v, 1,1 v Milli?“ hi“? n“ >zcnn - ' ‘ i GOYEBB‘ P1HNGEv~EDWrAtllD l. CHARLUPfIlETOWN, CANADA,‘ SATURDAY, MAY s1, 1924. haul Shiner! u neuvuea one Iv‘ sun. on“ ~ no o. s. n. use “Rumanieallllins Control 915116.!‘- Oil .- (United-Inna) HUCHAREQT, Ill-‘llk-rb. JDW mining law of very oonsid able importance, t0 the lhtdlll’ Oil 150m! panics operafinl ‘i5 Rllmlllil- ‘I new llcinfl PWDING U! U" KQVQY‘! lllfllli. ilflll will shortly be present» Hi for parliamentary _l‘&_‘liiiCl1U0lI. This luw is intended ‘w KTY-i- full logisiulive power to that purt of the new conetitntllon which provid- (-5 for the "Netionelination-of Still-Still.“ meaning the taking over’ by the state of all the sub-soil min- ernl ivenlth not- actuallyleased or conccssioned» at thus» of’ t constitution. will determine the conditions ill- tier which these lands can be lcnscti for exploitation. and what. prodilciiflfl royalties must be pal tn the stale. From official app Yncetnents it is uppnrent that under tbevnew law concussions to exploit proveddandl uiil only be granted tooprnpaniee um life considered as ‘first, §lI-_ which moan: tbatdsuc vii." _ ‘ panics mus.t 90* lluluallians, and that“ subjects must" 0W5‘ l liit- stock. Those majority- t; “T95 110! al- qtIDDOIi-llll ln unics which arernow _ = loreignowned and. < controlled‘. lid whose shares are not rend"? rlt-nilable for‘ purchase by Bullish‘ ‘un sublects. - in the hands of a government'- ostile to foreign capital, or to the foreign capital of any particular country it ls felt that the law as pruposcti woultlapparently IIGHIIM t-tmsiderabla . llvillll vxerc-isetl against. the ililil~ or companies controlled by sin-ll foreign capital. ‘ Poissibilitiefi ..___ 'l‘h~- humblest child of God has slnmbtiring within him possibilities uilivil no man is capable of gaug- ing. Our rapid advance during the Pits! century ha; opened a limitless vista of progress to the race. What an inspirhi] thought it la that the road we are traveling constantly leads upward‘ and onward! i ‘Phat our marching order in forever "Forward!" 'Ohairn'¢,fl, MM t... W mucous, lnddtitidneee» on lr taunted time maytnpq- m“ "high" brow," she said. “It u. the discrimination Americans Are ' “Lip Lazy»? fiays . British Woman (United Press.) ‘ , PHILADELPHIA, May 30.-.-Tbe pose o! lbeing "lowlhrow" and the the olurrlng of speech and falleged poor enunclotion of the average American by Mrs. Beatrice Forbes- Rbbertson Hale, formerly one of the l-eeding actresses of Greet ‘Britain. According to the former actress Americans are ‘iLip-ltaay," m: ,- are enjoying it. "ti ‘seems as though that every- thQllxht of being looked upon as fidofthe mental be considered 'a"gpod fallowommg- college ‘tull- ' cuts o! both sexes. Perhaps the word ‘moron’ that everyone uses will change that phase of it. _As soon as someone cells a sloven-ly speaker a moron there may he nn interest taken in correct speech. “The foreign population has cau- sed a variety of new sounds that fascinate the children and they imi- tats them." ' ‘lids Mrs.'l{ale'e opinion that the Americans. Pqiple are inclined to use the speech of the English‘. for compari- son with that of Americans; and to~ protects the illlllerqpiddlo classed fnotnapoor speech. because it demos them to a lessorpolition and‘ cor- lwt r Ll m f. r a ..r Yflllthdn private schools. To some Americans the English sound-affect ed. lbut they are not. except in the fhawi-baw‘ close, which ispesslng." Mrs. Hale says there should be a rebirth of conversationlln Am-srl-i ca. She says that in a. roointul of people the women try to screech cv- ‘II tlteltollt. while the men attempt to; iioaFover it. ‘She says the “pok- er has” is responsible for_ the flat. monotone that man-y ‘business men use-they attempting to‘ conserve their energy ,in conversation by keeping the face muscles rigid. oncutos m: BROUGHT "re MATURITY two veans soouzn THAN NATURALLY ITHACA, N. Y. May tilt-Orchids that are maturing two years sooner than under-natural conditions, and treated bacteriologicnlly so as to secure practically hundred per cent. germination. are being grown by Prof. Louis Knudsen. 