PA"_\bL rvuu I THEM BIIARLOTTETUWN 1101111011111 blunting Daily tl-uundcd I337] Presid- lii-ltL-fol. W. (‘ltealer S. McLure \ lresiilt-ul, .l. It. Burnett. F.J.l. Secretary, Lieur-(ul. l). .\. MacKlnnon. 0.5.0. Editor and .\|.111 111;; Ihtrclnr, .l. If. Burnett, FJJ .\~.~111-;,11t- lidllor. Flank “Xllker hLUafHlPllUN RATES $5.00 per 31.4" 1111 uilurtirci delivered to (lty. $4.00 per )e.|l" uu udLlllvrl tailed to l‘. E. Island $5.00 per your tin au\.1u1r-1 mailed to Canada and US. Slembcis Audit llurvuu of‘ Cirrulatlons “The Stroll _I/l'.~;l .111 mury is-"Wealrer tliaii [-11- Hen/rest Ink." me" _ -__. 'lliili.\ll.\\', UFIUBI-Ilt 6, 1113K ___'. _ L A Neglu 1111-; The Home Market ' 1' 1 -". 111-111- :111- 1"-1~11p.-1:1l— -:111."11- "1 1-f l"'i~1".t"1‘11*~‘ 11- 1' .-‘1i1-."71\1-~ 111' - 111-111 :111-l ".1"1»11l1l1-<_ 1 "1 ‘11'l1."1111111‘:1|1~ ;"~.-;1;-1:1t" when 111 '~ 111-111 fish. l1 1111 r.\"- -\'1.1. 1111- 11-11- " price 11 p.1\\ " l1-~~"1-111"1l. 011111.11" "w -.1.1.1 1-11 \\'1-1-11" 1l1:11 1"11111-111'~ 111111-111 'l'111r1- ~h11ul1l. it (‘F1111- , . 111.111‘ l-s" ~ 1 1w to -:1111l\" 1t. Fish " -" ' 1 "'1"l"1nrl 111-"1111 u-oulrl "" 1 1'" --1- 110011-"1111111111 to 0:11 1 1 111110 1'ur1h1-1": "=31. 1S "1 ilvlightfitl food. 11f course, inland f-ng freight hauls ' ' hut even l .1 m1 -11f ‘.111’ ~:1-l1.1=n, "it not what it "1- 1v':1_v so man)" Conn-- .. 31- .'1-1< r that, is r. cxulain vvhy there has ' 1-"1 "'10 111111 of the Domin- :'"1. - --11"111"1.Q 1111 this phase 1I11- l"1>llt‘l'll‘.§ .\lin- - -"."_"-"1-~11 on-the part of the 111-111- "':1 the way of initiative. 1"-f his own department than 1‘ pi-t 1hrc<>_v0:11"s. Etouotilic ‘All 1 ertnalh ‘1- r-\:"!1'11111-1l existence of Czecho- . 1111-1111 $17110, 1111-111. will neces- 1.l 1-1-111-111111; 1"l1.1!1g1‘~ as" 1:1 result 5:11;»: ."11- t ""1 of 1'11" .\" ' ‘1 "1 111. "1- of 11111-1111.. 110111;; <1-p:11"11t- ed from ...1- r1»? of 1111’. a11r11-11t 11111141111111. .\ writer 1n "he “("111 $111101 V forth :1"- "' ' -- 1 li ' journal sets them 11111111 areas c11111:1i11i11,1; 1111111, then 1111- ('£('1'll\' rrze output, 1111111111111“ "ricts, the Uarisln-ul 1"l"1)' r0sr1111"t§@<_ 1,3. ~" 11111101111 '1"1~11l r ,1 . -11:"'"1.1*t111": s-pus :11 I unique rztdiuui -":1lt "l. " 1Q a111l cl111111cinl l "11 .. »".\"n coal fu-l-ls of W1" 1. as 1s 11:1 11111111111111 r1111- 1-11111 1- -1:1."1'1"\" T1"1'lllt~'. part 11f 1111 ‘ <11»! 1.111115. part 111' 1111- c1111».- " . 1.". 1" ~" :111-l :1 11."1vi»r 1-1-111-111 11f 11111 ov1-1" 1n"- 111-1"1u¢111 (.1 "l1- 1-1-1- .'1i1111--1 . . . 11.111111111111111 1-1‘ 1;.- nf-r-Hw» t-vx. 1 u"- 1 11-r with 1111l11-11"i0= lid-P’. ["1 1“ '1 l 1111111)" thr- eutirc C11" 1 i "' "'1111---1"ta111 llol11-1n1."111 ' .""""".11 11-11 of .\u-"~1_-,(. :1 111- 111.1110 to 1 l\'."11'\11l'1 1"."1'll 1' - 1111111 -"1-. "1-‘111-1" with ‘"1"- ~+~.‘...-.. "-111 11171-511 - 111]. 1"1-':1111 111111: ""..11111t'.11":111"1-1\) 11- \\ :111- <llllill.' "111 v wild not he affected 1;‘ 11.,-;__ 1:111:21 1-:' .1 A \\i1.'1'.1s 1 1 1. 1 1'1.- 1~.11.1l.1'\ "-11.111111" " 1 ‘d 1' 11.5111 I ' 111' i1] (' 1 -1 "11111111 1"- 1' -- 1111f. 1-1 n". 1 , 11. 11f 171- 11111.-111'1 1 1'11- 1.11" ">1 1- ."1~"»--|1-111l1- 11-1 1-1 |1'1..\’_;1; ' “ ‘ 11 ,.I 1-"1-"111111-1111 ' l Ili-"vsr-e 1'1_- '1' 1' ‘i- 1"1-_1111~~ i: ‘l’ ‘ '1 ' '1 "-1- - 111 i11- " l - 11r1l-. 111- ‘1-1 "-"1\ 1-11- ' ‘ -;-' 1 -11' 111111-1- ‘ ' - l" 'l1"1’:~-"1-f -1 .- ' " ,‘ p! ' ‘H ,.,,.,.,,,..,1'1‘" ".1." 1 --»11T':1;111~. 11111 1111'.‘1 1:1:-- ' 1 " 1 "'11 7111- li-t 11-11 1'11 .r1111u1l1~"h111111l. lf the pres- ent rate of progress can be maintained tuber- culosis may conceivably cease to be a serious fuctor i11 public health 111 tl1e course of :1 few 111-110 genemtiuus. lllll where the other diseases are cc-ucemed the fitg-ures show a grave increase. Arterial troubles killed 88 per cent. more in the last de- cade than 111 t11e preceding one; influenza comes 5R per cent 1n11r1- fatalities; cancer 5'1 per cent more; diseases 11f the ltczirt 4.2" per cent more; ltidney- maladies :4 per cent, 11nd pueunlonia 2 per c0111. (lur best science is not merely -— savt" in the case of tuberculosis alomk-making 1111 111-:111 against these (list-uses; it is apparently 1111;1l1I1- to stem their steady advance towurd longer 21nd 10111101‘ death lists. DeValera And Chamberlain ln the ~wiftl_\" moving events of last weel; 1111111)" important tltings went unnoticed. Among 1111-111, notes" an exchange, was the fact that that 1-r<t\\ 111111 1‘t‘\‘11l1lli11t1i.