tlu- New‘ 111t111ti-111 in its '1 i11 lit-gii-h lit- in; the I..11{11 "~tr:1t:1 lit‘ t‘-1.11l ]1l'1-l-lt'lii i; 11 '1. ~111-l111'.<1»t' l\‘--111:111 history, .11 \\.11_\‘ inning hucu Cltlii- -.~ _;1_- lit‘. l1 1\.11~ .-. 111mb- . v 1'1‘--111 t-:11.'li1-~'. taut-s‘. 1 ~ ir-wctl 1l11- llJ~l rim-ll 11111 l\'--11!.11i 111'1‘lil1Iili-tli.l '11 ~1‘cl1 c--111l:111»11 as ivtttlltli \\~-l1t‘llillttll till . 1-1-31- 11f :111 11h] luv-kl U. z-t --i in ti-t- You‘ info." '1--__--.11-l; "l'i--f1i. (R111- I-t {iti- win-h‘ .\'.'ttl--11.j l\'--:1-l< lli-tv-iir-v, l.'1i11l_\1 prv», 1--111.---r1 >- 1l11- lligi- 11' i‘..1-l111--~, 1111- tint-cs tho-e 1.‘.'i11~t-<. the i111- ‘wwnzi; tlu-ui \\'ell—11u-1i1lt‘1l 1111- 11f nit-titling: lint 111:1)" .11-d i111‘ t-vi-r ~11 111:1i11- i .\'-w uztyt Sllli-‘lllll- . it e.1i.~t-. .\11d ho. 'lihat 1: \\11111-1- tht-rt- shall not he- 1 1*:1‘1-1"11tt<. or lliglt-riilgcs; l" 111-11 so 11111cl1 as :1 _11-i)1.1, r111 ll-fts. 1r l 1.1- 111 .tt't‘\l l-- -~c S‘ 11' 1- \\~11~t of l-ivils both to llxtu ; ll» ='~-~ :1- -~ --f the ilorsc-tracks: Nor shal‘. 1:11. 1'11 -11. i - 1‘;11i\t- to he once put t-d of miles Riding." ..-I111111-1l--1-§ 1111f set-m tr) .‘1.l\1'\1"1.\-.' 111-11.- thc zihnost incredibly t. 1- of liucll~h wads up to the latter 11.111‘: t-f thi- tfih t1-11t1i1‘_v. lt r11111aine1l for Irnrtvito and .\i1'.\1-\.\1 to intro-hire scientific principles rut-l a regular sy~te11i of road con- structi-ut 11nd t1<1p.'111‘. The llt'1‘t'~_~ll_\‘ 11f d11<tlcss roads ‘did 111-1 become tiruvnt until the a-lvent of (he nmtgr gar, Th1- jq-totl roads lllltYUlilUill as we know it todav 111.11_v ht- traced cutirclj- to the prob- lem of €\'Cl':iil(‘l't."iI~'lli_Q lllOliJf traffic. “Satan Rebukitigwqgin" The New York II11r11ld-'l'ribnnr is highly amused at the .‘tt1ti-1ti of ltussia Communists pro- testing against rtuy l-Iuropean nation sheltering Russian sub: s alhrgedlv plotting against their regime, in vicw of the fact tl1:1t were it not for the refuge puu-idt-d by l-Itiropcau and U-5.:\- govcrititii-tits i11 times pa<t the jirescnt Soviet gQyfrnmr-[lt 111.111.] 11111 have. bt-i-n in existence. lt says: "The Soviet [Tniotfs formal demand upon the X11111 _ 1111 govt-i-mut-tit that it get rid of Luox 'l‘11<>'|.~1<v, 1-i1 the ground tl1:1t he has hecn plotting a tz-rroridit" cmupaigti against the ‘frit-ntltr" povt-rnrut-nt of the U.$.S.l\’. is cer- laiuly a. 111111-111 111‘111'lil(“l"i‘lf'l‘l‘ll3' utre-rty-ititinnrii-ss.‘ "' single-incl.‘ llul-hcvilt- mind. l'1‘.'u"ti11:1ll_v1 all the saints :t11d 111:11-t_\1‘.~ 11f l\’1--l revoltitiotutry history M some lililt‘ f-tu-i-l s:11tvtitar_v as political refu- gees in t-tunttrit-s- obj-tying allegedly friendly rc- lati-rus \1.-iil1 tiai-i-t l\'11~\i:t. and there used and phused their s-t-t-uiity t-t plau and direct terror- l5llCy fi-‘is in tlu-ir houu-lan-l. _ “lhr-rt: i< 111- c-iuutrv in the world today in Wllwl‘ 3")‘ l1i/.1"1'~' with the Stalin rcgiute are not compiriag [-11- 1111. V3.4...“ ,,\-,.,-1p,-,,\v of gm»- thing else, unless he were held as completely in- comuriicado as otir own Federal boarders on Alcatraz lshttid? The government of the Sovietll ljuion owes all its power to terrorism. It was; t‘oncciveil in terror plotted abroad; it survives T‘ by terror, and, as the recent trial, executions,‘ and the continued purge are advertising to the Iwhole literate world. it is obsessed by terror. It provides no domestic check whatever upon its own (lest-cm into a hysterical, bloody tyrann_v; iso ill what terms but those of espionage, torture and imirder can it expect its political enemies, at home or abroad, to plan what might be an elec- toral campaign in any less savage country. "This is no brief for LEON TROTSKY. The record of the wholly merciless dictatorship t0 ivhicit he \v:1s once an important party is warrant cnouglt for the belief that if lte were 1t0\v in the Kremlin, and if Josue Sraux were in Hoc- IICfUSS, 'l‘1<o'rsi<\' would be mopping up Stalinites s in Russia as so many vermin and would be in- dignant with Norway for ltoltiitig his exiled critics in anything less secure and silent than six- foot graves. 