.. La»- PAGE FOUR THE DIIARLUTTEIOYIN GUARDIAN Morning Dally (Iconic! ll Ill!) tresmeul. Llclll». Um. W. Cluster a. Mcburc V100 Illfllfltlll; J. B. Humans, lJ-L Secretary; mat. Uul. U. A. Mnuunuon. U.n.U. lidlru um Miuuqlu; Director, J. IL Damon. IIJ-l. Asuwunc lmumi: lruu Wlutu and Ill L mlrncu BUBSUMIFIIUN BATES 5y Mali u: than, 34.00 9n punt, $4.00 nu u munkflu QM!» lul '4 nlulllus; Wu lur one llllllllll w» neuter; p.00 pa was. “m: Au o mulllll iAJa iv: A lllllllfllli 6W l0! um: Mount. by Man IAI emu Province: null U. S. A. yaw pet you can-aw; nucuy. fan-UV per )€-J, pun w: a umuum out: lur s uwuuu uuuruluu may In vutuiuuu It nun; Iguana, new lurk; 0|! curnu mu um lhanhllllhl, llflllvll] husruyuuun hon- Aguuuy, uu 1'01! ll‘ Aluulnnnn J. limo, BI! u” in, I'm-unto; new: Ital, Ulmlvuu Llurlnr, Unuvvin \\\|lll!l new: Shunt, Bllllllllr], 0m; Hub Iulviwvu alum, lluuvluu h. ll-i A hu Qhlflullvkuh n Aluminum: how: Agency, pvuua mm- Alana], “The arranges-L Memory l8 Weaker mun Ill Weakest lult." mommy, AUGUST 24, 1942 The Rubber Problem On; fl 1h saddest examples of lack of vis- inii 3r (Jttnvvn was the continuation this year at a {pct of minty iiiillioiis oi tlic taxpayers iiioiicy’ iii the polic) iii hiiiiiisiiig western izlrincrs iol" lint glowing \\‘1lc‘Lll.. .\t thc time the vulc tor LUll- tiiililug this policy was passed 1n Parllameilt, . - . . i _ becrcttlry of Agrlclillillc “lcltard of the Lil iicil Stilt-s vvzls being tillolfiil 3s‘ “WW1! 1113f m it grliiiliries l1l\' thc solution to 011C 0i 111C illlf \\ 111...; pit. i; problclils ‘ul- tlic war ~111111 ~11 ruppi-i- shortage. Synthetic rubber can be made from [ictroleunl as well as wheat ;' but petroleum i< list-ii iiii essential war commodity, and 1n any c...<_ lifiiCVfislllg tzlkcs longer. Rubber c1111 be 11111- (lilLLii lfiilll Wllbiii SlilfCll ill from six t011111€ iiiolltlis us colliptircd with l2 to 13 111011l115 170111 pctrokuin. According to Mr. \Vick'ar‘d, the wheat process “offers the bFSt 90551111111)’ Qf grvntlyl increasing the production of synthetic riibbcr as t-rirlv its ilC.\'l. yclir." llc clztiiiicil lliiit Elmootpooo lJllS-iltlfi of grliiu would produce J00,- ocopoo gallons of alcohol from which butaclieiie, in stifficicnt (iuantitics to make about 240,000 toils of synthetic rubber, could be obtained. Practically all of the world's supply of 1,500,- ooo toils oi rubber per yezlr ivas lost to thc Un- ited Nations in the first three 111011015 0f 1943- Abolit two thirds, or around a million tolls, l year's output was imported to the Utiilfld Slates in 104i and at the present time possibly a year's supply of natural rubber is all lliflt 1<_‘111fl1115 sit-siting inanufactuns The greatest portion 0f ghig, needless to say, will be reserved for war purposes. llcilce the urgent need for a 51113- stiilite. Czlliilrlii is generously equipped with distillcrics iii which wllcat can be processed with little loss of time. Is it too valuable to be used for this purpose? The answer is plain. It 15 Worth- less unless used. Cost, large or small, fades from the picture just now. Time is the only con- sidcrzitioil. \\'e have the surplus wheat and we can ¢Ontiimu¢ to produce it; which means that a speedy solution for the rubber shortage pro- blem lies at our very door, if we have the 1n- itiative to employ it. Island Communication I island ferry communication, about which our politicians are so complacent, is the subject 0f tiniclv comment in the Moncton Transcript. The Transcript is a. strong supporter 0f the blac- kenzie King Government, but this does not pre- vent it from viewing the present situation with gnnccril, It says: The inadequacy of the present: car ferry ECW111013 c0 Prince Edward Island under normal condi- tions ls admitted Last. week_ with the extra. traffic caused by the Old Home Week observances in Charlottetown, it ‘was much worse. Railway