—_.-<-<.n»- ." ......a.~..~......,... . -_ 5aue-..-'ruI:"a-rv\m I t i ,I i . . i ‘. ‘THE CHARLOTTETOWN GIUARCDIAN- Notes By The Way HE ' le ever and our next duty is to join the great celebra- ‘Tilt.’ ’Bhn al tlon of Canada's Jubilee. Very for- tunately the clouds of discontent. TUESDAY. JUNE 28. 1927 which for years past had darkened the sky above the Maritime Pro- vinces have been dispersed by the THE HOLIDAYS. HE next great event, now that agency of the Duncan Report and its adoption by the Dominion Par- liament. With this favorable change there are brighter paospocts taemed with lobsters and they ev- entually foliiid their wail "110 ll"? of a your: - 0.1....» W.BerIen.M.D. '29 A FEEDING sxweslmzivr The lfllblic Forum" This column la open for the discussion by correspondents ofqueetlone of Interest. The Charlottetown Guard an does not necessarily endorse the opinions of" correspondents. THE R-l‘ HT SPIRIT Sir.—"l‘he Guardian ls to be con" , tllls change fi"om work to recrea- opeil sell. We have no doubt llllll a few years of preservation in’ this buy would add greatly-to the loo-l sit-r life iirottilil our lslaitll. Our game birds and il'0llll'll1'\3 wt-ll cilrcd for by regulations as to open alld close seasons, but thl: "little life" generally has a hard part 0f lllfl lllfmel‘. "W"? "l" 1”“ time oi’ it. ill Victoria Park, for. laborious study on the part of the uxumpll.’ [he “rum, have Wang...‘ latter, invest tile vacation days Wllllsiun “ml they have destroyed the" a halo of promise. The seaside, the smaller birds, while squirrels and woods, the green fields never look chlpmflflk tint] rabbits are being as attractive its during the last lluiliutl by the small boy and the days of sclitiol, the days before tlll-“tltig. 'l‘lie "iittlo life" iii the ilarkl the election is over, is the clos- ing of the schools for the sllmmcr holidays, which takes plat-t»- on Wednesday. Iiolh in fezll"ll_tlt"s null pupils the opening of the holiday season i5 most welcome. Months oi arduous work anti anxiety on the anti the visits to distant friends and‘. “~93... ll, llllllubll. plllltes, by feed.‘ new scenes lire always beini; élllllyxiiig the squirrels wilicli, li’ fed flliili 6d. Ptltlsllllli’ the hlllltlflY-‘l 111'? 11101‘? iioi stoned, become as tame as kit- tboronghly enjoyed iii flflllfllplllltllbligllg, we lleetl the “little life" ill‘ than during the realization; hilt. our parks ltiitl groves. and out" boys, be that i114 it llltly. W0 hflVB 11 Tlghl iliid girls could do much and filial‘ to hope anti, a tluty too. to makcliitlicli pleasure lll milking anti plan», the beet of oiii" vacation. ling retreats ,_i"tir them, shtiwitlgl For the children at least the lloli-‘them that they are their t‘rlentls,l days bring untllloyed joy, freedom.»llutl not their enemies. sport. new adventures. They need: .__.4¢-o>--—- ‘PLACING CAPITAL IN CANADA.l tioii. mind and hotly need it and MONG the visitors w m,“ comb pmpnls w“! d" we" '0 see m "i iry from Britain. says the Mull] mm every Opportunuy is gwentheir-llnil Empire, the continent of En~ children to got nil that is possible olit oi‘ their longed-for ‘llfilltlllyB. The more enjoyment they get front ‘rope and the United States. there its u iltrgcr sprinkling thou former- ot‘ iiiiiliitrilil ,lllll‘l'tlt-llll looking; ilbotii tor oppor- littiiitics to itivest. For the teachers also the holl-l ‘wt-iconic. than (Iesfiunol,llllcilllfill of growing interest and a", “We” ‘m "wlt-olilltlciicl; in (fanadtfs natural re-I representatives oi‘ this rest tiic ilctlcr will it be for them when they return to work. These are very Tlllfll‘ pri-sciict: is an iii- dnys moan mort- irotn work. ‘flioy . . -l poitunlty mote of flltillisonrvefiy enterprise country. to learn much tlitlt will behaw” of value to them when they returuitlm United Slum“, wmch for years to their schools. Many of thenipnlfi ha“ a great Superfluny o’ gnm will go to tithcr provinces, to other-in m, treasury vumm Brim," i“ cities. some toforeign cities anti gradually comm‘: back m her om foreign (inmllfles n“ Opnomumylfinancial reserve power, and lillii"- l0 3C0 tutti property Money