‘and 51f tlnlnlllmwl lilllllllllli ‘K661011111 iélie We; WE recently auqgeatsd the forma- . i?‘ Iondhlt-W-Ohaotnl-Inl-III- VIeQ-PndbuO-I. l. landi- loocflJ-y-Iahfl. Col. II. A-IAeKlunl D. S‘. 0. “filler and uuuw-I- l- I '. I ——"' III!“- Auoehte Editor-D. x. cum. tion of {Loyalist Anoclatlo in this city in order that the des- become acquainted with each other, and valuable material in connection MONDAY, MAY 30, 1927 with Loyalist family historiesand traditions, might be collected, col- laied and preserved. lt seemed P. E. ISLAND HOSPITAL. cTllE annual ineetiug of the Prince Edward Island Hospital, which is to be held in St. Paul's school- room at eight o'clock on the even- ing of Tuesday, May 31st, is this year oi unusual importance. The present hospital building, which was constructed in 1900, has with the recent great strides made in hospital con- not kept pace struction and equipment, and it is deemed necessary that it be com- pletely re-modelled or that all ell- tirely new hospital be constructed. There has for some time been‘ considerable feeling tllat a nlore‘ 2 “unable site might be selected and pire. commenting editorially on the 8180mm were Wm be more time at the last llllllllfll meeting thc Trustees were instructed to have plans made for rc-modellillg as well as for a new hospital, and as soon as possible call a meeting of the public to determine wilat should be done. ever, that The Trustees found, how- tlle Canadian National Railways was contemplating some extensive changes in their yards, there was a possibility that‘ such changes rlligllt affect tllcllos- pita] grounds. For this rcason llo- tllillg could dofiuitcly bc donc until the Railway plans wcrc disclosed. The Ilailwayz howcvcr. has now decided on its plans and thc 'l‘rrls- tees are askiug_ for a full attclld- visitors know where and What ltilul of accommodation is available. i COMMUNISTS IN CANADA. i MONG the documents captured ‘ ill the recent raid on Soviet disuse, London. ill addition to other ilncriminating evidence, was a list “of communist addresses in different parts of the British Empire, includ- ing Canada. Premier Baldwin, dis- ,cussing the matter in the House of ‘Commons the other day, declared that Soviet Ilouse had been used as u clearing house for subversive correspondence arid even for mill- tary espionage. Tile Mail and Em- matrer. says: “The Canadian gov- ernment should at once ascertain ‘from the British government the1“@5i°"5- names of Soviet House corresp0nd3 cuts ill this country. We should‘ kuow who here are the pushers of off China" agitationj carried illto our vcry Canada purged of the spies anti propagand-l the “llalltls which is being schools. must be‘ ists of Russian COIIIIIIIIIIISIILT Call- adizllls have lilorc than once been. urges:- SlltlPkPll by thc public trcrlstlllzlblc. uttcrallccs of Ill-art allti-Ilrilisll \\'c (illlllltii. afford to harbor pcopll: who arc at‘ and ltllti-Callar‘ diam. spies and enemies. Those who do‘ not bclicvc in British and (‘zlnadizlln ‘which wc hero quote a few pass- ‘tllat with public singular that the first response to our suggestion apart from casual conversation, should come from ‘Vancouver on the far Pacific coast. It was signed G. A. Sharp, a name well and favorably knowll here. Waiting to hear from others, no immediate reference was made in The Guardian to .\lr. Sharp's let-: ter. It contains interesting remin- iscences of what befell his loyal ancestors at Staten Island, New York. during arld after the Revolu- itiollary War‘. We hope to hear from .olhers who, like Mr. Sharp, approve oi’ "forming an association, but we realize that until the Jubilee cele- bration is past it lllllst occupy a ,fol'emost place in public attetltlollm‘ After tllar event and the comingl land space available for considering Ethe devotion and loyalty of our all- ln Public Opinion of recent date ‘mention is made of a book entitled “The English Public House As It Is," wllicll has bcell very favorably reviewed by the London Lancet. Reference is made ill The Laucefs review to the Curlislc scheme of ‘dealing with thc liquor