PAGE FOUR flu cllarlottotovui Guardian —:+ ed in Nova Scotia in connection with the Albion Pneldent, latent.-col. W. Cluster 5. Iehnro. Vloo-Prolldellt. J. I. lllllctt, 'l J. L Ieoulery, Llent.rCel. D. A. Iullnecu, mines to the “Loading Ground" on Pictou Har- bour, a distance of 16 miles and the locomotive latter and Iuulu Dlreeto J. I. Burnett. I J. I Auoelue um:-. mu walls. no 1:. I. éu-u. was the “S.'imso1i." built in England in 1838 by Tmorinr HACKWORTH. It was brought out to Morning Dally (founded l.lI1) 01.00 per dellvered In Dlty. 33.00 per your (ll Idvnpee Prtnoe Edward llllld. “J0 . lulled -nlled not you to Canada and United Inho- you (ll advance) ) I0 (I: nlvnneu Nova Scotia in a sailing vessel and put into operation in I839. This locoiuotive is still in existence being housed in the Canadian National slrrunbsr. "mu 1:, ms. Railways’ station in Halifax. In 1855 construc- tion was started on the Nova Scotia Railway After The Battle lie following rhymed epistle: A: we sat in Queen Squaw, in the balmy night air, W ! heard sound: with flu calm .i-cam con- traslmgz Sound: of fury and .rh-ifs, as if murder was rifo.—— ’ ’Tzl'a: I/is Liberal: in caucus, broadcasting.’ Th: Leader was then, with his falulfo rare, And Big Jim with his booming bassoon,‘ And 1...~Paga, in a rage, was roaring back- stage; 'And John Archie was all out of txyia. Starr palcd in the skies; and the liideoud 0l(f[7'l€.l' Subriderl before the cork-crowing. Soon, roan, through the land, MacMillan'.r Pipe Band be /ilaying, GOING!“ Will "Th: Campbell: on Warning To Farmers \\’arning that weather conditions indicate '. 3-‘ late blight will be general and severe this sea- .,;,» son is given in a circular issued for the benefit of Island farmers by Mr. R. R. HURs'r, path- ologist in charge of the Dominion Laboratory of Plant Pathology, Charlottetown. ' Farmers are urged by Mr. Htmsr to adopt , the necessary precautions against this very de- structive disease, thereby preventing losses due 'Apropos of Monday night's unpopular per- formance in the Legislative Chamber a subscrib- er—one of many unwilling auditors—sends us from Halifax to Truro and Windsor which was completed in 1858, this being the first public railway in the province. The first railway to be constructed in New Brunswick was the European and North Am- erican from Saint John to Shediac, a distance of 106 miles. It was opened for through traffic in 1860 with locomotives some of which were built in the city of Saint John. Railway construction did not get under way on Prince Edward Island until 1871 and the line was opened for traffic in 1875. Development in railway equipment and fa- cilities has kept pace with and in some cases has been in advance of Canada's development and growth in trade. Ever the search has been to move the growing volume of traffic with great- er economy and speed. This has led to some out- standing developments in locomotive equipment. From the crude machines of earlier days is the latest giant of the rails “64oo", the largest streamlined locomotive in the world, developed by Canadian National engineers and capable of attaining speeds of 100 miles an hour. A like advance has been made in rolling stock such as freight and passenger cars. Along with the in- creasing size and speed of locomotives and trains the factor of safety has always been kept para- mount with the resultthat railways have achieved a remarkable record in freedom from accidents. Elsewhere in today's Guardian appear articles featuring this great railway anniversary, in connection with which congratulatory mess- ages have been received from many quarters, 'ncluding the Prime Minister of Canada and 1 the Minister of Transport. Editorial Notes The King, God bless and preserve him l BK 3|! 9|! mines at Stellarton. The railway ran from the A.