is accumulating in before us here in the East. _ have existed for munyyears, and] have revived and again become uc- tive and inspiring. '. illlllo" "llllerwlllll brighter prospects of the present lwill not repay all our losses of poula- tioti. industry the past half century, but they give evidence of a sense of justice and fair play on the part of the larger provinces that ilierctoiorc ili_ the atlmluistratiou of ltlic llulou into which ilic ivlitriilmes llliltl first cutercil lltllldlllfll- Alllllllpllllu“ l“ keyed l" (‘ltlllll ll" Efealll’ "llllllllllell by ‘bacilli doubt. Bill other thoughts nnd a high pitch and the rollicking llayllflilflflilg of bird boxes nnd safe rc- convictions than those which first maul Three Californitc physicians tried lap,_.-exporiment in ' eerilng that should fit; of in rest t everybody. particulhrly‘ w‘ ureiits. t Forty" seven children in an lusti- tiie experiment. l'i‘lill"tcen were given one half pint. of milk each, daily extra at lunch time, thirteen were given one med- ium largo orange each, ten were given four pulled figs each, Itfld eleven were not given anything oxtia at all. All the children were served the some regular meals throughout the institution dining room_ After fourteen weeks, the milk. orange, and-ill; groups liatlull matte about the same amount of improve- uiotlt. but those who had not been given this extra food had increased‘ only bollt one-fourth its much as the o her tliiee. - Now what about this? lf a farmer wants to increase the wclglit of ally animal be it. cow, iOpPfi that had lain dormant or dead] The new order of things and the and wealth during was not apparent with hesitaiicy occilpictl tho minds of our people have since been formed. It is now realized more than it Supply of mod’ Nommg is thought had been that the Union of nil Brit"- lsh America was it most necessary and iirgeitt step at tlte‘ time when it tivlis taken and had it not been taken the progress since .mi'l‘tle ilimtighoiit tbc northern half of" this i-oiltillenl would have hccii im~ possiblc. and not only our own fil- ture but that 0t" the British Empire been done. The some thing applies to child- ren. it‘ extra food is eaten, you can rest assured that the weight will be increased iii nearly every case. that in addition to having the usual live trlltsses of food. that is protein, would have been itupcrliled. This slllmlleh- ml“- Sall“ and wule“ these extra foods. milk. orange (fmtlmmn glowing flom You‘ .m,. juice. and figs. all contain vitamins. yelti iu the tiiiutls oi lite (Aliliiflillllhvé ‘he innnedqale enem- a). vitamins people hils tended greatly towartlhs apparently ,0 help foods“, com.- tlie iitiity anti coiisolltliitltnl of tlleibitie l-tiitipletely with one another, litmlltiioii. ‘value oi‘ all the food eaten. An average oi‘ all these illllnfi shows tlic orange ifroiill llf-"lt. 1119 tlg and milk next, and those with- out cxtru food last. . So if your youtlizflltll‘ l8 “(ll sain- ing steadily it might be worth your while to try some of those extr, A joyous and hearty celebration of the Jubilee from ocean to ocean is now assured, and in it tho people. of Prliicc Edward island nild oil. tho Maritime Provinces will join: with ti tiicaourc oi‘ sillisi'oclioii and‘ cortlittlity that would litlve betii inl- possible bilt it few years ngo. it promises to be the grandest celc- bratlou yci held iii British North America. one iii which ullle ntilllous |of Catllttllaiis young iititl old will ‘join with heart and volcc in joyful zicclamtttiou Illlll gratitude. llicm, becllitse youngsters will ilre of milk, of figs, and perhaps also of (‘Ollllllil lid our attention. QQ QQ-QQ-QOC OOOO+§O"O-O-§§-O Those of advancecfyeare, a dim- may “mmL M88" (lamldu “Hm” I“ drods oi‘ millions of pounds will be a motto that may well be hooded in this sonnet-Holt.