traffic from “in thc (‘arlislc arca where thc Statc Scheme has n virtual nlorlop- oly of tho ordinary l'0i1lll_il‘illlt‘, DIOYOII years’ cxpcricllcc has shown own€rship and improvements‘ The test of thc: control. immense havc been made. ceudants of that noble band might sromxcn PAIN At one time it was thought that the pain l'rom a stomach or intes- tinal ulcer was due to the fact that food got illto the ulcer and caused the paill. The fact that it was a matter of two or three hours after the food was eaten before the pain began, disproved this. Also the fact that when pain was present, eating some food caused the pain to disappear. It was then believed that it was the presence of too much hydro- chloric acid in the stomach juice that irritated the lllcer and caused the pain. ’l‘hus the idea that it was too much acid that caused the pain became popular. However experiments proved that not only does the introduction 0f strong acid into a normal stomach uutncanse pain, but that when a large number ol‘ normal stomachs are examined it is not unusual to dud cases ill which the acid is fully as high as when all ulcer is pres- ellt. 1),; w, 1,. Palmer injected a one half per cent. solution of hydro- chloric acid illto normal stomachs and-there was no pain from‘ it. But ill patients suffering with stomach‘, or intestinal ulcer these injections, immediately caused pain, which patients described as exactly likc the pains they usually suffered. What does this prove? That it is the acid in the stonr, acll juice that causes the pain, but‘ theremust bc all ulcer there [org thc acid juice to irritate. ‘ As rncutioncd before, in the 11141.1’, is due to gas pressure, which can: be prevclltcil to a KY6?" 01110111 11)’, chewing the food well before sWHl-l lowillg ll. ‘ However when you have a ill", -‘ ‘Confederation Add I 1 developed, W113 handicapped t out g - utsitnios shin ..; ._ . .1 . .. After SixtyYears Of Progress THE GROWTH 6F CANADIAN TRADE SINCE CONFEDERATION \ . At Confederation Canada was for the most part a practically un- known wilderness, while the Si. Lawrence valley. though partially in its trade by its severe winters, and the Maritime ‘Provinces by the lack oi nll-‘tlle-year-round communica- tion with the hinterland. Ill the first year of the Dominion, the total trade was just u-rder $120.- 000,000. Imports amounted to $67.- 000.000_ exporfs of Canadian pro ducts to'$48.‘500,000 and exports of foreign products to a little over $4,000,000. Of the ‘$48,‘500000‘ of Canadian exports it is significant that only $1,500,000 was described as “manufactures? From this comparatively unim- portant position as a tradltlg coun- try at Confederation, Canada clilllllctl slowly bllt steadily until the end of the ‘ninteentvh century, and thereafter very rapidly i-ndeed. In 1926 the exports of Canadian produce reached $1,31‘5,000,000_or I10 less than 27 times their value ill 1868. although the population had hardly trebled during the interven- illg period-a cr-nlparlson which capacity of the ‘Canadian people has increased within the memory of nlell who arc still with us, and suggests what an advance there has beeuI ill their incomes and their standard of livillg. 1n 1927 the exports of Canadian produce are somewhat lower at $1,252,000.- 000, about 2G times their value in 1868. . ‘Imports have on the whole growl: much less rapidly than exports. From the $07,000,000 of iConfederzr tirn days they P0249 to $921,000,000 ill I926 and $1,0‘31,000,000 ill 1927— an increase of ab t 15'»; times When lIllilfJPIS are compared with exports we find. aftcr allowance is made for exports of foreign pro- m-iiv of cast-s, pain ill the stomach ducts, that an excess of $l-i.000.000 of illlilt rte ovcr i‘.