...-.... i ‘THE CHA GUARDIAN ‘I'll! CHAR LIITTETIIII Glllfllllll Morning Dally (Founded I181) President Hub-Col. I. Chester B. Mclno Vice s-esident J. ll. Burnett, FJJ. Secretary LleuL-Col. D. A. Maclitnnon. 0.8.0. IdIlorundMaf-IagiluDIrectorLLBumetgF-Ll. Aaoclattc Editor Frank Wulkcr SUBSCRIPTION BATES 15.00 per year tin advance) delivered to City $4.00 per year tin advance) mailed to P. EJAlund $5.00 per year tin advance; mailed to Canada and 11.8. Itlctnben Audit Bureau 0t Clrculatlonl “The Strongest Memory is Weaker than the Weakest Ink.”_ WEDNESDAY, JUNE N, 1938 Boy Scout Jamboree {.111 l):-.'.', “till 2C0 lI("1\\'(‘I‘Tl 400 -. l\' 111-rs fr»1111 2111 parts 111-i umlcr canvas 2t "-111 111-Eng 11 vlHllllJOlVffQ 111111.11 thc formal .;~ 1l1.n1.nr l.:1~11t1-11:111t- 111.1 _l;n1111or1-c - l'r.1\:111;1-- '1111l i~ 11>.- is l1l~;1-l_1.- to 1r p1r1o1l1c Elflllffl" will in; rc- \l:". _l'1?.11 \\'. 1.. , oi 'l'r:1{11- ;.".1~i,1-1l to 1111- l\'11v1-r 11f iir-t '--r.1-1, 41- i1 1..r. il.\1r. 1'1‘ 1' -1-1-~. 1.11 Day c1-r1-1no11y". tht-rc 1 or training in camp, as '- "urn-ll by ~I>41ClZIll~I5 on ' iv for 11w old1-r hcout; , _ l CVPHZ, ltowcvcr, will 111--1:1:11fo11 znii handing ovcr of '11-" 1311c gvIhT-uls 11-111/11", Licutcnant- \\"1.- :1» the (iuu-rn ll1l'.'11§\. to 1111- fuy $couts Associa- tion. .1 1:11 r11"1"1-_1.1:1111"1: on 111-half of thc Aw.- . ..\" 1‘r1----l1~11' 1.. 1). .\lnrra_v and 15.x- €1".1.'"1.1»- 1 1' '1.111-r glohn .\. Ftilr-s. 111s ll1'1'111',ll' i1 an artistic granite cairn \\"""‘-"1 ‘.l1~ ".1" zl- ;1"1_1,uc i11=1-r1.*-1l, 1111,- gift 0f .’\lr. (111-‘1-3- 7'.‘ of the firm of Chand- ler 111:1! l'.- " vwrks. Xlalpt-quc Road. 'l.‘:1- 1. 111 is a fi’ 1g onv on which to rc- cnll 11.1: 931111171 progre“: nfa-lc hy the Fcout mow-n". in this l’r1.1.-inc1- in rcccnt y11-ars. In I928 1121-1-1» \-.-1-r1,- but thrc-c §cout Troops, with fcwcr 111.111 5o lloy Fcouts, and no \\‘r1lf Cubs or Ron-rs. '1‘ 11171)" thc-re are 28 Boy hcout Troopa I’. \\. 1111 (1111 l’."1cl<=. and 3 bovcr (‘rows with a total 1111-111l11-nl1ip of 31f. ln thc ncxt two y1' :1 is lzopt-d to obtain an cnrollmcnt of over 1.1.1.11, all in proccs< of being traincd and erlticriv-rl 1.11 thc, princiolcs of thi= great youth ' -.11;'11r.'1t1-11 3o y"(-:1r'= ago 11_\' thc (lticf 1-11-1511111111. ' l1 llis llonnur has donntcrl trf .,11 \\"'.1-'."l1 boars thc 1li~ting11i<h- v 11111111- of 111s lixcvllcncy" thr- fiow-rnor ", of (innzulzt, i~ idcnlly sittmtcd for hcottt- ~ ~. in 1111- llvlfust llistricf. l1 is ncar 7-1 which 111- r.1'i1_1‘11.'1l llighlanrl 51-1- .- l 1111 tl11= ship "l‘1.ll_\"’ in I303. and cr.111;.:"V-= ‘1-1-11 :1cr1-~". i1111ln1ling both grass an-l \\"1f1fl ’ . 1111b lmnrlrt-d- of fr-(‘t of <and' lv-ach rr-ric‘ ~11;- 11111 to 1l-.~1-p \\":1tc-r at thc cntrancc tn P1311111- ll:11"l.1.11r. '13P fo-'111:.l opwnivg of th1= Camp on Jilly l hos 1111-11 111111-1111 foruw-rll to bv thc §con1< and all 2°-'111i'1f1'rl in the n1ov1~1ncnt_ lt will also lffor-l rtn 1-~:1"1-ll1-11t opportttiiity for all intcrcst- ed in 111v \‘.'"lf.'ll‘(‘ of Youth to gct an insight into tlv- nm11111-r and 1111-1111111 of lloy §cout training. val-‘vh l-ns comr- to play such an important part ln building a virilc Canadian citizenship. Atlantic Air Traffic airline routes K711111119 "hing t0 establish our the North Atlantic 11111-1111 to >tart ncxt n11.111l1 doing a good 111-111 of cxpt-rinu-ntal flxlntf. 'll11-~1~ 111-n 111-1- fur from 111-mg confin- e11 1.. :1ct11."1l 1.--r1'1.r111.'111.1-s of ztny 111.11cl1in1-s, and take, 11.11;; t1. 111w 1-11111111 dcdtiction to naviga- tionll 111111 1111-11-111"1.i..1_;i1-".1l 11111111111111». The trstu- bltslnncnt of any :1ir|11."1il st-rvicc ovcr thc Xorth Atlantic this _\1111r 1-. 