- lt is necessary for available t'or investment lll lllfilnhlg Hwy Mun-ed a m“; n.0,“. nl" only" LESSONS. IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon peenn-oevvewweewew lnisbing number, will rcjtilce iii the |Grout l-lvcnt iii which at the begin- +04 {then the system can absorb the iullidmy o; [he people-S elected rem” j ory liitluoi- i_.l1w_ the teachers to know miicll about their mvti country, nnd there is no country iii llltl world that is hotter" ceptlon; the greatest forests; some oi the greatest rivers, the greatest lakes, and some oi theigreatest coal and mineral mines. worth seeing. and to see as much _us possible of it is an almost indis- pensable part of the teachers’ edit- cation. lbouils illlflflllillfli‘ securities of good middle life will look back with learning businesses. Tile melt who llrlll“ "W" llle 579M wmk lllel" ‘ fathers wroii lil lfrom time to time ort- sent here by. g |rcport as to prospects iii this itliat undertaking or fit-id of produc- Celmmmlll yew" tloirare wcll qualified i'or their lwork. if these highly trained, keen- sixty years ago. British "ind Aiut-rlcuil financial cor-lwhl}? me "mmmdp who me ye. l" worth seeing than Canada. Wc have‘. I lure a “prmgnme Wm 100k forward many oi‘ the grcuicsi things in the world. We have tho greatest motili- talus in the world, tho greatest falls‘, in the world with possibly one ox- mtirtiilotis to study conditions ilnillln 'l‘)pp m," “my mlly llw. in q-lljny oriille celebration of the Dominica's Oil the mornlnll ofthat day, in adopt the sentiment of Daniel Webster, the voice oi ac- clamatlon and gratitude. beginning WORDS (when MISUSEI): to go)’ guy “very tllixitius." ' iii “inen." n. nustrcssctl, "more," accent first syllable‘- tlry" iii iqliislte. emergency, iislciiiiai," Dolrt say "i am not mwerly litixiotls OWN-IN iillSPitfiNtillNttl-li): 8cm- flplHirP. Pronounce iicln-u-ftil", t: us Jll-VPIEN MlSSl'I1)l.i.l~3i): voioiiil- .S’\'N(.)NYLVIS: necessity. nccd, 1'9" re- Canadu is well minded experts seem hard to satis- fy, that should not be a ground of complaint. Canadian - companies that are looking for capital ought to expect to have their statements and the exact position of their tif- ifairs sesrchingly examined, and sp- |proved only when a clear case for qulremeut, oxlgcncy. " WORD STUDY: "Use l word three times and it is yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by master- ing one word each day. ‘Today's word: NON-COMMITTAL; not hav- ing or not expressing a decided opinion. "He gaive his answer in s, non-committal way." here on the Atlantic shore, shall be transmitted westward by, millions oi the Canadian people till it blends with the murmur of the Pacific Sea. We may hope that in the next forty years the expansion of Cana- da in its trade, its industry and pop- ulation will be greater than it has O-OQ-4 first-slated on tlieuspirit in which it 88 lewived the verdict cf Sutur- day. ~l-f all persons who desire the prevalence of"t‘einperii'ni-c. lll city, town and cduiitry will lint not in 11w Haul" sulrtt. lhere will lit‘ it bet- terment oi conditions’. We all ex- pect that officials will now do their" duty ill resiiecttle lite Liquor lEvil or be given a walking ticket by the men responsible to the people for ilie enforcement of the law. I ant, Sir, etc AN ABSTAINER -————¢0>—-—— NOW _FOR ENFORCEMENT -Sir,—A small majority of the cl-, actors has decided that Prohibition (made more workable) shall con- iinue i0 be the law iii Prince Ed- ward Island. in accordance with that decision. all residents oi the Province ate to continue to be prohibited from dealing iil and partaking of any in- toxicating liquor as a beverage; l. ~. horse. or fowl. he Blvefl ll all eXlIflIand it will be the "spéhlal duty of the incoming Government to see to about this because it has alwaysiit that the law shall be effective to ‘that end. , That the verdict of the majority lwas arrived by means of gross mis- ' representation. persisted iii uiilll the end of the electoral campaign. does not matter; that prohibition ls‘ HO,,.,,,,,E., i; you-H Home the Lypellincoiisistent with the pe-rsoilailib- of food that was given you'll see 9N3’ of the lleollle- l0 e31. llllllli 811d‘. do that which is not inconsistent with the rights, interests and wel- fare of the public, (loos not illaiter; [that nearly half the electors who ivoted oll Saturday last voted for the temperance policy lprolioscd by Premier Stewzl-lt does not mutter; ——ihe will of e. majority of the el- ectors is to be c-bcyetl and the sentaiives. as of all those who vot~ led tor them. is to see l!) it us... it shall be obeyed, One good result of the transfer of Rroliibltlon into Party Politics ‘l8 that the Party iii power is to be ‘llfild ltelamlaliy anti directly respon- sible for its enforcement. 