-, ._:__.__._ i 1 l l l l 1 i l n s". saliv- e e2 h“ e;..:i...-_ .g‘“ .533 "H...- sa s‘? Q": a E i‘ l‘ "é/IA cP-Pmfivn “""‘"“""‘“ lures‘ PAGE FOUR. THE BHAHLOTTETUWH GUARDIAN President-W. Chester B. him-Lure, I- P. Vice-President, J. l- 3l"'“s '5" I Srcretnry—-Lleut.-Col. o. s. muesli-hon. ll- B- 0- , i , Edlgqr mu managing Director-J. B. Burl-s". F- J- l- Anuclul, g-_-ull.,"_. l-‘runh Walker and B. IL Currie slurnlng Daily (founded illilil 85-00 per yssr (in advnnel) delivered “.50 Der year (in udvunr-e) mulled in Canada and United Status suvrsirrlsisu inc rltllSi-INTATIVES UNITED STA'IEH——'l'he lier-kwlth Spools! Agency inc, New York 0e! NotesBy The Way It is often disco " to lreep doing the simple, everyday duties of life, all the while feeling that nothing very great is being accom- plished. But no one can put one‘s finger upon the exact starting place of a great task. One thing we do THECH GUARDIAN “He Could Not Swim” (New York Evening Post) —-"Mayor Best, forty years old, was a motor boat enthusiast, and a lover oi’ water sports, but his in- timate friends said he could not swim." And so Archland M. Beat, Mayor of Hudson, was drowned. The engine of his motorboat stall- TIME GOES BY TURNS 585i!!- Ths lopped tree in time may grow villa-- Dr. ffrenchs V ~ AUGUST 9. 195s rmicide I I Capsules G106 Best ‘Results This is the time to dose your foxes with Dr. Ffreuch’; No. 1 Vermiclde Capsules. They are now in the adult class and require the stronger capsule to eliminate the worms, It is Just ss essential to look after them nmv they were pups, so don't neglect them. welL Oral Building, New York City, Genrrsl Motor! Building, Detroit- Intersisl ed for a moment and then kicked Most naked plants renew both fruit ss h It will my‘): llllluushiu Tower Building, Chicago; Glenn Build Building, Hanson City. l“. “o. “oh 5".‘ ing, Allnnin; hiunarinock Building, Bin Francisco; Philadelphia. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST B. 1933 L4 CRO WING INDUSTRY _ been very intelligently applying what they learned so that, as not- Recently The Guardian publish-l cu they m iuruiuu oui o orouuoi ed an interview with Mr. Alfred? vouch oommeuuu imu iuouiy to , _. | . H. Brlttuin, president of the i the buying oomooniou and mus are Maritime-Nulioilal Fish Limited! opening up on improved ouiiot {or Montreal, in which reference was] their ouichoo made to the improved sale of pick-i Domond ‘or oiokibouroo cod led curcd cocifzsli and it was pre-‘ lwill, of course, always fluctuate "m" “Y M"- Bmai“ “m” W“ with the times. But the demand for HDDYOVCG conditions in the United mo iououoriy cured fish will always States the price of this product, ioo ootioi. mun mot mi. fish put up would be firmer. This trade is of in more oi, ioou haphazard oi. “or increasing importance to the fish-i‘ duh fashion, ouo tho oxporiouoo o! "'5' industry m the Pmflnce as is I the fishermen in the districts where shown in the following leadingar- i we demonstrators i F h , departmental ticle from me current ;ssue of is - Erie! News Emmi“, a monthly » have been working proves the point. publication of the Fcclcrul Depart- Further demonstration work m this ‘particular yield is being done this mcnt of Fisheries: year. Other educational work done For the past three or four vearsiby the department with a view to the DOIfliIllOn Department of Fish-l assisting the fishermen to main- eries has annually sent. several ex- l lain high quality of production Pfiriellfifid fllld “P011 men 1M0 includes demonstration of the different codfishlrig areas in the “Gaspe cure" method 0f dryingcod Maritime Provinces to demonstrate in appropriate districts, spreading iilfl moat EDDFOVPH mflhod 0f Dre- of information by fisheries inspec- paringipickie-curcd fish, and oneilqpg who have been required to striking result. is seen this year in take special courses of study to the fact that Massachusetts im-_ qualify them to explain and dem- porters have placed orders Yoljonstrate different fish handling some 3.000.000 pounds in Princeinnd processing methods. and the Edward Island and Eastern Novaiholding of an annual instructional Bcotia on condition that the Drb- i‘ course for fishermen which is given duct is Prepared in lwfivfdflllce by the Biological Board of Canada with the instructions the dcpart- at its Fisheries Experimental Sta- ment has been giving. tion at Halifax, N.S. In Prince Eduard Island one of the big Massachusetts firms will make purchases in at least ten areas, whereas in I932 its Island When the Dominion Drama Fea- buying was done at only two tival was held last spring, a num- points. At certain places lri ‘Cape be; of play; with a Canadian Breton