\'])0l‘i$ ill thc firs: ‘year of lllO "Dfllllllllflll has become all excess of exp rts of $236,000,000 ill thc sixtietll. ‘Ill other words, ill the lutvst fiscal year we exported about $20,000,000 per mouth rucrc shows llo\v greatly the productive l, ; ‘ . ‘Iflllllill Imv and" Beautiful Isle In this Jubilee of Canadian Con- federation it is t mely to recall the fact that the lsla d Province o the Dominion was the birthplace o the Union of all the Provinces. It was lu a room of the Provincial Parlia- ment Buildings in Charlottetown that/the vision of a great British Commonwealth having Dominion from sea to sea tool: form. \ Without high hills or deep valleys and having very little forest Prince Edward Island ls a veritable gar- den, where in the course of a day's trip, one may see almost every‘ variety of agriculture in evidence. This historic Province was, ceded to the British Crown by the Treaty of Paris in 1763 along with other .§li.1;.t¢.rt. Comfort in you; o“ islands ill the Gulf of Si. Lawrence. but‘the territory did not take its present name plntll 1799. The French called it Isle St. Jealnafig, with their apt expressiveness i early explorers christened it “by baffe et belle isle," low and beautr: fulisland. I Interlslve cultivation has resulted! ill giving the Island something 0i.‘ the appearance of Kent and Sussex‘ and there is some historical back-‘ ground for this in the fact that the foundationsof the Island were laid, by Selkirkks Scottish settlers whose, descendants today form the back-l bone of the population. At the time! at the last Federal census ill 1021 rince Edward island mm a 1101111111- tiori of 88,615, of whom 33,437 werei of Scottish descent. This nl-ol10l"| tion of inhabitants oi Scottish des- cent is larger than ill any other 0111-‘ vince, and its influence can be see" in place-names found throughout ;he Province. The origin of many )f these names has been traced by ;he geographic board of Lailallii K81? dlilwnd lat-gab‘, upon your‘ foresight m‘: providing for it; ‘ This ‘Bus! 0M volcano-your Saving: Account-doped}; u“, be made by mail when druid. ‘The BANK 000.000 Reserve $19,500,009 Capital $10, - Resources $245,000,000 1nd the results of the enquiry were; ret forth in a pamphlet published a year or so ago. i i Slow Development .1 . l At the time of thc ccssioll Prince; Edward Island contained about .10; Acadian families living by Kardcllw Zing of the beautiful and _ island went 0n slowly for "zrcatly checked by largo grants madeJo a icw, a s) sicnl that handicapped dcvclcplnont for gcn- zrations. Nothing much was ac- zomplishetl llntll the arrival of Lord Selkirk and his first baud <11 rolotrists in 1601i from Scutlurld. Smut Destroyer There l: only one way in which Formaldehyde can lull ‘ In destroying smut germs-that's by getting a low grade" _‘ Formaldehyde. You can easily avoid that ‘chance by“ getting your supply here. Our “ FORMALDEHYDE is highest grade used for this purpose-fresh ‘strength. and f... Lars: ._ . ‘finite pain ‘in a definite silfll- =11 11‘ “sheTe. km us?‘ fins‘; “to Bigtlittdcfinite tinlc after, eating yfl>111‘ b“; - - - , 1'“ ‘"1" m“ e‘ ' ‘ ' .plan is to consult 1'01"‘ 00 011 11111. Tuesday night. where all the llli0l-‘ ‘extent it is an inlprovelneut Dirge’ “nder his treatment m Once mam)“ asked m!‘ “m be M‘! be‘ {conditions prevailing elsewhere? Medical or non surliicai @9111“ fore the public, ivho will be asked “m” m m‘ ‘aws “m1 “s syslemflyllile some big problems yét re- lnellt of ulcer, is now glvrug m‘ g°“e“"mem' imain unsolved, the Carlisle systemdiplemnd “emlml :is a vast improvement on the sys-, "tern which preceded it and greatly superior on the system which op- *'°*’*""""""'" than we imported. But the mere valuc of thc conl‘ lnotllties imported al/d exported is not the only thing that counts; the degree of elaboration to which lthey have been brought is also a ‘most important matter. Since Con- _ federation the manufacture of the | Dominion, ill spite of temporary set» H? backs, have been steadily forging i ahead. and some years ago, Canada system of government are not ob- About 800 were me "umhpr u‘. Us first company and lhcir [)l‘tlSIl(.‘l'li,\" may be said to have bccll illlmctli-‘ ate. -The visit of the Idarl of Scl- 'rirk is commemorated by the namc Port Selkirk in Kings t‘ollllt,\'-. Many of the early sctticrs camc‘ from the Island of Skyc off thc wusl coast of Scotland and tllcir pr ence accounts for many place. names such as Arulatiltlc, (illlSlIfl ance at the annual meeting on The White Drug Store I. c. JAMIESON vruggrst ligcd to remain in the country but, while ill it. they are obliged to coll- to decide what is to be done. ____.