-rm: CI-IARLOTTETOWN Gt_J_Anb1A1v Notes by the Way Last Friday evening In any U.!. city: "We'l, Mary, the shop‘: look- ed up ‘til Monday morning. Lot’: get. out. of town How about going down to see the old folks? Okay?" 80 Mary and John and the kids piled into the car early Saturday morning and went off to celebrate the Fourth of July week-end. Hundreds of thousands of other Amerlcan folk dld the same thing. But.—230 of them were brought back home—dead. That was the motor dent: htoll for\t.he "glorious" week- end. "Hey, Bill, how about going down to the beach for the week- end? The wholc gang's for it." So off they went to Splash in lakes and rivers and enjoy themselves in healiiful laziness. Many thousands dld llkewlse. Buir—69 of them were carried home-—des.d. -— stratford Beacon Herald. Leon Derrelle. leader of the Bel- gian youth movement, which is gaining much ground tn the politics of Bogium, says that when his party attains power he will pay members of parliament, not any flxed amount. but according to “services rendered." If this ldea is carried out strictly to the letter, on a credit and debit bases, the Belgian government, or any govem- ment for that rno.t.t.er, ought to realize qulte 9. nice little revenue out of it. De Mortals Ntl be hnnged. old hands in the gallery say that. the first session of the eighteenth Parliament of Canada, now dead. was deader while it. llved than last year's senate Hansard. They say that no reorter alive, not even Fred Cook, who remembers Sir Macken- zle Bowell, can remember speeches as dull. They say that the debates were no debates, and they are right. They were no more debates than it telephone directory is blank verse. They were cold plates of ready cooked oplnlons whereon bol- ogna and headcheese suppiled from rival political packing houses were laid out in 40-minute slwbs by tn- du.st1-lous apprentice butchers of the King's English. They were the le- oeptacleg of set speeohm recited, in full defiance of Bourlnot and the Rules n Debate, direct from the typascript. They were partisan PUBLIC FORUM ‘lhle column In II‘. for diumuu or «Insulin!!- quutllle I! lltenet. Charlottetown flulllee can not clone III -1119“ the Cl AS IN 1914 8lr.—Developm.ente tn the inter- national field have ,ro'rnpted me to make some remarks which may be pertinent at this time. but this reason I beg space in your columns. “Europe is retracing the path of 1914," David Lloyd George declared a. few days :32. Just how this is being done he explnlnsclearly: “We are following the some steps which led in 1914 to the fires of aehennn; the same steps, one by one, includ- ing military conversations, pacts and reequlpment in armament." There is one step of vital import- ance which he has omlt.t.ed——t.he kindling of the war-splrtt. It. is the motive which makes men put on a soldier's suit. and reach for a gun. The other steps are only prepara- tory to impassioned wiu'-propagan- do. flag-waving and bnnd—pla.ytng which send men to slay their bro- thers of another country. Seneca one tlrne said out we punish B. man for killing nntther. but the murder of a. whole geople is considered 9. glorious deed. That is a true statement of our inconsis- tency. Men know that war is stu- old. wasteful and nntl-social; yet. they indulge in ft. Men know or shculd know that war ls hell; yet. they persist in going that way. This Ls plain, blunt language, sir, but it is what most of us need. Too long we have been in the doldrums so that, in a time of crisis. we are swept on our feet by demagoguee. Reason has not been our standard: rather, emotlonallsm with its up- peal to prejudice and hate. let us take thought and resolve t.ha.t the mistake of 1914 may never be re- peated. In a week's time Canada’: part in the Great War will be commem- orated by the unveiling of 3 huge memorial at Vlmy Ridge. What F-hOl‘lCl that mum to us? With all respect to those who nuanced themselves in that conflict. I as- serf. that lt ls a. monument to the grentmt mistake that Canada. ever made. The years since the war have disillusioned men and laid many different points tn the Pro- vlnoo, have myself uneble to dis- Igree with his better Judzment In any particular. I refer to John D. Rockerfellers co-director tn the standard 011 00.. although he lived in Olnclmutt at that tune four day's journey away. he decided to butld hlmeelf n hous: tn the Province to which with 111:; family and friends he could each year repair and enjoy the health. comfort and recreation that he meny times said could not 1:. dupllca‘ ‘ elsewhere In the wo;;u Alexander Maabonald was no. the men to net. tn haste and, nfi.