contracts have been made Setting and mitten by Canadian for the season's output of pickle- uiiihdi-s were “bungled, bug only cured wd- United 5mm bllllm- , one of these got mm the finals aha impressed by the satisfactory qual- l was prosomod at Qtuowou kl’ “l m” m)‘ pwdwed m“ year For the next festival, a more de- l" “Lmicts “"‘°““' ‘he d°‘°“m"°“”s I finite effort is to be made m bring instructors had bccn at work, have Canadian plays mm production and placed substantial orders at several. director o! rMiss Martha Allan. points on the eastern mainland of the Montreal Repertory Theatre, Nova Scotia whore, nihcrwisc, op- ‘ Y n has offered prizes of $100 each for Igglgiuvitvgzluailv hiya been neg g‘ the best English and the best Pickle-curcchfish is used in the French play submitted to h" be- production of bonclcss cod but, of fore December 1' Better Mm’ ‘she course, (‘he Curing must be prououiy gives assurances that the winning do” m, the finished orouuoi wiii plays will be produced in connec- be of inferior quality. In various “m1 with the festival‘ Atlantic coast urcas the curing has It Wm enwumge the prommem been yo“. won done for muuy i.ooi.5 of the Dominion Drama Festival- pm but in outta oi tho Muriiime and they include men and women Province! the oiouoiiou woo not so prominent in all walks of life in “outflow”, o iow uoouonu ago and Canada, from the Governor-Gen- ln some other places pickle-curing "t" dOWn-thlls I" 59° lam ‘flu’ oi ooo woo not uuooriukeu oi uiL val used to stimulate the creation Prince Edward Iuioud was o prov- of Canadian plays. This, of course, ince where buyers found difficulty was one of the prime objects of the l» “i; of pickle-cured, and the island was Vancouver Province, which says actually 1111mm“! bmmle” °°d M‘ that if the festival does envthihs its own use. so in 1929 the Fish- to inspire such plays it will have 61'1" Department began demon‘ accomplished a good work for the stration work there. The demon- strators showed men in the fishini; Dominion‘ communities approved methods of handling their fish by blefidiil! them and splitting them carefully and they also gave expert advice as i0 cugglni; suiting, etc. Before long Prince Edrvard Island Drill-lime“ were supplying Prince Edward Is- land demand for boneless codtish, and sales were being made t0 the United Statcs. In 1930 over a mil- lion‘ pounds of lllf-‘klercurild cod from the province was sold to Unit- it on the bindings of his books in ed States buyers who had not. PFB- such a way that only the discerning viously bccn making Purchases in will notice. the Island. i Demonstration Work W88 0mm" l The local Liberal organ again re- ucd in thelsland DT0Vlfl¢@—i°\‘ arpeais its misstatement that The time it included the use of depart» I Guardian had declared that the mental demonstration bouts t0 ' ggitatiflfl against the Franchise Act show improved methods of fishing in Nova Scotia mainly came from ._nnd a year or two B80 it W118 "the Tory-owned Halifax paper." extended i0 Cape Breton and some What The Guardian did was to other parts of Eastern Nova Scotia. ,quote from the Acadian Recorder, a In some of tlicsr- places the pr0- Encwspaper which boasts of being the dimiion bi pickle-cured cod for,only Nova Bcotis daily owned and use lit preparing the boneless c0m- controlled by Liberals, denouncing modity hnd not been carried on, ‘the Chronicle campaign as untrue and clscrvhcrc the fishermen had , and charging that the Chronicle was not followed tlic most efficient "Tory-owned." Our contemporary, method. 'I'hc fishermen in all these__l having apparently no explanation to areas, like those of Prince ‘Edward i omi- for the “timid; u; m; 34mm- island, showed keen interest in the er, garbies its statement and attrib- demonstrations and they have‘ m“ 1g mini; go Th, (Jul-mm, CANADIAN PLAYS EDITORIAL NOTES Rudyard Kipling, poet of Empire, has banned the swastika, which for years has adorned all his books. The last volume of his works, pub- lished a year ago. bore the swastika. The next volume, to be issued next week, will not. 1f Mr. Kipling does not like Hitler and his method! he will not say so. He prefers to show know-that nothing is a trivial that 1's at all worth while. And it may be that a thousand apparently val- uelesa deeds and tasks, have in the end, contributed to a very great event. Most people who buy u piece of property, an automobile or a. suit of clothes want to know what they are getting for their money. Strangely, when buying shares in lstenoe of intelligence, and gamble. The stock market, properly employ-i ed, may be made a useful agencyl for investment. It is a poor place make a bet, as people learn