mac .- ._‘. Q1 a‘; y", . i iifilOt-ll per your , Willie remembered for ' his many A ‘possum "thefaoimstbs f- 3tiiecitnhewnsnsves-toohuy-tc @h.;i.yelymoeilsetieesrtotiieetiii-y ‘claws cusnl [resident-W- 0 S. lei-Ire. and lInnsgen-J. B. Barnett. (In advance) ‘ nailed ' Ion-nine Dally founded Iss1) IIJI BOSTON-Old South News: I. IONTAUUD-W. A. Johnston. III GUARDIAN enn be obtained from A. Brown, Post Oliee. S. . J. D. Taylor, Grafton Street. Irsd Gnndst. Greet George Street. llnrltlrna Stationers. N. Outer I Co» Queen Street. ll. Whltlsek, Greet uleorge Street. I HEW IOBK-llotnlingo News Depot, l“ West NEW GLASGOW, N. B.— SUXHIBSlDI-Hnllter Book Stars I Vise-PreeIdear-i. L Inrseet. Seeeotnrr-LionL-Cel. D. l. llaellnnon, I). I. 0. Aueeiat e IdltlP-D. I. Qllflo. in usnadn and United leases. be! rear (in advance) -dolivIed. Andloknlln, lSd ‘Iremnlt St, 00th Si. . l. Faulkner. Black I Cs. _ SOUIII-I. I. ‘earl. the following agents In Ohnglntesegyg, Duly, Richmond Street. Alex. McPherson, Queen Street, Tvvn. 11, Ilm‘ Ave. Tomlin: Grocery. Cor. Kent I Ioehlord B. Thornoa White, 125 Elm Ave. J. Canada News 0a., Depot. llrs. Jacobson, Darehester ltr Ink N. KAYI. ll Blllsbnrn Street. P- Bu!!!» Queen Street. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1929 v g v There are fewer eentensrisns in Canada than there were in past years. remarks an exchange, and it goeoontotelithstthisllsingular in view of the large increase in the population of the coilntry. In 1861 there were 209, but in 1911 only 120. In 1021 the centenarians had in- creasedtolosbutstillwerenotns numerous as they were 40 years eeril- er notwithstanding the improvement in living conditions. » AaimilarstaieisnotedintheOld Country by the Centenarian Club of London. In England and Wales the WI HAVE WITH US TODAY. Cltimns of Charlottetown wllhex. 10nd a cordial welcome to the mem- bers of the Canadian Good Roads As. swam which opens its sixteenth Innual convention in the Confedera. Sim Chambcrthis morning, The visit. ors represent every Province in Gan- ads. and many of them will be seeing he Island for the first time. We trust that first impressions will be good once. end that they will carry away with them pleasant memories coup. lea with s determination ‘to come again. _ ‘ The business for which the dele- llw! l" 119°“!!! 1s a very important one. The ofllcial programme, pub- lished in The Guardian some time I80. shows that every phase of high- Wly Problems will be discussed by Iiletlllists, and much benefit should fwllt from the deliberations. Like other provinces, Prince Edward island has iis own problems in road- making, and the solution of these problems is becoming increasingly important with the development oi Illeedier and more numerous vehicles of travel. Autmnobile traihc, which a few years ago was a negligible fac- tor, has assumed largo proportions, and no future road policy can be suc- cessful that does not make the full- est provision for development along this line. Much emphasis will no doubt be placed upon problems of safety as well ‘l as of comfort and convenience in f highway travel. With the progress of speed and efllciency in transporta- ‘ tion there has gone an alarmingly increased fatality list, and it will be oneof the chief concerns oi the~ Canadian Good Roads Association to discuss remedial measures whereby these casualties can be reduced to the minimum. This is the second occasion on which the Association convened in the Maritime Provinces, and the se- lection of Charlottetown this year will result in much valuable public- ity for the Province. It is to be hop- sd that, weather conditions will prove favorable. and that a pleasant as well es profitable-time will be en- |oyed by the visiting delegates. _______-_. THE LATE DB. JENKINS. r 1n the passing of Dr. Steven R. Jenkins last Sunday this country has lost an outstan“ figure in the medical profess‘ . and the