110N111!“ 0! Cornell University, at the Slate College of Agriculture herejBottie- fed flowers planted iii Stsrillled tubes five years ago b)’ FY07- Knudaoil, show a development nearly two years in advance 0i .__i_.._...____ m? iufliuf of foreigners is ltlamed for _ and one at llreaent ls terrified by tire . “fluound is rarely heard among _ . l ittleEntente At. . (lancer Quest J With 200 Mice 4 - Mystery Compound (WW P's-st . 1ft§§§3r'$'.'."iii'§y“a°<»'.'l-§ii§“ “Jinn..- ‘Ems?’ “'7 3°-_Th°- in regard to ‘ what substance; or "‘“¥°_'°'“!"°“." l‘ "w" mourns .of snbstoamea. in, m- "dim?! 33°F“ W D1"- 5 5WD produces cancer has been investi- i‘ tacked. by Rum.- anian Fascists »__ pencil brim "til/the oanlpnignwhlch the Rnman- gated at the cues;- Hogpmu Re. ‘hi! Fellows m writing onssarch institute. and the inveati» galnst. the Little Entrants. The Faa- gators are still baffled, s: the Romanian soul, Rulnnniw-to bolster up the alliance, While damaging or ignoring Roman. San netionar rests on their own soil. ' ' y lltecentl, Jhscismul, the Fascist organ, attuekedlhe Little Ente-nts and the Romanian government for remaining in‘ it. By vote oftlie min- isterial council the lune was sci» ed and the paper suppressed. time cismul reappeared recently with the following declarations against one followJnemvbvsr of the Little En- - lento: "ln the Banal. and in Macedonia we fear, can not survive the measures which are ibelng taken against tt. From itwe Years up ‘our children are ‘ driven into Serbian schools, and they are forbidden to speak any language other than’ Serbian. ‘A_ll' Romanian churches gm] ‘schools have been closed. The ‘ltumsniens are ‘being tormented pv-iiltill-lfi hindrance and with offic- ‘ byfl-tbe» Serbian ‘Plhooflto be preeentetito the King prior to hi; ‘going to Holyrood Palace. ' ' that attained by Nature's method. By feeding them sugar and elimina- ting Jnicro-organlsnls which or- dinarily prove destructive to plant life. Prof. Knudsen is hopeful of almost perfect germination. Orchid seed is unique in the plant world in that ltlias, at its maturltyfno storage food or mater- ial for self-maintenance. Coupled with this is it: extremely minute size, the embryo measures ‘ about 3-500 of an inch in length and 7-2509. of a nlnch in diameter. The undeveloped condition of the seed. together with insect. pests and plant diseases, accounts for the difficulty and uncertainty encount- ered in germinating orchid seed under the old method. _ The process which Prof. Knud- 50!! has employed is this:- A nutrient solution W091i!!! W? essential salts and sun" 1i llllilfid in carefully sterilised tubes and the {my seeds placed in this medium. After a few months’ Ifowth in their tubes. the aeedllnll I"? transferred to large flash. contain- ing the same cititufe medium httder such favorable conditions. _\ The plants grow rapidly. andwhen they have fire or six loaves and roots an inch or two in lelllfih- a" i?!“ spluntetl in open pots. inn $11 ire ‘lid-bits on iheTip of Evervbod Toni?“ .___.__ _ Vol. 1. N». 41 “First at Wxmliley! A lettir just received from qMQIIYI London representative eonhlnethlcpollai: ' ~v......i., | visited Womble! . and mot ‘mo. c. M. Williams I mm u. tun m» at h mlf stand Ne. b and possibly --~-t~.-..7p_--.. - ~ av. -— o... ‘_.,-. _ . . ~,-..,,_..,....v- '.~.,_,_q..-,.....,.t_.._ -. t...“ f.‘ .,_ . d... “ma...” i ~ “in ~ w r r w ~~ w" Charlottetown. May 31=t;1924‘ rnlm ~ the first order taken at the Brit- iuh Empire Exhibition. King George visited the athl- bitlon the name day. l. Mwifilll- er dispatch relating that he pot '_* * lndleuntl " to he. tastes. Hothenaaqeome oboe- olatoo. displayed nearby- ll they were Meir’: he had a royal timoi ' i. es the driver as “dressed in rifle _ horses in th wyw . in‘ u» niteitbvithoofli vi W stunt"! mlitléllllllfi . ' W" m‘ iii l Y's detrlni at but they v "JAMIE," g wvefl lends 01."? 