fl.»- ll‘ ‘:i with , IGILLETI‘ LYE A tcaspoonful of Us: Gillan’: Lys fonall C leaning and Disfnfscling Costs little i but always I i. i effective t ' ‘ . ‘ a n ' TTTT‘ Strand Theatre In the ev-etr i M g our once In-g which will be addres- “i their sham n i“ u amen . - - - - ie gsed by the Honorable llr. S. F. for“! w‘ med w any g 'I‘olmle, ex-Minister of Agriculture, and other speakers. ' should be well attended. Dr. 'I‘0Inile p its a good platform speaker, ls Inti- AFGUST 22—You are self-reli- ant. modest, and amiable. You have winsolue ways. and an off hand way of doing the thing yoll want to do. and of avoiding trouble wheil iuost people would find it. You will in- spire decp love and tender ilevo; tioii. Don't become too foild of money. You will trayml a lot, and make sun-cuss late in lift‘. Your birth-stone is tlle sardonyx. . which means a happy married life. Your lucky colors- art- orange and red. IT WAS, HORRIFYING. Mr. Kll4‘\\"/.(’\‘~-Mi:lifl Vvrraplalti was takui lo the Iiospital tiiis after. noon. Ali-s, KllI‘.\\'7.(‘\ licar, dear. I didn't know she lvus ill. Mr. I{II(*.\\"I.I'II' ~Shc wasn't tllitil slli- saw i iiifipg... Queens County cal have much of interest to say, No 7f» E r sin-in; lll!!! tin-abs inn) ltllb per yrnr (In ndvnneel Inllel In On HIIIITETIIIINHIIIHIIIIN [$.00 per year (In ndvnnee) delivered. nnin and United Mules. Iter U. ',I Inttetovvni GIIIBH’! Lye sprinkled mtln-ur-flmtfrnlton in. in ti" G-fbm C)" .:.-..'.'.':.."'.~..:'.;._j.::,l:.-.r: prevents flies breeding ";':'_"l';:|_‘|': SJ“ M“ n", FRIDAY, AUG MEETING romcm Alter the business meeting of the Liberal Conserva Ive Association tllls public nle-elitig will be held In the This meetln malely alcquaiilicd wltll thefpollli- situation lil Canada and wl one should miss this meeting and . hlelnsset Iieeretn . Llent. Col. II. A. Itlnrlflnnon. l). S. lager, J. ll. Ilna-nett vr Yolk lleuresentntlve-Jirnnk It. Northrup , Chicago llepaesonlntl mmnmmv any he waist-ca lrn- the Inllovvlll use-u Ia afternoon a VleQ-PIIAIIQII. J- I- IIIIIQlH 0 Associate mam-r. ‘urn. Con-le- "‘ J. Power r P. 1‘. Morphy, Prlnec It” Grocery J- P. DUI’: Qlnen St- W. O. Wright, Kent Street West IL ‘Ihnnnn Whlle. l!!! ILIIn Ave. Fred Qsudot, Great George at, J. D, Taylor, Grafton 8t. ‘JST 22, 1924 hospitality and the friendliness of They will find hero ‘our pcvvifl- descend liiuily men and - woman. isiits of their ieltowcouutrvmen. men nnd women who have mfllle good here and who have contribut- it ls today. I iii} i‘ unnorzo CHANGES A story is told of a mun who re- visited his native country after an zibseilce of over twenty years dur- ing which be bad not kept In touch with hls_old time neighbors. Meet. Il all are invited. -?-<-o->-- _- WELCOME VISITORS Last night a party of six‘ Heb- ,i'ldczlns, headed by Rev. Father Mc- Donell, Charlottetown with a view to prospecting in tho province lor farms suitable for set- arnvc In the writeup of tlii- Swintoil musicali- in which Silt‘ was nlciltlril- ed as the IIIIPSI of h irror. FO-§-GQO-O§QOOOOO4000O O04 I g SOMEBODY i SOMEWHERE i WANTS Y()UR i, ruorotilmru jgpsf BA YER iii-iii DQQO-OOO#-O §O§OO§§O O-O-@§O~§4 , Insidious i We use this adjective advise odly. Sufferers from Eyeatraln may hlVg perfect vlslon and thcrefors’ do not suspect the presence of any eye defect. The motive power of the v onlzlro human organism Is Nerve Energy. Normal eyes. it Is computed’ utlllza about 28% of this‘ larva Energy, ‘out when Eye- straln Is present, a much larg- sr proportion Is required. Hence defective eyes, through their consumption of an ex- coaalvq amount of Nerve En- may. may seriously affect tho functioning of other organs of the body. and produce Ill health. HAVE EYES YOUR EXAMINED (l. F. llulcheson Optometrist ‘o-o oouooeoooeerovo ooaorfl Professional Cards DR. A. B. MARTIN PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Mt. Stewart ‘ plialmer 228i Palmer H. J. PALMER, K. C, Barrister, Etc. ~.Money to Loan Bank of‘ Nova Bootla Building Charlottetown, P, E. I. ' Mac ’ J, A~ MoDONALD, I H. F. McPHEE l. . Iarrlstsm. Attorney, Etc. Money to Loan ‘Riley Building Char‘ ttstown Mark ‘R. McGuigan B. A IAR-RISTER. BOLICITOR, ETC. Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P. E. Isl I . . i . and ~ Eye strain , Donald & McPhee \ ‘tloulcnt for themselves and other eungrants from the l-Icbtlrlilcs who, f comlitloils warrant, purpose cuiil ing to Canada. 'I‘he 'party consists of Father McDouelI, Itev. Canon MacDougall, Iilg one of these he BERN! 110W Illlngs wcrcgenerally and was i-Olll “Oh, things are as they have al- ways been. You will find little .f any change." In further conversa- tion the stranger learned that In Ills absence his father and mother Illlfiiliifid, the old home had been burned down and a new house built; all but a comparatively few of the friends he had known were dead or had loft the country. On further investigation he found that. the face of'the whole community had so changed that he could not Dean of the Outer Isles, Messrs. Neil McMillan. Angus 'McLeod, llnichlan McLeod and Laeblnn Nicholson. The reason for their coming‘. as is well known, Is that conditions in I“ are“ “fir” “n” y },.lhelr native Islands. never favor. flahlefaro at present, and have been §§-§§-O'§§§-. 0-. §§§-§§O§-Q§§.-Q._ I Q jfor some time past, extremely un- favorbale and it has become neces- sary‘ for the greater portion of the‘ population to emigrate In order to avoid actual want if not stavntlon. and Edward later will be taken to other sec tlons. preference no doubt will ho gage in may be necessary, by fishing. However this is a matter of detail 0n which we have no doubt. they will be well The lnnln thing is that there is ample room here for sov- advised. eral hundreds of them, that they need just such accommodation as we have to offer them and also, uml very emphatically, that we nccd We need a new Infusion of the red blood‘ which over a hundred years ago came to this Island from the Old Land, mlicb of It from the Hebrides and Northern Scotland. \Vc need this fresh blood today; we noed a stirring them. up. the exam- plt- of hardy, sturdy men working for a living. Continued prosperity and Its disad- experienced has Its advantages and both. Too many of us are content- vantage hnvg ing ourselves with conditions as they have been. A new body of who have struggled (Ilfflcultles such as were Immigrants against known only to our early pioneers and now forgotten, would act as a tonic to the whole province. i"I-Iow are things going on the ls- Thc party has visited Nova Scotla is now about. to tour Prince Island and, later, New Brunswick. “Today accompanied by The Ilebrldeans, nccustomedas they are to fishing and farming, should find conditions in this prov- ince congenial In many ways. Their shore side farms In order that any farming occupation they may cu. supplemented, if recognize It: he was a. stranger In a strange land. This is true of every country, of every city and town nnd village andi They areall continually, farming community. changing. changing gradually, imperceptibly, to these living among the changes. but. start] Iliigly real to one who sees thoi cumulative effect. of many years. I To the oft repeated question Iicard at this home visiting season, lland?" ‘one often hears the reply. '“Oh just as there is no change!” usual, No change! This province has Premi" Stewart and 0mm" i“ alchungetl immeasurably In the last position to advise, they wlll vlsltnwdntyxlvel my,“ mu, yea", u the eastern end of the province and h, a new 1am] Wm, new people ' then unknown, with buildings and farm implements household com- ‘lorts then absolutely unknown. In ilhe language of Coue, "we are gob ting better and better every day In live among the gradual and almost ‘imperceptible changes take no not- ice of them and often Imagine that the place ls too slow to change, that times are as hard us they over for, were and that there Is no progress. Ono wlin had not seen this prov- ince for say thirty years, if he vis- Iletl It today, would