Province an ideal citizen. None who knew Dr. Jenkins-and he was known through- out the length and breadth of the Island-but was aware cf his fine qualities of mind and heart, and among his fellow practitioners he was held in the highest esteem, no less for his kindly attitude towards the younger members of the profession than for his long experience and re- cognised ability. Since his student lays he kept in close touch with the latest developments in medicine and Iurgery, and only recently returned from an extended trip in Europe. when he visited the principal hospit- als in Great Britain and on the con- tinent. A Throughout this Province, wh Dr. Jenkins was best known. he will lirvlces to the community. mteresied ‘iiguunrr movement that had un- its inkin- meanest of hygienic. ‘Fuel pad ‘edueetiarui conditions, he ugly of his en- " ‘seven-earthen- ~» aecusemot the lervnt prietieaaia. ‘ to of the may. em» an» I "were of enoourmmm 1M " at the casrimtovn nea- seijwsw It"?! ""1" visitedalincet Qnqgnggpfllcng eeneiuhll m aluminum-MW the caution f lcai moments; were the ‘occasions when Dr. ‘Jenkins did not come, and come in time. To the doctor, as to few men of come opportunities for service in the highest degree-for the amelioration of pain, the com. farting of the sick and dying, the counselling of the young and m“- perienccd. Dr. Jenkins. as he ad- vanced in years and in professional skill, mellowed in understanding and sympathy. Minister-lug in humanity became, as it were, a second nature to him. and he seemed always to be engaged. wherever one met him. in this beneficcnt task. It is thus that he will be remembered by the com- munity in which he lived, and which he served so well. any profession, eisasistiarfvith W!‘ l" ed throughout the coming years. By the 11mins stall oiboth hospitals he "it Nslrdcd with the respect and veneration of a "guide, philosopher, and fflcndlfand his brisk step and °h°°ml1 8119111118. so frequently await. ed in moments of anxiety sick-bed or the operating table, never ""94 W 111511111 110M and confidence. "Wait till Dr. Jenkins comes." was . tly heard at crit- few indeed and CHIGNECTO CANAL AGAIN Now that the Chignecto Canal pro- ject is up again. it is to be hoped it will progress more rapidly than it has done in the past. The survey promised by the MacKcnzie King Government leaves us just where we were one hundred years ago, if the following extract from a letter from New Brunswick in a gentleman in published in the Prince Edward Island Register oi May 20, ma, ‘c in bl believed: " with regard to the Canal to connect the waters of the Bay of Fundy with those of the St. Lew- rence, the only information I can give you is this-that Sir H. Doug- las has written very urgently tothe Government at Home, to I-dvpi some preliminary measures respect- it; and l-Iis Exeellencyb re- commendation on this important work is supported by documents from the several Provinces of Brit- ish North America. to shew the utility and advantage of it. as re- as well asthe immediate importance of such a communication to New Brunswick; with these documents are all that were transmitted by His Excellency Gov. Ready. in May. 1821, by which the advantages of such s Canolto Prince Edward Island is clearly - exhibited. This communicationwas made in February last, to Mr. nus- kisson, together with Plans, De- signs, Reports and Estimates. The probable cost 0i the undertaking is estimated at £100,000. In what way this amount is to be raised-what proportion the Government maybe able or disposed to give-whatpro- portion the Legislatures may grant —and what is to be raised as shares, “Charlottc-Town," ing gards other Colonies. is not yet fixed on. The tranei trade is likely to be very extensive through the Canal, not only for consumption in this Province, bu also for the purpose of being ware- hcused for exportation. during the winter, ior the West