1n the face of the l\'reu1li11's pitiful ll(lf'l'0l' of the terror in which it was brought forth it is .\'orwa_v's tindotibtctl ititertiational right to tt-il loser S'r.\1.1:\' to go jump in the Kiosk-ya River. Her (liploitiatic obligation, at the same time, is to insulate that electrical eel, Lnox‘. . somewhat more effectively against contact with high explosives and to show him the door if he docs not like it. “Norway-‘s problem today- is likely to he attyj nation's tumorroty; and in the contemplation ofi it there mtist be no cotnprontise under any dic- tatorshiifs pressure with the ohl principle that; jiulitical refugees are entitled to asylum. llut sitice our .\'azi and Rcd friendshave been equal- 1 1 lly i11.~i<t1-111 on their iutroiluction of the morals l than single 11110.»; of the New liuiuert head-limiters into their doin- 1 cstic affairs, and are just as eager to inject them into their foreign relations, Norway and all the rest 11f 11s must learn how to keep closer tabs up- on their feuds among us." Editorial Notes .\nr1tl1cr fine tiay experienced by those hav- ing the half-holiday. .\lc.\'ic0 evidently does not bclicve in i1e1it- Jrality though a tneniber of the Pan-rhiterican (‘on-gress. Prctuict‘ llizi-iiriix >Zi_\'S he ivould have hal- aucc-l hi-z budget were it not for the illl(‘lll]llt1_\'- tuent rclicf which has put him behind some two ntilli-ui tit-liars. lle forgets he prontised to abolish t1llt‘l‘i'i]\l(i_\'ll'i(‘lil as well as deficits. T11 liovc1‘111t1e11t llotisc was hospitable and gay wvhich feel themselves damaged by Notes by the Way Ql/iljfll fiobp of f bouts htstances of presidents leaving‘ the United states are few; still‘ rarer are their visits while 1n office ' 1 to heads of foreign govemments on’ the latter-‘s soil. The equivalent of- rPresldcnt Roosevelt's eight hours at Quebec as the guest, of the Gov- crnor General of Canada, ha; not {occurred since Woodrow Wilson's ftrip to France during the peace‘ luegotiations after the World War. The favorable response in Canada ' would seem to augur well for good. mesults in Canadian relations and give occasion to regret that it. was, ttbe first‘. instance of a president's‘ Jormal call in Canada on the titu-l 1 lax head of the Canadian Govern-i ‘ ir1en1..—Det-roti News. CREASED once more. It. consists 0f:- Governmem 1, , Rise early in the morning to hear l what the Gcrrtian jtvants you to think. That. is when ‘ the Germans broadcast propaganda 1 iii English. 'l‘lie_y say it is-for South l an l-Iast Asia. South and East ‘ Asia don't speak English. But Aus- l tralia. and New Zeaiand do. Mid- 1 and hard drinks. 3. Increasing week lit-m on this service; 150 yolks. Emma .Amb5 “Old “l .1)“ 40.0 Pllll-‘l’ l l‘, ‘I318 duse “Bin, lifilcbggg Jenn Pierre Roma was chosen 1 troops. The British public Will not , (‘lpltig lentioftfi ‘in?! ticllsewrity m; n5 Director of me Company and believe this disparaging story. But 10 B l) l‘ arrived at Three Rivers in J1me such broadcast propairatidu brings U19 Btmcks- u.s tiear-cr to the day when nations l it. \\'ill retaliate. And that is the weakness about. radio. You can jam the other tciioivls broadcast.-,—Lon- dcn Sillldfl)’ Expt <5. Statistics ltzivc taken the point number of attacks ruetltoc 0f relief out oi the old jtflit‘ that, "married people do not really live longer‘, _ ._ _ n on“, Seems , trgy and Psyehiatt fungi-ii" says the Los Angeli-s Times Fittdings of lift‘ iitsttriutct- com- panies LLSSUIC us that tutti-vied then 11nd women twttiaily- register better in the mortality tables than do bachelors and spinsters and that. daily, with whom number of years epileptic attacks The English rcvicrvcr who. mis- took Mazo dc la Roche for a man is like the other Eitgiislituan who boasted of his acquaintance with literary lights of seventy years or so ago. Asked if he knew Georg? Eliot. he answered. "Certainly. I roomed iviih him in London for several montiisfil-Toronto Mail £1: Empire. other of the two tcxit 2- tion as carried out, that, You can't beat the people of Kitchener when it, comes to being thrifty. Here's the latest. example: A team of girls was to come from Buffalo to play softball. They did not turn up, so that. the patrons were given their money back. The amount. paid out. \v:1s $25 more than the amount taken in at. the pression about one every chamber. state last (‘\‘(‘tilli_;'~ill(! tirst big dance since the Cotirt went out of scmi-tnnitriiing. lt will he attother 1111111111 before the Royal Family and cntotiragc officially resume the usual gayeties. rl‘. Tiakcu to court i11 Xlilwaukcr- on a spec-ding 11111111411, 5.111 STR/twrrz offered this explanation: "l have lmy fever, judge. and every time I sneezed my foot would go down on the acct-l- crator. l_ twuildift help myself." “The most novel t‘.