~'i. zigaiitst British rule, 1111111111111 1h: \'11l1-r;1 stood siputrel)" 1101111111 l‘1"i1111- .\li11i~t1-r (‘1111111111-1111111. lle Valera, now l’1"e<ide11t of the .-’\sseu1hl)- 111' 1h:- l.1-:1gue of Nations. syrolte from Geneva on 1111- 11111111 that .\l1. ('h:u11he1"l1"1i11 \\'(l\' preparing i111" his third 111111111111; with llitler. lle s-pulu- 111111)" ;1<11111i~"l1111_g 1111-" \\"11ul1l l1:1\'11 5111-1111111 iu-"t ."1 ft-w )"e:1rs 71111-1 from the suuulpuint 11f 111-.- Iiritislt 13111111111. Landing .\lr. Ch:1111he1"l."1i11's 1."1'|'111‘ts 11nd 112"!» :1 s.-t11e1111-11t, he said that "1111111- 11110111 11111 111- 111111111111" .\'eville ('l1"1111l11"1'- 1.1111 in some 11111111- rri-is." X1".\"t1l:1)" .\lr. lle \'."111-1":1 wir111l .\l1". 0111111111111"- lain: "Let 111111111153 dauut _\"11u‘iu _\'ntll‘ great work." .\nd on that szuue 11a)" the representa- tive of Fire in London attemled a 0o11f1-r1-11c1- of 17.11111111- heads with the SX-ciw-tzir)" of tl11- l)11- minions. ./‘ Editorial Notes I‘ The liatnhcle \\':u" hrokt- out tl1is (late, 1893. l.‘ i‘ F * Conservative enthusiasm in Kin ‘s Count is Y manifest all right. 1v 1U 1k I01 There is ntore in the Rlontreal detectives slot)" than tucets 1110 rye or car. \\':1it till th11 .\lll‘|lSl€l'lZll Association 111111125 to judgment. 1 >11 111 =41 A tnethod for the diagnosis of diphtheria 11y which the diphtheria lmeillus can be cultured in 11111-0 l111u1s and :1 111:1e1"o~1"11pic 111111 micmscopic dlilglliwis of the colonies 111.1110 at the szune time is 1111111111111 h_v the llueuos" .\1rcs correspondciu 111' The Journal of the .\1ner1c:u1 Medical .\s- 1-111111111111. * IF * IK "\\'1- 1l1111't want to fight, hut h)- jingo if we do, we've got the ships, we've got the men, and we've got the moire)" too". This was the old jiugr) rhyme that was sting in Music Halls in the good 111d Yivtoriziti days. l1 is" 01111101)’ out of 1lat1- now. 11nd the <111p1"1s1- is 111 fi111l 111011 11f the calihrc 111 .\lr. Duff Cooper and .\lr. .\ntl111ny Fdeti resorting t0 it in opposition to .\lr. Chamberlain's cooperative peace polic)", for well the)" know that llrituin has" got 1111111101 the 1111111 uor the 11111110)" to <1|u;u11l1-1 on :111 uvoi11al11c \\:11"—f."1r 111-s the i11cli11:11io11. 11¢ II! >1‘ W 'l'h1- llalifzix 1101:1111 is spoitsr-ring an appeal 111 1111- couutr)" m "moholize for peace", It poses 1111- 1101111111111 111111-111111; \\'h)" cannot we uuuxshal our r0>ou1"ces for pewce as we 11111 for war. and \\1-1u1d have done 111411111 had 1111: necessity arisen? 'l'he fzict seems to he, as Ruskin long ago point- 1-1 11111, that peuec is- 11111 often a negative thing, 11110111111111111: <l111l1t'ul11ess 111111 seusitalit)’. while the s101111-r ll1'1‘k‘.~\1l1(‘< of war bring the old sp."u"1:1n virtues to the front. This should not he, if 0111-1111111..- lezi1ler~l1ip were given. .-\s our llailftix crmtempotzwr)" well says. the perils of :1 ft‘.'1(‘l1'1111.'ll'_\' 1111-111- which (looms 111011 to idle- 111--~ r1111 as great il\ those of :1 1lest1"11cti\"1.1 \\"."1r, :111-l i11t111"111l 11011111111110 t_vr."1n11_\" breeds 1111 111s- 1l:111t,'01"s than the rule "of a fmeigu tyrant. llon. l)r. .\lani11n s."\1d the same thing on his rccettt .\l:11"1t11110 tour. >1= >11 11 ('1111-1-1"\":1ti\"1-< 11f llritislt ('1Illlllll1l'.'l are 1e gziiwlitig" the political situation. s11 far as their prospects an: 1‘1)llC(‘l'llt‘Ll. 111010 hopefully than f11r some time past. 111 the elections of lune I. 1k 11137, 111Ql1l 11f 1l1.-"|"1111111l1111" were clvcted ."1~" com- |>.'11'1"11 with ."1 sitigh- l'1111111i~t 111 1110 p1"1-\"iou~ 311111-1111 1111-0111111.» .