Indies, asthe Canadas and Prince Edward Island ere laid under great disabilities St. John and St. Andrew's are accessible ell It will glvn me much pleasure to afford you any further information you may wish; but X m“, a railws, now eniera from Edmon- during winter by frost. the year. apprehend that Governor will bring the subject. in some shape or ether. before the Legisla- ture of the Island, during ,. _ ‘ Session." A ‘HMILI IUBIIOT. The win in its relation to agri- culture, which il the subject of to- night's public meeting at the Strand ‘rheatre. is one oi great practical in- tereet to all our Ibeekerli Messrs war. r. snow. museum». are pse- tioal ‘oataio ran-nus with a thbir mint in. w. circuit. ll-ilfdl its c net l. is s at the or the ca. as. number dropped from 141 in 1861 to 110 in 1021, while in Scotland they dropped from ll’! to so during thesams period. 1n Ireland (North and South) centenarians reached theeztraordin- ary number of m in isei, but only 314 in 191i. Within the present area of the Irish Free State the ngures were i586 in 1881 and but 34v! in 1011 and 114 1n 1026. There was no of- ficial census in 1021. The Centenari- an Club points out that the decline in the number of very aged persons at each census does not tally withthe general assumption that the average expectation of life is extending. Racing of —' pigeons is carried on from time to time by breeders and fenciers of these mtcresting birds in Ontario. This year the result was qu surprising to their owners. Abo_ t a week ego some 2.000 piston! were taken from their cotee in Tor- onto on e Saturday afternoon and carried by train to a point 100 muss distant from their homes, and there set free. A. T. McAree. who tolls the story in The Mail and Empire, states that the general expectationoftheir owners was that the birds would b6 returned on the wing ln about two and a half hours. The day was not an unfavorable one for birdracing. butoniy 24 of them returned the same evening and once on the following day. What happened to deprive these birds of their homing instinct seems a pro- found mystery. Migratory birds, in flocks fly a thousand miles or more southward in the late fail and return in the following spring without 1M1- Berhape Jack Miner, who is wise in bird lore can erplain the mystery of the racing pigeons. The Canadian hen is doing her duty ncbly, according to account in Agri- cultural and Industrial Progress. a C. P. R. publication. In 1928 egg pro- duction per hen in Canada. as com- pared with the average of seven pr:- vious years had increased by 22 per cent. and the total number of hens on farms had increased by 32 per about 60 per cents and-the value by over 100 per cent. The ‘three Atlantic 092.708 doaen eggs, worth $3,034,140. Some eggs are still exported from Canada and about an equal quantity imported. Canadians consume more eggs per capits than my other na- tion. "Canada ls buying from the Uniiezl States twice as much as she sens to her. Canada is selling to Zekbfoth- from her." This terse statement is to shut out another hundred million dollars’ worth or more of yearly pur- chases from Canada. The fact is re- cognized everywhere that the Dom- inion must transfer to Empire mar- ikets sthcmeorebroadasmanyes t, in the ‘United sum. "The only si- ternative," says The Globe, "is scon- cmic servitude." " new in this the presentational it in a Liberal journal is something quite novel. ‘ -_-. The Peace liver eoantryininwhich toniseisimedwbevesyrsruiesnd itistheiastlargebioekstiliopen fcr homestead entry. During ms ‘inepcpulaticnwesdcubled by the numbsrofaewsettmesmaaygo- E i i rs? the lhritinns m Saint rename. end Sydney, N-S. Salntfllohn lest with m establishment tsiissdst a summ- sen-be hardly any more made their appear- ' cent. the total of eggs produced by Provinces in 1928 accounted for 12,-. erland twice as much as she buy! made by the Toronto Globe, which goes