\'1‘t1.<t‘ l ltave ever heard." applauded judge .-\. _l. llillllllNti, “The fine." he added, “is $10." .\lr. Dox FRASER, .\l.L..-\., the redoubtahlc edit-tr of The. [fur/rm C/trnnirlv. New Glasgow. .\‘.,\'.. is i11 the city attending the Good Roads tkutvcntiou. .\lr. I-‘Rasi-iir is celebrated for his , virile indcpcudetice as a ucwspapermau and pol- itician, aiidf notwithstanding, popular with all StiflS and conditions of men and politicians. Nlcmhcrs of the King Nleinorial Baptist Church, Leakcsville, N.C., adopting a "New 'I'estament standard of church membership" prepared by the pastor, Rev. ERSKINE l-IEATII- lZRLY, have voted to expel any member who: bses profanity. Drinks iutoxicants. Swims in li1lX(‘(lCOll1pIlli_\'. (iamblcs. Stays away from church for six months without a reasonably good excuse. 9K 9K 9K, Everyone is anticipating the (faring rcturti Atlantic flight projected by hlcssrs. 11.11am‘ Rtcn wAN and Dick l\lERRll.l., who, at an esti- mated cost of $200,000, plan brcakfasting in Nciv York, dining in London and having dinncr again in New York the following evening. The report is that both Mr. RICHMAN and Mr. .\lr.trRir.i. have insured themselves against failure for a sum of $250,000 each. The policy is said to have been placed with Lloyd's of London for a premium of $43,000 each. 9K 3K The S. S. Queen Mary has created a record bylcrossittg the Atlantic at an average of 30.63 knots per Iiour; at the saute time the London North liastern train drawn by the engine "Silver Jitbilrc” has created another new record of 113 miles per hour. The new mark was clocked over a half-mile stretch between lissendine in Rt1t- lanshire and Tallington in Lincolnshire where there is only a slight down hill gradient. Over a six-niiie stretch the average was 110.8 miles an hour and for r1 tniles the train \v:1s streak- ing ziloitg at over I00 miles an hour. Passengers were 11111111111111“ the time and were astonished to be told in London they had broken speed records. 5K 9K fi l)11c to the extremely unfavourable weather conditions in the West of England ivhiclt have prevailed almost front the beginning of the grow- ing season to the present time, hay dealers i11 these areas aredirectiug attention i0 Caflatli-‘ln ernmcut- til-ich 111-1- ilu-ir 111.41, m with wit-mi sources of supply to meet the anticipated short- their l11>~t~ viii-q foriual ilipliilllitiit‘. rt-lzitions. if age of good English hay, writes Mr. L. ll. N-"l ‘l""'"1'l".‘~ i" “\‘\"'i1l“- \\'111‘c to demand AtsMAN, Acting Trade Commissioner in llristol. that all such t-ouspii-;tt->r~ I-eaiust Hitler's pt'i'- in the forthcoming issue of the Commercial lu- mn and zttuht-ritv ht- 1-\ju-lli1-l ivithout bent-lit of telligcnee lourital. Almost cnittiuitrttts rainfall visa 111 other hzt-t-s of i-r-"Y-iiniu‘. from the 5'11- since earlyiiu June has been general and has for vii-t ['|1i1111, (I11 :11 llritaiu au-l llit‘ l't1itt-rl Wales. 1 lmrrified s1|t|.'|\\ k would g1» 11p in ,\lr1s1‘t1\\' and would be 1-cl1-11-1l in the ‘iii-crab pnrss of fifty 'l.'lliltll~'. "it is llul only jittssiltlC but l1igl1lj1 probable hat l.1c--.\" 'l'111-'rst<1', as a guest of the Norweg- ian people, is an active conspirator against the eace and security- of the yin-sent Red hierarchy thg Kremlin. J-low. indeed, could he be any- thc nmst part prevcitted the ltarvesiing of :1 sat- isfactory- cntumercial crop of hay, Early (fittings are of practically no value, and ltavc i11 many cases been lcft iu the fields to rot. 