l)(‘l‘l$d-; ically to their sorrow. ‘ About once in a lifetime some’ sang of criminals barricades itself in s Inndon house and puts up a: regular battle against the police. On‘ such occasions the London bobby- can turn out armed to the teeth; but there affairs are exceptional, In this that the gun-toting criminal is! draw a gun on him. He knows also that if he himself is arrcsted with‘ a gun his sentence is likely to be, l0 times heavier than it might oth-i erwise be. ’ ~ l ‘life is an endurance lest whose; goal is uncertain and whose reward} B! lanes W. Baton. MD. KEEPING IN STEP MENTALLY You have likely heard the story of the fond mother who on seeing a company of school boys marching by, said that all the children were out of step except her boy. i No one blames the mother for lov- jing her boy, thinking he is about ,3 right even if he is "different" from . property oi. producing industries - others, but it is this very mother i ygghflg cannot gwlm, The are 15 so they omit thou. o?“ deny mo ox“ care that interferes with ‘the boysreuy 0g acqull-emenl, Anygne gm chancegbf remaining normal like other youngsters. When the boy gets into trouble with other youngsters the mother considers the other youngsters to be entirely to blame; if the trouble oc- 'curs at school then the school or the teacher must be to blame. Some one has spoken -of this b0) i as the "overprotected” boy, and? quite rightly states that the parenti is at fault and in her anxiety inf make things “smooth" for him act- ually takes away his strength Oii character. He learns to depend upon. the ordinary course he goes unsrm- i the parent for everything including: 11813:: éivlir T1: i‘: iigezfgltngfifit ed and it ls no doubt 3, result; o; getting him out of trouble when he u ° ' is in the wrong. comparatively rare in London. Every; Unfortunately l! this ovcrsroduc- fwfil‘ przvifistshzm" txohiivmg’ criminal knows that no boyby can i tion continues the boy or girl growslm‘ pa’ a a ° ° W ' into manhood or womanhood and is always looking for support, for a (lciendcr, instead of supporting or defending himself. In other words the youngster is “out of step" with life, and only by getting “in step" can the proper mental development occur. You can thus see that Lt any me. He was thrown mo» the Hud- “"1 “W”? sou river thirty feet from the bank. He couldn't make that short dis- tance or even hold himself up till help could come. "He could not swim." How strange this omission seems, when we encounter it in the case of men whose lives are on the water. It is astonishing that many sailors on New Yorks big private of pain, toning shower: change by course, to worse. flow, She draws her favours to the lowest ebb; Her tides have equal times to come and go, Her loom doth weave the fine and coarsest web. No job so great but runneth to an end, No hap so hard but amend. I learn it 1n a few afternoons. The only heartening fact in the situation is that this easy water- manshlp is becoming more and more general. Only in comparative- ly rare ‘instances do we repeat the grim epitaph pronounced upon Mayor Best: “He could not swim." may iuilne Not always fall of leaf, nor ever spring, Not endless night, not yet eternal clay: ' The saddest birds a season tind to sing;- The roughest storm a calm may soon allay: Thus, with succeeding turns, God tempereth all, ‘That man may hope to rise, yet fear to fall. Restive Rivers (New York Times) The threatened diversion of the 250 miles south in the Yellow Sea, The Yellow River, which has alter- ed its outlet five times with 4,300 years, last emptied into the Yellow Sea in 1852. It is the weakenng of its dikes at Kaifeng that may cause it to do so again. Among the rivers which period- ically but to a less extent shift their channels are the Tarim, Gan- A chance may win that by mis- chance was lost; ; The net that holds no great, takes little fish; In some things all, in n11 things none are crowd, The sorriest wlght may ilnd release » The driest soil suck in some mois- , We have no hesitation in recommending Dr. "Nnuul. Vermloide Capsules. Twenty‘ years experience with (hm and h ’ ‘ of satisfied customers all over the world is“ us to believe there's nothing like them. Don't log-gel h, uuo the Number One Capsule for this dosing. ' .'I‘ime goes by turns, and chances j‘ From foul to fair, from better hap The sea o! Fortune doth not ever i PRICE $1.00 BOX (20 CAPSULES.) E. A. F 0 S T E R —Gentra| Drugstore Headquarters for all Fox Supplies Canadian Opinion (St. John Telegraph Journal) In view of all that has been writ- ten to convey the information that the world conference in London was s flat failure, it is refreshing to read the opinion of so shrewd an observer as President Beatty of the Canadian Pacific, who has just returned from England. He says: “To say that it was a failure or that it. had left the intematlonal situation no better off far from truly represents the case." ‘This conforms-to the views expressed by Sir Walter Layton. Then we have the decimation of the Canadian Minister of Finance.