find things Ile would find, population vastly changed._ regrettably, that our had fallen off by several thousands but he would find also that one ‘man today, with the aid of farm implements then unknown, could {do the work of several men and do lt' more efficiently and less labor- iously. Ile would find that not- withstanding tho decrease In pop- ulation there Is a large Increase In production, In value, In homo coili- fort. u. wolild find ha... farms, better buildings, better live stock. Ile would find a more progressive and a better off and a more con- tented people. The world Is moving on and we with It. Notwithstanding our fre- quent complaining, we are keeping up with the procession. Our farms are as up to-da-te, our acreage yield as great as that In any other agrl. every way," hilt those of us will; ‘I’!!! ittpwa Notes ByThe Way - The nomlnatllona for the two fsileral bye-elections now pending In the province of Quebec took I ing will take place I4 days later on Septeniebr 2. One thing that, ls qu te satlsfactoryobout the nomin- ations is that In ouch case only two candidates wore named, one Conservative and one Liberal. A situation had arisen after the oleci t'on writs were Issued which made It probable that there would be two Conservative candidates In St. An- toine, Montreal. The retirement of Mr. Bell, who was the first man in the field on the Conservative side, renders the situation loss complex and difficult. It lull-II be a straight party battle In St. Antoine between W. M. lllrks who carries the Opposition standard and Alderman W. J. Hush- ‘on who leads the forces of the King Government. In like manner In RI- mouskl there will be a straight contest between Oscar Sassevllle, K. C., for the Opposition and Gen- eral Sir Eugene Fiset for the Gov. erument. There ls no candidate but forward for organised Labor or ”or the Progressives, although La- bor is strong Ill Montreal. There are not many Progressives there, or in Quebec province. The late member, llon. Walter Mitchell, was n Liberal, did not. agree with the (lovernmenfs tariff policy-and resigned lll-l seat in pro- test against It. This ought to make the Robb tariff a square Issue In the battle, and assuming that the contestants are equally popular and representative of their res pectlve parties, the Iiye-election should be considered’ all evelit of the first importance. It will no doubt be yvatchisil with eager Inter- est by politicians ltnd the Intellig- ant electorate throughout the en- tire Dominion. A point to be remembered, how- ever, is the fact that the lilberal candldiltes in both St. Antoine mid Illnlouski are backed by the power the patronage and influence of tnii (lovorilulcuts, federal and provln cial and In no province of the. Dom 'niou‘ do those agencies count for more than In Quebec. In that one place on 19th August, and the vot.» ' reading about Chaucay M. Dcpcw liiiliat £011?- of yours . a . Bu Ion-m W. B01010. M-D- THE ART QF LIVING 'L°NG You were likely Inttrested In having another birthday, and that he is now past ninety years of ago. You have road many of his short anecdotes and perhaps some of his speeches. I oltened wondered how he kept himself In shape physically, and also mentally, when I realized that he was attending evening "din- ners", and making reechcs there", at least five nights a week for many years. Added to this was Ills daily grind of executive work as the head 0f Olle of the largest railroads In the world. l I got the impression that It was perhaps his extremely acute senlc of humor that was carrying hin along: also that it was because ls actually refused to think that any day ill the past was ever as good as to day. , Further, he believes that tomor- row will be even better than today. Now knowing bow the outlook on life nets upon the whole system including the appetite and diges- tion, this was the explanation to me of Ills ability to go through with so luauy dinners. _ Ilnwcvtir, on the occasion of his iiliietii-th birthday, Ire told a num- ber