1111-11, highly inlprrlbable, hut its" nl1i111:111- 111-1111-11-1111-111 is insured by thc dc- t1~r111111.11ti1.11 of llilllillls to gain control of thc I\,'o1"tl1 .\tl.'111111" :1ir t1"."1ff1c_ 11111-11 l1..;..-,ri.-1l .\ir\\":1>\"s and Pan Amcricnn /\i1"\\":1‘r- \\ill 1"1-~n1111- 1111- flights they mmle ex- pciiinriitr-Zly" 1.1-‘. _\"1-:1r. '1'l11-~1: flights will 111- 11_\' 1h.- ,\'1-\1_|'1.1n1I1.111-l-11"1-l"1111l mutt‘. tlr-rntztny‘ and l"'1‘."111c1- \\lll 1111111111111 11-~t~ zilong thc 511111111111 T-dllt", 1l..1t 5-, 11v \\."1v\" of 1111- .\/or1-,<. lntpcrizil .-\ir\\.1y~ i. .-\-|..-.-11~1l 1.. fly 1111- .\l111"1"11r_v, 1111- up- pcr 1111-111111- 111 1111- rompo-it1- .\l.'1yo, lllll 1111- 51111111 l-1..il 1";1p;11i1_\ of ti.1- .\l.-111"111"_\'. 211111 1111- i11- \'11i\'1"l1 11.111111. of i1. :1~~i~11-.l lJtltv-nff, 111:1l<1- its ("-11111111-1"1i:1l 111il1tv1l:1l1i..11~_ lf 1';111 ,\n11-1'ic:111 .\i1"\v:1_\'s 11111 ~p-11"1~ 11111" of its tlcwvf-st and lnggt-st Clippt-r- from it~ |‘.'11"ifi1"~1-r\"ic1-<, it will h1- anxi- mlc to [Iv ont- nf thc-1- .1.;|.< ov1~r thc northv-rn roun- of 1111- \tl:n111c. 'l'l11- p1"1-~<-11t .\tl:1ntic pc-r- f11r|1\],'|n1'1-\ of those l\\'11 comprntics, apart from thcir 11":111s-oc1-:1nic 111st flights, arc vcry con- Birlcrzthlc. 111th lmvc 111111111 mort- than I00 round- trip Cflllllll(‘f‘I‘l7tl flights 111-111-1-1-11 .\'cw York and lerntndrt, a vlistnncc of 81x1 milvs" cnclt wn_v. And as to compnrzitivc cmnfort provirlcd in thc British (‘nmhcr and 1111: Pan .-\1ncric.'1n Ber- muda Clipper. Iht- editor of .-\1nf-ricr1n Aviation wrote rcccntly thr1t .\1n1-ricnn ops-raters have much to learn from llriti-"lt dr-signcrs. Housing Scheme A Palliative Heralded in the Liberal press as a $135,000,- 000 housing plan, the government project an- nounced at (lttawa shrinks on inspection into a proposal to lend $50,000,000 providing someone else puts up the balance and desires to build. ln that aspect it has the appearance more of win- dow dressing in preparation for an election than of a serious attempt to cope with uncmploymcnt. the Toronto Telegram states. It is not possible to cure u cancer by putting a plaster on 1t, and there is much to b1: said for the vicw of the president of the Property Owners’ Association that the government is attempting to treat a qmptmn and not the disease. ,4 Ivory million dollars spent must have a bene- I .3..- ficial effect for a time in the area when it is expended, but a housing scheme, without somc- thing to lighten the crushing burdens which lie upon real estate, while it may increase the num- ber of low price houses available for occupation, “ill do nothing towards permanently iznprovitlg the position of the building trades. As Mr. Dunning himself has said, once construction starts the key log will have been taken out of the jam. But the jam will inevitably form again as soon as the artificial impulse has bccn ex- hausted, if the heavy tax on real estate still lies across the stream of business. Under the housing scheme of I935, the Gov- ernmcnt has lent to date a little over $17,000,000. The results of that plan have been disappoint- ing. The new plan increases from eighty :0 mncty per ccnt of the cost of construction the amount which may be advanced to a builder. _\\'hether slightly increased borrowing power will induce persons to assume the burden carried by owners of real estate, even with a partial rebate on taxi-s for the first three ycars, is problemati- cal. liven Mr. Dunning has expressed doubt whether it is kindness to encourage individuals to home ownership where the cqtlity is only ten pcr c0111. Fitnilar (loubt might be expressed as 1o whctht-r such a plan is economically sound. F0 for a: municipal housing SCllBIIICs are con~ ccrnr-rl. the government's proposal is that thc- nntnicipalitics shall assume thc full cost of con- qruction with intcrcst at 2 per ccnt plus deficits ztri-ing from the pfruvi<iflfl of mcomodntion a! .1111 11111-co11o1nic rental. The fio\"c1'n1ncnt co11~ trihntt» mvrcly thc diffcrr-ncc 111-1111-1-11 thc ratr: :11 which i1 can borrow mom-y and the per ct-nt, which is charged 1111- mnnicip.'1li1ic.