'l‘0 he foods, it night be well also to va "iclmslfllfillt, tilt: members of that ‘P1111? itrust not drltik l-ll@lllSC‘lVQ$; and "they tile to be held responsible if those who viclatc the ‘l’i‘flllll)ll.()l'y Lltllitir law are not duly puirislitatl. We may therefore hope and ex poet llltil. there will lit! less liiteur P61111111 ill the future, and i], more rigid eniorceiueiit of the Piohibit- Officers of the aw who have heretofore been lax n" tlicll" dilly will new do their luly oi" give place to those who will [do it. lliootleggcrs, who .iu increased iliolu unlawful business, will now Ellie it lip 0r stiffer the pciinltle-s Iillcscrlbcti by ilie law. Magistrates, constables, policemen, all ml‘. be more active and cart-ful iii the p61 formaucs of their ditty in rc- specl to prohibition; for thus-s, who have ilic power to tlcpose them. the ll 1"‘ ‘lllellftlsentatives of ‘ill: Prolllliltitiii Party and the members of the Pro- hibition Government, will 1.9 held Ptlfllwllflllllc by the people ll’ the law should not be carried lllto effect, The will of the country, having beettcxpressetl, it is to be expected I00. that the goveiinntents of the in. Wflloratetl towns will be constrain- more watchful, active and ‘llerlwmfillcfi Oflhfilr duty in re- "flpetfl. Particularly tc- the enforce‘- meni or the WRiohilbltory Liquor Law. The disgraceful and disgust- tinued. Liberals in position. oiilillce iiclre wtlillil. it is" expected in- ilst on the enforcement of the law, " touch with his liealltlulii"tci.~"_ I __ "if"? l-TWlYZt-tl your aiiiiettt"ance.;aild 1 l"lllllk._‘l' , 11111" m5. lllllfieclllell should have remembered you any- sd to require of their officials a. effit-leiitdng his accord with this wish, and ills wlldltlotls reported by toe de- ceed to the formal business of the eectives who visited Charlottetown surrender, saying: "- B11011 ‘"1118 88o should not be coii- ‘General Grant, we have both con- and sidered carefully the steps to be r Appomattox . -Z : After 62 Years (condenled Morn Current History (April, '27) Arthur n. JenningI-l /_ .. - . . . The little hamlet oLAppomattox Court Blouse, whet-e oil April ti. 1865, the tremendous epic of U19 Confederacy ended, has all ‘but dia- appeared. AithougwL- now and t ea ii is proposed ito prlaeorve and pro- perly mark Ulla historic Place. tiotliing tleiinatellias yet. been done except by patrloticbodiee in Vir- glnia, particularlyeetiie r-iUult-Bd. Daughters o! the: Confederacy,- w-lio have placedmarkers andkepi some soldier graves ’ll‘l»§00d order. Ths lIIIOSUGiPIYSDlCZUQIIB houses in the village at. the time 0f Lee's stir- render were~~the Gourt House it~ self, now entirely gone and its site marked bynatablet. and across the road, the hiotel, which "still stands. Two and o. half allies nor- oi’ the Court House there is now t e thriv- ing little town iof Appomattox. 1111 the Norfolk & Wvlestern Railway- At the time of the Clviil .War thlB was merely Appomattox station. where Sheridan swooped down and captured four trainloads of llrovl- sions sent. from Lynch-burg to mllct Lee's army, and thus put [lie tiuull de grace to a situation» which hall passed ‘beyond human endurance. Lee and Grant went into confer- ence ln a room" in the hiclueuu house lof which nothing now rc- maitis but a. few piles oi‘ debris‘- lt was tor-n- down in 1893 to iii- transported and re-erected at llli‘ Chicago's World's Fair, but ior smile reason the plan failed illitl the piles oi brick and boards wcri- left there. I When Lee entered with his stall Graht was waiting there with Col- onel Marshall. Lee was Grunts ‘senior by 16 years. _ His iiuir “'11s “silvery gray and he wore ll lull beard also gray. fHe wore a new uniform, richly made, with a sword of‘ gold, set. off by jewels here ziuil lihcre—a sword of ceremony, uot ion use on the battlefield. ills 'Tnwannsce“";npsdm over a ‘li A Crown is $3000; tltg,gt_,__ v fivwwhssat . Lite lgdlldtttiiOnal P°li¢ifw t " , " evade" i:d.li.e ‘v f. ‘ftffi'°.i'i?