-. a. prolonged. careful and l.hOl’Oug.. search of the whole Island, tr. selected I. spot on the Tracadlc Bench, buying several adjoining and this place he called “Dnlvny by the Sea" the name Dalvay De- lng that of his house in Ohio. And now, Mr. Editor, I shall have once unfit to ask you to let me flnlsh my story on another day, in order that I may recount at. least. some of the many att.rnct;ve fes- turee of that local spoton the North shore, which with other properties in the district will I trust. be adopted as the location of our 15- land's National Park. I am. slr. eta. ll. K. 8. HEDIMING ivowrs"1-rm" 1-mm’ Btr,—'l‘hem has not been 1 tune in history when money could be as safely and as profitably invest- edaattoanbotodny.endlfft.ls l.nve.st.ed with ordinary judgment, profits are sure to follow. There 3 only e. small per cent of the people who wlll make these in- vestmente and thereby make these profits, and that is because the ev- erage person wishes to go along with the crowd, and today as yes- terday the crowd dam not believe In anything. not even themselves. only A short time ago we were all trying to "get rich quick" on the stock market. all buying stocks on rushlng blindly pellmell In one dir- eclton, did not knew what we were doing or where we were going, just farms and linking them txxcelher, . JJULY 18. 1936 —-—*—-—-'» -'12: Suit Sale Friday E9’ Saturday $17.50 Suits worth up to $22.50 go on sale Friday and Saturday at $17.50. Get your Suit this week-end and save money. Henderson 69’ Cudmore Men's Wear For Vitality alwaosus BRAHMIN RANGE PEKOE TEA The blm tn the corn Is A marvellous crow. He was laid and was born In the season of snow;‘ And he chants his old catches Like u. about under hatches. It seems appropriate enough that a militant pponent of capital punishment should put him- self in line for the rope. BK ié uolng along with the crowd. Many age and waste. It is ntting that lost their lifetime savings. of-hers weshould respect nndhonourthose lost their little uvlnos that they who gave their all. That does not had laid by through many years of mean that we should repent, or al- 11J1l'd 3011- We did 110': CV90 pretend low to be repeated the conflict of to know wheat. we wen investing in, 1914. LEI. not this be the occasion Just following along with the mob. for a revival of the war sp1rlt.but: The results were that we ran one for serious reflection and of squarely into disaster, values dis- resolutton: never again. 1! there is appeared overnight, at: onstla fed- any spark of nobility or goodness ed away and the bubble of "got. penny readings supported each in “"9 the Stalk T935"-Y 0‘ “'4 05171‘ its own void by its own gaseous content, They were hangovers of is hard seasons campaigning, flat. echoes of e‘ectlon sounds; and fury signifying nothing, ragbngs of sec- ond-hand phrascs and rayon prin- ciples. In short. and on the whole they were awful and there were 3,742,000 words of t.hem—-all print.- tso destruction of tops by blight and potatoes by 0 H‘ X th and comes mm e as wt‘ or his wood very early, And works in the blades Of the wheat and the barley And he's happy. although He's a. grumbleton crew. The links have devloee .’ For sunny delight, And the sheep in their fleeces THE HEIGHT AND WEIGHT 0! Bordeaux mixture, it is advised, will pre- YOUR’ mu“) vent blight if properly prepared and sprayed up- on the plants, beginning when they are about eight inches high and continued thereafter at in- tervals of ten days to two weeks. In this Prov- ince the best results have followed five or six 9! Two women paid the death penalty this week for killing their husbands—one in London, the other in New York. XXX Parents are naturally concerned when they observe by the age, height and weight table: that their boy or girl is underweight. or under height for their age. Now these tables have been made from thousands of examination: but 3 I app]im:ions_ I . There's many a slip between an aim and a ed. It was Henry Laboucnere who WM,“ _ 1,, th to ,5 an rhyme or an h ,_ Am woo" dwhm, ( t 1 I. l)ctailccl directions for preparing Bordeaux hit, Mr. GEORGE ANDREW MACMAHON, alias 3?-l"°‘:‘!"‘1 l:“1’r'L?‘_”‘]‘1l:‘1‘“:]°I_‘lVfl5(:»‘e3‘f)l;1[ print; reason me 1fmvez_Se‘-‘get us Mr ‘mi ;1u°bb]eq.ui° exploded like . Hut theseyei: the scdrn ttiigtf l;1r:Ieh;]8?blB:nkC‘;i,Ixl‘fl:!l?‘bI.k:ct1ff)lll:s0 ‘ are attached to the circular. Growers desiring GERRY BANNIGAN, of Tyrone, Ireland, now thfnk. £8 3'”, ..um ,u.ur°5'en_ Deal to them! All this has driven real values °‘ *3” b“’d“""‘° °°m- con-Sldefltlom The first-131:?-Or ts ,,._a1,,,,,_ ' ' ' 8 5 I am. sh-.otc.. may belnw wthalt wtould mutually whether the younat ll of the fiirthi-r information are asked to enquire from .\l.. liL'H$T. ‘' _ Credit Where Due \< inllicatctl in Tll! Guardian a. few days he chief federal unemployment projects . _-.c.ir will consist in subgrading the Char- [I .r [1 \\'a= under<t:m<l the federal appropriation for those projects will amount to $90,000. Federal contribulimls to other new projects this year— crmstruction of sea wall and roadway at Vic- toiia Park, sea wall at Surnmerside, improve- ment to (io\'ernn‘lcnt Pond, etc.—wil1 be coin- cuce was made by Premier CAMPBELL at the Fast Prince Liberal meeting? Largely through . '« :' the rmewal of the grants for completion of the - \\'ilmnt and liusticf) trans-Canada. highways. Tlicsc projects, as our local contemporary ad- mits, were secured by the Conservatives and it is to them. and not the Liberal government here or at Ottawa, that credit is due. Let Us Have The Resolutions The C.\.\ll"'BliLL Government organ has pub- lished only a skeleton report of the annual meet- ing of lllC \V<'st Prince Liberal Association which has been described by one who was pres- ent as the worst “clog fight’ he had ever wit- ncssetl. Scathiug criticism of the policies 8114 actions of the CAMPBELL Government was voic- ecl at this meeting, the loudest and bitterest and :1 supposed Government supporter. It is high time that the Patriot implemented its pminisc of publishing these resolutions, as mnipzuij-ing them. Only then will its readers be speech which the Premier made in reply. - Canada’; First Railway railway. One hundred years ago, on July Zlst. the first steam locomotive in Canada hauled the first train for the carriage of passengers and freight from Laprairie to St. John's, Que, a distance of sixteen miles. Today, in place of line locomotive there are 5,000 and 42,270 miles of main line track with 14,249 miles of secondary track, including industrial track, yards and sid- ..,., ings, connecting and serving Canada from coast ,-""°' to coast and reaching up to Hudson Bay in the 'horth. In addition, there are 7,500 passenger jgarg, 200,000 freight cars of various descrip- tions: 120,000 persons are employed with an annual payroll of $150. ,ooo. Annual put- of‘ Canadian products and materials are 1:. excess of $50. , .ooo- During the your I935 Canadian railways curried t7,o66poo passen- " " and transported 2, coo esrloeds of rev- rom smell bqinnlnp nflweynheyegrowntobecomifeinejor U . 4 ’!~" II‘’‘’‘'' 4 of economic development. rut tobeoperlledbylstelln fl construct- nrltlineu ml g -. ‘-rr.» wt 4 A $.' -- ‘y. .- .