=,. Th1- nr-t rc-"nlt will be to put a furthcr municipal bur- 1l1-n on rcal estatr- at vcry littlc expense to thc Covcrnnicnt by the various 1:1x1-= it 1111pq=¢= 1m thc rcsirlcnts of the municipalities. The mouth of this gift horse must be thoroughlv examined. c) J Editorial Notes I’ Farmers are smiling these days. C i Q J Palestine Campaign entrusted to General Al- lcnby this date, 1917_ ¥ l I 1 From this date to july 4 is predicted Buchan's ‘Lttb Cold Period" in the British Isles . l U I 1F Cheese imports during May amounted to 171,- 529 pounds of the value of 535.345 compared with 173,276 at $36,083 in thc previous month and 157.401 at $35.418 in 1111- corresponding month last year. Italy stipplit-d 78,284 pounds, France 24.742, Switzcrlanrl 20,5111), Albania 16.- 5941 llf-nmark 11,466, the United States 8,012, Netherlands 5,777. I I i i Among the distinguished visitors in the city 1s Dr. ltobinsrln, Principal of \\'olf\"ille Acadcnvv, who is giving a “rcfrc-shcr" cour<c to tcaclters in Prince of \\'alcs Collcgc, The doctor has had a (listinguishcrl career in church and 5111c and is recognized as one of thc most outstanding teach- ers of youth in Canada. Those who have pass- vd through his hands bear hi: kindly impress, for he is a charactcr-lattilder in thc trucst and bc-st sense of the term. He has many (lisciplcs in the province_ liflfi The value of living animals cxportwl during Flay was $061232 comparr-d with 3734.710 in April and $1300.28; in .\l.'1'\", 103;". The total to 1hr- l~llllPfl Kingdom was $431,106 and to the Ynitcd {Qtatcs 3.136.208. Exports of cattlc were 12.560 hcad valuz-rl at $772031) compared with 30.372 at $1,333.727 in .\l:1y, 1037. Thc Llnh- cd Ftatcs pnrchasr-d 6.473 hcnd. thc Ynitcd Kingdom 5,345 and Newfoundland 588. There wcrr- F16; horses scnt to the Cnitcrl Ftatcs, 106 to the L711itcd Kingdom and124 to Newfound- land, the total value being $103652. u v I 1 Gambling alas, brings its o\\"n sad reward. Dcsponde-nt ovcr losses in betting on the Louis- $chcmling fight, .\lr. Charles \\'.'1hlcrs. 28 years old, of liast Orange, :1 porter in an apartment hotw: plungcrl to his (l-rath from thc roof of the tt-n-s1ory1 apartment building. llcfort- ascending to thc roof in an elevator. the local police said, .\lr. Wahlcrs bcmonncd his low-s, th1- amount of which was unrlr-tcrtnincrl. to follow employ-es. Police dcclared that .\lr. “iahlcrs had told his tnothcr he "would be in debt for a year" be- cause of the fight bet. t Ii This may account for th1- not infrequent auto toot-footing heard ltcrc. lfsing two kinds of automobile horns altcrtirltcly1 below thc walls of $11111‘ prison, Paris, a young man accompanied by his mothr-r was arrested for communicating with his father. who is a prisoner 111-hind tltnsc \\‘:1lls. ['<ing .\lor.<1- codc. thr- yotttlt spcllcd out “(iood morning" to his fztthcr, wliosc coll \\"in- dow fact-d on thc strcr-t, and thcn proceeded to send by thc same tncthod some information of a privntc character. Ibifortttnntz-ly, a prison guard who had donc militnry- sCFYlFC in the tclc- graph corps rt-cogttize-l thc 11in as not just thc ordinary horn-blowing of Paris automobiles and called a policeman. v l i II III Th1- internal disruption nf thc Liberal Party is spreading and has now reached Mr. A. E. Mac- Lcan, .