\l1". l’z1lt11llo's li11\"1-r111111111t won ."1 -1t_111."1l \"1ct111")" when 1l1c'l."1st appeal was 1111111111, hut the l.ih0r."1l< returned 1111111111-11111 30, \-.l11-1"1-."1~ on 11111 1111111111" oc1":1\io11 the)" l1:11l 35. ,\1-\1-11 ('.1'.l"'. 1111-111l101"~ \\":-r1- 1-l1"1"11-1l 111111 :1 suh- ~1"11111-111 hy-eh-ctioii went 1o 111:1! purl)". wl1icl1 l.\ today 11111 official 11111111-1111111. 'l'l1t1_('1111s1-1"\":1- lives suffercd a loss 111 the 110.1111 of their lend- 111". llr. F. l3, Patterson, hut now a successor has 11111111 (hnsefl 1H tllt‘ person Hf hll‘. R. 1.. X11111- 1111111, |\'.1'.. .\l.l.. \._ 11f \':1u1111u\"111", who stands" \1-1"_\ 1111111 in th1- I‘:1rt\-'< confidence and esteem. 11 41 >11 1v 1111- hirths in (‘amulzt during the first quar- 11-r 11f 11133 1111111111111-11 51.711 (pnrliittinarv fig- 11111-1 giving :111 t11|uiv."1l1"111 ."t111111:1l 1:110 11f I118 11111" 1.111111 1.111111111111111, 1"11u1p:11"cd with 53,214 1111111- 111111 :1 1"."1t1- 11f 111.4 for the first quarter 1.1‘ 11137. 'l‘h1-1-1- 11-1-1-1- 3.338 ilh-gitiitiate l1irths forming 1.3 111-r c1-111 of all live hirths. compar- 1-1l with .\.-S; ."1111l 11111 szune r1110. §tillhirths 11111111011 15111) 111- 1,8’ per cent 11f all hirths as ."1g:1i11-1 11103111111 a 1:111- 11t' 2.1) pcr- c0111. Deaths 1111:1ll1-1l 114.3115 with :1 rate of 10.3 per 1.000 11111111111111111 11s c11111p:11"1-d with 33.1.12 and a rate 111‘ 11..\'. l)1-.11t|1< uudcr one )-11ru" 11f age num- 111-11-11 3.1131) 111111 1110 infant 11111rtalitv rate was f: 11111" 1,1100 11111 hirths". 'l'h0=1- figures com- p:11"111l with .l_1'1.'11 deaths :111-l ."1 1:111- 11f 3;‘ in illl‘ 1-11rr1~p11111li11q 1111111111 of 1113;‘. Deaths under 11111- 1-1-1-1111 of ."1-y 1111111111-11-11 1,1113 giving a 1:110 of 35 p111 1111111 1111- l1ir1l1 as :11.(."1in=t 2,104 11nd of 111. 1111-1-1- u1-r1- 3.13 111atr1"n."1l deaths ."1- 1"-11111».11"--1l 111th 311;‘. 111111 11111 1111c was 4.11 as 411.1 1111 11.1111 111-1- 1111-11» The natural 11111"1"11=1~- 1111" 1711 1|11."-.:"1111" wa- 36,3111 giving’ 1'1 r1111- 11f 11.5 1.1" 1.11111 1111111111111-11 11s ngnwin-"t 2n.- 1-1' “'1. 'l"1"1"t- were 12.1191 111111- ri:11_11-= giving :1 r1111- of .1!- :1< against 12.792 or :1 1:111- 1.1;1".1;1 11.1 NOTES BY 'l'llE WAY ‘he Slut;- lnat. llas 5.0:)"- tliitig." a slogan WlllCll vrill uppuu" on uie lovely new cheques issued by all otner New York state de- .., ..l.;vv.s \ Cranberry Growing In Prince Edward Island pariments and divisions, will be Ollllllfid‘ from those sent out by the Division ot Uueniploytnelit. I11sut"once.——'f‘l1c New Yorker. George Bernard Show, tall and 111111, is an avowed vegetarian. The late G. K. Chesterton. who w1as very stout. and strong. loved Said Chesterton: “To look 111 you a person would think tluu. there was a fmnine in 511111111111," "And to look at. you", replied Shaw, “he'd think you were the cause of three students who were unable to sign their tmmes 011 the hotel register. This, tiowever, must lnivc been pretty curly m the sea-"oti. "Wlll u. -- Windsor Dally S1411". , Ulla ot the heal topical Jokes 11's.?" of the week ln political circles in the Umietl State-wit this wuit-h 1s good 11111111111 11"re\"111"e11t: "At tlic recent convocation o1 the world's dictators. Hitler ".11"t..-"11 111111 .\‘.ll(lI “God 1111s aippoititetl n10 as (110m- .tot" of the uuwcrse." lle :111! tiuup ‘and Altissollnl 11111511. 511111 11c: ""H1-1"1"-tl1tle1" 1s in 1-1ror. 1.c1l 1111s 1z1pp0i111etl tnc ruler ut tlu- 1121.1- verse.‘ ‘111011 l-fl l). It. sluotl up. 1511111011 11nd said: “.‘.l_\" 1111-1111, l (lo 1101 1111-1111 zippoltititig 1-11111-1" ul youP-Bruntlou Sun. 1'95 the .lll Literary competitions often 1J1"o\"ille_us0ful indications of the 1.1111141 o1 111111111111" taste, 111111 smut- great lobsters from novels o1 the present century" w1l101n they thought, most likely to be remembered 50 years ltcnce. The six that obtained tnost votes were Somnes l-‘otz-cvte, Jtevcs. 