of newspaper friends soilie of the ‘st-crots" of keeping young. Altcr a hard regular day‘s work at the office ho would go home, Iakx- a short nap, and thou prepare Ills speech as he walked up and dowli the floor of his reference library. \\'hl-n llc arrived at the bailqilc-l room he did two things. First, he arranged with the chairman that hi‘ be called upon early lll the ev- ening so that he could always be sure of ge-ttiilg home at eleven o'clock. Then as he sat down tn cut, simply partook of thoseloods which, "experience" had taught would itgrce with lillil, aiui lie avoEdi-il everything else on the bill of fare. So you see Depewfls system for attaining not only long life, bllt an enjoyable long life, was vcry situ- llt- rested n few minutes after his daily routine, got as he said a "diflt-rcill set of Intellectual mus- Human/Beings‘ Healthier But ‘In- sanity Increases In the opinion of Dr. Chariot! li- ‘Msyo, tho famous American Bu!‘ goon, In another twenty Yea" °" m the gvornge expectation of life may reach the Scriptural limltl that ls to any the chances will I19 that every babyborn after that will live to be seventy’ veers Old- Th“ opliilup Is startling only if ‘"6 5° not realize how greatly the overuse human life has been extended in the past century. A hundred Yell" ago the average expectation 0! We was twenty years. In the Dust fifty years, It has increased fifteen years, nnd is new more than fifty. This Is due wholly to the advance of medical science, to the master- ing of certain diseases, and to the diffusion of Information that en- ables people to lIve more intellig- ently. ond to live more Intelligent ly is tolilve longer. Dr. "Mayo be- llves that In the next few years the plague of cancer may be con quered .'I‘he time may come any day when one of the thousand In- vestigators who are devoting them selves to the task may announce the Isolation of the ‘cancer Ilerm. After that It wlll probably require another five or six years before the benefits of lllu discovery will show themselves Iii n lessening of the disease. There is More Insanity. There ls only oil-c field In which medical sconce is going backward. or perhaps It would be fair to say that civilization Is going backward. Insanity is on the increase. It is growing at the rate of two and a half ppr cent. a year, and nowhere is it flourishing as In the Uultetl States, whore seven per Cont. 0i the entire populatlolr IHWO till‘ mentality of a child of ninc, whllc an additional 1b per cent. class nu- ly up to tlr.‘ eleven lnnrk. In other words, more than a fifth of the Aluonlcan people, are suffIcll-iltly ilefectlve mentally to be classified as such by experts. ’I‘llls is ties- plte the fact that the medical science has shown as lilitcll actlv lly Iii the ult-illal itsrln tho idly-Bi" cal field. The cause is civilization cles working," ate just the kinds respect the contest Is unequal .Otliorwlsc it seems fair and equal enough. Both seats were held by Liberals at the last session of Par- liament and therefore the Oppost )III(‘I‘.' both seats, whatever the probnbill ties may be. of which were held‘ by supporters tlrely of the GoverntuenUs choice that the bycelectlons were brought on In advance of the others. This was done In the bc- Ilel that the two seats In Quebec were entirely safe and sure in rc- turn the Liberal candidates. It was also done In the hope that vic» torles In Qucbccwould give such hope ‘and cheer to the party as would Improve tho party prospects in the three other bye elections that must shortly follow, Elections are at. best uncertain and It might happen that the contests In Que- bec will result as the Government or Itiiuouskl should return a. Coti- servatlve It would be ominous of Liberal defeat In the contests that. are near at band In Ontario, llrl» tish Columbia and New Brunswick. In any case the Govcrnluonfs pos- ition is insecure. Ilaving no do pelldlblo majority In the House and having lost Halifax and Kent last. year It can lll afford to lose nliy more