- . XX)! Don't miss Church tomorrow with its op- portunity of publicly thanking God for the pres- ervation of the life of the King-Emperor and all that it implies. 3K 3K ill The last of the “hello-girls” have left To- ! l.:;;.~i..u n-.\'«uiris road and a section of the \\’est- ronto telephone exchanges. Dial phones have grub in the tree that 11.. pay; all too ern rn.'1(l l1Pl\\'t'(‘ll Slimmerside and l\llSi‘OllCl’l€. been placed in the lust 3.528 homes, bringing lime fllllenl-1°“ 1'0 What is 201118 0“ complete dial service to the city's 194,000 sub- scribers. ¥ if ¥ The heat was so intense in Ontario—l1o° that a large Boy Scout Commissioners Training Course scheduled for July ll. 12 and 13 at Iibor p;1rati\'cl_y small, \\’here then does the $287,950 Park, had to be abandoned. Tile tar roads were structlon, butungratcful mankind is of fcrlcral expenditure come in, to which rcfcr- in such bad shape that the authorities thought it threatening this bird 6960165 with advisable to cancel the gathering. if 9K ¥ In Russia they make doctors suffer for their mistal<es——when found out. A medical assistant named VASILIEV was sentenced at Omsk, Siberia, to ten years in prison for an alleged bluncler in administering anti-dysentery injections which caused the deaths of two children and made thirty-two others ill. 3K 9K The Swiss Federal Council announced it considered the case against the Italian iit-\\-s- papernlen for hissing null booing S1-:1..r\s:s‘115 at respondents had left Switzerland. They are for- bidden to return, ll0\VC\'CI‘, until the League dc- cidrs if they are to be readmitted to its scssionc. “VVe are going to cnde.'1\'our," says Premier fv'll1ll~lll‘|(lC|' being 3 member °f th elxgislature CAMPBELL, “to administer our unemployment “"055 °l ll1'~‘“'—*7l/C-'11‘-118 f0WlS find relief projects that they will he of real benefit to those who are actually in need." But the l’c(lcr- al Minister of Labour is taking un cliaiiccs, and well as a verbatim I't‘P0|’l 0f the <‘°"‘”"“-M5 3C‘ has engaged Mr. J. B. l\lURl.l€\‘ to keep a w:itch— «1 kind 01> P03111153 9‘-)9? <19 m?“- ful eye on the CA.\ll‘BliLL (}ovcrun1ent's employ- able to follow intelligently the report of the merit activities. 9% SK 3|? The Guardian is indebted to the Royal Bank of Canada for a magnificent reproduction of :1 painting depicting the scene at Laprairic, This year is the centenary of Canada's first Quebec, on July 21, 1836, when the first train of the Champlain and St. Lawrence Railway started out on its inaugural run to St. Johns. Que. The picture, marking the centenary of the opening of Canada's first railway. was executed by Mr. A. SHERRIFF Scorr for the Royal Bank of Canada I936 calendar. The reprint retains the artistic qualities of the original, and is ac- companied by an interesting brochure on the subject. K 5 X Production of creamery butter in Canada during June amounted to 38.933375 lbs. com- pared with 36,746,6o5 in the same month’ last year, an increase of six per cent. The Maritime Provinces showed a remarkable increase. "SW8 from 1,287,713 lbs. to 1.B84.475- Saskatchewan. Alberta, Quebec and Ontario also showed in- creeses, while, Manitoba’: production was prac- Mlth fut year at 3.65o.o0°- Brit- ' ,_ 3 decrease of :3 per cent. ' 39 in June 1935 to 654,143 lbs., lowered production which has during the last few months. eratlons will cam uncommonly lit.- tle about. what. we are saying at the present tune and I think that even if they do we ought. not. to minister to their fo‘ly." One of the easiest. blrds to shoot. at close range is the Woodpecker. He is usually so absorbed in chisel- llng his way to that destructive around him. The woodpeckers bright plumage often costs him his life. His scarlet-crested cap, his bed stripes and the white streaks on his wings make hlm readily visible to the boy with a slingshot, to the man with a gun. The wood- pcckcr is saving trees from de- extlnctlon. Those who must shoot; birds, should shoot. .t.h:rn with c:imcrns.