'l‘l1c Scarlet. Pimpernel. Jesse Oukrtrvcl. Father Brown "Zllld Peter Pan, The list, arranged ln order o1 the number of votes cast, continued as follows: Sherlock Holmes, Bab- bitt, Judith Paris. Kipps. Scarlett OI-Iara, Bulldog Druuunontl, M1" Polly, Kim, Isorcl Peter \V1'n1sey", Consumee, Rogue llerz s. Tessa, Lord Jim, Hercule Poirot 11nd Mr. Chips-Herbert W. Horwlll, New York Times London Correspond- ent. lent Johannesburg. — A 16-year- Greemvood “'11s probably turning off the top ready to stsp lnto her bath when she was killed. Her 10g nmst. have tout-heal 11in b11111 11nd the shock 111 1111) volts must have thrown her forwmxl. There were burn marks on her left. lnmcl. The lenknge of electric current bad been caused by the working loose of 1t small bra screw in a switch on the electric stove in the kitchen. The tilug-iaoints n1 this place had been 11:11"1l1et'1 1o the \vate1"-pipi11g 1011111111.: to the b11111- rocm. A11 electric toustet" hurl lz-cetl connected to the taro-point. plug.—- South African Ncxvs Letter. Th1- fatst. that the iuhalliilitnls of Eitglzitttl and 111 --11ttl1-.- Umu-tl ease has been u stumbling-block as well as an advantage to the rel-11- tlons between the two peoples. A Frenchman m" 11 Nonvwziau '~[)(.“.\l(S a (litfe1"e11l. lmuuiage; 111.1 is u for- eigner; you do not esp rt readily" to untlerst-antl 111111-111» tastes, his mind, his attitude to life-even if you can lll'l(l€‘l'Sl.llllll some of the words he speaks. But the Ameri- cans and the kluglisli have so 11111011 in 1101111111111. o1 11111111111311, trutlition and zutecstijv, that 11:11:11 uncon- sciously" experts 111 11111 0111111" 1111 extension of the s1n11l11ri1_v fur 1111.- yoncl the reasonable, and therefore Lends to regard any departtirc from his own form as something sur- atiug red volume. Who's Who in Amcrlco, has been open to some crltlcism on the ground 11111.1 it was. not. inclusive 0110111111. This year the polio is more Liberal. l-‘rcd Astaire is in 111111 about time, Also uppeu1"111g for the first time urc- Clifford Odcts 11111111. does it mut- ter lf lie is Left W111g‘?1. ltflglll‘ Berger who inventetl the celebrat- ed veutiiloqulstls clumtny, Charlie McCarthy, nutl those two great. Hollywvnorl pt-1"st.11".111,0<, \V. C. Fields 11nd Mll-h 0111:111- Lotuburtf A1111 here, 111 1110 111-u" vulum", is that fortncr 01111111111011 pugtlist 110w a blg-latisino-s 1111111 11nd alwnvs the philosopher Mr. James J. 1601101 Timmy. 'l‘l1111"1- urt- 1"11"1n1.1 others. Th1- trcnrl sen-is to be all 111 the direction o1 11 11111111 smisble in101"pre1n11o11 nl 112st \\h.111 nntkes a man i111po1"11111t 111 A111111"10:1u life. —New York Herald ’l‘ribuu0. view to The great. Dutch dredge Ka- rlmate, which nll Summer stught to snlvngc the gold and silver that went to the bottom of the sea when thr- Britlsh war-ship Lu- tiue sunk in 1790 off ‘Feischelling Holland, 1111s quit her task 11nd Wlll now p1"oc0t1<l to the Dutch East. Indies to engage ln the. less pro- salc but. tuore profitable business of dredging for tln. Her apparatus broke clown on September 12. nftcr she had 11111111111011 over the l1u1i111-'s wreck longer than was originally plantietl: in the course of 1101" long search she.- brouglit up n few silver coins, a but" 01 gold and some ln- tleclarlng llmt. the directors of the expedition have come to the con- clusion that. "there can be 11o gold left ln the wrcckngef- New York Sun. If Nazi Germany has preferred guns to butter it 1s" nt. least. ln n. posltlon to point out: that. its ideals have tmvt-llcd further on guns than would have been pnssbllt- 011 n full (llnnt-r pnll. Much of the low standard of living 1n Germany, whlch has led Olll'\l(l(‘l‘S to hastily conclude that ll 1s in no position to _ wage a war of nny duration, ls to some degree acltinl cvltlence 0t‘ the saerlfice of luxuries imposed upon the (tt-rman prople by their rulers so that they shall b0 tn a msltlon to wage wru". Canadian tnurlsts ln :1 1.111- 11f 4.7 1n the first quarter of 1957. Berlln thts summer brought back word that butter was served at. Along toward nnd-umter 111011 1111- berry most backward 1111tl<11"5.-1"-.1<t11ute MlCll as usually gets 11111 11.11111; of play g rou States of Amerie -' k lnneuaut-s b5 so 110111031 related 1.. L they can Lmderstnnd each 0111111 \\"1tl1 11111‘ As ls no cru11b..11"1"ies grow lu cfllhbllllg as a rule of musk land and sand, 111th botn 0f which thts Lsland ls supplied ln many sections. 