a. lei. is iYIBl-hpl '- ldltor and Iallllll; Anaemia“ ldllun-Iralb Wilbur all 0'1 ' llclullg Dally (lruadod ) is evident. ‘tilabfclfil ‘ llimlesantcti an making. out~ 4 strong case, and have the facts and “"V°“‘CB” n" W” l" "s" .4 i. u. Maérlieifleeeezle WW1‘ s°‘»“°" .-.=.~-.-.~.=r.-.~.-.-.-. . .. - I . 5 't t’ F. e "-‘. ~ " “l-‘iilzt? ’.....,,“*"'."',;"~,g_-. m“ " "' Ji§7'in“§.?.$”lef3.'. "J3 ' i "HolfCentuly A8‘? At MGIPGQIIQ A V ’ ulna-smug ‘~ " .. e i.» ' , lam ila-Dlfflcfltieg-Progresr . , . _ _ AsPrlnczpalOfGrammarScllool _ ~11...» 8mm. _ ‘ ’ ‘ - _ v I - ' - ‘a v :..."""@...:'l..:r:..::':,.:r*-"" "its: F"! I l e e r "v. i°i 1°? W" Plllltllefillliw“ ~ iieenliiepein Vienna 101' permission Q/Qflng-qqugm ., The Guardian in ill-Mime: to name. never sitvlded I M"! "1 . . ‘ . Our Bydnoy irigendsllavc; missed to start excavations in different ‘ , " - mihlian the foliowln: veryJhter- ihif-‘h ill-Twill I" mactised. We ‘me settlers liad every incitement qulit an important luv“; m. o; mo. of the" country. Many histor- causas or snaarnsssussa “his: MW. involved sen. no ielatiene at Orwell; the, to vimmue erenien min-tile mt- m, mun“, ol,.m,h..dty_.umu lane, however, claim that the grave ' ‘ _ Namath-Minister, of culture. n of 3 8nd life W" use of their tenures. ‘may were sl- . m‘ no‘ ‘Iiuamhnt u“ ' o1 Attila will never be found on sir Andrew Hairball, with heavy. mt in Helpeque in wintoi‘ lowed to purchase in fee simple, “Emma. motile?! l. 5Z5 't:',‘,‘.’.‘.‘",‘.'°..“.,",‘:‘ “will”... *“ is .1». l. a some n. food “l” i? 322ml‘; ”‘.’i;"“2.’.‘...’f.‘; res...“ "ti? filmmfifiilfi “h; “N33151:” "m- "hm L ,. av- ,_neare ver . emcee m ' y -.. acrcswc {Edward Island, o. Ihlchplflggs n. Tissayvhere Attila llec his capl- m‘: 1w irgtsllsop causesmohe to be pa: - youn: and old, men ls old I8 lav w “n, fgmfly u g mymmgdme, was appointed. in "eueeeeeibn to dlflinamgf Qigafiiflth“ fir“ bu; we “u; Q} {j -mufleqr‘l;m 111w» Momm- lfmarérdeglex yo? 13:12:11; a1; i311: none were givtfhtzagratug. ' ‘ , __ €IL e V T883111‘! ' 2 ". a 0 e I G I O °°m‘m"“°;‘m'§““mrw:t;:Yo-n1f1°:y1if seekers will search on tile lands ly- mfi‘f&,f°fwflg$f‘u“°;w "nag; Your wopoaal a. make a pllb- pay tile fiddle. had no Iuperfluity of eenitiu. they ted at the presentsossion of Parli Invent. A ' ’ obliged to obtain the services of sight years ago. I 9Q .§. 2 but theKlng Govemmr-nt,-by fall true t0 formw "Since the Bennet tion. Duncan Commissioners tisan commission, contended that Bil- Andrew Duncan and his colleagues had failed to carry out their own terms of reference. , This astonishing charge our local lndorse. The storm of criticism which this reflection occasioned forced our contemporary to change its tactics, and from that time to thislt has not attempted to explain u" excuse Premier Macdonalds charges, which indeed were subsc- quently refuted in s. telegram from Sir Andrew Dluzpan himself. 1' q._ l \ - . v l w. SYDNEY CELEBRATION Mfiydney, Cape Breton, is.p";epar- 3" 1n; to celebrate its ondllupdredth - ;I_nd fiftieth anniversary, July 20~to August 4. An interesting sloetchof the founder of the city, Colonel jOesBarres, is given in a pamphlet issued by the Sydney Town coun- oil. 1i is stated that Colonel _ nes- Bil-res was borri in 1112, and ‘enter- ed the 60th Regiment as an officer. m‘ 1756, as a lieutenant, he was .§t to America, and,» ‘the second . siege of Llcuisbcurg ‘he s": disting- _ y, filed hlfIl-“illf lly we lei-every w}! eiiglneering skill “that” new Iwoifc specially mentioned to the Kmgond ils a rcsultflra‘ was ordered to acccmpanygwolfe unl- gincer on the expedition ‘against, Quebec. when weir; his qpcrtcl wound on hqz-iirzifiinsyrflol Abraham, DcsBarl-e, ‘i .- . wee-ensue.» fé-“ porting to him lmfgaqfifleehld fleouted. He continitlidl serve" o...