'l'hose farm- ers. on the other band, who were forced by the iueicmentjv of the weather to leave thvii- ltay n11- cut arc now in a position to harvest .11 compar-t aiively large crop, although its quality will be. very poor. .~ - gate. After checking over the re- lsuits several times the officials de- cidcd that they must have rc- fundcd money to n. hundred peo- ple who had climbed over the fence in the first placc.—Fcrgus News Record. creased oxygen be that this The leaves or needles. of all pine trees grow in clusters and may be readily identified by their length and numb-tr. The Jack pine lins two leaves to n cluster toccasionaiiy tin-ec- about. one and a quarter inches long; the White pine, five leaves about four inches 111mg; the Pitch pixie, three leaves about three and a half inches long; and the Scotch pine two to :1 cluster, about two inches long. The cones take two years to maturtx-Canadiau Forest and Outdoors. 1 FROM It. was the Barron Pierre 111:1 breast; Coubei-tiu, a Frenchman, who was ‘Twill take your responsible for reviving the Olym- them far, pic Games. He wished to spread throughout. the world the social benefits of sports as he had ob- served them in England and the United States. He wanted to foster through sport, the instinct of chiv- alry. And he believed that the mingling of athletes from the dif- ferent countries would promote poems-Ottawa Citizen. And there, from were tacu, You and I shall Friends and admirers of Joyce Kilmer, the poet who wrote “'I‘i‘ees" could find no more fitting memor- ial to the mnu who sacrificed his life on a. French battlefield l8 years ago than the 3.840-acre tract of vii-gin forest which is being dedicated to his memory in South Carolltia.—I.ond-an Advertiser. Should the measures succeed. everyone will benefit. Should they fail, they will not. be the first poi- icim that have fallen short of ex- pectations. A surmise may be haz- arded that, whatever happens, the dividend plan 11nd the scrip plan will neither break the province nor usherdn the millennium. We shall still have to live and do bus- iness with those who are at pres-- ent on the other side of the argu- ment. The less that is said now in bitterness, the less there will be to repent. of after a.- while-Edmonton Bulletin. Long we shall be sighiseers “Siop" signs placed u warnings where country ronds cross main highways are disobcyed by more than lmlf of the motorists. A "rural safety campnigti" DB5 been in progress long enough to check 342,268 cnrsron Michigan highways. Only forty-one percent came to a complete stop where a "stop" street was marked. Why did so many of the car operators fall to obey? Because they knew that there was nothing back oi’ the order. Because it. was a gsueral order not, based on specific condi- tions. Because each driver preferr- ed to judge what was safe rather than take orders from a post. These are the conditions that. make for law; reasonable leeway left for exercise of judgment. and certainty of impartial enforcement of the; law-Detroit News. ,1 1 a veritable "inuo about the world, to remain the 511111910" and engineers have , started work on the sis-mile bro-m 1 statue, 260 feel; high, representing‘ Fascist Italy, in the Mussolini Fo- rum in Rome, to commemorate the conquest of Ethiopia. The statue-g which will belr Mussolini! new.‘ will be the hldilll Ii o! .11-m 10. omen. MD. REDUCING 'l‘lll1. NUMBER. OF EPlLEPTlC ATLACK$ BY 1N- PRESSURE whiie the routine epilepsy Ls now generally known it. might. be mirth while to mention it. Cutting down 011 the amount 10f liquids-Amt, coffee, water, soft. 2. Cutting (town on starch foods, fisugar, bread. potatoes, pastry. the fats-Janitor, cream, fat meats, egg-. .By following tlic above four rules} ‘many epiieptics renutiu completely- frce of attacks and others ltiiye the j It would appear which may perhaps lead to the dis- covery of the cause of Ci)il[‘l)i\,\'. Drs. - W. G. Lennox and A. R, liehnke Jr., 1 Boston, in the Archives oi Neurol- mi experiment with tliive t-yiiietitics. Three young won1e11 uho had a number of light attacks of epilepsy the breathing of air low in oxygei-i. of occasions hpetit. from 2111 important causes. their on a number death rates are l0\\'£‘I‘.