1t. la not my teuuon to attempt to explain ln shall I refer particularly many special ways ln wulch cran- tm-ry" bogs are maintained, the" plcklug of the berry, its markellng, I do not intend to assume 1- sibllity of glvlng elther an fllllflllfllll/E 0r 0. tmgatlve reply b0 this" tiuestion. lulu-rs 1o do. All that I shall trtnpt will be to outline as nearly correctly as pcsslble special conditions tlmt, prevnll ln cranberry world, which has tmquestlonably reached vcecdingly S])8£'lf\llZl\ll0ll, , Cape Cod covers an area of ap- proximately tliat of ward Island. and apart. from its importance 11d, and as a fishery of oysters, ccd. lterrlttg and Cape Cod estimated from Govern- that ln Cape Cod 000 acres of bog land a°§$eh*l§’°__l?°¢l‘ mrnt, stirveys there are 120. of_ which 13,644_ TO A. I‘€. the 1H3‘ ,% .1.111111'1111 \‘Ifl (By ll. K. S. Hemmhig) doubt ivell kntwn converted 1111a cxanbei-ry bogs. an aeld sall, 'I‘l1o quca-tlou \\'l.ll 1.1.1.111"aly b2 pzat or askxl. ‘Q1 Wllltl value ls" an av.r- b0 The cue leading question that I lmve all along had ln my mlnd l5. it pay Prince land to establish cultivated bogs on up-to-date lines. has been clone Cod and ln some other of the Am- erican States nnd as ls being done — to a limited extent in Nova Sco- the That will be the high state Prince Ed R511 sigititieunrt-11111)" bc attuclittl to the 1 11' 11 has, apart from results of u recent ])l‘l1L‘ otlerbv “m.” S’ very few mdustl-iys The Ob-‘QYYUV R"l“l1‘1'-‘1 “"1” 1"‘ 3111x1111 farming s11.1l1 as we are ac- vited to mime the six ('ll‘.\l".lL‘l.l.'l'S “Homed u, m prince Eduard 15- lruitl Ls scarcely known. I saw only one horse and one small herd and tire individual cows 1n the 111.11 I was there. although I motor- rd in all directions. 011 the other 11111111. as we sped over the excel- ‘Massachusetts hard sin-face- ed xvlndlng roadways, more than not lined on either slde with trees. chiefly white pine, cak, elm and maple, over eyes were stantly" attrartecl by lakes and large ponds and beautiful tic-Ids or bog." in which cranberries were growing. surrounded by dykes or embankments, usually frcm two to six feel ln height. Another fea- ture in which the Cape from this Island Ls tlmt sand ls E. HOUSMAN Let now the willow weep no more That wept withln his mlnd, But lwai" the long leaves that it. 1.111 for a v/hllc behind, While he lies easy ln a place Where beds need 1111111 change, And where the bedfellow to face Shall not be 10st nor strange. Even to persons born as he, Kl‘.()\\'lllg too much tn know, Except that. there Ls Spring to see And blcssoms hung like snow; And not so very much to say, Save 1n the saying well; There comes an uneventful day With itothmg left. to 1\V1'.ter Bynner invthe__NY Tlmeil tell. breakfast only, and then 1n home- opathic doses. It. was possible for totirists accustomed to more liberal Pll-‘illlgfllld WRIT’ 111W‘- M JQlm use of butler to secure an addl- Cnrter m London Smctutor. 110ml m", o; p" but prodigal“). _ -—————~— W115 not eticouraged. An extra. ord- l-nr many years that faz-"cln- (.1. m butter cost the diner 18 cents, and 1m extra slice of whlte bread added But in considering such reports of npptuwant want. lt has to be remem- beretl that although German dlets have been traditloi l5 cents to the blll. ‘fully of lusty proportions. Central European stan- tlnrds are not American standards. A nation whlch during war had such a thorough lnlta- tlon lntn ersatz products has been yirepared for the given by Nnzl leaders for a tight- t-nirt; of the national belt with a the last encouragement tiltlmate attnhtmetit: of tl".t1. place in the sun which ls to recoup the nation for all lts sncrlflces. --Toronto Telegram. The Windsor l: ono of than rue hotels which abiolulely {if lnto that: luxroundlnql. The lut word ln modern furnishing: and decoration 1166p] the Wlndnor constantly 1n the forefront ol tho con- tinent’: tine hofoll while r0- . . . . - . the refusal of the Government. tercstlng but.