“ l0l' the iweqtollbiilvclycase‘; gall in ml went id Nova‘ scene w prepare, plansjand ‘M: gtinistgs; for rel-saying the hernia-fist " Billiard 33m 1m to lflfiiihhe was gemployeii “puking surety; of the 1min and metal, ‘ ivitergwivhlbveleau f“, iieien. wli§l;"b'e'liet1_w=d9- . A at tildtépilio! HfiWVawaQ liiiorlcan lfibeyrtttb-Tfirito. Xlgures before them. ‘may are urg- “Ang a minimum annual subsidy in- i" ‘crease o: eooopco, basétfilrffldclal heed-i. Plus 8162500 ‘annual increase an debt ailotillliee." Interest will now centre upolrthc finding of the "Commission, which is to he submit- v_ our local contemporary falsely states that lion. J. A. MacDonald opposed the appointment_ of the Duncan Commission. Conserva- tives protested - against was the shelving of the Maritime claims iiuestlon‘ by the appointment of any Commission, a protest which was “justified by the subsequent neglect of the King Government to imple- ment its own Commission's findings. It was as a result of the insistence of the Conservative members atpthat time that the King Government was chairman who would be above sus- picion of party prejudice. The re- ' cult was the appointment of Sir Ail- irew Rae Duncan, against, whom no ‘ --criticism of any kind has been of’- fercd by Conservatives. Neverthe- less, had the original Conservative. luggestlon been followed, namely ‘of . direct governmental action, our sub- sidy claims would have been settled The Commission did its duty in the report submitted, ‘ ‘in; to lmplement- the report, ran Government came into power its concern, until recently, has been wholly to meet the problems oc- casioned by the world economic de- pression. It is seizing the first op- portunity to implement the unful- filled recommendations of the Dun- can Commission, which should have been dealt with long before by Mr. Mackenzie King and his administra- The only criticism which the received ‘came from the Macdonald Govern- ment of Nova Scotla, which, as an “excuse for appointing its own par- t contemporary had the temerlty to that the time l! should jointly ‘ with t leader's speech Mr. t unemployment‘; object t0 this MacMillan for from the than any other cal phrases. to in a 800k." ticshasiaeued companied by a ‘lion to the lmafteraswrmylllssagefrommg- land. At that time he was- over eighty, but his age did’ not inter- fere with the dischargefof me dut- ies, which he performedereditiibly for eightyeara. Princeljdward Is- landers thus have more, than casual interest in the anniversary celebra- tions at Sydney, which was the scene of Desbarrea’ earlier activities. .4 CURRIE uauomill. 2 More than a year has now passed smoe the dean‘ c‘ new‘, vs“, cts of numerous primary producers. Arthur Currie ,"the distinguished ' Oommander-in-Ghlcf of the Om- adiarl 001178.111 1"rll.noc,_and I is‘ suggested by Zfhecs-nadian Vetqun ting lnemoi-lalto be erected to him at Ottawa. stew-kins foi- former members of the Canadians Corps, the veteran says: "Sacha memor- lsl, to betruly iiigriificsnt,.must be of our own conception, and from funds drown from our own purses." It suzgeats that the organizations comprising veterans of the." Corps further this proposal. Such a com- mittee could call for suggestions as to the character of the memorial, and open a fund to which all vet- erans would be invited-to contribute. Needhssfo- say. if such"a proposal ' is carried out, the‘ keenest interest and sympathy by all our citizens. EDITORIAL NOTES Mr. Lloyd Gemgel,‘ the pacifist, is now predicting war. , The tenor or, the a contemporary. . closed every avenue of scape for the opposition which, therefore, agreed to his program. ' “A sum sufficient" to deal with quire the val-tom items to be speci- fied in the estimates. ' " Perhaps the Liberal organ will the $15,000 obtained by Premier wood election, "because it was not in the estimates." Mn. Woodsworth: "I congratulate the Government on the speech Throne, whatever" its motives, because it contains more been a member of the House.” Mr. Mackenzie King l: noted for having coined thine famous politi- cent-piece for unemployment relief in any Conservative province." "The Liberal ‘party isln the Valley of Humiliation," and, lastly,.“l put it The Dominion Bureau of Statis- the Oflclal Handbook of oanma. The Handbook dcscl-ibeethe prea- ent economic condition of the Dom- inion in nineteen ohwters. dehlifli with all phases of the coiliitrfs economic organisation, and statis- tics are brousht up in the latest possible mnrrcnt. The text is ac- iliustrative matter. which M18 to ‘ale lniemtel the euleieeweioetec. ‘The frontispiccc has been specially designed to eommcmorotrthe sil- ver Jubilee of His llfllettfl 1°09!