—Bi‘t1ll(lOll n.0,], three and onwhfllf u, me tsull- hours in a conipre. under an absolute pre ‘urc of 4 at- mospheres, together with one or lite front the effects on the number" of attacks that. occurred, these pat- lenls white tinder ioneed the satire degree of mild in- (lid present at the time. Ou days on WlflClf the cxtierurtents usual normal conditions, they had seizures at the 111101111111 rate of one every forty minutes; chamber the number of attacks was cut down bv about one-half Thus Drs_ Lcunox "Decreased oxygen tends to bring on an attack and ln- prcvent. attacks of epilepsy! It may knowledge creased oxygen pressure reduces the number of‘ attacks of (‘PllPIISY r1111;- pvove of help in the treatment of rttaeks and possibly 111 111p flifzflnr- 9Y3’ 0f the cause nf epilepsy rum, “Tllli wesr" Comrades, look not on the west: Twill have the heart out of your {leagues beyond the sunset. bar. Oh lad, I fear that. yoirs the sea Wlicie they fished for you and me, Senduot on your soul before To dive from that bcgtiiling shore, And let not yet. the swimmer leave His clothes upon the sands of eve. i Too fast to yonder strand forlorn We Journey, to the stinken bout-no, To flush the fading tinges eyed By other lads at eventiric. Wide is the world. to 110st. Ql‘ 11011111, And curly ‘tis for turning home: Plant your heel on earth and stand, And let's forget our native lnud. Whe nyou and I are spilt on nir Frieixds of flesh mid bone are best: oi-"RTBGPS. 100k not on the ivest. Romcl except the dome of Peter's, and will be 1130 lot-t 111111101- thnn the statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. ‘Two cievittors. one running up each to the statue. A bnlcotry conc-t-alerl i11 the drapery around the sliottlders will enable them to see Rome. Leon Trotsky will go down history as n colorful figure. l-le is the noted exiles who are rwaticretl His name is frcqtieittly new-s. Just now he is suspected of having had a hand in fomenting trouble dur- ing the French strike. He ls a lotio- ly man. this Russian Communist, and there is something pathetic about hlm-Slierbrooke Record. _""_15 Roma And His Three Rivers - (By PROF. D. C. HARVEY) Settlement At In 1730 Isle Si. Jean (Prince Edward Island.) which had been, granted to various fishing com-j panics between 1654 and 17i9, was , rc-unitcd to the royal domain and '1 placed under some semblance of royal government in subordination to Louisbotirg. But, in i731 the dis- trict of Three Rivers, the lands. drained by t-he Montague, Brudcii- l cll arid Cardigan rivers, together with certain fishing cortcessions at St, Peters on the North Shore, were granted to Sicurs Cottai-d, du Bocage, Narcis and Roma, who were known as the Company of the East. and received their‘ grant on the conventional terms of encour-l aging settlement and providing for ‘ 1 ‘eligion and internal communica- OXY GEN trcntuieut. of amount of 1732. He chose Brudencll Poinbns the site of his establishment and immediately set about his task of founding a colony, prosecuting a sedentary fishery and building up trade between Three Rivers and France, Three Rivers and Quebec and Three Rivers ulid the West Indies. ' Though the other members of the company were interested only in the trade and fisheries. Roma was anxious to make i1. settlement that in time would be a colony as distinct from it plantation eu- tirely stibordinntc to the interests,- of the teudcntary fishery. He com- , mcnced by levelling off the cap?- He then erected nine buildings, two 8O feet long, one 62, three 50 11nd three 40: a cellar 120 feet. by 2O by 7 1-2; and a pier 45 1-2 feet by i0 with a stage, 40 feet, by l2. to fac- illtaie loading and tinloading of vessels. He also ltad about 400 acres of land cleared. From the cleared land he hoped in time not. only 1o feed his rncn and the col- onists but also to have it surplus for export. to Iiouisbtiirg and the West Indies. He prosecuted the fisheries not. 1 only at Three Rivers but. at St. m m,‘ Cami Peters,‘ AtLSt. Pftgiphhe lptd a the "up w“ , magni ieen N cs a shit-n e11. 