ée . orbits-es‘ artists i - "i. It. "ti-boss meal l .. i1i . eta/c 0hanoes;- when driving In motor care,""er ‘en ‘wpfllting across city l streets, we are taking chances-m d we take more-chances by moving about wlthoutfaceldenf insurance. Let an insurance eornparlyLtsite the financial risk, be- cause accidents are Qitpdlillifm“, ' " \ ' "~12 . Accident policies can be purclligaed at maeonable prem- iums, from $5.00 up, accordingly» the amount of insurance desired. . ' ' ~ For further information-coni . .. . , . .91- IIYIIIIMMI 8r "tlfigillli " ., .»,,_ -..,."...- The Oldest ineuranoe/Ahency in P. E.l. Lower Queen Street , ‘Charlottetown -b0ots were polished and lie wore handsome spurs-some EIUPllllllIlll .say golden spilt-s. As lit» Sill n Ellie mom a pair 0i‘ long buvltsltin lgauntlets and a felt hat. llltil‘ hing [his uniform in color. lay on lite liable. Grant says of ills ()\\'ll cos- ."tulle: “l wore a rough ll‘il\’-‘|.lllll]g isuit, the uulilo-rui Of a privuic, w ti illiflhfilfitlfi of a Lieutenant Gciioral. ‘l must have coiitrilstcil ‘lstraugely with it mun strliuutlsoine- “ly dressed. six iklei lliflll illltl 0f lfutlltles-s form." Lee's costume {was partly his concession l) his ‘ideas of puiictiiltltlrs l-oiirll-sl" and lgood form and partly because his headquarters wagon liud bccu 1108i. IGratiVs was due to tllc incl iliut for l several days lie had not iii-en in so fur as being able to sot-m". clothes I ivlls collcerilctl. i~li;.i"a-:'te Porter says llitll Grailt begun tho conversation by saying? "inlet you once bcforc, General lit-c. while We were scrvlhg ltl‘ Nltiifltft). ;l‘ lingo always rciueulber- wilt-re." "Lee replied: “Yes, I ltiiow I incl you there, llllll ‘I have feature." 'l'-lr.=ro wilt-i some about Mexico, and than lmo raised had u short tulk about ills terms of surneudcr. “l think our cor- respoiidencc indicated pretty clear- ly." said Grant, “the action that would be taken at our meeting, and l hope it may leltil to d general "duspensllon of hostilities and be the means of having further life.” Lee "lnicllined his lletul as indicat- lG-eneral Grant went on to tallit st some length in a very pleasant vein about t"he prospects of peace. Lee was evidently enviious to pro- ‘*1‘ presume, taken, and I would suggest that you commit to writing, what you Confederation And PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND AND, Jacques Cartier ln thought it port of the mainland. it was at first culled .lsle St. Jean (St. Juiin island) and this name -lt~.re- taiucd iilitll 1789. The Indians call- ed it “Abegwelt" Wave.) Champlain took possession- ol‘ tili- Pruitt-i‘. in 1603. and it was folmal- y cctlcd to theWEnglIsh ill 1763. " Tho island" is about long and in width from 4 to '85 fillies. lt has an area of 2.184 square miles. Save for‘ some boggy“ aifd ‘if swampy land the whole lslaiidds uiltlvable. ' lti 187i it had a population of 94,201 ~tlic llcusest tin ally part 0f Brit‘.- oii-sri thought or it and ll'lt'tl to re- m‘ Nmm America- colloct lilo-w you looked, but l have ErUWll‘ l" Wlllllallll" never been uiblil. to i'l*('illl n single wlm" ll reached l! malllmllm ‘M towns, blit the population steadily l-urlller ‘all; dot-lined until 192i, the time of the last census ,iuld it was then only. llic question oi tho motile-lit. They 88.615. At first glands a bud shawl lug; but ii, was due largely to the introduction of machinery o';i t'he farm Tilt-i ilslailtl had no large cit- ies or large factories to absorb the population thus released. Unforttth- ' 113C061 against ,Confetieiatloii. 3p; i land] tbegaln railway- bull" fTltz ‘Government, in 1871i. folio -its_elf in a precarious financ- ial phiLlolL/llhe Dominion Govern- ment. madgltLiberal offers regarding the land question and the railway turd ‘ e lslanti- accepted terms!’ and joined the Canadian famil . ' llhouglllfiere has been a ile- crea ' iii population, there has been it stolidy Increase iii wealth." The sea. contin . o yield a rich inn-- Nastgfbf flair,‘ e fertile laud yields large, crops, particularly of oats iilitl potia. esfiUnforlunately there are idwy. ctories and those mainly to supply local needs. thus it lallw home, market is absent. After Sixty Years l _ 0f Progress CONFEDERATION Prince Edward was visited by 1534, but lie (Cradletl-on-the island, in the name of its miles "rec t. industry. fox-farming. Tho fir! ‘» experiments _in ..fox-farinini< 9i" carried on in 1.1187‘ Then/ark r "hi. y i909 .1 number of- Millers were engaged iii the ‘business; The wanbroitght lilird times foi- the ilir-_ furthers and’ there were many fall- llresfqlliut the industry is now once more on a sound basis. _lu i913 fheife were 277 farms on the island. -and"fn these farms 3,130 foxes; in itltitthe number of farms hall lu-. creased. 519,8 and faxes lb 13.990! The"|tle arid ftir Prince Edward, foxes and pelts is extensive, Jiutlil. in Europe andflAmerica, on a count of their superior quality. l 192i the value of sliver foxes on [tiff faririli was nearly $3,150,000. ltstloevlopmenrwas steady, and. Tilers _wlts iiiltll i891 “better "i ilsland is the ‘name of a quite _ ' aauv. ‘atltritctetl~~ wide» "aiieiititiif ~" ately three-fourths of the emigrants the Charlottetown Conference. This scheme was not. found to be practic- able and visiting delegates I-from; Canada induced representatives of l. Prince ‘Edward Island to atientiflilfs ~ went -to the United States andiwere lost to Canada. I in 1864 the question of Marltlmti Union was under consideration at- Quebec Confederation Conference- But the island was flourishing, it nnd a. government system to its ‘Ilk- Ills. import duties were low, airdlit {Much attention is now being paid‘ lo scientific farming, dairylng. cattle-raising. and wool production; Elie fisheries are being conserved: population is"'oncs more onitbq up - are trend and the allure o! the Qflerrlen of the Gulf" is exceedintziy v bright?" ' , 1 .1‘!- t; wBy rthis use of a Swedish inven- tliion a telepthlolle message rls taken on: enptioaegeotpu ieoom .111. this sli- eemoe .0118 ‘nelson. mailed. to be rs- l, be fl in sixty years past and that wherever pupils or leacherglaecurily and profits is made out‘ on: present niuu millions of Cana- choose to spend their holidays we" ' ‘x . Ventures that cannot. stand the ma“ people wlll have become trust they will find them pleasalll- rigorous tests applied to them by twenty millions then. What i1 cele-l By profitable and healthful. and that they will return to duty refreshed and strengthened fol" their work. _...___<e>-_-% PRESERVING WILD LIFE inqulrers on behalf of British cap- italists may iii given cases be no more than unfortunate. They may have a ilne future. blit the people who are carrying them on may have to go through some ftirther tribula- tloii before the success is reached New York lady, Mrs. Grace Rainey, has contributed $i5ti,000 to endow the Paul J. Raliiey Wild Life Sanctuary in Louisiana, her late brother's favorite shooting ground. The Sanctuary consists of forty square miles of forest and lihat will convince Investors of their soundness. Canada wants no fur- ther adverse experiences in the way of unwise commitments on the part nf British or American capitalists. lake, and the hope is that the wild Two WAYS OF DOING n. life of the adjoining states will ‘ greatly multiply because of this ANOTHER illustration from the safe retreat. The gift is the larg- day's news: bratloti that oi‘ Canada's Centennial promises to be! And what a pro- gress iil other multifarious ways will have come overihc world iii which we dwell. l - | ROBERTA LEE l ¢>eo+e+e++e+e++e+e+o++0» Porch Pillows If oilclotii is used for an inside cover oi" the porch pillow, and wash material for the outside, taiucult- not injure it in any way. Already since the Dominion was young, the telephone, wireless tele- grapliy, telephony and television have come in quick succession; men Wilt) pioddetl on foot before ride swiftly in horseless chariots now, or soar aloft above the clouds "up- boriie by