__-{-p)————- LATE SEEDING. We understand the past year has ieeu the most successful ill the his-‘ tory of the institution, financially and otherivisc. ill this as well as in tllc discussion of ways and‘ means for ilnprovclncut thc public are deeply iutercstcd. lt is thorc-_ fore hoped tllcre will be a largc at‘ tendancc and that thc rliffcrt-nt mal- tors to be laid befori- thc meeting will be flllly and freely discussed. i THE TOURIST BUSINESS. HERE are pointing to a more than Oi'(lill-‘ many indications‘ arily large tourist business durin this coming summer. Of those who‘ come some will go to the larger- hotels in the city or by the sea- shore or in the towns alld villages, and the hotcls and their trapacity nrc woll known to or tnsily uyuil-‘lt-ss Nlifilltl 50011011! is sufficiently‘(iovcrnnlcllt Control as proposed‘manner." visitors. gglrly u, t-nsllri: thc ripcnirlg of thc‘lly thc Stewart (iovlvrnlllclll, tllcyi ablc by tourists and Among the visitors’ m, has already ma,“ comparatively early i“ thhfarc alike ill this, that they both clim- bflvfl illiilllillifill ill 18110114 11110 filllf-‘F-Vhlltllnllt thcre is always the danger, Wise. 10610 Will b9 1111111)’ who williot’ damage by frost before thc llal‘-‘ want less pretentious alld lcss ex- pensive accommodation than the r regular hotels provide. Many, par-ltllnlous rain has prevented farm‘ EldDlNG is. somewhat. lutcr Ill this Province this scasou than thc il\'t?l" 14c of prcviorls ycars. 'l‘his, l10\\'(:\’Ul',l$ causing no concern farmers as, almost in- bccn IIIIIOIIK olll‘ variably. late seasons have followed by larger and butter crops than whorl thc seed is sown earlier. Rapid vegetation in this country has always been the secret strong alrd vigorous crops whether always long enough to bring our props to maturity as we are rarely troubled with early Autumn frosts. Ill the Vilestern Provinces there is considerable anxiety over the Early fall frosts are not. infrequent, and un- latcncss of seeding. ‘vest is gathered. This year heavy and almost con- ill the rest of thc country." . . The fact is, ol‘ course, that‘ thc liquor trade is ill its nature a‘ ‘dangerous business and therefore‘ ought not to remain outside the control of the community. The.‘ ‘community has seen flt to restrict.‘ ‘this business: by means of laws and regulations, but‘ until the gr¢at mushlng power of private profit-mak- ing has been removed, the commit- ‘V (‘PIIIUS i of nity cannot expect to be master ill .. i its own house.“ in grain or roots. Our seasons are‘ This quite knocks the bottom out of Mrs. Gordon Wright's contention] ‘as preacntetl to thc people here that‘ ithe Carlialc plan is a failure. Pub- .lic Opinion and The Lancet arc thigh authorities known and respect-E ‘ed throughout the reading world." (And although the (Jarllsle system: ‘comes far short. of thc plan ofi inate the element of private gain, which is thc chief lnotivo behind thc batlcful activities of thc t-ijllllif," l i igler and thc bootleggcr. For the first time the House of; ticularly those with young cllildremioperations ill vcry Jflillly sections; Lords has acquired as a member‘ , . will look for quiet private homo-s where there are open fields, bath- ing accommodation and the quietiPrerlictions of a short wheat cropiavon, fomlerly Sh. James Craig, life of the country that goes with the country life. it hrl-fbeen suggested by Mr. Justice Arsenault, President of the Publitr _ ity Association, that persons in the country who have accommodation of this kind to offer should make to the Publicity Association or by regular advertise- it known either ments in the newspapers. The sug- gestion ls n good one. Visitors have no other way of finding out where! those places are. number of people who could be ac- commodated. general information as to accommodation were made,‘ known either through advertise-i meats or to the Publicity Assocla-l‘ ‘tion there would be no difllculty in‘, placing visitors when they arrive.