80 mmuws. Thus, tuciy dovottd to the fisheries. But 1 to make possible llll0fl18l communi- m the j cation he made several rough roads; greatly tier-reused. that another has been foundl y, Chicago. tell of CXJICIlVJIIUL,‘ t)\'(‘l' ti had shown that always followed ion citamber phyzsieimts, Aside ])l‘l‘$Sll1"C flXllfT- tltc physician riot. their WC F0 is llii(l(‘l' when Ifslattd visit/ed Three Rivers St. Peters, so as to keep in touch with his establishment. there when the water route was difficult, and to Poi-t. La Joye, the capital of the Island. For both trade and fisheries he both built. and ‘bought boats. The first two years he records build- ing at. Three Rivers: 2 fiat bouts, 2 canoes, and 6 shailops; and, at, St. Peters, lie completed the eon- striiction of a vesel of ‘l0 tons which he purchased in process of construction. Altogether he had five vessels - Lc Michel, St. Jt-itn, Le Postillon, L'Angelique and Ln Belle Fuucou -——\\'lllt‘ll he employed in the trans- portation of fish to France and of commodities to Isle Si. Jean; in trade between Quebec and Isle St. Jean; and iutradc between Quebec rind the West. Indies. To the West. Indies he shipped cod and planks 1n exchange for molasses, sugar and coffee, part of which he sent; to Quobcc iii excl-range for food for Isle St. Jean, ivhen it: \v:1s suffer- ing from the various plagues that beset it in the early yenrs of its existence. Having difficulty with his part- ners, who criticized him for pay- ing t/oo much attention to his set- tlement, lie went, home to France in 1736. and bought cut their iu- terest, r-eturrting to Isle St. Jean as sole PIODFlCIOY in i737. Unfortuna- tely his‘ crops vyere eaten by field mice in 1738; Le Michel was lost at sea with all her cargo in i741; and the New Etigiandcrs raided and plundered his tntnblishment. in 1745, after the capture of Louis- lir. L. o. r1111. 1 of London, EngQ Noted Physician treated suc- cessfully and made permanent cures of Stomach (fomlitiotts such "s Indigestion. fly-pep: sin. Sour Stomach. Heartburn Gastric Distrcsses and 1111111)." 1 other ailments peculiar to the stomach. with ,1 prescription 1vh"ch we have procured and. sell under the name E\’A.\"S STOMACII nlrx-l-L-RE We alone have the snit- 1 rights cn this prcscrtptiunllnd rlnce selling it, I111‘ received numerous testimnn ls 1111,,“ satisfied purchasi- , Get a bottle today R5 cents. MACS PILE OIIVIZHENT Gives quick relief in all c.1115 1 of Internal and |"l.\'ll‘l‘li;ll 1-111-5 1 A safe and effieir-itt r-1-1n.-1l1-111 ‘ the treatment. of‘ thi~ \\I'(‘l(’l|- ed and stubborn (list-use, A, Fl-lfl? (‘HIE if the tlirei-liorts are carried out carefully, 1 Get a tube tndn_v-—l'rire 50c. THE 2 "MACS Mail Orders (‘. O. n, (".11-uni Prompt Attention, ‘ PUBLIC FORUM Th]: column ls open tor tbs dllculllol by nurrelpondentn of questions of llllereli. n1, Uhlrlnilotowl (Inrdlnn uou not necessarily endflrn tlu- nplnltllll of correspondents. OUR DAILY BREAD Sir,——S0me time ago a Iiuiv \\’l'2l€‘f in the Guardian exprtascu 51-1116 surprise that none lift-M‘ to tie. nounce the last jack up of titt- price bourtr. For nearly ten years his colony was uninhabited; but, in 1755, 101 refugees from Acadia. tcok up residence there, only to be l threatened wjith expulsion again in i758. after the second conquest. of Louisbourg. 'I‘l1ose who did not escape to St. Pierre and Itfiqticion were transported to France. In 1765 Captain Samuel Holland, in the course of his survey of the and named the point on n1l1ich- Roma had settled and one of the three rivers, Brudeziell, after George Brudetiell, fourth Earl of Cardigan and Duke of Montague Brudenellls other "titles gave name for the other two rivers, Cardigan and i to Cardigan and Sturgeon River, and Bdmkci l0 train access to the meadows; to Montague . tt-itsizm l tenri ')lt tends to that in- Roads And Road Traffic (Montreal Gazette) Considerable public interest will follow the deliberations of the Can- adian Good Roads Association nt its militia‘ convention in cnariottetown. It is announced that co-ordination of control for the various forms of luglitviiy transport will be one of the 11111101‘ Subjects to be taken up. l Eight provinces will b1- represented at. the gathering by liigh- ranking officials anti-it would nppenr an ex- cellent. opportunity to arrive at sortie uniform basis for the control of the buses and trucks operating on the highways of the country. The chief competitor of the hiuluvay carriers, rtrimelyr. the railwayx, are under control, to n considerable extent, of thought; and sink a Dominion-wide organization, the - Board of Railway Contmissioncrs; and, perhaps, the differences be- Lweer‘. these two branches of trans- Dortntion will be more easily brought to i1 solution if regulatory 1'ill|.