- Thmne, ma. is to b: ieelelmted on my lo. ills, and-l ‘message from l-Iis hoellenoy the mover-noi- General In ' locsnt photonlblret the lint. Aooardlllltntliolbdtifllffipflrt elnieoofirtnleniormca- in theylareiiiiitig. .1 “‘:"";.*‘.“°L&'...’m“*‘*‘ Island n, yo, pounna in, eenneetiih will log-between the Moi-lens and the ‘rissmwhctilrli ‘numbers of coins beArlngAt as name and portrait have ‘been found. Mr-gllyonl his plfldgod to “adequate protection" and that pledge must be honoured; but it applies only tn "deserving" Austral- ilfl..,1!idll8tl'l$. Protection is not Prohibition, and. the electors have Elven no mandate for continued shelterlto every paltry little mush- loom industry which seeks to Justify its existence by the claim that it flflllloys a few Australians, although it may have been established by methods which threaten the mark- the problem of sleep fell us that when the obstacle to sleep is sim- ply a nervous state of mind, am:- iety, or other depressing emotions, the patient finds it difficult to go to sleep often staying awake three or four hours fussing, butdinally gets to sleep and thereafter sleeps well until morning. However when the trouble lies in some physical condition such as high blood pressure, or some low or slow poisoning of the system from infection, the individual falls to sleep lradily enough but wakw up in two or three hours and after that finds it almost impossible to go back to sleep. _ The explanation is that when the individual can't get of! to sleep when first going to bed it ls his worry gill: llgepsl him ‘awake, but w en a asee roln sheer . famue he mp5 wmgmg and map Ilsarned more than 1 taught, on earth, according to °°"“““°5- ' trust illlwfillalfi‘ 5.1mm’ for 8. -D..-0'Oonnell, of the Bureau of oflmmflgegfmnhfilz-fkgelsgggesxgdq: stowed upon‘ int/They" Gtatist , Washington, D.C. The mmsawaie the “flan” . flu “.0” o; m," mm u“; I dominating-influences of our clv- s,“ at d b 9b gmhg ' " ilizatlon am not from any one or may?” ‘mm {:8 ph i??? um two sources. but from many races undemouflshment y ‘£05m ‘m or thelearth; and those who are other condition. flu, a’ 80mg t?‘ m“ ‘me l" °h°°°° s" “mt ‘he has regained some strength fragili: predominant strain is the Celtic. physlcal conditions The Anglo-Saxon strain in our “m, bloodis vary slight compared with N . ell the other blood infused wlni it. 1, n1‘: 1,’,,‘:,;;*‘;“°,°:,1‘§§‘,f,’; as to the cause of sleeplessness, 3e. sides them are some mental ali- ments where the patient is awake for hours at a time and yet is not worrying about anything. The point then is that we should or natural piety in which I it was my privilege to teach for three years.- Your-s m your public service you are to the traditions 0f Malpeque both sides. sinm I left Malpcque, when I been for three years; they happyi and to me important y --Mclbourzle Argue. _Peolllc in America and England Rm not Amie-Saxons; neither are there any Anglo-Saxon people or institutions has arrived fora fit- u, Malvpeque,,as principal of Fanning Grammar School. wd the time wasof two rooms. the boys and. girls occupied s Mme“ “finmmfl m of the room; they welc- forty Only three fatal accidents have occurred; on pedestrian crossings since their inception. and there will be general agreeme it among ped- estrians and motorists, except thzs: who conduct s sort cber; her iii-me was Fanny- it _ will be _, followed .> . .