on to point out thatIwhile this condition exists the U. S. Congress Pffiposes by fiuther drastic exclusions possible of these purchases now made Whiletiiereirlittieifanything iusiisduumieiispswiuiapab- Blips: W. Berton. MD. - INSULIN AND LIVED DIII‘ As you think ei some of your friends or ecquehltancefwhoheve died of diabetes you naturally. regret that insulin the, juice from ancreu was not discovered sooner. m it is only too true that diabetes has car- ried cii many strong vigorous per- sonalities, in the primsof life. who could have made contributions to humanity. _ . And when you think further. of the cases of pernicious a" which were always fatal. Tru , ey were kept alive for one. two, or even three years, by the use of blood transfus- ions but death always ensued not later titan this. I. Lber a professor of medicine proudly ahowklg me a case which he had been able in keep alive for neer- iy three years. This was most un- usual. To-dee s11 over the civilised world the llver diet, first demonstrated b! Dre. Minot and ‘Murphy. However everybody does not like liver and despite the fact that it is now being served in at ieest fifty dif- ferent ways. there ‘are patients who are able to eat it as often as is neces- sary. Now although liver is effective nevertheless the liver itself. eaten fresh, is considered the most satisfac- tory method of treatment.‘ So notwithstanding all tliesattrac- tive methods of serving it. it has been found necessary to try and increase that patient! appetite for liver. And what has been found most ef- fective? A German research physician, hav- ing. in mind the fact that if onc's liver is in good active condition. the ap- petite s uslnlly good. and that if it is not in good condition that appetite is usually poor, hit a happy idea. As the insulin manufactured by the pancreas, helps to put starchy foods into shape for the liver in handle more easily. he decided in try out some insulin on these cases of per- ’ ' anaemia wblch~had a poor ap- petite. , So he injected fairly large doses of insulin twice a day. What wes the result? The appetite immediately improved in all cases-eight-in which this in- sulin treatment was given. . It is rather gratifying to see the two discoveries of the past five years proving so helpful when used together in these formerly fatal cases. TO A SNOWFLAKE __ What heart could have thfllllbi- you?- Pnst our devise] (O hligrcepeteli) " Fashioned so purely. Fregilely, surely. Prom whet Paradleal Imegineless‘ metal, - ‘ q Too costly ‘for cost? _Wiio bainmersdvyou, wrouiht you. Tromargentine vapour?- "ood was my shaver- Passing surmisai, . He hammered. He wrought i116. Prom curled silver vapour, To lust of His mindi- n Thou ccuidst not have thoillht moi So purely. l0 901911. Tinily. surely, mightily. frallly. Inrcuiped and embossed. With Bis hammer 0115110» And His graver of frost." - -‘!'rancis Thompson. ‘Tl-IE LAND WE LOVE. "ran ‘mar scan v scnoou n. . can a s ovdwee at Selifakin l’!!! in onenes- tien Iitlllttchulh; ‘ ‘in m D0141!!! . ‘ tn..irinc'vei'un-oqu w, w: was». s * 5 g' ~ c n s‘ ‘ A seine-in. use... In Prince acwsl-sisisnc e ‘was sroav ov-‘aulnaaav “ 1 (Continued from Yesterday's I rut Canadian Mayflower T110 will!“ 0! the “Polly” hadall the plemenis of romance. and to the residents of the aeifsst‘ district the honor of descent from a Polly pas- senger equals. or surpasses 1a value. thedeeoentfromspusenges-of the “Mayflower? ‘rhefiove is still beautiful. Inpiaoe of the woods, farmlands now reach to the brim of the sea. The sandstone headlands.