and steamer officials, staffs and em- ployees do the best they can find what the)’ 5116f ceed in doing with the equipment available 1s remarkable. It is not enough. hOV-‘f-‘Vel’. t0 meel? the needs of an entire province which depend! largely on this means of communication with the rest of the Dominion. Traffic will not grow less while the war eon- tinues and the transport problem will become more serious unless something is done about it. What can be done is a question over which the authorities have been puzzling but so far without finding a solution_ Meanwhile, if anything should happen to the car ferry now in use the situation twonld become extremely awkward. A tunnel under the Northumberland Strait. ls the only satisfactory solution, and undoubtedly (m; project will receive serious consideration af- ter thc war. It may not. be wise 0r safe, however, to wait for a tunnel to solve a troublesome traffic problem Inflation and The Farmer “inflation Breeds Farm Distress" is the self- explzinntory title of a pamphlet ivritteu by Dr. Q- ]‘._ _lt'SllC§§ of thc University of Minnesota, which i5 bving widely circulated in thc U. S. NOYIhWCSK- The author minces no words in passing judg- ment iipoii what the results gire nf allowing the inflationary’ spiral to set in. llc writes: ".\ fcw iiidivitliizils look upon rising pfiCcS 21S an iniliczltioii of prospcriiir. 'l'li<*_v welcome thc rise in price but overlooked the serious consequ- ence of a violent inflation. The rise soon becomes a steep spiral. Farmers, finding that their costs art- increasing as well as their prices, want still higher prices. \\'agc ezlriicrs press for higher wages to offset the rising cost nf living. Em- ployers scck higher prices to pay higher wage and material costs This rricc goes on until event- lllllli’ thc inflation bubble bursts. 'l‘licn there are scrinlis problems of adjustment. \\'hcn the rc- mtinu sl-is iii. prices fiirmcrs rvccivc tend to frill further and faster than their costs and they fiiirt it difficult to mzikc ends mcct. ".r\u infliiiioiiary price rise provides strong l"lll]il.’tllftl'i in bid lip lzinrl prices and :1 spcciilzi- five lziiid linlilll develops. This brings with it r1 mph] iiicrczlsc iii fririii debt. lVhcn prices lircnk. fnrpclifiuiipp flilil dvlit distress follow. The F|1(‘(‘l1lflll\‘(‘ lzind boom illiriiig the first World \\’:\r iunr: ilriii lll1lll)lC(l land prices iii the Middlc West. The lzirln mortgage tlcbt for the country tripled. Farmers have ample reason for n02 , wanting to go through another debt-swelling in- flation. “Inflation i] undesirable for alwthbr R1801!- Rapidly rising prices tempt persons to seek re- turns by holding goods for higher prices. It draws attention away from production. Difficul- ties of production are increased because costs change so rapidly. Contracts become subject to frequent change. Inflation tends to interfere with rather than to aid production essential to ivinning the war." Canadian policy is designed to prevent the emergence of thg conditions here described, but it can easily be understood that the campaign against inflation in the United States is a pre- requisite for the success of our own price con- trol programme. Tea in Canada Sixty years ago, and even later, all tea was sold iii this country in bulk, by the pound, or in chests, half chestsand smaller fractions. The chest held I00 pounds and a container as small as five pounds could be purchased. Attempts were made earlier than the time indicated above by wholesale grocers in various parts of Canada to make the public like tea in packages, but it was no go. Whether the lead package was suspect, or whatever the reason, no progress was made in inducing tea consumers to emulate the fashion illrcatly adopted in Great Britain. At the time the package was introduced Can- adian dcalers got their tea on the London