- In returnior this restriction The above ulde ma mi on pedestrians, the lsrw against wild worry less. an?! to have’ a cgmgsle: and lreckless driving, whenever physical examination to locate any cases are proved, should be enforc- hidden infection. -. idlgiiiahmtrgfiostnrgigrgus penalties. ma“ o! shune m“ I w”. paid y ' much 101‘ coin; so little. riled dollars a ‘war; _of sleeplessnesa is worrying about not getting enough slee . ~ -The obaession of the American preasyand public with the trial of Kauptmann is rather revolting. Even Brisbane. who used to have cementum,- has -_given himself up to the. current craze of the man hunt. But why hunt the man when the hunt is over? The indecency of dragging Mrs. Lindbergh into court i0. identify her child's clothing is flpPllll-llgwthe indecency of report- nrain talking a. personal drama of the proximity of Lindbergh and liauptmmn is ajpzlling. The whole thing-is appalling. They are dram- atiain, a. foregone conclluio to satiato-a very low tendency of mind in- the-public. Everyone knows that whether m is guilty or inno- cent he will be condemned. The only real drama. is between the two lawyers; the prosecution and the defense. It is an old gain: and a foul otter-Vancouver Province. Opposition was, “Mo, Too," says wider world. The Constitutional Aspect (Sydney Post Recon” a A staff correspondent o! the Montreal star, writing from Ot- tawa, foresees little opmsltion to Premier Bennett’; measures for the establishment of social insurance, but expects considerable difference of opinion to develop with rcspec to the proposed legislation for" the regulation" of business methods: Premier Hepburn of Ontario and one of Premier ‘rasdbereaws Cabinet m‘ associates have declared that their respective Governments will not concur in any Federal enactments for the regulation '1 working hours and minimum wage rates. But these hostile reactions are not likely to cause Premier Bennett much worry. 1 gislatlon in the interest of productive labor cannot be div- orced, in its effects, from tho re;- ulatlon of trade and commerce which is specifically allocated, un- der. the British North America Act. to the Dominion Parliament's field of Jurisdiction. There is indeed reason to blelhve that all of the Premier's economic reforms are Wllhlll U10 légl-Slltll/E! yulnpltfillfi 0f the Federal Parliament. One doubts that them will be much serious resistance to any of these remedial measures, for their popularity is s; obvious as their timeliness and necessity. All sans people wish ta see the capitalistic system preserved, because any at- tempt to substitute an alternative one could only result in endless conflict and confusion. But it must be" reformed for its very premrvn- tion. and it is a. realization of this fact, emphasized so impressively in the past foul- years. at has prompted the Prime Minis r in th; formulation of his advanced econ- omic policy. Timely nsform is thil best antidote to blind revolution. appeared to have father who had been an inepec relief does not re- CO county. This may hive 7101994- 1!. DNWKDCU ' ICQIVIXIK labour at Falcon- “at ‘or “u” pmmu yum Upper Holloway Baptist church. Iondon, has its own restaurant, fhdatreyunerriployed club. penny savings. bank. and grandfathers’ club. ‘rhe- restaurant served 100 three-course luncheon; every day. Every week 30 unemployed profes- sional musicians come‘ to practice under the instruction of a paid band master, and are helped to get engagemenu. 11m grandfathers’ club was started because old men had not enough to do. No one under liftty can join. Many or the mem- bers are over eighty. ~ speech since I have Pk! Cd "thine 1110B; learned to rideion James Mdlfc w“: unbroken Kentucky mm! with "Not .1 flvc- ' vrlilu oi J-he- mane of Nations -wil.l, find it, very-hard to minilnisc , _ theyaiuc of itsllafest constructive Achievement. ‘The current resolution “pm Council. bringing an end to the darlgeio s crisis’ between Yugo- mvle and ungary. is so cielrly an advance onthe rnethod—or lack oi IIIQlhOii-of 30 years ago. that the mcatjomlrmed cynic cannot fail to b6 impressed. The mace-preserva- tion machinery of the League is far perfect. Much harm has been done lay-trying to pretend that it is more competent thanis the case. But that it nnrerents a very real step fofwfrd in the nldtlorls of wealth of pertinent organised-peoples with ‘one another is nolongsr subject" to question.- Wliihlngton Poet; lveinaillce the world began the iffelt starch in life-has been for happiness. The imagination oi’ men and-women .1105 been taxed to its utmost" that the right road might umltd. bl every dinlcticn. to- ‘alihculiend objectives. ~. veiled, hoping that this of all‘ lniqht be found. schooner: ‘ ’ on the bar. the i936 edition of scene off ~thc breakwater. You complexion will reflect the treat superiority of PEIISLAR Gleam of Almonds g3’ é i l iii s; iii! v "cliff ..».c......."