‘ The tourist business is import-i ant and should be cultivated in ev- ery possible way. There are many country homes which could give- the kind of accommodation that the majority of ylsitors are looking for, but unless these are known to those directing the visitors they are not likely to be discovered. There should be a move in this direction at once. The advantages of Prince Edward Island as a sum- mer resort are well known. What in moat needed now is lo lot‘ our If location, the ‘of tllc Prairie Provinces where ifarm operations have been held up. Willi Illrtilniarc already afloat, but pessimlstiwwho is not only the Premier of Ul-‘ wholesome hbmc cooking and allipygtlictinpg are not uncgmmon‘ nor stcr, but a full-fledged rllcmbcr of ‘are they always reliable, as the ‘$106k market has an axe. to grind in. issuing reports. 1| of a ;bountiful yield forecast lower prices Short crops usually mean high prices. During the later season predictions ‘and between the two tllc wily spec- ‘ulator obtains his harvest in wide Even in the West late springs have frequently given sat- isfactory harvests and this may be repeated this year. Anyway, it is too soon to be pessimistic. margin. m0}- EDITORIAL NOTES.. The difference between prohibi- tiorl and temperance is that the former is not temperance, of which there is abundant proof. The Patriot stresses the fact that many persons who lately support- ed prohibitlon are going to vote for Government Control. Having, mean- time, read andconsidered Premier Stewart's platform, they have changed their minds, and have de- cided to give Government Control u. trial. There is nothing nnreasonq able about their decision. Good methods, as good reasons. must ltlrc Prclnicr of another sectiull of {the Empire. The recipient of this |irigll distinction is Viscount Craig- i the llousc of Lords. IIe was intro- duced uud took thc prescribed oath Ofl Wednesday last. More and more reckless grow the airmen. The other day one of ‘them, Lieutenant .1. A. Doolittle. at Dayton, Ohio, undertook to do the “outside loop.” 1t.- is said to have never been attempted before but once, and then had resulted in the death of the pilot and Ills assist- ant. This particular form of air- exercise which Doolittle performed is thus described: When flying at thc speed of 150 miles an hour, at all altitude of 8,000 feet, he sudden- ly tllrned the nose of his plane down and attained a speed of 280 miles an hour in descending 2,000 feet before tlle loop was completed. When he landed the report says his eyes were bloodshot and there was evidence of hemorrhage of his lungs, but next day no ill effects were apparent. What next’! Ii one-half the effort devoted to the advocacy and defence of pro- hlbltlon in our Province had been put forth to educate the young in true Christian temperance we‘ might. have had today a more sober community, free from the vice and crilne which prohibition has brought in its train. There has been an ap- palling ioas to the community from giro place tn Imttnr. nlncerc and cnrtlcat persona. r512) ‘ ‘ the misdirected efforts of many i DAILY LESSONS 11v ENGLISH By W. L. Bordon rvoomeeovovovooo-vo-oo-vev. “UIIDS ()I~"I‘I<JN NIISUSEI): [mp1 say “that city is ll long ways from hcrc." Say “a 1011i; wuy from hcrc." OFTEN AIISPRONOIYN-CFJD: pre- amble. Accent the “pr9," 1101 1119 ant." OFTEN MPSSPELLEDI lent; two f's, ient.‘ - SYNONYMS: continuous, ever- lasting, endless. ceaseless, inces- sant, perpetual, interminable. WORD ‘STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.“ lint 11s increase our ‘vocabulary by 111M161" illg one word each lay. 'I‘(1dfl1"5| wcrd: PEHPF-NCTIW) Y; done care- lessly or negligently for Ill.) sake of getting mymigh; half-hearted. “His work was donc in a perfunctory artific- Dally Selections ¥ roa A é Guardian Readers +o+oa May 30. 