9. . ..,l,""‘“°" ‘W itsmenyriiaplas ‘the oEllglinh its-nil? . . “OWN . lH-i‘ time "l l>°°9 - '““°"“'“' and the American- child ofrthe‘ "Mi " ‘ ‘ for " " * f“ “ “llhill a P°"’°"‘ '"° "°"'~ supremo England. m. class system 9.14" annm units» Biloklnohlm. "llbflim- “cine maintain that the other mom-i hers of the Little Entsnte. con-louder the supervision of the direct- , Blllcllqllflll J-ugosluvia, are using lalone is not a means of cancer.” . The msearch was carried on 0F 0! the institute, and with the help of expert advict_a__ and mater. lals from the Gas Companies. "l Several kinds of tar are said to produce cancer, and they were all exarnined—llgnlter tar, gasworka tar producer gas tar, . coke-oven tar, blast furnace tar, curiuual! enough, does not produce cancer. r Comparison of the constituents of the last named with those of the others ls differentffor one reason, because blast furnace tar has been mile Blildlefl. but. dozens of experi- ment; on mice were made with the tar derivatives. , Aflidllle. for instance, has often been suggested as the cancer-pro- ducing agent in tar, probably on account of its irritating effect upon the skin and mucus membranemu It was tested upon 200 mice. t‘ The only noticeable effect was that the health of these mice was ‘especially good. so that an unusual- lY large proportion lived through- out the nine months. This provides another illustra- . tlon of the fact that “irritation”- producing i "The some is true in Greece.| It was further found that a very ffliereulao the Romanian popula- largepart of the acids and bases tion‘ is being denationallned. The “Greeks for this purpose resort even_ to murder. The areas in Macedonia ‘and on the Pind are running anew, {with nnmhnldh blood. With such allies it would be to our advantage| t d th Litl f o sen e to EutPnte to theiknown conatuutents ‘devil!’ After this pointed utterance. it is worthy of not-e, Fascismul was not. suppressed. Londons First Street Gar (By Dominion News Service) LONDQN. May 30.—On March 23, 1861, just .63 years ago, 1,611- dotfs first street cur rattled along, amid grant excitement,'from Not- llng Hill to Marble Arch. It was a crude horse-drawn ve- hicle. running on what-would he better described u flat bare than as rails. Thae bars were live Inches wide and an inch thick. ex- cept in the middle, where a groove two inches wide. reduced the thick- ness to half an inch. This groove kept the wheels on the track. Thewbeels, solid, cast-iron discs were keyed fast to revolving axles, served as springs. Except curves and in. places where the road was irregular the motion was easy." » in appearance the body of the car was not unlike modern curs. ‘It possessed a projecting platform at each end. and two long B61111! ill- sldo. on which the ‘passengers sat facing each other. '- A newspaper of the time descrlb» uniform. and driving n. pair 30!‘ e attitude of n classic oliarioteer." The scheme, for which an litm- erlcan named Train was reopens lhio. was at first viewed with dis- lavor. ‘ . ‘ 0n ___‘ WQIB r»- troat of the car. One Y t poet that certain gent-r! . with otnnibuses and may have had a anger in . ‘ Opposition was won down. and another lino laid a few weeks later the first day numerous ob- . o h! stor. Hundred! of people l!!!“ two feet nine inches in diameter, ' und blocks oi’ vulcanized‘ rubber I on - described as lbeing “fitolerably can. be removed from the tar with- out destroying its cancer-producing power, and that other extracts have proved very active- in produc- ing cancer. - All the attempts to find the can- cer-producing substance among the of coal tar negative re- lhave given wholly suits. | it now seems not unlikely that ‘this substance is a compound as yet unknown, which is unstable and present in amounts perhaps us small as those of the vitamins in foods. out at eight o'clock on a Monday morning to see the start. This time there was no repetition of the obstruction incidents which mark- ed the opening of the original line. The car, which was named “The People," and bed seats inside for 24 passengers. ran every few min- utes between Westminster Abbey and Pimldno Railway Stotion, now the "Victoria" station, iknown to thousands of Canadians during the war. , . l. i i. LIKELY’ 13W‘ MOIIQINITOR cum» Jlneldnnon. Pm- hr tlioyofllon of Moderator.