‘ crumbling inks russet piles. guard’ the entrance. toward the end of the cove, the land slopes down’ is a spot typical of that vivid color- ing for which the Island is celebrat- ed. the red of the soil, the green of the verdure. and the sapphire blue of sea and sW-Prlncs Iidwardlslend came close to being called New ire- innd, and not even old Ireland had‘ a better claim to the title of the Emerald Isle. Toward the foot of this Cove. tbs small boats bearing the emigrants landed. It was August, when every- thing was looking hts best-They had been many weeks cramped into the limited quarters otthe old warship. on stale food and stale:- water. Fer- vent Geelic prayerp drifted upwards as they set their feet on-solid-earth‘ again. Chief of fresh, coolwatsr. the Cove are seve these flows stesdilyihand quietly in such volume that trickles icily throug lthe grass and spreads itself over on the way to the semlt may have pernicious anaemia is being cured by > been that one of the oilildren scam- pering over the sand water and cried out his discovery. They followed the li stream in- land a few hundred 13bit": toits source. So it was that to ‘ this particular spring this eager settlers first came and drank and sat themselves down around the bowl-like depression, while each and all had their fill. This spring is a treasured landmark 0n the farm O1 Alexander MacMillan, who, with his five children, led me to it, across fields of swaying oats. It builders is guard-ed by an old fir tree whidh ' stands, sombre and lonely, in the n" h“ their bhcumlw “d carpenters, doctors and ‘ achers, midst of the field. wild roses and daisies grow around the water's edge. It is one of three springs marked on a map made some years after the arrival of the Selkirk settlers and still in the possession of Mr. Mac- Milian. There is a curious pssociation be- tween the MacMilian family and the semi-r settlers which 1 was able to‘ meats Itomd away in an eighteen”- cehtury bide-covered trunk in the elaclfillan home. J. The loud on the opposite side of the Cove was ‘deeded in ma. to osp- ' tain Alexander MacMllisn, an" Irish Loyalist, by Governor Patterson, in exchange ionsome other lends. The consideration was ‘en annual rental of one peppei-coi-n. e hot-tempered. unlucky gentleman. Whfl 1°95 Wlfyihlfll in the Revolution and neglected‘ to make claims for compensation until it was inc late. 1hr some reason or otherhe left-his wife andflfsmily on the Island and went to England, probably to press his suit with thegovernment. In his‘ absence the claim was regarded as abandoned and alone with all the other lands in the vicinity. was sold to we Selkirk. no sooner vnsd the . Highlanders ‘settles there than sus- r » muss instituted suit Lord “N” Selkirk for return of the lends. That suit continued for ‘twenty-six ‘ma. CANADIAN, _ ‘ . was Davina. lngThe Cana- i dien Isgnafno.) Guardian) __ WI SHAVING CREAM ‘ which retells at 88o per tube. With‘ each purchase of thh excellent preparation we are giving one 80o bottle of WILLIAMS AQUE VELVA SIIAVING LOTION - I'll! These two Shaving Toiletries I are favorably known in every city and are the beet of their kind. Yon are taking no chance In making this purchase- llernember The Two for lilo. E. A. Foster ‘ casual. nacnsroaa Inward to lower banks. 1t Totheesstofitlsaclrcleofold’ stones, lost in the ‘undergrowth, where once the shrine of the burying ground stood. Sometimes under the tell gram one finds bits of the native red sandstone, scraped roughly into the initials of some long-ago French- man, and here and there a fallen stone bearing the name of a Scottish successor. Only one stone still stands, 591141118 rakishly. and. ere long it, too, will succumb and lay flat be- neath the tangled weeds. ' Night in ‘Prince ‘Edward Island has never fallen on more strange a sight than that of-the first Selkirk camp. 7 1n a half mile curve around the Cove ‘ stood a row of little wigwems, built from fir branches. By each wigwam _ biased a, bonfire and ln-its eerie light '4 the kilted Highlanders and the wo- men in their plaid shawls» moved about. Each family had its little pile of household goods. From blue to blaze of the red, and golden, fires tramped the pipers, blaring out the wild pibrock of triumph and promise. And beck of the strange, wild scene, full of color and life and motiomwae the dark wood soon to fall before the axe of these homemakcrs and nation ‘ their wants was ‘bout the foot of springs. One of "f5 little, stream _ i sandy beach. 