‘£~l can be applied uniformly thrrugltout the country to the l1igl1. way vehicles. There is still dlSSflllS- faction in the public mind, as well as 0.1 the part of rniiivny officials and shareholders, by 110115011 of the conviction that, the heavy bitscs and trucks are not doing their pro- per shnre in the upkeep and matu- tennnre, siroiv-clcariiig. ctu, of the highways, on which, because of their size 11nd weight. 11nd continuous op- erution, they have the most ivearing influence. Announcement is also mndc that some drastic IHOXISHFCS will be plac- ed before the convctition to rid the ' ltigluvnys of irresponsible and reck- whence we both drown again. less drivers. Leading members of the association nre said to have in mind certain definite proposals which they believe \vil1, if put, into effect, materially reduce the num- ber of road fatalities ii Canada. It is indented that these proposals will call for greater attention to the qualifications of the driver, nnd in- creased restraint upon recklessness. As already pointed out in these col- llllilil‘. the regulations are too loose- ly enforced both with respect to the driver's qualifications, and with rc- garrl to the penalties provided for violation of the laws. Roads may be improved nnd made perfectly safe for" travel. but, if the driver is not. likewise improved and made safe, the hoped-for objective of greater safety upon the public high- way cannot be attained. Most ne- cidents are due to recklessness. The speedcr must be regarded as a po- tential killer. In some cities the practice has been adopted of send- ing speorlers to the ltospitnis nud morgues where they see for them- selves the sad consequences of their folly. Many of the drivers have brokcii down at. the sight of n dc- foi-mtxi victim and it has had n sobering effect upon them. In the United States there l5 11 more 111 some parts for elevated highways to reduce the growing casualty lists, bu: in Canada the present highways are still adequate for the amount, of travel. and concentration m, 11115 time on the human factor would appear to be eminently - desirable from the public point of vicw. ‘How To (‘Enjoy An“ Exhibition strangers titer-c; —A .E. Housman. iBy W. J. Flynn, in The Eastern Chronicle) During the month of September county fairs nrc ripe - that's 111t- mmtth for them. And it's 11101111 anybody?» 25 or 50c. to attend them. The county fair or exhibition, tinder-stand, not. the world's fnir wltich isn't h fair at all — its to.» big to be enjoyed. I mean the old- fnsliloned fair with the half mih- ti-nck nnd the hundred doilm- puvses. The kind of exhibition which I ns n ind attended at Chin-- lottctmvn, forty years ago, At. such a gathering everybody was ltnppy. ‘Twas a jostling, lnutzh. ins. Jolly ¢Y"““" Tl“ flirts iu white with pink and blue sashes; their cs- eorts dressed regardless, with cigars set, ritklsbly lu the corners of their mouth, and carrying buggy “mp5 ndorncd with red, white and blue ribbons. A bis bl-lfll‘ fellow in n. check suit stood on a. platform proclaiming the attractions in the nearby tent. —pointing to bmtners that. pictured the glowing cimmts of a fat. lady, the wild mun from Borneo, a snake charmer and a dog-faced man. He used to conclude with the ringing phrase "And remembah, gentleman, it. costs you but. a dime, ten cents, the tenth part of a. dollnh." Just then his rus-sistauts would rush for- ward to act. as bcll-wetbers for the hesitant crowd. But‘. even his elo- quence nor his assistants could stay the mnd rush when a far-on voice . W15 heard to say "the b'ioon's go- intl up." Away we go. Past the pop-corn stand. the striking mn- 1 thine and the shooting gallery. Si. leg. will i11-ad of take the in wolf." Hut of nil he 1121s mnnngcd most pioruineut. m cut n; 11 drqfl aawzt.