mar- ket. An interesting date in this connection is July 7, i886, when the sailing ship W’. B. Flint tlelivcrctl a cargo of tea direct from the Orient at Port Moody, B. C. Port Moody is twelve milcS from Vancouver, which had only been incorpor- ated a few weeks earlier. - EDITORIAL NOTES - August on its last lap and it has created al- most a record so far as seasonable weather is concerned. a- ir at it Remember II. M. S. C. Charlottotoivii, and see that the ratings get those leather coats to protect them from the stormy blast. a vi it I \\'nr correspondent and commentator are as plentiful today as grasshoppers Prairie wheat belt. n: n- u n- The milk bonus will be appreciated by farm- ers and consumers alike, and it is to be hoped Will speed-up production. u u u “epics" iii a This province was represented at Dieppe though not by the army, the navy including some of our brave boys, one of whom has made the grczlt sacrifice. HllllCFlO thc air force has pro- vided our casualties. u u a n All workers in essential jobs in Australia must work on public holidays, the Prime Miri- ister has decreed, but those in non-essential in-. dustries must take the holiday because their work would waste scarce materials and use valuable freight space. . U I F I St. Bartholomew's Day —- one of the twelve apostles, said to be identified with Nathaniel; he is traditionally reported to have been flayed alive and then crucified; on this date i572 the wholesale massacre of the Huguenots in Paris, by order of Charles IX, took place; planned by the Queen mother, who feared and hated the heir- presumptivc Henry of Navarre, who was the hope of the Huguenots. n- =o= w u Queensland has evolved a new treatment for butter for export ——it is reduced to pure butter fat and can be shipped as ordinary cargo. Suc- cess 0f initial shipments to Britain induced the Queensland Butter Board to insall a. plant The plant is capable of treating 25 tons of butter a day. The butter is melted down, all moisture and salt are removed and it is deodorised. lt is then rlin into cans. This butterfat can be used as it is or reconverted to butter by adding milk. Shipping space is reduced by I8 per cent. and tlicre is no loss in nutritional value. In fact, the product is the most concentrated source of calor- ies possible. The new method is the most revolu- tionary change over to occur in the Australian butter export industry. a is a s Evidently graft and misappropriation of Government funds are beginning to attract the attention of the powcrs-that-be in Quebec. Hon. T. D. Bouchard, Minister of Roads told a group of newspaper men who called on him that he docs not want the employees of that depart- iiieutpven iii far-off places where they may be- lievc themselves safe from scrutiny, to pad pay- rolls, usc the government men and material for building roads on their private property, and he even objects to patrol men sleeping by thc road- side on sunny afternoons instead of scraping the roads. He has let some employees know of these pet aversions. "These things must be clean- ed up," he asserted. Evidently he docs not antici- pale an early provincial election, though Du- plessis does. u n u w Here are some of the good things said of us by the Montreal Gazette. "In 187i, when the first census was taken, the people numbered 94,- o2l, while in i921, the total was the lowest on record at 88,615. Today the figure is almost the same as it was seventy years ago. More people live in the countryside than in the city and towns, the rural population today being 70,707 and the urban, 24,340. The farmers are comfort- ably off and life runs smoothly on the island. Agriculture, fur farming and fishing are the cliicf occupations and summer visitors annually bring considerable wealth. The islanders have N all along been strong on education, the free school system having been introduced as far back as i85l. 