‘ lvfr. Rhodes refers especially to the benefit de- rived by Canada and the Empire at large from the meeting of rep- resentatives in London, but he says it would be quite erroneous to as- sume that there was a breakdown in the sense that there were irre- concilable points of view. Most of the delegates, he said, felt real is doubt. Few of us could surely de- I _ termlne its outcome. Yet with rewfp"°g"°ss ‘s t° b? ma“ Wm‘ me exooutiouo’ moo mks up iis cimuioverprotected child, it means that lenge, determined to do the difflcultl the mother or father should be thing and iioo during ihing despite! taught that the youngster must the countless opportunities for sur-, loam w “and on ms own met’ ges, Indus, Amu, Dayra, Missouri. and Missssiippi. The Tarim, prin-i cipoi siioum oi. Eusiom Turkoi“ I Unuicddled joys here to no man be- stan, has deviated eighty miles inI the past thirty years. It has re- through Few all they need, but none have Who least, hath some; who most, progress had been made and ultim- ately the aims of the conference would be achieved. Those aims will be pursued more intelligently be- cause the difficulties in the way are now more clear. all they wish; fall, hath never all. render to ease and indifference that I come to them. Refueled now andl then with fresh hope and the com-y forting contact of friendly encour- agement, they spend their strength to the limit to leave behind a record of achievement. This is (he spirit that has lifted man from the dust of which he is made and given wings to his spirit. This makes hlm master of his world and ofiliis own destiny. ' Mr. Mackenzie King asked s was- tern audience whether anybody knew where Mr. Bennett stood on the question of reciprocity. Mr. Ben- nett's position on recprocity is re- corded clearly and expllcity in the Hansard of the last session of Par. liament. It is that when the Unit- ed States agrees to give Canada e. measure of reciprocity that is fair to both countries and that carries Wmfi guarantee of permanency, iMr. Bennett will be for it. Mr. King sat in the House while Mr. Bennett said that. In the circumstances, Mr. King would have been more fair and frank had he told his Western audience where his own party stands on reciprocity. Its Quebec Willi. for example-Ottawa Journal. There Li’! still 50m: problem, Certain aspects of the earth are as far beyond our understanding and our power to influence them as they ever have been. Nor do we al- WVBW Set along together as well as we should. But on the whole the birthday would seem to be a cause of congratulations. The earth is two billion years old. Many happy re- turns of the dayl i There is enough in this world to intake the simplest in taste or am- bltiOn, hB/PPY- The urge for imp- lpiness is born in all. Many are un- hB-DPY in youth who are rewarded iwith happiness in later life. The law of compensation usually takes care of each of us. We should not com- plain. Mlost happy events justify all former sacrifices and (iiwipyioint- ments. i__.__ Much of the current dissatisfac- tion with open dholomacy is hardly justifiable. Open diplomacy, espec- ially in disarmament conferences, may have disappointed the extrav- agant expectations which were en- tertalned of it soon after the war. But on the whole it has shown a record signally comparable with that of the old diplomacy. The Washington Conference limiting the building of battleships and cruisers, the Looarns treaty, leading up to the Kellogg pact, and Lausanne, Emil“! reparations as such, repre- sent a list of achievements in eleven i Wars of which any system of dip- lamacv may well be pmud. When it is reoollected that open diplo- mwy has had to elaborate its tech- nique in scarcely more than a de- cade, while the old diplomacy had HICEH slowly pcrfcctiu its methods; ever since the thirteenth ccnturyn‘ one begins to view its accomplish-l merits in something like a true per- i spective.