bye-elections. In botll Ilall fax and Kent they had the power and patronage of two governments In their favor as they now have In Quebec and yct the Liberal candid ates went down Iii defeat. The test of the bye-elections this year will be more Important than those of inst year, and In some res- pects undar different conditions. The contests In four provinces widely separated must afford some Index to the state of political 0p- lnlon thnoughollt tho Dominion. The Robb tariff, along with the throiitened-"ddath-knell of pro- tection" ls a distinct chsillengc to the friends and supporters of the stable fiscal policy laid down by Sir John Mucdonald and since en- dorsed by Laurler and Fielding. tlon cannot lose either one or themii] The Government's position! Is more perilous as there is a 1iiis-'|,i,,,,,,," says "l “m, [he Wm to do slbillty that. they may lose Olin or what was W159 of the King Government, it was ell- In QIIIIDPC- of food that be knew he could saf- ‘sly eat. and got home and to bed llu good time. I Atldcd to this was Ills wholesome ,aud humorous outlook on life. ie iil tblsfts there? But lllc whole point is this, as hp In regard Iiablts of life. i Nothing to learn then. [will to be wise. With flvc seats "ow vacant, throw ,..‘..‘._.‘ ‘”“ Daily Selections FOR . Guardian Readers ‘OXO-O i eeeoooo-ooooovooo4o. LIKE AS THE WAVES Like as the waves make towards the pebbled shore, end; changing, place with which goes before, Each contend. Crawls to being crowned, flglit, truth, And "Billing stands blit for his scythe to mow: And yet to times In hope my verse shall stand. Praising thy worth, cruel hand. despite his —Sbakospeare Love Cure For A Lost Memory (By Dominion News Service) IIUNDQN. August 21 The “Sweetheart Cure" for lost mem- ory is Being hopefully experiment. ed with at Boscoiilbo Hospital, Bournemouth. There tile doctors arc engaged ill COHXIIIIZ back the lost memory of a young Irishman, who was found lying In an exhausted condi- tion In the New Forest unable to give his name or any account of himself. Helping them Is a lady, under- stood Io be his sweetheart, who came from Belfast to Identify him, as a result of seeing extracts from a letter’ found In his pocket, In which her Christian name, Annie, was mentioned. Dr. G. Smith. the house surgeon, thought this was an opportunity of probably reviving the lost memory lIP-rc is nothing new to you nor to my Just the So do olir minutes hasten to their that In sequent toll all forwards do Nativity, once in the main of light, maturity, whvcrowlth Crooked eclipses ‘galnsl. his glory Our visitors will be given amp opportunity to see for themselves what Is possible In this province. Dr. C. C. Archibald Should they or their countrymen Graduate of N. Y. Grad Medical School a I . ' ---- 'l'".'."" IIIT doc-I‘ to settle here we can as- l ‘than a klmlly welcome, iibun. dant hospitality ands generous re- would give us a more wholeiio cultural country In the world. We have reached this stage byvslow and almost unnoted changes and we who lIve amid the changes would dowel], to look backward and compari ourselves with past. generations. rluch».s' retrospect. lc L Flor these among other reasons the coining series of bye-contents so widely distributed may produce results as Important and fateful an any that have happened In the In- terlm between general elections during many years past.‘ I E81‘ l! IV IIYTHING‘ of Illa patient. Screens were put round the bed. and the Irishman was‘ suddenly confronted with Annie. He failed to recognise her, but she at once Identified him. Ho loft Ireland souls‘ months sgo and as II allot) when he fill i - weak rtlleted with old ago. The study of itself. When a lilan begins to worry he enters on the path that often leads to ins-nlllty. Dr. Mayo says that- tllis has been strikingly m. :,'-"“" .3‘ As o Letter Is 00d A. C all The Banking-by-Mail of the Bank of Montreal is so satisfactory many of out- customers conduct all their transactions with us through the postal service. lfyouwish