itidefiltigable wings," over the continents and oceans, oili- speeding the swifisst birds in their flight. The sailor navigates bo- neath the sea today in calm waters, unmoved by the tempests that. howl Removing A Rusty Screw Heat s poker or splitc retl-liot and apply it to the head of II. screw that is rusty and obstinate. When ille screw has becoule Ilot it can be removed very easily, When Bolling Vegetables ~—now that a majoi-ty of the people of lllle Province have voted for im- ilroved prohibition and that their iepresentiltives in Legislature and GOVGTIIHIBIYL are responsible iiorils cc-ntiiinanceas the law of this Pro- have proposed." General Grant, calling for his manllflolti book, proceeded to write the terms. d-le did not pa ss un- til he had ‘finished the s ntetlce ending with "officers appointed by vince. me to receive them." Then his MI am, Sir. etc eyes seemed‘ to rest on this ‘hfllld- . ' TEMPERANCE some sword- at Lee's side. "He Charlottetown felt that it would be an unneces- Qfth June, i921 "sary humiliation to require the offl- cers to surrender their swords and nail no public debt. The lestiereof public thought felt it would bdlwibe to let well enough alone, strong ' .; - _ "" ' l”? éhfldtmfiflbll 1W 1* tag“. o cc ed t e terms offer were “I . ,. . neither wubei-tu nor just" . sud LhfligfifliDl-eggleg And would have nothing t do with, " , Confederation schemtfi in 18tl6'.tl§§‘f‘,,"h"f _Mlad€ to , , . . , z »'-‘ easure. 1870- the Assembly again went pfl,‘ ,-' > . proldiliceduwvliilpli his mtumne. , - wit. .. - cares, For Mother said ‘twas so. Some bakel's twelve or more; Each dimmer than before. Belated swallows passed our panes, They had the sunset oh their wings, And we could scarcelynlteep apsce a great hardship to deprive t-hem of their personal baggage sud horses, and "after l1 short while he wrote the sentence: "This will not embrace trhe side arms iof this offic- t-rs nor the private horses or hag- sasef’ ~ Grant said of this moment: "The much. talked of surnenderingt of Lee's swiqrd and my ‘handing it back "is purest rompnce." , ' nature or mean lsplrll. the courtesy. shown bee in this matter of tire of- ficer's side arms and t-he men's hills" would perhaps have been transformed into some llGttyngpitg against his foes. Me's generolship bad brought. upon Grant and t-lte Llnooln Admin.- istration the anntb-emias of. a strick- en North and t-be curses lei-bor- "iflt guaranteed l" 3'1""! slim" negtllllhtlfll" tel. Twenti’ Dollars. ‘Men's Quito. Overeeatl. Kalneoatagaiiored ts measure. ll‘ fitter tgg§,_._ln.any style and Orly “W. Fill-owl: ' "‘ -, 54F.’ ARBUSIlT coca-Representative When boiling beans or other starcy ivezetables. put a teaspoon- Of stars that ilociteii e... window Lee read the terms attentivlél)‘. Occasionally. he made some remark space; in dreams we losi.\lhe score. above its surface. ful of butter in the water, and it est over given for such ii purpose. The hunter and his gnu, his traps anti other killing devices has made terrible havoc among the denizens of forest and lake and stream. If ll. were not for the few sanctuaries scattered here and there throughout the world. the few pieces in which blrll or ilsh or beast itnow instinctively that. they are safe because they had never been molest ‘ there, tho wild life of the world would be mlich loss in evidence than it ls. in this province we have no sanc- tuaries at sea or on land, altiiouah we have many suitable places on both. For many years the need of prefilvlilll. tftir lobster fisheries, dsaifiplo. has been emphasized. m lilobtaoad lav has been sus- Y - ‘as a auitabitraenctusry. This ‘Moth lobster trapping In Paris, Tenessee. a negro shot a. {Saul uleliaiieritt who sill’ attempting his arrest. A deputy sheriff took the negro into custody. anti shortly afterwards the black was riddled with bullets by a gal- lant mob of fifty men. ln Winnipeg, Manitoba. , a wo- man and a girl were murdered tin- tier circumstances of extreme britt- ality, and while the city was in a state of tremendous excitement ll man was arrested charged with both crimes and linked with them by a chain of evidence pointing straight towards tiiegallows. Ho was put in jail, given his prelimin- maudlln sentimentality. A And these are >but a tithe of the or "jumpingdfil: '=’ - wonders that man has achieved in extending his dominion over earth “I ~ f and sea and air iirtlie present gen- ‘ . "l. oration. Whlft shall be the new Dillly $9l96tl0ll$ wonders yet to be achieved by m n FDR Hdltttrtiian Readers during the forty years to come! l to deal with his case. There will‘ June 20, 1027 never any stiggestion that a mob " might take the law into its own A UREA” scum)!