-Boston Christan Science Monitor. make his own progress, take his own isumed its former course defeats, fight his own battles, and suffer his just punishment. No one wants any more war; not u single nation in the world, and not even the real soldier himself wants it. However there is one thing about the military drill, the marching or other parts belonging to it and that is that the word of command must be obeyed correctly. And the boy who is "out of step" is at once noticeable to the instructor. For the time being each boy whether rich or poor, brainy or dull, is a part of a machine, and must not spoil the perfect working of the machine by being “out of step." This is the training of drill and of athletic games. Remember the only difference be- tween you and the mental patient is that he is “out of step" with the rest of mankind, and you are not. ‘the long abandoned city of Loulan. Mountains of Central India, enter- soutwest of its present delta. The emptying into the northeast corner of the Great Rann of Cutch. The Amu Darya, Arabic for "crazy river" which now flows into the Aral Sea, once ran into the Caspian Sea. Dur- -R.obert Southweli (1581-1595) lection of the overflow for its more uniform dispersal. The use of Dlkes or levees, usually of earth, is gen- erally accompanied wlth revettlng. This reinforcement may be oi concrete, or of willow mats anchor- ed with stone, as alorig the Mississ- iPPl- Millet is used extensively for weaving mats to hold back floods in china. Another method of con- trol is the placement of groins 0t stone or stock projecting from the _ bank at intervals into the stream Th“ ma“, i" ti" 4W“ °l Pwl- to deflect it from the intervening emy’ m“ wnslderably w u“ 935i’ sections’ of bank. Where the bank of lts present delta below Karachi, 1510p“ siimcienuy, ioscmo mum-e“, es are sometimes used. In river sec- tions where there is a particular danger of under-ruining or overiilow- ing the banks, double rows of dikes, as well as grolns, are constructed. where it flowed 2,000 years ago, when Lou-Ian was the midway post on the silk road. The Ganges, in the second cen- tury, flowed through the Vindhya ing the Bay of Bengal through Mayurbhanj state, about 100 miles Ganges was joined with the Brah- maputra as a. result of the floods of 1787, when the latter burst into the Padma, a tributary of the Gan- ges. ing the past. seven years it. has mov- ‘ ed from a. point three miles from within halt a. mile o.‘ the city, Modern Style More Comfy In the meantime the gain to Canada from the conference can- not be disputed. Let us therefore look on the brighter side in rcla- tion to the future and any fiuther conferences that may grow out of the one which is now history. .,___.___-_-_.. Compared with the cultivation of cereals, the introduction of artific- ial meadows is very recent. Mr. Roosevelt And Tarifis (Ottawa Jmu-nal) President Roosevelt's adventure“ experiment in higher wages m‘ shorter working hours to up.“ employment and increase pllrchu. ing power is thus far reasonabli successful. Despatcha tell of hum. eds of thousands of workers N turningto work, of industrial“ deluglng Washington with semi» anoe of the new code. But there is one feature of ti; Industrial Recovery Act which, m sidering President Roosevelt's pr; fessions, seems strange. It is feature of it which is oer-leg with tariffs. If United States nu; ufacturers are going to have shoie er huors and pay higher wggq then, obviously, they will have ti; right to demand protection m‘ ‘the manufactured products q countries where the same sholi hours and high wages don't prey“ 'I‘hat being clear, at happens g Mr. Roosevelt's policy and proulig of lower tariffs? It begins to look as though in m. revolutionary changes of the W few months the President and no mocratic party had lost sight o“ lot of their traditions. Also that faith in the United States doing something about. tariffs isn't overly well based. Rotation should not be ironclad ‘they should suit the type of farm. lng the farm and its peculiarities. Bu tatlos should be the servant of till farmer, rather than his master. The Trask For WELL DRILLIN Communicate With VAUGHAN H. GHOOM Local Representative At Morley Bell's Law Office, Summerside, P. E. 1., or Telephone 297. zit Well Co. ‘their bins for whatever they could A ivldses Gone Wrong Turkul, capital bf Kara Kaipak, to (Ottawa Journal) Remember when Mr. Aaron Sapiro was a sort of Moses in the West? He came from California, where he had some connection with the orange growers, and his business on the plains was to tell our wheat growers how to take a short cut to Utopia. by disregarding such things as the law of supply and demand, world production, consumption, etc. All they had to do, preached Mr. sapiro, was to rid themselves of such parasites as grain traders, elevator owners and speculators, gather up and market their own wheat, hold it: until the world paid them what they wanted for it. It was as easy as losing at a horse race. The farmers listened. They had listened to Hatfield, the rainmak- er, had