\l.l’., and the Provincial Government. The member for Prince has "served notice in the Pioneer that while he "is perfectly willing to do all he can in any matter even if it is a provincial government matter. he cannot attend to these matters while in Ottawa". It is too bad that Premier Catnpbell and the other Prince County members of the Provincial Government should be so neglectful of provincial affairs that it falls to the lot of Mr. lvlaclxan to direct them from Ottawa. Mr. MacLean, however, descends to details in "passing the buck" back from Ottawa to Charlottetown as follows: “Just as a suggestion as to_ whom to write to, I may say that all road work, paving contracts, selling gravel, hauling gravel, bridge building, as well as all prohibition cases, loans to fishermen 11n- der the Provincial Fisherman's Loan Board, Old- Age Pensions, relief money, Sanntorium, county gaols, schools, colleges, etc., comes under the provincial government and your local member is the man to write to for quicker action." So there you are and, likewise, when n: you? IIITES B!‘ TIIE HAY menv. to spenil u dollar.—Ne:vP York World-Telegram. as and Commander-In-Cblef at Gib- raltar, learned ftuelgn e like the famous explorer Burma did. He put down on l postcard a list of words every day and memorized them. Thus he built. up a. vocabularly by abort and Intense concentration-New of the World. A recent legal decision In the United States has fallen upon Jaded sports writers like manna from heaven. It appears that the umpire at a ball game in a West Virginia town called a strike. The batter felt differently about It, made a verbal protest. and follow- ed l1 up with a punch on the nose. The umpire took the case to court. After hearing the testimony, the Judge dismissed the case with the FF-‘mflrk. "It ls the inalienable right of a baseball player to get mad and have a fight with the umpire." The judge has had his lit- tle day; but we are wondering what What $111111 of £01111! fiillc-IIJILD. ASTHAIA IS OFTEN DUE TO SKNSITIVENESS TU Ul-MTAIB SUBSAANCES A farm boy living 4o miles from n. large city found mat; curing ms visits to we city, unsung 1..o or Lnree clays 1.0 a week, he was ab- solutely free of asmma, and an examination of his chest by a phy- sician In me city revealed no truce of asthma; yer. on the farm asfn- mauc attacks were frequent and severe. bkm tests were made and If was found that horse dander was me cause of ms asthma. Similar cases are often seen now and the offenmng substances are found w be cats fur, pollen organ- isms and gasses m me fur. and even certain 1 . Drs. Stanley B. Dorst and Ethel L. Hopnan, UIIAVGFSILY of Cincin- natl, m Ohio State Medical Jour- his reaction would be if some lItI- . gant In his court exercised his ln- alienable right: to get mad at a‘ decision and took a punch at the judge himself. Perhaps It. might: occur to the umpires‘ league to make a test case.—- Winnipeg Tribune. One recent Issue of a vvldely- read newspaper from an Eastern city contained: One business story on a great nation's prospects of getting oIl for her battleships In the event of war. One business story on the effects of war-talk on rates of exchange. One business story of a nation's territorial de- fence expendltures. One general story on the development of a merchant marine as a naval war- time auxiliary. Fourteen general review sbortes on present wars or possibilities of new ones. Nine news stories on preparations for war by various countries. Two news