‘ MNSTDIL“ 0 God, thou hast taught me from bonds, never the least doubt. that justice would bo done, never any fear that a bloody-handed murder- er might escape adequate punish- ment through legal quibbles 0i; 71.17, PRAYER-Teach me, Lord, even me, that I may teach others to itnow Thee. Canadians have faith in their “Now ITLAY "i" will prevent the lid fromglrontlcing, my youth: and hitherto have l do‘ clared thy wondrous works. Psalm "'* ery hearing befotge the magistrate in the regular vraly. and in the fall he was tried tet- his life. ll vras not coneitferetfdeefrahle. the Kt- torney-Generoflaald. even to) call a courts. and so far the courts have been worthy of our confidence. While this condition estate we shall not. experiment with iyiieii ilm-l special-slit! ‘Tof the Asst Court Ottaw \ ourn . _ ' v ma; kllhainimtcstotm-QTAK "at... - “New l lay pdown to sleep";- ‘Tvrae yearslgnd years eso We ltneit to ea the simple words {torsion 3 "pitted, . "as pa" "on ‘I w." "in daytiinet a The 7"-‘>_-‘l"-t...t.r..it 1'16 his em that peeee uits. w, all!" l I nWQy l q s» -. - . when ws-were thM 1S0 all the years can never spoil Withgmiltlewing, hope toll l; " .f‘DBw and Bronze." ntmii".-.'”~‘» ‘ ~llllil ‘ilr, l. with ei. lees .or rusting That blessetlness we knew.‘ hum‘ ‘ gust ‘ll-l f: wcomrsaflgrfrabeglfi —Robert P. Trilram, Wgoffin, in the terms and acceptance were flu- , " not to sea , gm otficerw In. ‘a gill v‘®l ' rodeou. "III v ..,'v' l, to Grant ‘concerning some" entail out". te "mitt 11-h‘? i?“l“9'!"°'tl-li° ltlrlltd- theextena n in pr ted ofth- liri v ltitifillfiirhgwn gors- es " me, e m. rant qulgk 3Tb» will have a» lisp" - t upon our men," said General bee. r troduoed each member ally signed and delivered, and the company. present present prepared vo separate. went to the porch, of the iinospaad directed that Itisdiorse ' b [he up. ~ As he we pd lie v sadly and sli- eniiy t-ito dlhaol frofthegvalley where his telitaent. of an erflily .~ , l l2l‘..i$§§8d;""lf"a ‘m’ of way," says-die , 7 lb; I i-Dfiolfl. , l a _ sown from ole. ii and saluted lien by raising his , . He was. fol“, din this not of ooilr- present; ' '4 eaved tens of thousands. Grant treet- 0harlottetewn_ had shunt-lam cause no feet otaerl thalrgenietbue to Lee aud- his trap ttlent of an army. but mic lessen" ' I it_ae the "scene of a... dlflnlhllhll purpose, lime r Gene l Nhflvidfilil! - .- l8'ou .. .'."'"‘.""' many gesture of Grant's in the oioe- itlg scene at Appoenet . The break-up warmer rapid. 0n April 11 the remnant of the Army of Northern Virginia treat-lug arms marched out and surrendered fortn- etlv to the mm Qivflion of the Fifth Corps, drawn m. my‘ ‘m; fills! lust beyond Appomattox court House, wit... Lee 1m Ap- pomattox he mile to_ Richmond. He wee greeted all along t e way WM! every evidence of a. . ‘ " Airmtnatto» was soon Jeft desolate. a little hpmiet long un- lllwwll. now to. be known the world _ ei- tic-never. Perhaps the Moth $5223.‘ ,'5...“.'.’.i".l‘i“.€$"".fil-"d thlng- Perhaps the North regards of some great u, oe regal-ll . it. stands eh of the malted spots of eéhhhlhflilf. and" in‘ eiie mill F. UMJUPVQKIIII’! tl lithe, . sewage. no log To.’ la, mat-bed oimae ottieaqa. have for the st-evs arugula loved l~~. . m; h It matters netwnettier I'll‘ are an amateur er eXP"‘""°‘ v4 shower-mar. w" "m" have the goods to went wllll- a sees Gamers and hllll 11"" , ,. ., l, “TI-IE . ENSIGN”. The beaten the market. "WI iml-Ylitmf" rrtou Melts ,__ liaidever our line. Wt supply you ‘with. " . ee i..:"'.:.""* ~r "1 . V ' ens a prlntlnl’,