***i. ~ tan; mar school in ifalpoquc is an act light to sham. That record. as you inform, goes back a hundred years. You were educated in that school; ubeeq career and the style of your letter proves that you were well taught. of your family, handed down on 1t is now pracisciylfifty years One always looks hack with rever- ence to tbchopes and dreams of his youth, and with affection to the friends he made. In those years people be- adoptzd ms look upon Malpeque u my home. It was in the year 188B 1 went place I halve since achieved has given me more pride. The 8611001 at long. desks and benches without backs were ranged along the Walla: number. There was a second tea- thcrc was rlcgend of a mysterious endowment, the gift of. Lady Fan- ning. The money was secured. Desks seats of the. most modern desizn “are bought; malps and a. black- board were placed upon the walls. In summedtho ‘films was filled a." with s. golden light coming through "ca" the grove of‘ trees. We were Proud However one very common cause of, the school. but I had a-lwflyfi l» my board coat oodollcrsrln those three years I. had saved ‘enough to venture into a Ihadhealdoftheschoclfrom , a previous teacher A. D. Fraser. 1 put forth my certificates from, the mieee eiwelre. oelhiflthw-v“ a" ‘raditlon o! teaching lnthc film- ily, acqulml from my mndfflthtr who was cast away upon the shores withcnly a copy of Horace. Sol/Ed from the ship-wreck. and from my of ‘the 180 schools in Q1169!“ 1 gwas met at Remington Station we in oeeembel- 1m by William Hudson. ‘and-brought-before a meet- of , James ncrlutt,’ and Duncan McGougIn. I was installed in the stone house of Bandy wflollsen we hi! "i" Susan Bcairetn, wiaerellivelliricon- I had come‘ into ‘a new world- Orwell my nstim phce was in- fancy but Malpeoue revealed itself a; g gefles or headlands thrust out into the ocean. I altered into the mystery "o1 lt."1"mm Dr. Kiel’: boys 1 learned to swim. and to M11 8 boat. 1mm ' James McKly Me- clougan I learned to handle- a sim- Iloaudir good plrrpose- that one before dawn at one shot t1 th were domesic uc $1.... $0M». nylon‘. Also I saddle bonvwed-fromulanvls Ram- scy..It was that old horlema-nshi? that gained ms entrance into thl army. l - - >011»; fine afternoon 1 would watch the tel memoir over Fish Island with as many u W" the spring Ice-n yet heart-M 1118b" lug ice and the thunder of the summer r saw Malneqvv 1mm t!" m, um every mark was familiar me. All the time I half access to Dr- xiere librlfy. containinl hi! ill-h" “l; mo“ ‘l; well as his ‘own. I read them‘ all. It was through them 1 gained entrance into the field of litnrature and of medicine. I l!!! further-enriched» by time n-iendl. bfGecl-u Sinclair a lnoltintelll- gmt" man with a completely Wir- without a- in 1t UB1‘ true WW and had were ears. stately hospitality and the house, where still the no The ides in But nllaolnllol of b! qleltiala of ll ewnaballu PUBLIC FORUM I'll: eolula la npu far the correspondents w: Gail-dials lees no! iii undead; the Old and yolmg lined together on the one side. withnutdear on the other. Fath- erland sons wouldelldagoinsports and even contrive the most elabor- ate jolts. spend (tiny! maklngpn e repruen an Indira who had Nile thrown the ice, and then faster the figure to a mud-digger to be mised from the . and carefully left to lee- ward untilflcorgc Sinclair should arrive to hold an inquest. In summer there was an influx 0f visitors. many of them from Harvard and other American uni- versities, who brought an air of wider culture. They would visit the" Panning school. and incite schol- ars and teachers alike to greater rJfcrt. At all times there was the of Peter‘ Mc- Nuttb household in Damley, which was a school of manners and of cbnduct: and of your own father's your mother espec- ially iliculcated the tradition of good birth and breeding. _But what impressed inc most was the politeness and good breed- inil of the scholars, some of them qlder than I