1927 TIIE l“Ot)l.:—i'l"htl fool hath said in his heart, There is no God. Cor- rupt are they. arid have done a11- onlinable iniquity: God looked down from lleavcn to soc if there were any that did understand. Psalm 53: 1, 2. / ldtlhYERz~lxlrd keep lls from such folly. NEVER T00 LATE my friend, though you've ‘kllowll dismal failure, _ Do rlot idly stalld mute with des- lpflii‘, / There's a thought that will stead‘ fastly thrill you, _ That will brace like tht! keen moun- tain air— ' It is this-note failure is final. Nay, no failure is final indeed; Alld there's always this great In- spiratlon- ‘It ls never too late to succeed! Say, Till he hopelessly ceases all trying, _ Until then not n man e'er is dow.n- \ ed: For theresalways the chance our new effort Vilith abundant success crowned. So then rise high I failures, Let the manhood within you be freed, And u-ndaunted start new-ever lknowing It is never too late to succeed. will be above the old Start anew, with a. determined spirit, Starbanew, and let nothing dis- m5)’; Should the struggle seem hard and unending, And a spur for the fray need, Grit your teeth as you voice this great mollo: do you ‘tion is writtcu large ill was recognized by the ‘League of Na tiolls as one of thc most important industrial countries of tllc.world. 'l‘lu~. correctness of this classifica- our trade reports, for ill the year 1020 we ex- ported, instead of the $i;500,U00_ of manufactured goods to the value 0f $506,000,000 and partly nlalutfactul" ed gocds to thc value of all addi- tional $130,000,000. Thougll Canada is still a young country, her ex- Dorts of manufactured conlmodiii- es now exceed her imports c-f mau- uiactured gQods, and her ulannfact- ures are exported to all the conti- nents and to the islands of the sea, carrying with them the ‘name and fame of the cities and the country in which they are produced. !Flnally_ our iniernaticjnt position as a trading nation i5 of the best. In the calendar year ‘I926 the ex- ports of homo products and the a1.’- gregate trade of Canada, a young country with a comparatively slnal-l population, WCPE the fifth largest ill the wc-rld, lxclrrg exceeded only by chose of the four great trading nations: til-cut Ilrittllll, the United States, IFrarlc-t: alrxl iflcrlnally. cacll of them "with from four to twelve times our population. ‘in per capi- ta trade we were only excelled by our sister “Dc-million of ‘New Zea- land. whose comparatively small population of a million and a hall makes it difficult for her to devel- op holnc industries by a tariff and forces her to rely in.the luain on other countrieg for her manufact- ured goods. The enterprise and energy of the pcoplo of Canada. acting on our unsurpassed natural resources, ‘have produced this rc- su1‘t in what is a comparatively short space in ‘the life of a nation. iAud as yet ‘those resources ‘have scarcely been tapped. t FOR THE - SCRAP. BOOK A al-zmsa or LITERARY noon-nous l=on BOOK tovzne Q w Monday, May ,30th (Joan oi Arc burnt, 1431; Pope died. 1744; Voltaire, 1778) “I asked her ii she wasn't ash- amed to get up so late; and she aald she was: but that she had rather be ashamed than get up." -Kale Douglas Wlggln. ‘SPRING ’ l Spring, tlle sweet Spring, is the year's pleasant king; lblOOITIB each thing, maids dance lll a ring, Cold doth not sting, the birds do sing. Cuckoo, jug-jug, pu-we, ‘IO-WINE.- W00! Then then pretty The palm and may make country houses gay, thumbs frisk and play. the shop- helds pipe all day, And we hear eye birds merry lay, Cuckoo, Jug-jug. WOO. tune this pu-we. to-wltta- The fields breathe sweet, the dais- _ ies kiss our. feet. Young lovers meet, old sunning sit, ‘lnpvory street those wives a- tunea our ‘it. is never too late to succeed!" earn do greet, heln, hilmuir. I._vndzllc, Porlrcv. Stancllcl, and Figg. An interesting] tiaclic name is (‘orraubalrl zlpplicrl to 1 settle-incur on 'l‘r:lcailit- llny. 'l‘llc nunlc int-ails "whitc sicklc" and rc- fcrs to‘ thc ilili1Plll'llll(‘t‘ of thc froth covered sllorc lillc in tllc fall of tllc year. ' Surveyed by Officer. i l Thc first survey of Prillcc Edd I- ward island was lnrulc ill 170T». by‘ Captain Sarlluel Holland, a llrilisll, officer, who had fought at. thc soil!