stor- Ies on current wars. Two new: stories or situations feared lead- Ing to war. Sixteen pictures from various countries of preparations for war. One picture of current warfare. Five cartoons on war. One letter to the editor-on war. —Victorla Times. “Outdoor rooms" they call them in the May number of "The American Home" - these attrac- tlve light shelters from weather and too much company that were called “Summer houses" tn Vlc- toria times. The Summer house, It seems, is the latest. number in the Victorian revlval commenced about ten years ago when the grossest. Insult that could be offer- ed any one was to describe his behavior or sentiments as Victor- ian. Even behavior and sentiment, as the law of reaction works upon them, take on a hInt of Vtctortan- Ism again. As for archltecture. Interior decorating. women's dress and halrdresa, they go to "Go- dev's" more and morn for inspir- ation. Rural Gothic Is coming In again with Its rival, the French Third Emptre style. The market for Victorian sofas, chairs, bric- a-brac. even the whatnot, ls white hot.—New York Herald Tribune. It ls not no common nowadays to hear people say that. America has been good to them. That ls the oplnton xpressed In a New Jersey svlll. he testator, dying at. the age of 57, leaves his sav- ings of approximately $16,000 to the United States Government. He was brought here from Italy as an infant, grew up to be a mechanlc, never marrted, and felt that. his money should stay ln the country where he earned It rather than go to brothers and nephews In Italy. Measured In dollars, there are a good many people In the country, natlve and lmmlgrant, to whom America has been much klndcr. The present legacy means perhaps $400 a year saved, which might be done without dlfflculty by an unmarried man on a small wage. Please let no cynic suggest that this man left. his money m the Government. not. because he llked the United States more but his relatives less. —New York Times. The Australian “makes the lova- llest husband In the world," de- clares Mrs. Pauline Budge, of Syd- ney, founder of the new Australian Women's Party, ln reply to Pro- fessor John Dollard, of the Yule University Instltute of Human Re- lations, who has recently publish- ed tITc result. of his researches Into the twenty-one distinguishing American characteristics. " e Australians," she says, "Is strong and healthy, sporting, and has a sense of sporting fulrness. He Is a good mlxer, democratically mtnd- ed, tolerant of everything except hypocrisy and klnd to his women- folk. But he Is not. perfect, thank goodness! "He ls cas a1 to an ex- tent that leaves hlm apathetic to the affairs of state and a1- though he has splendid strength of character, he has a predlsposltion towards lnferlurlty complex. But my own daughter prefers an Aus- tmlIan man to any other as a hus- band."- Australtan Press Bureau. Westinghouse research engineers have put. ftnlahlng touches 0o the third of a battery of electric fur- naces In which steel molecules be- came so hot and "tired" they stretch lIke somuch taffy. Before the metal part. can be safely In- stalled In a modem hlgh a ed machine such as a steam tur Inc engineers must know exactly how much It wtll stretch, or "creep," under working conditions. And In o for example, the m” port In ' such n. turb ne. whose fatlure at. a crucial moment might plunge m entire community Into darkness, elabor- ate metal apparatus has bullt at hat Pittsburgh. The steam Inside n turbtne generator Is so hot. (It d Fah- renheit) that the steel Inverter lows a dull red. The blades which furn tho armature shaft are bath- ed In this tremendous beat u tho stream forces tbom noun the oomhlnod action of of fnch that new u! ant wumbullt. -6t. 111mm?