‘ not valuable relics “mug a‘ m. "m. ma.“ w ply the ‘Inference, voted ‘W000 of the 1.1111111, ‘but she lccovercd f t _ 1 ‘ H h b m nothing to jllSlll)‘ continuance of -— h." much map“ u P0111 gee nice vine y f e the search. ‘lltc specltil corres- ‘uh H he h WW “e m“ ‘l-Jenl-Y "ceded 9" licndelntmol‘ L110 lllondonlTltticsl at. 1"!‘ ' i9 P “ha”; 2:51 dl-iglgeellaoag llliqgégn giltsnslva-Yeg '(?l‘SCl9 n- )ll$ 11 (e ressn m“; - - period of "thisi treasure lijutit bgy w m ‘hung m “a T1115 3190-90 170m U18 8516 1'8- Montai- H m niitlsnr ll wrutmu I'll! \llll V1 ln- the Edward Is- crun- ln Cape for at- many of tourists’ week often COH- level green differs age beating cranbnry bog?" As ln all other agricultural laud values. there Ls of course a 1grzot varia- tlon, running probably ftxm $500 menp one d“). muse m0 ‘vnty 11011111 the methods usually em- plelr acéetfolruli: (llagfintlirtlilt)! Rae]: Etigiislitueti met on thc street, p101“! “l m‘ preparmg and e5‘ a owe, o . ‘I500 . tablisltlng of cultivated bogs, nor to be iemacis. up to S 01 BVJI $2000 for cu".- ln pIlmu cunuhlon. Some of the best bogs could not be bought for less than $2500 P31‘ acre, At. $1500 per acre the net _11__ " n. . 1 p etc. All those matters are cover- C5116 90¢ cranbf-‘TW mWH-ed l‘ D” K°_L__l" Hem“ ed elaborately 11111111 illustrations ln wealth. 11pm from i" the M" on one fhalnplongljip cape“ the Government; bulletins already iendiml DY09655il1B._¢fll_1l1lnll_ “pd football team WlllCll traveled out. referral 15° which "-11 b3 PYQCUTEd 0m" plants" mu“ Le m Me to play in Los Angeles there were IP99 0T 5i trifling 0°51- nel3hb°rh°°d c’! $20'0001000' an accumulation of about 90 years 0i almost constant effort. Another polnt of material signi- ficance ls the rapid change that has been taking place slme the war in the number of owners of cranberry bogs, In 1924 tlieie were no fewer than 2148 lndlvldual owners, whlle in 1934 there were only 1913, and this process ls still going on. One owner, Mr. John J. Beaten, who was born ln the vlc- lnlty of Flat. River, Prince Edward Island, is saitl to owu 503 acres. yielding in 1937 15.000 barrels of berries. ‘This change from many small to a. few large owners will by some be put: down to the deblt. of what ls known as “big busl- ncss." More correctly" in this 0.110. I be- lieve, can 1h.- chuugg be uttriuuttd to the 111-ed for u large expendi- ture of money i11 establsltlug sat.- lsfactory growing conditions and in malntalnlng the bogs efficient- ly. Just, as in mixed farming, so in e1"1u1b.-1"rie.1, o poor bug indiffer- ently nuinngctl gives but n very poor return. either lu quoiuity or in price; and, as many of the bogs that. have been olxorbed of late years were quite small, the own- ers were unable to make from them even a bare llvlng. Crop yields and values will also be of interest. In 1933 there was a record crop up to that time of 506,000 lmrrc-ls of 100 pounds, each, but, 1n the following year, 1934, the yleld fell to 275,000 ba._rrels. During the ten years ending 193-1 the average yield was 410,500 bar- rels. The largest yield in any one year to (mo; was in 1937, when 565.000 barrels were harvested. This year the crop will pmbably be from 20 per cent. to 25 per cent less than a year ago. Just. as yields vary, so do prices. As the frult. ls stlll regarded as f 1 J1. Vb ., _ 1 K 1.1M“, . found far inland from the sea, m0” m‘ 1955 °f 5 IUXUTY» the d9‘ (l)(rl11"0gt1'd"('1'1?t1\01'1'\'\"'01oil","iiiasgwelr..1111! Tlfllllflll-ly t0 8. Breat- height B-Ild mend delxmds Iadgely upo“ gm‘ cutcd ln l1c1" bath 1.11 her lioi-z in dmml- 9'51 buslness mndnlons- The 15w Cardigan road, Purkwood. Miss I" l5 of will“? and demmd 315° rules- so that a blg harvest usually re- sults ln a lower price, and vlce versa. An abundance or shortage of turkeys each year also has a decided bearing, while the keeping qualltles of the berry, whlch de- pend upon raln at plcklng time, frost and other conditions. may lower the market value, During re- cent years large quantities 01f cranberries are being canned as sauce, wblle cranberry juice as an appetizer Ls gaining steadily ln public