- . es of Louisburg and Quebec. ‘ named a large rrumbcr of fcnturcs after fellow officers including Illur ray River aflcr the Scottish gener al James l\lul'ra_v. Governor" of Quo- bec, 1760-66. Of othcr Scottish i names New Glasgow (‘i1llllllGHl(ll‘l<l.i0i§‘,“ Glasgow frnlll which settlers were‘, brought in 1810 by William Epps Cormack the Newfnuntlland cxpltlr- er. While there is no Edinburgh or Aberdeen there is Dundee, the naming of which commemorates the romance of a louc Scottish las- sic who came out to Charlottetown from llilllflfli‘, Scotland in 1M0. Prince Edward lsluntl is so OHHIJII- tially rt land where the outwurtl as- Deflifi Yflflevt the inner conscious- ness of the people that. it is not surprising to find many individuals aluong nations owning it as their native heath. A Chief Justice of Canada, Sir: Louis Davies, came out of the Island. and it was tllc land that in- spired that cllarnlirlg rural Hlinnnttp of young lifc. “Ann of (lrccn (in- blfla." by lillvy illautl lliontgruncry. But the most noteworthy incident In all her history is thc great evcnt now being celebrated with such ell- thusiusm all over Canada-Coated eratiolr. ——-——oo>-§. “ ehhld g Scrapbook By ROBERTA LEE vflfl¢¢+w+mo+woao+oot Hons When Making Soup To skim the grease from top oi‘ soup, take square, sheets of clean willie tissue paper, lay one Bhfiat i" <11 111110 Ofirflflllly on surface of 11w soul». ‘ihfin gently rm n m: and all the grease, or fut, will adhere to the paper. ‘How "'l‘o Clean Sponges Sponges can be cleaned Oughly by soaking Them in milk for several hours. dry and rinse water. fiterplnll. the Squeakl 1f Ilium. drawers. and the like. are rubbed with a little soft soap, 11 W111 awn any annoying squeaks. Cuckoo. lug-lug. pu-we, to-wittia‘. woo! 811111151, the sweet Spring! -‘l'homa| Nnh (1567-1601) ‘A Mayfair hostess gave a. big party. for which a number oi extra ‘ Win11"! We"! Blisaged. Seeing c-ne young man gtanding alone, she ap- roached him and said. "Shall ll find you a partner?" "No. pleas, don’-t trouble." he re- Bits. lie I? ‘lteirét pedition thor- Then wring ihel\ I‘. thoroughly in hot '1 s< Tm: ‘wr as» .m=-< m, w E.‘ R. BROW 146 Richmond ‘St. Charlottetown ‘ v Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and .. Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate Good Strong Stock Companies A Agent at Sumnierside, Lloyd Lewis. v ...,;.,_ - dam,‘ -,._l-.,,,_ "W, .-_,,.-,.. slsss- -(|“l"‘ 1110M ployed. The aid of wooden!‘ trappers will be sought all _ Cotton expedition rcuclwl fouudland. To Search Newfoundland (Canadian Press) NILW YORlK, -May 27.——~A relief expedition, headed by ‘F. Sidney Cotton. formerly Newfoundland air mail pilot. which will search the irlterior of Newfoundland for trace ofiCaptains Nungessor and Coil. plans to loavo this city the early part. of next wetlk, it was announc- ed. last night. Subscriptions 0t’ $16,000 have been received by Frank Tichenor. publisher of the Asro Digest, who is acting as trustee of the fund which is financing the expedition. Cotton expressed the belief t-hat the remainder of the contributions to aid the expedition -will halve ‘been received before the plane seeking the fienclunen hops off. A telegram was received from Premier Walter S. Monroe, Premier of Newfoundland, promising the full support of the Newfoundland government in the cnteprise. Bc- sides Cotton, who has had twelve years flying oxrperlence, two other “illins ‘l ‘ oi Trout are now in our streams, ponds. etc. There is no. batter or healthier pal time than trout fishing but to be ouooonful you! want good tackle. We have the good tackle. the kind you can land the big onu with. if, "shag “(aground for , slain out. 1w 111 ""- "" a ad a were» MW!!!" “m! - "rllli li enroll!!!" 01'1"" 0 u or range. ~‘ i», gunman}. "lnw" We can ilt you out with cheap rodl for just a c. days outing or lino split.’ bamboo. or llnoewood that will tut for yuan‘. Now II the time to in}, vuh We can uvi- you » money on (letting tackle i The 2 Macs‘ t‘ DRUGSTO E ‘ Dlled. “I'm Bfrflid it ‘might make the other waiters jonlnngJK-Tll Q 14o Great ‘omega . iml njllh- n.4,.