was. "Riley looked up- on “the master" as a friend not as an enemy. My reg-mt is that in my ybuthful innocence I did so‘ little for them. Yet, when I went away. the little girls had tears to shed. They are now women with children of their own; and when now by chance I look upon those children I sec their mothers and their gxlndmothe. in their eyes. Interest. ‘Ibo n-illol I so 800 tor dom of worship. humane ideas. constrains would be moud of Y‘! a it In itiorl over us. fair play. coining of sslt on his Ilblfllil the burden. i inst sen-sly toprotect pe qtpllcsble to leaders cf deavouring to "bring home" some- thing the people need, being aub- Jooted to insult and abuse, while I am, Sir, etc, B. I. iinvalvcao aal-‘olmi iBin-Whilc wc have reason to be ashamed of much of the history o! Britain, in the "times of we are proud that, later, she became c, the acimowledged teacher, or pre- ceptor of the world. Emerging from rude and barbarous customshand abolishing cruel _ and‘ tyrann laws, the established reforms which contributed immense], to thccoln- fort and prosperity of the people and to the wealth and power of the nation. Magna Charts and Habeas Corpus made her- a leader among ‘ . Elle followed these re with other remedial laws, su the abolition of slavery and feudal- ism and the establishment of free- Oonsidering the times in which reforms were made, "we may truthfully say "there were giants in these days",-—giant.s in wisdom, dis- rrlmcnt, advanced thought and What the world owes to Britain's wise. unselfish patriots, no man can estimate. >As readers of ‘British history, we arc proud of these thinBS. and this us to believe that the ice fllture readers of Canadian history ‘ tending and advanced Canadian legislation. New is the time for, patriotic action. The of Canada is urgent. gstclns, of treatment fail to give rc- llef, hence the mod of a great-and earnest consultation. 1t is not a dime for egoisin, but oneof due res- pect for the opinions of others. hen any man has been chosen by the people of s. nation to lead them. lie must evidently have many of Ric qunlitiesto lead. We are told h a Great Authority to "render to scsar the things that are Caesars." my mind, that command applies those that are put in a responsible By all means. they should have We should consider the load upon their shoulders. It was astute United states Senator o, in an earnest address, said “it is a good opportunity, but a mean and cowardly act, to kick a man ‘ a corner with a bag " back"! The simlla is on luminous smtwarxs I Bin-In the treachcmlu weather we are having, one might rea- cxpoct that m: City auth- orities would make a special effort leri DOTBHOC", ichl Si"; The old , en- werenotieduiredto illthethild t Blythe lr possueicn. or fourth year F payment with interest. ‘Ilhul, while a remedy was provided for cases of such extreme nscsssityas might otherwise have put a stop to thn Progress of the settlers, they were not encoung-d to re on any resource but their own industry: and their minds werenot degl-m. ed by the humiliating idea of re- reivinc anything like charity. The woud spirit that characterized the ancient Highlander, was carefully cborlflied among them: the near prospect of indqaendence was kept constantly within their vicw, to stimulate their exertions, and mp‘. port them in every dimculti, - Having calculated tbc arrange. meats necessary for til, progress or the Iflttklllent. and having left the charm of their execution ln- the hands of an agent, whose fidelity and mill I was well sssulcdpf by lone previous acquaintance, r left the island in “ tember. 1808; and, afici- an ertensive tour on the con- tinent. returned in the end of the same month of the following yrlar. It was with the utmost satisfaction I then found that my plans had bean folldiowcd ‘up with attention "1 men. ‘rhough circum- stances had intervened to disturb, in some device. the harmony of ill-e settlement. they had J r no essentially bad effect; and the pro- Bresethathadbeenmadcwaseo satisfactory to all concerned, that little difficulty occurred in healing the sore. I {Olllld the settlers fllkblbd in marina the harvest which their in- ‘illillly had produced. ‘rhey hail a su lent for. thclentlr " 1 ' ' ‘ thgcscttlement. Ttic~~l 3 abundance had diffused universal satisfaction, and ovary dgubg u u, the. elisibliity of ille situatfon seem. lid to be removed. m the whole set- thment I m“ 1111i 3W0 men who showed the least appearance of dia- spondency. ‘There were three up {our families who had not gathered a m?!) “equate to their own supply: but mwv others had a considerable superabundsncc. The extent of land in cultivation at the different ham.