1 into the icy preachers and elders. and Selkirken- gagcd natives to show them how in put up log cabins. So enthusiastic “make is time jor ‘ i, any hand... .\_ rituuiiutsst- "w . - lytoanyholdcr , ThwEmhuu your mark” . in School a ‘HEBQWWHhI-Eversllarp i Persoml-PointFouniein Pens represent your par. eoncl ideas of the periect writing instrument? Any point-any holder from a wealth oi colors, Sim. styles-selected indi- vidually by you and com- bined ‘by the dealer right before ‘your eyes! Choose from 14 varied ‘points till you find the one that writes like you. ' Wahl-Evetsharp Pencils, standard of the world, are ‘ ofiered in matched combi- nations with these finer pens. See‘ them, today, ai your favorite dealer's. . six ‘r0 ran ‘noiuias r WAH; cEVERSHliRP- i/zi/Jmzccfi ‘ 0141i"- Fo uzvmizv zfszvs were the Scots to be at the business of building and clearing that one day Lord Selkirk himself earns upon an old lady iustiiy wielding an axe upon a tree trunk. Ker sons were away and she thought to push their progress on a bit. Shelled cut in such a way that eventually the tree would have fallen exactly across the little home they had put up. so lord Selkirk called a halt to her labor just in time. _ ’ m- two monthe Selkirk remained on the Island with them. a sort of Chieftain tc ‘this new clan which westaklnlrwtsoeeslly. ‘Inthatfl first autumn all labored together in the erection of tsnn dwellings, and the winter passed in felling trees. By lhflng theywere all ready to eet to with a will to prepare the grmmd, The sci-ins is wag on the rslendand‘ summer warm and ‘swift. That year these thrifty folks cultivated an av‘- trale of two acres for every able- bodled man among‘ them andthgiy. fir" m» consisted of a met harvest Oivbotatoes. oi such ‘quantity l. and such excellent quality that it . glans would have been enough for the sup- Wft 0f the party iatothe following simmer. The MIOMIIIII! Strain. through old letters and docu- Mecbfillan was sly Prince is. forefterlm-dseikirkkdeathitwes s- ‘ "K ‘ “I ‘Bu, mainteineli vi“ his sststnreosoie “""'°"'“""°i"l‘ . ‘NW0. "W" ' “Wm ‘nmnmmmh Severn sveasevongesisprusiiisecuvsntsmi thellillidhutlivedtoheffeehle ' mgyhhqm-vm cldmamtotaliyabeofhedinislninq. k sivjlilr-ohoaeerwrltese. suihsacrifldnsrvmbhingrloyitans »‘ a “ ' " yirltaofnothifllfill-‘Inhil lringinthatiittle-hhmkthet known. ll..“Bpt\,d_-_1ll,liid'_: escorts seed potatoes allover the continent of North Ainericai - grains and vegetables that first sum- nuuthemgnisnesrs built-boats non which toflih. and within a year tits settlement was independent in the 1n addition to growing their own way of food supplies. Continued on page 8 . s ‘ ' PIBSIdBIIt Hoover says: "I afmvwomder why it is that insurance must b: rs- ‘cicred by solicitation. It is indud due only to one thing, and. that t’: the lack of appreciation of the fim- ldcmcnial character of the investment that they main in insurance, which is an inv “must-in savings, and savings in a form ihatbringr to them not only a direct return from raving: but an ‘enormous return in racial J‘ benefits. I believe that it i: our duty that w: should ' encourage the whole theme of insurance. 0N1" irountrier ‘have found ihrurance so fundamental to their commercial and economic fabric that they haw given special impulse to insurance through rrempfivfl from income ion: in reaper‘! i0 that rims of money that maybe invested in insurance itself. It i: but a sign of our lock of rldlisoion of the valiur of insur- emc ihaiws have not longsince adopted into our, n4- siianai, is: fabric this particular and invaluable im- pulse to the? increase of insurance in if: many form-t” , t‘ t»: 0H 9M»)? r’