‘ ‘my nal, pomt. out that. asthma 1s an Individual problem and define asthma as a spasm of part or 8L1 of the air tubes going down w the lungs. When the spasm occurs the air, of course, cannot get out of the lungs. Thus alr remains in the lungs that should come out and naturally as it ls not. as ricb in oxygen as ft should be the blood circulating In the lungs does not get. properly purified. The cause of the spasm that closes or partly closes the air tubes land causes the violent coughing In an effort to get a free passage of air is often sensittveness to foods. pollens, extracts used on the skin. gasses In the air, and bacteria — small organisms. Drs. Dorst and Hopphan report 62 cases whlch were extensively studied, All the patients had well establtshed asthma of at least. two years‘ duration before treat- ment was given. As all cases of asthma are not. due to this sens- ltlveness to cetraln substances, each of these cases had been given skin tests and show to be sensitive to a particular substance and then was treated by vaccines of that. particular substance- food. pollen, bacterta-for four to eight months. Thirty of the sixty-two patients were improved; twenty-two were distinctly better. that is they had a light attack of asthma occasion- ally, and ten cases showed no Im- provement. The thirty patients who are well had an average period of treatment lasting over fifteen months, Of the twenty- two who are improved but not cur- ed a large proportion dld not continue treatment for over three months because they felt so much etter. The point then ls that a certain number of asthma cases are due to sensltlveness to substances and vaccines of these substances vised for a certain length of time will cure half the cases and cause Im- provement In one-third more. LAST REST Rest. rest.—there ls no rest, Until the quiet. grave Comes with its narrow arch The heart. to save From life's 1on1: cankertn rust, Fmm wrpor. cold and st — The loveless saddened dust, The loded will. And yet. be far the hour Whose haven calls me home: 1on1: be the arduous day 'I‘Ill evening come; What. sureness now remains But. that through llvelong strife Only the loser gains An end to life '1’ Then 1n the soundlsa deep Of even the shallowest grave Childhood and love he'll keep, And his soul save: All vext. dash-e. all vain Cries of conflict done Fallen to rest attain: Death's refuge won. —Walter de '11 Mare. Iiassy Stomach: RELIEVED If you have any trouble with your stomach such ar Indl, ‘ . dyspepsia, sour stomach, heartburn. distress etc. then don't de- luv ‘petting .1 bottle of m. 1.. B. van’: Stomach Mtxture Immediately. Evan's Stomach MZ-xture I: preocrlpgton of Dr. L. B. Evans, no d En llsh Physic- Iun of which we ave the role rights to Ind llnce Rlllll ll have received numerous tlmonlulr from satisfied pur- chueru. bottl today. 133...‘. ° it It t! it! SPECIALS Int urrlvod large unort- meut of Bnthhrg Clpl and Beach Ban- Price thin Cnnl In all onion ---ltflato7lo lac loll In Blueflhn orloso-———--i1.00 Irrlilulur Frult Julia. --—-——-29cl'erLb. IIMII Ilflh Midi (Inocul- MI—~———-89ol’urLb¢ 30:812. THE 2 Mltllfl . DRUGSTORE us on» Gum rem nlolorluuloutvnnuqpt Attention. PUBLIC .FORUM T!!! GOVT. I-ISPONBIBII POI. THIS. Bin-It. seems rubber s are o0- Incidence I had not been stimulated before now to Issue forth any statements or assertions as rewards the ouruvunaeral (life) of our forthcoming National Island Park. However, with great uni- moslty, not because 1 am n south shore dweller nor for any other pretematural mason: but belnl spurred on or incensed by the un- surmsstnx beauty of nature which tbts Island hourly eulflys. I flnd it mv worthy and lucrative duty to act in a mutual or reciprocal op- Dosltlon as relates to the sltuatlon of our Island government. when ‘they have so liberally taken upon themselves the burden or encumb- rance of erectintr a man-made park In a land of natural Parka. To the lover of nature and to most natural DeODle this situation seems an absurd arc-dis!