- therefore. fiend to be watched con- mnily by the PUIIOn who sets the “I'll?” “° "l"; . e men w spread the sand "Wllflntly do their work in a m. fun manner, it where _it is not needed and leaving glare _ unoovend in other places, 3. As a rule. after n. thaw the freezing process tahee place during “N m!!!‘ find. instead of having the lend screed between ii a. m. and 8 a. 1a.. as is done in other cities. l0 thlt the streets will h: "lg to Wllk upon when citinsns am leav- ing their homes in the morning, the men lPPlfillltly start to work leisurely, betvvoenil and l: a. m. , 4. I not know how many sand mm l" wolmd by tbeoitv. but they should be sufficient in mi “her cover the whole city batons a “n, 1t it to be hoped that the city will not defer action in this matter until some injured person mo"; suit for damages. Peopin do not ‘Witt the cause of the lamentable death-chow late highly mpeemd Lieutenant-Governor Hon. Charley I I'm. Bil‘. etc, ma. s. uslulunlo prim l and was generally 8116509 to have meats. “Have another wee drink," MicTavish," he insisted, "and thiml be your fifth." leis. I found to be ln Pmbortifln o! two acres or there. abouts to each abfc working lland- in many cases from three to four. Several boats had also been built, by means of which a considerable supply of fish had been obtain and formed no trifling addition to the stock of provisions. Thus, in a little more than one year from the date of their landing on the island, had these people made themselves lndependant oi’ any supply that did not arise from their own labour. Budd's Kidney 0111M» ma: lhipl mall zlme t... 1 shall mm On slzlnalc bteacn and watch u,‘ 0am 1'1"" It my feet: then With my hand" my“ 311841118 eyes tiled llllll N8!!! ‘m’ fluvial Dvvn by the sheltered auto“, lgreet and Cabtaiga fined from ventures a And f-lalétellall tell me stories of u. Till day's declining to sleep. “Huh” mm And memories t shall bringo my “m” ‘h’ Wfinkiegivizf smiles, not labour; u scenes again, hi: With “a: e m“ m‘ ct ill B can Kive. recaptured you“ omealgngvlll take my unreluctam And lead me home, understand, and folk w“ "-3116 Muncesi“ "they were having a t Aberdeen. The host was yea: vival, even magnaniynam mood‘ Pleasing m, Mime rnoze refresh. general in q, (‘N be Dentin-bed) Bachcha is Nature's warning that than is something wi-on with coin Nevar neg cc; it. s notcorncmd, iso fen followed lly more serious form: of Kidney trouble such as Rheuma- tism, Deeply or avan Bright's Disease. A: the first sign of Kidney h as ha, rum 7 to Dodd’: Kidney for over gen. arations has been the favorite Pilli Kidney conic and Remedy. BLOOD F000 FOB PA]! AND THIN- PEOPLE A combination eapeeiaiir valuable in the treatment of those diseases when their origin la traceable to an im- poverished condition of the blood. One of the greatest ruined- ‘ in in the treatment of Rheu- matian. For those. who have lost their INIUCIIQ M}! Blood Food will Prove the restorative. GIT A BOX NOW. 50c. Mail Orders p .. Attended to, Pnacriptions a Specialty. The Two Macs fi_____ """ “Ilmowofno o __ IIOCQIMUIQIGIIOO development of the Bri Scou ll. ll. ll. “lilo llulls of ilonnailght, and a former Governor General of Canada, ‘ said of Scouting: llillatlon _ or institution- s or Sunday schools, nor else that docs so much to promote the boy along safe, ane, sound the future of this country what we do for the b0)’ id‘, and what we do for ii tile cm Golder. These are , , community which have been very ‘"5 "Wlimhfl. up to the ‘present time." g _ k Subllthd witll ale compliments of llllllllll 8i 60., iliiirizu - Th Oldest Insurance Agency in P. ll. I.