'l‘hcy are also strong on patriotism, and today most of the males of military age are in the ranks of the fighting forces. Altogether there are about 50,000 males, from infant to near- cctiicnarians, living in this pleasant part of Can- ada. Prince Edward Island is a steady province whose poopln fulfil all aliphatic," THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN NOTES BY TllE WM The time f; put when vvo lhould w» Eingllsti Canadians, Euro- pean Canadians, New Canadians or French Canadians. We are either 111 Canadians or we uien'i..--L0n- don nee Prus. To date In have never owned I twelve-sided coin, but should be better than Canadian five-cent p to our ehoruiglmtcd vision looks courage 1111-! querading as a quarter on church collection plates - though we AN not. sanguine as t4; that. — Stim- darti-Freoilolider, Cornwall. They do not form a tool Bound wont, of com-u, but tho new ot- tacks the United States on Jup- anese Pacific bases an calculated to help Russia, perhmps in a vital way. One of Russia's gravest dun. gers Ls u, Japanese attack in Siberia, the stab in the back long expected. But so long l4 Japan is threatened in her new conquest-s so lo as she must fight to mid her ga n.5, she will hesitate to om- bark on another major campaign. -Varlc0uver Sim. A contcmorary releu‘ to Mr. das Malian as Nationalist leader." It is respect.- flilly but urgently suggested that there be an end to this peculiar form of adulation. In Britain, and even in India, observers have often expressed amused lsc over the newspaper canonization" of the Mahatma, partlcularl in the 0.5. Before applying he Adjective "great," it mlkht be well to define terms. There is noth great about being foolish and that. is what. Mr. Gandhi has been for a long time past. — Branbfmd Ex- positor. Without advertising in peace time new products could not be brought to the people, new indus- tries launched, new processes per- fected, the inexhaustible dlscov- cries of scientific research made svailable to all. Without. adver- tising in wartime the needs of the nation, the regulations of the Gov- ernmt-zit, the campaigns of morale building could not. be resented in a free society. In a s iwe society, where the people must take whet. they are given, and no questions asked, there i; no need for adver- tising. In a. society of free choice, advertising. 8s M: Jones says, is an essential ingredient. — Van- couver Sun. Almout everyone has been struck by the number who in recent. years, have been dying suddenly in mid- dle life from heart ailments. What. ever be the general cause of this conditions, treatment; to pre. vent the toll take 0n ial tri- terest, and thus there L; be exhaustive study of the newly announced substance, convlslluia, which L; extracted from the 0cm- mon lily of the valley. Digitalis has become widely known as a su-b- stance “inch prolongs the life of those suffering frcm certain dan- gerous heart conditions. The new drug u said to possess certain od- vantages over that extracted from the purple fcxglove. and thus it apparently makes a, further SD01) forward in the search for ‘some. ,l.hlng that. will effectively combat this great. killer of men in their prune. — Windsor Ont“, Star. The Maud Muller type o! girl has been out of fastiicn for a 300d rnany years but Ls conllng back into the picture on account of the shortage of farm lmbor. Genera- tions have come and gone since Whittier the kindly Quaker t, wrote his gentle plaintive fie about. lovely Ma. , who on a. sum- mer day raked the meadow sweet with hiiy. The poem told now a young judge acme riding by on horseback, dusty and tired from the long, hot road, and now the shy and gentle Maud gave him a dr of pure, cold water from the pasture well. there was the age-old affinity and both felt. its power. Maud was shy, however, and tongue-tied in the presence