toépctttl Savings ot-Chequ. ing Account, if you are in quest of information, or if ‘you desire advice on some problem, you have ‘ mcrelytowrite out-nearest Branch. Charlottetown Branch i-:. c. coolvlsst Mflnagar BANK OF MONTREAL Established over I00 years orite nlodlums ot‘ exporimcilt, alld llr. Mayo says that cancer can be product-ti lll a mouse by rubbing one spot daily for a Iiundrctl days with a solution of tar. (Iradually th-e Irritation Increases until the cancer zippl-ars lll ull its familiar mallgnity. In human beings un~ lilll‘ flesh is lo be regarded with suspiizitin after a ciartaln ago is reached. 'l‘hc map fifty years old and fifty [IUIIIIIIS overweight should be ‘Viflilfllll. Dangerous Predtispositlons. He will not necessarily ilcvoltilt concur but ilt- Is more likely to do so than the man of proper weight or oven loss. Ills system Is iii a shown by tliehlslory of the neg- rocs. When they were slaves, In- sanity was riire among cause theyhud no grave mental Insane In formidable Insanity among savages have gone numbers. is rare. Cancer and Diet. ' lialf ll milllion civilized [ronplo die cacll year frolil cancer. This, too, is a disease of civilization. As long as there has been a civilization there has been cancer. It is llnconi- men, but not wholly unknown aulnng savages. It. is scarce among the Eskimos and the Laplanders who live on a moat dict; it Is equally scarce among tropical sav- ages whose food is mainly fruit and has planned and anxiously do- And Tillie “'3'- Eill"! d0“! his 8i“- slms_ confound. vegetables. Diet, therefore, Is not Time dmh irmmm‘ the ililurish "i- the cause of cancer, or not the dir- And It may turn out quite the‘ Andondgaiigl’ the parallels m cct cause. I)r. Mayo believes. otherwise. For ll’ "either Si. Antoine beauty's brow; i-hfillllh. l-ilfll mllflll 0i 01"‘ Bicknefl“ [reeds m, the rarities of nature's is the result of lniproper eating. We do 'not eat enough roughage. Ill» says that. one could hold ln Ills hands enough food, so far as actual nutrlment goes, to feed a cow for a day, but the cow spends most of her waking moments Iil gathering food, much of it having no value as nourishment. Yet this roughage, or "trash" as It might be culled, is u necessary part of the cow's ra- tions. Feed It on condenst-tl food containing every property, bllt. that which ls mysteriously supplied by the roughage and the cow will d-Ie.. We have got too fal-titllous. and refuse to cat many things Llmt pzrplo In a savage \t'lte would be Ignorant enough to CDlllIllIIIc with the result that they would live lon- gar; Watch the Overweight‘. Irwin Smith, of Washington, has made experiments In cancer re- search that Dr. Mayo regards as highly Important. He can control the disease In plant life. He‘ has Isolated the bacteria and these can be removed nnd Injected Into 0mm‘ lllants and cancer will ro- ault. Ho has also silt-ceded In producing cancerous plants by means of chemical irritation. Can- cer ls common enough among ear- taln animals. Dogs are subject to It, andmany an old dog has died wIIIb the disease and his master .Iiss supposedtlist he has been sf- Iicor In tho lower anlmils has- ;lll0I‘l‘ susci-iltIbI-o. courlilloil. The Ilwm. be same thing may be said ofhcrcillty. ll ls doubtful if any person ever Wllrrivti- Th0)’ Bimllil! did B8 U19)’ lnhtirltotl cunccr, bllt people do lil- WQYB loili- Th"? hall I10 Iliillls i0 llcr.t. certain tendencies which are lay. no problellls tlo groupie Wilh- likely to Induce. traueor. Th1!!!‘ Qlllllillyl-‘FB Iiili file Ulinkinlilllitlons of life have been so greatly for‘ lllclu. NOW lhfli Um)’ KY0 Ob-i-illcrcil lll the pnst fifty years that Ilgcd to fend for themselves theyiwo unconsciously prepare a for. 