- HOW 18] lt postble to. or otherwise, bow, Impossible It Ls to ameliorate upon the works of nature: nevertheless with not only this great. all Impor- l tam. objecttvmcorrelatcd with many‘ other unuleamnt arlsint-IS. work 1s contuiuallv belnz carried on In connection with the building of this park. When our tourists come here‘ durinz the summer months of June. Ju‘; and August. lt ls not. because‘ they vcant to go places where they can drive on a few miles of new pavement. nor Is It the novelty of electrically llzhted bathing houses: but they wish to rest awhile from the llzhts and streets of "Broad- way", and the rush and tear of that fast Industrial world of tur- moil and confusion. Those things are not. thetr conception of a vaca- tion. they can see these every day. everywhere and almost at. any time; that's why they have driven a thousand miles or more to Ire clear of them. And vet. are these not the very foundations of "Our Island's Nu- tlonal Park?" These tourists want. to see the Island In its natural and unmann- factured state. and this Is why so manv have come here the past few years. because elsewhere they have not been afforded such natural and not national parks. But. the things of nature are mos‘. undoubtedly belnz classed as secondary requirements In this Park project. The emphasis Ls be- ln1z placed on those least unwort- ant factors, which concern not. the vacatlontst. Nature ls crying out. and savlnu to them: “COmGiItZIBHIXiK all the festive m Appalllng those who gave them birth" They are tearing ‘up the very places that are reaching out like fineers and oventna up orroortun-l Itles to these nature-loving people, and are reconstructing them into well-beaten paths of the commer- cial trend which Ls such an unwel- come, unnatural. and unpleuslnz visit/or: so artlflclal. when one Is on a vacation. And vet. they are wont to say. £8588 JUNE Z9L1y3 We m pleased w nnnouu the appointment of branches of Insurance. Charlottetown Summerside 6Q rnomts 11. 1111111111111, 11.1., special full time representative with head- quarters at Charlottetown as from July 151, 1938 Mr. McAvinu has had several year's experign“ as a put time fieldman with this F has made a thorough study of the 1111111111111 a. 0011111111111 1111111111 The Oldest Insurance Agency in P.E.I, Montague w? irm, and various Mr. Tea Pott Says: For a. Delicious Cup of F111] Flavoured Tea Use BRAHMIN Orange Pekoe Tea the Bavarian mlJ, ha; been under way for something more than a week and early report-s are mgarded tlsfactory by the committee In charge. Moisture conditions have been good. the seed-bed has been well worked, and rough cultivation amund the fence posts and the weedy corners is sald to have pro- duced a well-rounded effect. that our French friends call bv the name of the toot. ensemble. The Leader- Past. extends best. wlshm to Swift Current, hay and alfalfa pmdmm. We suxtast that. be awarded for length, texture. percentage of clover. freedom from weed seeds and tobacco, and yield per acre. and that. Hon. Mr. Gardiner. Min- ister of Agriculture. be appealed to set. u a marketing board to ensure 0rd v marketing of the crop." TRINIDAD WOMAN 116 YEARS OLD PORT OF‘ SPAIN, Trinidad, June 28—A claim from New Zcaland that. Patrick Hamilton. born