—Kltchc-nor Rl‘COl'(l. After a heated argument. Mrs. Brown had succceded ln persuad- ing her husband to nflow their daughter to go to boarding school. After a. few weeks the gir‘. wrote home nndsald."I‘m awfully keenon plng-pong.“ "What did I my?" ex- cllméd Mr. Brown. "I knew it would come to no good; now you see she‘s fallen ln love with n Chlnamnnl" An Eng.lshm.1n visited on Am- H.K.W. TIE ISLAND PARK. WHERE SHOULD IT BE? Blr,——The responsibility of answ- ering the above question rests, of course, entirely with the Govern- ment of the Province, who will no doubt be assisted by represente- tlvcs of the Federal P8-ltk Com- mission. for upon the latter pre- sumaihly will devolve the duty of lay- ing out. the future scheme of development. Because of the above fact. one nat.u.rn.lly hesitates to ex- press an opinion. As, however, there has already been 5 plentltude of advice gratis, perhaps the Premier and his fellow ministers of the Cabinet. will not take offence if the matter is once more consldered upon its merits. , Here let me say that the decl- slon is of vital importance to the future progress of the Island, for, once a. selection shall have been made, it. cannot. be altered. The best. and only the but location should be, and no doubt ls, the aim and desire of the Government. Such trivial matters as party political bias or the rivalry that may exist between those llvlng in the several districts will no doubt receive short shrlft. from the Provincial Ceblhet. In my previous letter I tried to emphasize the fact. that the Island’; National Park ls being opened up crtcan fr.c:1cl who employed a large the League of Nations has ended since tlw c0r- staff of l\.C,.'»:. 'l‘uc visitor no; direct benefit of the reslden‘ tended tu;‘ir Sunday service, after, which the Negro pastor asked hlm how he .1l:cd the :ermon. “Oh I liked it. very wcl," replied the visitor, "out 1 think you should preach to your people on tha wick- cggs.' The pastor's fuoe clouded and he r:p11cd. “Well, sell, I hub tried dal. way oa p:cuchlng, but som:-how, lt. alw.iy.s .=»;(~.lncd to throw mg!" A former Govomor-General of Canada, Lord Wllllngdon, keeps an unforgct.ta.b'c memory of the years when he passed in our country. In a speech which he has just made in London, the former representa- tive of the King in our country de- clared that the five years during which he dwelt among us count among the best. of his life. and that he will not. forget, the courage which the Cunndan people have not ceased to display since the com- menoeinent. of the economic crlsls. Lord Wllllngdon goes farther. He 15 not Afraid to propose to the people of England the example of energy and labour which in effect the Canadian people have elven to the world in the course a.‘ the last. six or seven trying years. "The example which Canada has given has convinced me that It. is possible to ensure international frlénlfsfilp and ." he sold. The excellent relations which exist at th. present time between Canada and the United States. two great. eountne which are separated only by on tnuglnery frontier, the good word. of lard Wllllnsdon and demonstrate that what. to pee- elile on the North American eon- ttnent is not la: reellslblg on the old Continent. for the indirect rather than the of this Province. Occnslonly, no doubt. we residents will satisfy our curl- oslty by paylng the enclosure 3 visit, chiefly on Sunday afternoons or when enterttzlnlng guests from the mainland Tn: real benefit that will come to us, however, wlll be from the rlrculatlon of the money expendzd by our tourlrg licnds. whose number we hope and expect. i will be larg:.y uugni ll cu 1r.. .. :1 desire to see and make use of mi- much to be heralded Prince Ed- ward Island National Park. If tn the above my reasoning ls logical then there are only two questions to b: answered, viz. 1. W111 the location selected for the Park depict tn