favour in competition with tomato cocktail. This absorbtlon of the berry naturally assists in maln- tafnlng the prlce. This year the opening price has been set by the growers co-operatlve associatlon at". $8.60 per barrel (8.6 cents per pounds) to the wholesale tmde. and already CBl'l0t\d lots have been shipped to points ln Canada, lncludlng Wlnnlpeg, Regina, Sask- atoon, Calgary, Edmonton and to the two large cltlcs ln Brltlsh Columbia. In the three active business year 1927 to 1929. the average sel- llng price was $13.53. wblle the average for the decade 19215 to 1934 was $9.01. Just as wlth pota- toes. so with cranberries, the Prices during each selling season rlse and fall. with this dllféf~ once. however. that there ls greater risk ln holding a stock of cranberries, because of their more perlshable nature and the for a constant temperature in the warehouse. The total sales value of the C1111‘? Cod output. ln 1926 was less than $3.000.000, In 1929 l1, exceed- ed $5,000.000 and ln 1937 1t was a- bout $4,000,000, on an estimated investment of $20,000, PUBLIC FORUM Th1: column h upon for the illnuunlnn by nnronpnndalh o! quonllonn n! Interest. ‘Ila Chow lottntowl Gunrlllan doe: not ne- and daughters who have made the great. success of the Cluntr Falrs. And while 0n the increase tn prizes W0“, I might add that EH31‘ slnce the Sourls Exhibltlon started. because of the close har- mony bztueeti the mamgement. of bath Fairs, backed by the enthus- lastlc support of the farmers of the County. the prizes have 1n- creased from 810000010 upwards of $2500.00. that. is over a perlod 01 years; wlule the prizes have more than trlpled, the Government grant. has only doubled, " Much of the trouble and disap- pointment could. however, be done away wlth l! the offlcluls of the Department of Agriculture would lnslst that. some of the glaring tmfulrn-ess of the prlze llst. be re- moved. Take for example the prlzes ln the sheep class. At this Fair the money offered ls $209.00 and almost. all taken. Al, Alberton a larger Exhibition. they offer $36.00 1n the breedlng class. just two sections, for a reglstered ram, and a. breeding pen, Why have more? They glve the money to the market lambs, but not wlthln nearly a. hundred dollars of what. we pay for sheep at. Georgetown. Why pay a. $41.00 prize to a sheep or a lamb worth perhaps slx to ten dollars and offer a $6.00 prlze to a. registered Ayrshire, Holstein or Jersey cow. that Ls worth any- where from $100.00 to $200.00, Why, even 1n the Handicraft Department, articles are fcund \\')I‘l-l‘l many tlmes the value of a. sheep. and the prizes offered for those valuable rugs are not a third of the money offered for a sheep or a lamb. I have 1n mlnd a very-ltandscme and valuable rug. the work Cf Mfrs MacLeod of Dundas: there was no section for this rug, the judge IGCDIIllIIEIlKlPG n sprclal prim. As the money was :'\ll token up and more tlum up, how could I award Miss MacLeod a special prlze, which I know she should have received for that very hind- some rug. I hope to see thls rem- edied another year. Stirely the value of a sheep £0 this Province as compared to that of lxacon hog or the utility hen. does not warrant. such B» 111189 share of the prize money being awarded to thls class. I have always contended that. the Government should my me prlzes won 1n full. whether the amount be $800.00 or $130090- Bl" since they refuse to 80 0V" ‘he $1000.00 then surely the Dem"- merlt. when they approve 01 f!" prlze llst whlt-h thev do annual- 1y, they should see to ft that the prlzlx offered are kept wlthln the bounds of the grant. Just one more-them. 11nd I “m through. I know there is l 1110119 from the Department to amalfl- mate the two Exhibition Associa- tions of the County, and to hold one Fab" alternately each W8!‘- TbLs ln the interest M 9°°“°"1¥! If one or both Fairs “yell 8111138 (Continued on P1156 6. 