of masculine grandeur. The young judge was ambitious and with a. rfig-etflil sigh he rode on to make wa L1 ‘he great w ld. - Fort Wlliiim Times- Journal. The public appear to like the new demydrat/sd meat introduced experimentally by the Ministry of Food. Samples were recently sent to about. I00 catering- establish merits throughout Britain, ranging from well-known London and provincial hotels and restaurants to industrial canteens and British restaurants. They have now given the Ministry reports on its recep- tion, and have suggested suitable recipes and wsys of cooking and flavoring t-hc meart. whim l00k5 like scme cereal food, and reconstitutes after an hour's soakin in water in the form of finely m ced meat. "In nearly every case," a Min- istry official said yesterday "sat- isfaction was BXIPI‘ wt e dishes served, which included nephew's pie, cottage pie, rLs. so s, mince patties, curried mince, stuffed vegetables, and Vienna. steak. Tine meat was also found adaptable to sucih oold dishes as pressed mutton and meat. r011, ed salads. -- Glasgow Ono of the pleasant bill 0f fiction with whim the American peo le like to begutle themselves is t. at horse raclrightkic sci-called spurt. of kings, con bum to im- provi the breed of ' “ horse em. But for all the 88 con- tributions shoved through zealous horse year the average price paid for l riding horses $1 ii hi. raft horses, $101150. O3 o er hoof, the lowl mule, Wllldh has never hard the nefit of any organized campaign in behalf of selcctfvo eugenics. and has just V, gone on its mulish wa , mile; con- siderably higher in e market. e ave-rage cost to the Ami for pack and riding mules was x198- 52; for draft mules. $201M. Np- parently the mutual windows will have to do B. lot of business befoi-o the strain oi’ American horsellesh can be improved to the point where, poo for pound. it equals the himbie mule. - diiciigo Daily ews. Stamp collectors-and there arc hundreds of them in Canada - have something to look forward to n4 a result of what 93 govern- menfl 1n the world have done dur- ing the first six months of this year senting kingdoms, re- publics, ominlctis, colonies and protectorates. they have released nations; 8a) major Ind minor vari- e s o c mps. - Kingston whl Standout! ' Between the two tr his“!!! g Anny-gig: riding horses wu at .24; ° each service in aid of lllstury 0f Tryun llnltel Church 150 Years Of Service 1792———1942 By l. I. D. p BUILDING THE PBEBENT CHURCH In i019 Rav. J. S. Phiuney who Wu superintendent when ttw cir- cuit was divided came for a second pastorate. Lu the fall of 1880 he, climbed the stairs of the high pul- p“ in m; 41 you old chapel and challenged nu Conlflffllrmll w RTE} AND B . liflllflll which echoed through the Method- ist homes of ‘rryon for many ‘"6118 and lived in Methodist (hearts for many years. At the Quarterly Board meeting held in November in Tryon Ch I it WM moved by Albert D. C beck and seconded by Thomas Dawson that a effort be made to build a new ethodist Church in Tryon, which motion was carried unanim- ously. It. was also agreed that Al- bert D. Callbeck, J. M. Hood and Jabea Hudson act an a committee to solicit subscriptions for erection of a new Methodist Church. This committee went to work with con- siderable drive, we believe and a1- though no subscription lists can be foun an item from the ledger of is Tryon farmer in quite moderate circumstances. shows how the peo- p16 responded: Melhdolnl Church 188i signed $100.00. May 5, 1881 Paid b0 A. D. Call- beck $25.00. October 22, i881 Paid to A. D. Callback 835.00. November 4, Paid tn A. D. Cull- back $25 00 Sept. i1 use: paid m A. o. Callback $25.00. In the Spring of 1881 the old chapel was vacated with the con- gegistion moving across the road Lord's Hall which had been erected a. few years previously. A Trustee board for the new church was appointed consisting of A. D Callback, Thomas Dawson, John N. beard, R. C. Lea, Geor e Ives, J. M. Hood, Richard Poo ey_ Jabez Hudson, R. I1‘. 