the highest de- gree the outstanding features of the Island, particularly in these respects in which we claim to surpass other summer vacatlon grounds of the Oontlnentf 2 when the Park has becnolm- proved. developed and embellished by the Federal authorities will It. be so attractive to our monk who will visit us during the summer months of future years that they wlll not only speak of it to their friends at. home In terms or high praise but. wlll tlutneelvel rotum toltfromyeertoyesrlfieeerohof their own rest and recreation’! Ndmrheveneuetogrtndm this matter. I In allied with neither pollttoel party and I have no per- sonal interests in any pertlz-u'nr port. of the 151 . since coming to Prince llldwsr Island. hmtover, 1 have tried to study cloeely the possibilities of the future touri.-itry of the Island, which I renrd as one of our chief commercial Meets. and I have found that, nearly forty pohtofvfn end.efter vulunu cost to reproduce them. I believe that we have now reached the ex- treme low, and this is the time that the opportunity presents ltself to lay the foundation for an everlast- ing future. , Today is the time for the oeute lou: man are not afraid to go into debt. The dollar will buy more to- day whether it is cash or whether you so in debt for it -11: doesn't. make any difference. If you have any judgment, buy anything that you can carry for a few years; but remember do not buy anything that you do not know all about. Do not buy any stocks and bonds because some merit! of yours gives you a tip. There is not any question but there are plenty of stocks and bonds that you can buy: that will be perfectly safe. but htwe them thoroighly investigated by some- selflsh interest in selling them to -body who know; and who has no you. - You who live on Prince Edward Island had is good deal better buy is piece of real estate-—whether city real estate or farm land.‘ There has never been a. time wehn you could buy as cheaply as you can today. You can buy plenty of land for a third less than it sold a few years ago. You can buy a home in Charlottetown, tn sum- merslde, or in any of the good town; in the province of Prince Edward Island at real bargain pric- es, and for much less money than lb would actually cost to repro- duce them. The old pendulum that. always 8088 up and down, seems now 120 be starting to swing in and up. ward direction, and la‘. is to be re- membered that the mllllons of And mornlng goes by, And still he is there, Till l. mu tn the sky Calls him bu.-lk to his lnlr In the boughs where the gloom Is 3 part. of his plume. But the boy tn the lane With his gun, by-and-by, To the heart. of the grain Wlll narrowly spy, And the twtllght wlll come, And no crow will fly home. . —John Drlnkwnter. Mr. Ford’s Mistake (sault Star) When Henry Ford dlsembnrked at the New ontnrlo dock in 1910-46 years ago—he sighted Charlie Sul- livan's 1909 Ford car wlth the then rubber license plate attached and so went over and had is chat. with him. Mr. Ford sald.—remember it was l9l0.—-that he figured the saturation point for making cars would be reached in 1914, and so he was on his way to Winnipeg to look into the matter of establishing a plant for making agricultural implements as everybody would be owning a cru- bylthat time and no more could be so d. slender type with short body and long legs, or of the broad type with long body with short or med- ium length legs. The second factor which is most important around the early teens is how near or how far away is puberty (the age when the boy becomes 8 man and the girl he- comes a women.) As you know the ago at wbfeb puberty is reached varies: some boys reach puberty at 14 and the majority at 16: in girls many reach puberty at 12 and the majority n 14. This means that a girl of thir- teen wlll be growing at at more rapid rate than a. boy of thirteen. Sim- ilarly a. boy of fifteen, approaching puberty, wlll be growing more rap- idly