001- 3) 111E 2 MACS CADC Australian JOQKPY “m0 h“ tn Ceylon for aeverlil 555591151 011d m hospital here shortly after being thrown 1n the Calcutta Races. CORNS Relieved in 2 Minutes 1". d or two of Putnam's 03$ £11.23... and the pain E0118 away. Relief ls almost instantane- oul Removing coma with Pulmanl Corn Extractor l; so ea-fl. 5° 911N- Qmliiifflfin entl-re success and so! 1L Ls the best. In one bottle Putnam's Cm-n Extractor W" m" flnd solid comfort tor your 1m- Bold b! all drugizlste. ATTENTIUN lllve you lruublo with your stomach. ll’ the answer i: yea. than we ask you to try EVANS STOMACH MIXTURE Evan's Stomach Mixture i.- is prescription of llr. L. B. Evans of’ London, l-lnghnil and ls sold Ior lhc treatment of Indigestion, l-leartbu n I‘ gpeplla, Sour Stomach. Gastric Distress. and many other ailments peculiar h flu- stomach We ask you only to try it. You wlll he delighted with the results. PRICE PER. BOTTLE 85c. MACS BLOOD I-‘UOD For pale and thin people. A combination especially valu- able ln the treatment of thus-1- dlseaaes where the 1." orlnin ln traceable to an import-1'11: condltlon of the blood. W; highly 1- mmend Marl Blood Food for thp treatment o! rheumatism and for thnsv who have lcst their lipnrlit- Macs Blood Food will prov.- the rrstoratlve. TRY IT TODAY. PRICE PER BOX 50c We wlsh all our cllfilflmltr‘ to know that we now have in stock Mnrsllles ‘l2’; (iiuuine French Castil: Soon. Budd's Fills — 1291‘. Ill-r bux A. S. A. Tablets — — 49c per Bottle of 100 Remember The Two Meets all Prres. Macs Phone 315 "rnnowu AND KILLED —- R. E. M. Hill. ridden UTTA - thousands use this of r ht to mung pirliwlslon for the fulfil!» A more practical The world depression has ltl In lnconl I iomieui-tsruvlslon for a ruin! by. bjectlves can be gmnll outlay. for your old age. HYNDMAII & Charlottetown Thlmls McAvinn What Is Your Aim? 1,. their Some 1men Ianlllllmwlzfm I “an”, method oombllieu the rlxht mm!“ ll spending u. u» present with security for the N111"- brought home to and lnaecnrfl! 1- eat u! u ldell n! The Gr“ w “Umfilfia — lnd for a OMIIPBWUWU W Ito for particulars about. this can!’ Wfl yoiu- wlfo will ml 11m» u» battle nmxle-hwdvd 11> the home uul family; and at the some time make PT" 5 ‘m B0. LTD. PROVINCIAL MANAGERS Bmlmlddo Iflhfllbl IIVIBI nnflnlhrzlnllvd! muaycaxudlan olnotmaldng mnnderwhlohhofih to make sure Glut Manhunt Speck! "Ilqanlenldiw For a. Delicious Cup of Grange Pekoe Tea Mr. Tea Poll Says: nunnrlly andnna (he ‘ o! norrelnondevu la. KING'S COUNT! EXHIBITION Slrsz-As this letter appears ln your columns, the prize winners of the King's County Exhlbltlon will have received 1.11011" prize cheques from the Treasurer, Those cheques, however, are made 110 85 per cent of the actual amount won, and not ln full. as would naturally be expected. The quastlon as to why thls hll happened? No doubt wlll be ln the mlnd of all exhlbltors, and 1t ls with the idea of stich exploitat- ton this letter appears. The prizes won at. Georgetown thls year. apart from the gener- ous donntlou by I-Ils Honor Lieut- enant. Governor DeBlols _t.ot.al $1279.00. This is b0 be met by the Government. grant of only $l000.00 whlch would allow slightly over 75 r cent of prlzes won. . e management, however. afte brought the actual amount. pald up to 85 per cent of prizes won. Everyone should realize and es- pecially the Department officials. that, the gate receipts are needed for upkeep and Improvements, and there should be at least a small dlvldened pald to the share- holders who have put thelr money lnto 1111s plant. A l During the last number of years the Kings County Exhlbltlon has grown and lmmcwd so tlmt. the prizes have hint-eased from $1000. to M31900. But. apparently the attitude of the Government renardlng-agrlc- ultural Improvements when 1t! meat-s ddlnrs and curls ls: "Thus far you have come but no furtre": wlll we go". Hence. the B5 per tent. of money won, is the pay off buts to the farmers, thelr wives, sons 11$ YOU MAY BEIN A BIG HURR" But there is 1111411,»... to stop for a moment and ask for that N‘ favorite with Islanders In Prince Edward Island. Its high qualify has IIL‘V(‘I' been unchanging for 11111111 century. ' Mun ufacturetl by Hickey 81. 121 Hl-CKEYS BLACK TWIST CHEWING »\l1.v:\ys fresh l1 1s sold in pruelt- callv every sill" FIG 10c PER 11.1"?’ WW1.“ $91‘.