10rd and S. E. Dawson. The members of the orig- lnal trustee board of 1817 had all passed on and the names of the re- presentative families had changed- only the families of Lord and Icai-d being rcpresenped‘ or: bpth boards. The building committee for the new church consisted of A. D. Callback, S. E. Reid, and George Ives. with John N. Leard as chair- man. The foundations, prepared mostly by flee-will labour, are re- membered by ‘rryon lads of sixty one years ago some of whom are still living and who worked with their fathers on the project was well and truly laid. The corner-stone ceremonies took place on Friday August 11, 1881, when the wife of Hon. W. W. Lord of Charlottetown had the honour of setting the stone, with a short service under the di- rection oi’ Rev. J. S. Phinney. Hon. William Warren Lord, who had commenced both his commer- cial and political career in Tryon was probably one of the oldest men resent, having been born in time o be included in the first English census of 1798. His wife the for- mer Arm Lea was one of the origin- al Lea family who came from Lincolnshire 1n 1818, and her eIBhtY-one years lay lightly on her lth fifteen years still ahead. chitects for the new church were Stirling d: Harrison. Tenders were called lor the framing and finish- ingn of the church, the contracts g0 g to Messrs Charles Howatt and Frederick Warren, two youn men who did splendid work, bu who unfortunately had tendered too low and lost money on the con- act. In June of 1862 Mr. Phinney whose 3 years pastorate was com- pleted had to move before seeing the new church completed and was succeeded by Rev. S. T. Teed. Mr. ‘Red being chairman that. year of the Prince Edward Island district of the Methodist church was ac- cordingly ln charge of the service of dedication when on October 22nd the new church was formally opened. One of the Charlottetown newspapers in its issue of October 1i, 1882 announced the opening: "THE METHODIST PEOPLE OF TRYON having erected one of the handsomest. churches on this Island intend to dedicate it. to the worship of Almighty God on Sun- day the 22nd of the present. month. The following arrangements for the service on that day have been made: "The Rev. Duncan D. Currie well and favorably known on this Island will preach in the morning, service to commence at 10.30 o'- clock. During the service the church will be dedicated according to the form of the Methodist Church of Canada. The chairman of the dis- trict the Rev, S '1‘. Teed past/or of the church officiating. In the afternoon at 2.30 o‘clock Rev. Humphrey P. Cowperthwaite of Cornwall, o former astor of the church will occupy t e pul it, and in the evening at. seven o'c ock the Rev. D. Currie will conduct the service and pireiwh after which the Sacrament of the Lord's Slip- per will be administered. The con- gregation has done nobly in the way of contributinf towards the erection of the edif co_ but, u thc trustees are now responsible for a considerable amount not yet pro- vided for it. is hoped that a liberal collection will be given and help in Ls way afforded to them in this most. laudable enterprise. A collec. tion will taken at the close 0f tho building fund. It is expected that Rev. Mr. Corey, Baptist minister will lake p502?‘ ip one or more of the ser- The services were held very much u announced, except that. Rev. Duncan D. Currie did not fulfill his appointment. his place being taken by Rev. Dr. Burwuh of the grab Methodist church, Charlotte- wn. The Summerside Pioneer of Wed- nesday, March 28. 