paid him good money eve- ry time a shower fell on the prair- ies, so why not to Sapiro? So the wheat pools were born; whereupon Mr. Ba-piro, having pocketed his fee (which report said was a good- ly one) proceeded to leave the ba- bies on the doorsteps, or the threshfng floors, of the farmers. They thrived for a time. Ilhey became so lusty their foster par- ents got boastful and proud, told how they were "showing the world," and could keep their wheat! until a hungry world came across with at least $L50 a. bushel. Over in Liverpool people who had been dealing in wheat; for a hundred years said that the plun was wrong. that it would break down, and that the when/t pools, instead of holding big carry-overs. should clean out get. But the wheat pool leaders only laughed. sapiro had toldthem they were right! Now, when the wheat pools are but, the memory of s. strange nightmare, there is word about sapiro. It is word that a Cook County (Chicago) grand jury has indicted h‘m, along with Al Cn- pone, for conspiracy to stifle trade. Conspiracy to stifle it by "bomb- ‘ugs, acid throwing, slugging, strikes and less forms of intimida- Betty was taken to the museum which now appears doomed. river rises inland. Rivera flowing snared by the Yellow River. In flood by auntie. They went into the Egyptian room, and there saw a mummy. Betty asked what it was. "That is some one's mummy, dear," answered auntie. "Auntie," she confided, "I'm glad my mummy‘a not like that!" The Mississippi has not perma- nently wandercd as far from its habitual channel as the other rivers mentioned, but the tendency to allel- its course back and forth within its general direction is similar to theirs. The same may be said of its tribu- tary, the Missouri. What causes these rivers to mean- der? They are diverted by their ovum deposits of soil washed down and piled up ahead of their march to the sea. A certain slope of the river bed must be maintained in order to carry this load. As the deltas, formed by the soil, extend further into the sea, the bed of the ::Long Standing Asthma. Many have suffered so long from asthma and have tried so many so-called remedies they think there is no real help for them. They should read the letters received by the manufac- turers of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Asthma Remedy from hundreds of cases once as desperate as their own. Even in long-neglected cases this famous preparation brings prompt through easily eroded soil there- hell). fore change their courses more read- ily. Intlnltesimal particles of a silt, imowfl Bwlogically as loess, wind- blown from the Gobi Desert are Max Factor Society Beauty Aids Created by Msx Factor, Holly- wood's make-up genius, who for many years has been chief coa- meticim to the screen and stsgc profession. ' Max Factor preparations sre in s large way responsible for the splendid complexion of these celebrities. Some of our lines include FACE POWDER FOUNDATION CREAM SKIN AND TISSUE CREAM LEMON CREAM ROUGE AND LIPSTICK These preparations are made from the purest ingredients in correct color, harmony shades to blend with individual complexion coloring. And is delicately per- fumed to please the moat iss- tidious taste. The peculiar sd- hesive qualities of the Face Pow- der mnke it "Stay on" and "cling" on under most tryilll conditions. Visit our store and see this line of toilet preparations of which we are sole agents. THE 2 MAGS DRUGSTOILE times this material amounts to as much as 18 per cent of the volume of water discharged by this turbul- ent stream. The Bliantung Moun- tains, being of volcanic origin un- like their surrounding ares. or loess deposits, are the obstacle which makes the Yellow River travel so in!’ afield 0n its final marches to the sea. Shantung Province abounds with hundreds of vestigial chan- nels of the Yellow River. Levees and flood reservoirs are the principal means used by engin- eers to control river courses. These llfllfillcies have prevented rivers from running entirely smuck where there are no natural barriers. Successful flood control may only be achiev- ed, however, omen a river is pm. teoted art every possible breach. The advantage of flood reservoirs, made by damming land adjacent to large tributaries, lies in the col- tion." m. Bapiro has been arr-egg- ed. Let's hope this news is read all over the prairies. It may possibly have the salutary effect of teach- ing that .it is a mistake to stringj along with every glib-tongued in-l divfdual who comes with a radlcali 146 Richmond St., E. R. BROW Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis Charlottetown ii pose calling for "reform ' ‘ stack TWIST CHEWING a ._..J