In Ire- land on St. Patrick's Day, 1830mm _t.he oldest man tn the British Em- oldest. rstdent. since. “Enov your vacation at: Our Nat- Ionsl Park." Allow me to say that God In Hts neat. klorv never created a fairer land than this Island Province. sheltered here In the midst, of the Gulf and the rolling Atlantic. from all the plethorlc streams of evll, Is our peaceful and truly fertile do- main. A haven of quiet bliss. no nut shell. and no vut country with mountains and crazfy summtts to stimulate our tourists Into reckless ha-blts. Bill mark you, u 15nd of flflfllrfll Dorks. peaceful and ram- bllntz streams, evergreen forests, velvet carpets of nus. quiet groves of beech. birch and maple. where birds make love and llve. ‘These "9 ‘he fhlntls our "Fair Islan " has to offer and these [IQ t g thinks which have acted aka maz- net durimz the past few years and will continue to act Into the future. Now I ask Wu. as citizens of this province. do you earnestly believe that It ls Domlble for our Govern- ment to Improve over these things of nature all portrayed about u; 1n tbeIr natural beauty? I ask you will till-s novelty Wear of! as will that of a Natlonal Park or will It keep 0H belnk a 50v forever as “Phat gpfmligs W581i: :2 g 3e 1 pndoi dlmmortal 19861118 Drlnctples. n ustry "a I um Sir. etc. sum A. 3.11m. Cornwall. Whiskers On The Western Front (Rfiflna leader-Post.) PLEASE BUY FROM US chandlse, respect? this service. tlsers “The 81:10:18 sllent. men 9g u, I "flgllmflnl ‘111-Y of Swift Curr-eni- are growing go pm M Day event on July Lrwahgn ‘i113 "l" l» Mn min. Even a Dfllr 01 swm omen». 111w to have entered the“ 11:3 115ml.‘ m looser be referred w "W161: M a couple of razca . 1111-11.. b -grqwin _ "m. which. mud-guilt wlllglncblullillt the mountache, 1m inutton chop, w" V!" Drke. the long, gtmlght ohm-lo the oblr_1_ whtsker and Many Big TERS THROUGH THE MANY YEARS AGO ING EFFECT OF Chew Tobacco IN FACT 111' HELPS PITCHERS AND BAT- WHEN THE CROWD IS IN AN UPROAR. ISLANDERS MADE 111m SAME DISCOVERY ABOUT 111m: soon:- FREE Phone 132 for information about 1111a new surrn srnvncts Leaguers TENSE MOMENTS ‘ i‘ HICKEY’S 10¢ PER FIG Manufactured bf ntre Is challenged Mr. Merchant: We understand that you are selling up-to-date mer- manufactured by modern methods, and supplying the demands of the present day public. t But. how does your advertising compare In this Your customers are looking for your announce- ment every day in The Charlottetown Guardian. Old-Time Advertising was an APPEAL TO BUY MODERN ADVERTISING IS AN ESSENTIAL MEANS or KEEPING YOUR cusronfrtts INFORMED REGARDING NEW FASHIONS. NEW MODELS, NEW MATERIALS. NEW PRICES, ETC., and the modern buyer looks for The Charlottetown Guardian offers its adver- IDEAS, COPY, CUTS, LAYOUTS, ETC BLACK TWIST HICKEY und NICHOLSON bTI-rtiiialai Mrs, Mary W11- llanm who says she 1s 116 year; q We. Hamilton, who does not up glasses In reading dailv newsps and get-s much quiet Gnjoymg from his warden, recently celebm,‘ 8d his 108th birthday. But. Mrs. Williams said she 116 years as she quietly celeb“ Mother's Day at her home In of Spaln. She was born 1n St. V cent, an Island of the Wind , group of the British West Indus KINGSTON, Jamaica, June za- Belteved to be the first 11111111111114 case In the history of Jamaica v the dIsaDDmsrance of two-year-o Jenny Lind lvlclntosh. reported 11 police by her mother. Mrs. 511m v McIntosh of Kencot. St. Andres. The nurse in chat-ac of thebal] told Mrs. McIntosh when she ro- ‘ turned from a shopping tour tluI a truck had driven up and stoo- bed n the Irate. A tall man luI invited Jenny Lind drive-and she has not come bu! - to zo Iotf _ . '_"~‘ i