1883 had among its Tryon notes the following: "The Methodist. people raislnl $4.000 in Tryon towards building their handsome and com. fortable new Church have started is. subscription list and will pay the balance 8000.00 duo on it immedi- ately, something un ivrcedentcd in church building on . E. I. in one year. A. D. Ciillbeck was treasurer for this subscription list. too, u well as for the previous one. In the ledger of the Tryon farmer who had finished payin his $100.00 Dwlfllp 111 d! 1H D WORDS OF CHALLENGE “With confidence in armed forces. with u“ rm- gflulgndlnl cgtegapuinstion up: . e gain rsfifinerirhsnrtei the tfnited State's. m ° - Q£iu JQQODDQ. 00 wu raised. He made the 591-11 g‘ gem. and wlilmn?“ n11- scrlpuon-Rfisjgllzlflllllt of last sub- THE GER-M A mighty creature i: the germ, Thougg smaller than the pachy- erm, His customary dwelling place Ir deep within the human race. I cannot help but. wonder at The ocidneu of his habitat. His chJdLsh pride he often please Bv 81 Do you. DODDQt. feel i You proba ly contain a. germ. —Ogden Nash. Late Dr. Schurman Was Once Considered As Tupper’s Successor s t3 i h 5 a § c. ‘E E F (J. W. D.,1.'n The Winnipeg Free Press) “T ~ i HE Y m’ Jwob Gould schummn. WA I look at it is this. My boy who died in New York 0n Aug. i2 in his 88th year, had been for so long a period u. prominent figure in the United States many fields of aotivlby that. most Clu- aldlam either did not know or had forgotten that he was by Canadian and that he ha. distinction in Canada before he transferred his loyalties to the United states 56 years iiao. Thc writer of this article, noting down the years the ever-rising stature of Dr. Selim-trim in the fields of education and diplomacy, has often indulged in speculation as to how narrow was the margin by which Canadian public life was deprived of bile services of Dr. enlisted of his own free will. He’s got to do without a lot of things he’s been accus. tomed to. I wouldn't feel right if I couldn’t go without something tool” ' “The least I can do is to work hard and save. My kitchen, my shopping hag, my work basket are the nearest I can get to his battlefront. But I can buy War Sohurtnan. The facts herewith . . 59:3,. m“, mm- Mm been Savings Stamps and Certificates-and S l . “an lgigrmdhlxanmiénrlémfnné wt lots of them-every week, so that ho i886, what witih the difficulties may have the tools to win. And that’: what I’m doing! How about you?" arising from the Northwest Rs. bellion and the determined resist- Act. For some two weeks ln JlfliQ the parliamentary u gallery had an almost daft v itor in the rson of a young, a. ractlve and abe PL fessor from Dalhollsie Universlty—J. G. Schurman. His business in the gallery was with MI. George Johnston, resident correspondent in Ottawa. for sev- Buy War Saving: Slam 1mm banks, pout oflicea, telephone o ca, department slnrea, druggina, grocers, tobaooonlsts, book stores and other retail utorcl. Cortl- ficates may be purchased for Immediate delivery in denomination; of 85, I10, I35, from Banks, Trust Companion 0nd eral newspapers which were gov- Poe: Ofliou. $331352,‘ cwiifntnzi... l2: ~---~1w--1-1----1=--1- on tenns of such confidential inti- macy with Sir John A. Mauionald and other lenders 0f the itovem. I merit. and was so active ii their - . servwe 1n mm thw w lomflustlc “ m“ “"14 “PM” 5" °1““'1°" Se,“ that the boys h, the m” the thunder-er. m view 01' m" allery were in the hiiiblfi re- 111811 P01111651 qualities subse- fei-iing to him as Minister of bhe fluently dl-sPliii/ed bv Dr. Benn:- Exterior. m» was s, Nova Scotlan, "W1- 11 1s 1111~mt1na to s eculate rind as such particularly interested "P11" What the effect o1 a. lei-em 1n the ‘ox-tunes d {he pa"). 