%aa1aa, £11k. 'f'hc nt-‘splingieti, liaullhtyvng-fij.‘ nriut stalks proudly throtigli the 0PM“. Slienking to none except a bi-z negro who is tiu-oiving gasoline or kerosene into the tunnel beneath the swnyitig ntonst/cr. At Inst cvcry wrinkle has (lisapticared; the man in tights seats himself in the baloon, lnokinr-hnisghtler than ever its he gives the signal. Evci-gvbodt; lot-s go. The b-md tilt-rs "Up in n Balloon Boys" and the balloon leaves ti?» earth. A professional smile dis- places the nemuautls frown ns he hangs by his toes and waves geod- bye to a sea of tip-turned faces. Up, up goes the great balloon till it looks like something no larger titan a barrel. Titcn n midget fig- ure is seen to drop. For n hutidi-ed feet; it shoots like n rocket. Then the parachute opens and the figure floats gracefully to earth. Now the bell rings in the judges’ stand to announce the Free-for-ali trot and pace. And the crowd surges to the track where they are kept in check by special policemen -full of a little brief authority. "Nothing doing for awhile," say-s the man at: the ice cream booth. "You can't pry one of them kinks, away from the track now tvitii 11 crowbnr. But. they'll come n-tenr- lng after the race. Hike over and 3e: some more ice cream. we've got to have a. freezer full when the rnce is over." And to bring back nil these old i‘, o1- Vitalit] alwatjf 116E BRAHMIN RAGE PEKOE TEA of bread. 'I‘herc is a remedy if vfillbtllllfifi 2 had the backbone and 1111-1-1 l c i age tu apply it. By i111v. _ 11nd baking their own 1111-1111. or ,'enn not only save about $10 per ;barrrl, but may enjoy wholesome 1 home-made feasts. BACK in the eighties tire standard loaf was 2 lbs. There uas a bread iuspcvu1r-Aiigt|s N1-\vbe1-_v its .1, bakeries to ensure \\'t‘i-,'.l‘.t and coni- pliaticc with civic reguiatiotts Three bitlztrries operated. I-‘lotu- rctaiird at $9 per bbl. Two bakers i-vtitrird the 2 lb. loaf nt. 8e, the ‘hurl 11' 7e. 'l‘iiey nll became i-oiupat '- 1 wealthy. Bims, (Cllfftilllt. ge ginger cakes, tarts, llil'litl\t‘l'~. seed cakes sold nt 10c. dox. A barrel of standard .ht11i flour makes 281) 110111111..- 140 loaves of 2 lb.s._e1.1 wholesale costs 11111111“ At 8c. this turned in S: profit. of $3.20 \\'lil('ll, on cakes and other 1:111- isfnctory to the bakers otlirr baker, tstiii lt\‘ll';i- .- similar‘ linrns. is 011.1- t-i 11.. and honored citizens, n11 11:11 considerable property. . It‘. the ivar time sent-x» $14.00 to $15.00. coal 11o 1- . $14 per ton, bread was 1.11 101111": thun today. Today the loaf is t‘.- 111-111 ' inspected, a barrel of fioui‘ 176 loaves. This flour, n‘ 1 cos; nbotit $61511. salt (when ‘uscdi your ago. an dcoal ll1(‘l‘1l(l(‘ . iid tvages, less than half 111.1: tmv prices. The total cost of 176 . 1W5 is 1.111.111 so. 111 12c. 11o- 1-11-1 $1111- l or a profit of $13. $13 0" ill" ll-lr‘ rel of flour baked. Allowances must be mii-h- f0? wrapping. delivery, etc. but till! would account. for nothing ly-vullfl a fraction of the big thirteen dollar scoop. It. is safe to sny that in no (‘ii_\' outside of ivm- zones, 1.: tho 111*" its high as in this Island. In hloli- treal, with iii-titer “antes. 111 -‘ coal. several times l1i1_:i111t' iongcr delivery distances. i1111-.1.l 11 lb. lflllll is retailed at. Be. llvl‘ m5 4c. less than in this thr- lip-first bread price on the continent. ’l'11-‘r@ they tried to Jack tit: price lit 1° 10c reecntlv, but foiled. Consumers have the rented-.- ll} themselves. Ten tlfilllirs 1111 11 b.1111‘. | of flour is worth the saviue. I I am, Sh". 11111.. . ~11 1 11.111- merr-ories nr to implnnt 111-11 1111-‘8 in the hearts and mint!» 1'5 ill“ younger set. let us all make up rill‘ mind right now to go to the P1111111 County Exhibition which WW1" “ll September‘ l5il\--_iu.s'. two vv-‘lii from today. The mentor)‘ H? 1‘ “ill give ycii sour-tilting in think ‘ talk about tn your r1-‘a'i111-.\ I friend.‘ in the years that arr i" come. i?» ~~ ~ - '1 SEPT. ' ilfli IIITRV 11111-11»- UVISYOFK IPIIIIHINT