'I‘Iic. con- tilcsoil for diseases such as this. Whcil we use an elevator or an automobile we are (Itlllilflilllf, from the natural means of getting to our ili-stlnatloil aiul by just that. mllcll deprive ollr muscular system of Its proper functions. In time this denial luoails flaccid IIIIIHCIPS and reduced power. Then ollr Internal ‘machine slows down and we begin to talk of pains. Beware of those pains, says Dr. Mayo. They nlay indicate tho first slgils of cancer. Prompt examination Is the unvary- ing rule every person should follow. Progress ls beillg uladu lit the con ifllct with th‘s illsease because In- day more than liall thu women af fllcted with cancer of tho breast obtain medical aid before the dl- l-lense assumes a malignant. forlii. A fow years- iigo only a fifth of them were able to take trtlatilleilt Ill time. {Q} MIHIWIO Fired ' The First Engine (By Dominion News Service) LONDON, Ailgust. 2I-~A whilo wlilskercil man of 83, with shrewd klmlly eyes, leaned out. of iho cub of I'illI‘()|llI'3 Iiiggosl railway engine, "TIL! Flying Scntllllili," In tlli- I'll! ace of Flnglncering at. Womble)’ lately, and surveyed below him Stvphtlusoifs plgmy "Ilocoulotlvo Delft slight. details, 9V9“ in the preparation 0f the simplest dish! If the r8- cipe crumbs u-se only tihe best- , Ask yourgroeer for ' Hamilton's Dream SodaS Crisp! Appetlslngl Fresh From the 0v cons-rs in ers. Have a I Put In’ w: No, 1" which 63 years ago. Ile was John (Hurley, a l‘l‘lil‘~3(l licensed vlctuallcr, the last living link bcfwccu the oilgiile vrhich drew the first passenger train at ill to l5 miles an hour and the inalllliioth that eats up the 400 urles hlllwlgpn London and Edinburgh ill R hum-a, Stovensoifs cnglnt- was Iiuilt ill he had stoked 1T5, and III years later, when It wtls lctlt to contractors by the Stockton luid Dilrllnglou Illlllwny for marrying stone frnlu lit-inside Ill iill‘ building of llurhalu North-road Station, Mr. Cowley, as a lad of 15, was its fireman. As hlseye roved ovcr lilo shin, illng array of Iirass and steel con- trols in the cab of "'l'lic Flying Scotsman," Mr. (Inlvlcy said, “Pills ls a palace compared with lily old . 1 engllrc, and I would just love, to lire licl". ‘No 1' down iiltTl‘ used to iIIIiCII black smoke at its, and pull and shake from itldc lo side dread- fully. , "Why, I could walk alluost as i fast as she ran. It uscd to tails her two hours to ‘IIPZIW two Iiogeyl l 0f stone a dlslzluco ol‘llvi~ miles. The engine driver Illlli to ki-t-p his hand on lilo levers all the lime Ila was on the foolplale, aml I Iiad to flro her continuously or she would stop. ‘No. 1' puffed too lunch autl was soon returned to llarllilglflll. and the engine ‘Washington’ Wll! used instead. "l lilust say that lll her coat of Iilnck pain ‘No. 1' now looks quite respectable In contrast to lilo days when she made me sweat on the footplnte. Mr. (Towloy came up to sce hi8 old engine at the lnvllalloil of the London and North Idastcrn flail- way Co. mom‘ TO IMPROVE CANADA'S STATIS- TICS OF INDUSTRY Conferences are at IWPHPI" i“ progress between the Director ill the ltomlnlon Bureau of (Ynnsu! and Statistics and officials of the (ianaillan Manufacturers‘ Associa- tlon with a view of Ilnprnvhil! fimi slliiplllying the schedules used i" compiling the statistics of lndustr)’ in (ianada. The linportanc.t-._ill sec iirliig the schedules used lll film‘ plllug the statistics of Industry’ i" Canada. The ‘Inlportance of secur- Pou-nd cutlot. and season. Cut the edges Into Take 1 egg and beat ll a little. Roll th thoroughly with "omo rolled Hamilton of butter and lard in cook slowly. Who ‘ng nccilrnte statistics of the l?" (lustrlal activities of tho countrv I generally reccgnizcd nnd the DI‘!!- sent discussion are intended I0 d9‘ tcrmluo the type of illf0flllllliftilil that. will be most useful and thfi nlost effective wily of obtu nlng ll l; figures. both from lilo standprlfll: of those having to fill out nil fortns and tlloao engalllld i“ 16g“ solldntlug the particulars. MN" L". of tho (Yunadlltu Manufaiturlv-e Association arc beiflll iliikfli i“ “we . Ihclr views on tho subject fort m guidance of those taking ll" the conferences. Detail Counts I calls for cracker “L? ORACKERS 800d sbapfl- tbtn cover l u . 961°?“- .1 rod In your skillet- Icely browned. i’ . lief.