1n (1801-5101! WOUJd hive n u m“ “wine, the course of. politifs ‘in our; _ O I O O Nova Scotti». in that time had :10 The M11111 for s m to representative in the cabinet. sli- 13H" °111r1°~1 contlnued. It ended Charles Topper, who had been a "w" i? Suwe-sfi; the man _ souizht was f Bcotia bench ouixzid ab: Qfionrmfi 11 S. D. Thompson who djgd in Windsor Castle some nine you; r B- ngln theintervairiscn to the posit on of Prime Mining;- As for Professor Schunnan no '1'" W111“ a year sage Pro essoi- 31; Phfiosiitithy in Cornell Univer. Y1 beimmnk that notable and both High Ccrnmiasioner in Lon- don and a. member of the govem- ment shuttling back imd forth bet/ween London and Ottawa, had art last made Iondtm his choice lmd had retired from both Par- liament and the government. A successor for him was being sought; and there was agreement that. he would not. be found in the Attntion Farmers I We need ten thousand pounds of five to six pouiiil chicken and fowl per week. We buy alive or dressed. Nova Bcotiazi del atioin in PB-flll- 11531111 career as an America t‘ ma“ what :55 w“: w” 0mm, mm“ m mm m 1.1 Gelt ln touch with us for someone who could function as a °°11,m-11 l-M a half of last ‘Ihurg- pr ca’, counterweight w Edward Blake, 111118 New York Times: Principal t-hen in the nltude of his power. ‘>1 °°"1'~’11 Utiwersltv. 1892-1920; THE ROYAL PACKING vresldent 0f the first United Slates le The list ofp available possibles, these being the qualifications, BS Cvmmtsslon 1o the Phlll i CQMPANY very limited: but there were tkibse 13991;‘ minister to Greece, . young professor J. D. Jenklnl, __ ._____.__ whiioglflcouglg 311811511 1. D 1th i an ~i a cute had the abilitiesgto head it. (Continued on page g, Co] 5) Prop‘ ‘Ilioulh men in his early thir. , tiltjrlti. his {passer} Wl-JS tafilreisfdyd not- t. ' B. e, par c ary rl .6. oi’ scholarshi. A Giichu-iiat. scholar. ‘£3 '3“ “vii? “iimmii” if?“ ‘“ w n. n on vars an s - h “lamented “I by and!” t1: P333 Tabla 6s .0011!!!’ o!‘ ‘fr; '11:)?‘ a‘? we cplpld market quite a few cars of Ear: and EMHWWQL Lawn having “Hm o I c we: er in against us. The markels l won the Ember; gmveyung fe1l0w_ y ver naded and with the serious blight situation these Potnml shi , he pursued his study of '1'" 1"" 111M111 1>==n shlmwd are not standing 11p. ggggfaglrg “Blergle ugéveéslffis 0r My recommendation ht lenv P tt i th fl lfl gnu . n a o -ngen. o c your a0: ii e e s re - Crowned with honors, he returned 1"! 1! they are dud or not. I hlve non Pbtatoesn in the South left I11 to Canada to become a professor the hills for two months alter they ind fully matured. Thin h tho fig; M ficldgz‘ 1nd “'11:,” If’ D121‘ chelhest and coolest. storage during hot vvelther and it l; no use puttinl and inlrergst/ed lnwpiiblid- gfiatiiiriir In" qulntm" of Pun”! "r Tllmllll 0n the market in warm ivcalher. Efilfii" 3503i’; lltt.s‘l‘..'.‘“il.'iiti.t’é nwnc n. ctr-inw- riszrsir rm esiiii ‘ile§§tl§¢si%m5t§§i“l'iratt the . l "d" I " A ‘bll B i°.‘“‘lr§’éd:..f.‘ii"“‘.§“i“.;'é2.£l£‘;t2“. lleflw" » “P Pee e ceasm- of Sir Charles Topper. No doubt the situation was thoroughly canvassed: but at the close of the negotiations Professor Schulrmazi mtumed to his wade-mic duties. ‘Iho thc writer sought indus- t-rloii-sw to find out why this do. cision had been reached, he had little success with the enigmatic Mr. Johnston who, as go-between, knew the secret; but from his ll s he reached the conclu- sion that there w“ mut/uol wrec- ment. between thc par-tin in the adverse decision. Mr Sditinnnn Parties intending to purchase breeding cue lambs 1°.‘ extend or establish sheep flocks should immediately 6011" tact either the Dominion Livestock Branch or the P1101111" cial Department of Agriculture. All orders for brcedilil} stock should be placed before September 15th in order to. insure a proper selection of well developed, typy 111111115“ fore these are sold through commercial channels. Full I11- _ formation regarding the Sheep Extension policy 1111171" had no buminx desire to abandon secured at the above mentioned Departments. his 9684195110 career, and Sir John 118d hi! doubts whether so young ii_l__-l _—_’_i.' Burn Largeis Coal ll Queen Si. l-LR. LARGE". fir CO. Tel. I000