than 3 glrl of this age, who has already reached puberty. It has been my privilege to ol- amlne teen one boy» at three lam preparatory schools, and later at A large university at. ages from 16 years upward. A boy in his twelfth year may grow one inch and In- crease in weight five pounds from September to June; 1n his thir- teenth year grow one and one half tnchea and gain eight pounds: in tile fourteenth year grow two lnchel and gain twelve pounds; in his fif- teenth year (almost at. puberty) grow three inches in height. and P1“ on twenty to thirty pounds. Dr. Helen B. Pryor, San Fran- cisco, whose research work on the growth of‘ girls I mentioned once before, records in the Journal 01 Pediatrics, St. Louls, a study of 100 gnu ranging from 9% 15014 yew‘ 0‘ age. Examinations extendtnz 0"“ four years, at half-year lnt.cr\'nY& showed a perfect of very rapid growth immediately before puberty- Gnln ln height came before gain In welzht. During the slx months Im- STOLE MILK FOR. WIFE DONDON—-Joseph Hill, 20, was sentenced to 14 days in 11111 when he W85 charged with stealing a. bottle of milk. He said It was for his wife, who was expecting I baby. DOROI-IESTER, England (OP) -- Flve policemen were summoned from their beats to revlve a men who had collapsed. They massaged People are going to continue to live. they are going to have three meals and they are going to wear flood cfothes. They are going to: have radios and telephones In their homes, and they are going to ride ln automobiles and airplanes. The forum are going to produce: the food, and it. is going to be at a, profit based on the low values at which you can buy farms today. These are the times ln which the man with good judgment is buying, because he recognizes opportunity when It presents ifself. so this is the time to study your lesson on the business chem. You will find that values go up and down as reg- ularly es the waves In the ocean. If you get abroad when the waves up high. you will be carried down with them In spite of Ill your belt efforts. on the other hand. lf you got eboerd when they are down. regardless of your individual of- forts, you will be carried up by the WW9 03 DI'08l>€fll-y that always fol- low the wave of ‘epreeelon. It takes elotofnerve tostep aboard when things are low and any down. be- cause the crowd. the mdi. I: II- wnyii in the other direction. You must have faith in yourself. faith in Jud judgment. faith in your oom- munlty. faith in your town, your city. your province no your coun- trv.1!yvuuo;oin;tontnny- where in the world; otherwise, It wlll plea on end you will be left intending at the urea reed. I am, llr. elm. DONAIII W. l‘l'lWAI'l'. , ‘l’EMPLE‘l‘ON'B RA!-MAE Clpeulee step the man's heart. for five hours, but he died. medtately before puberty the 1431“ in welght was 55 per cent. faster than during the some perlod of the prevlous year. If parents will therefore kcvn 1“ mind that the slender tl/DC “'“°" puberty 8. little later than the broad type and that the shape of the body FREE for ASTHMA and cnnomc BRONIHIYIS winning chukins. |BI' In-kn hm-thine Sm; ena.bley‘p:‘lo :3.'t’...a Ileep in comfort». enters into the "normal" weight for the age, there will often be less con- cern about the hclght. and weigh! 0‘ their child. P am Dill‘ ‘ Of ... .. aria ..,,.... . free it-1.1 wriu'i‘nM1lx.E1'oN um I‘. I in your own eyes. Buy 3 D bum. old... nun.-. N3. Lower Queen Don't Take Bislrr Fire is man’: oldest servant but ll. re- mains u_nt.amed—and as treacherous as a tiger. It strikes swit'tly—unexpected|y, bringing tragedy in its train . . . A care- less match, or even a bit. of defective wir- ing, is enough to set. It free . . . don’t rlsk your home or place of business . . . protect yourself against the ever-present hazard of fire by the only known means-adequate Insurance In trong. reliable companies. ilmlntml & 00., units» Established 1878 Street, Charlottetown Phone 07 and 1001