PAGE room‘ ,_ _. -_'.-.-~.. Inn: imnntorrerowii Gtllilillllil “JV (ll advance) mule‘ h (‘n-In and Ulflll flan Iormli Jhlly nun-am 1mm u.» b» won u: mun» lollvqoo. l'rnidout—‘-7. Uhuur o. llul-orn. vino-random l. llllotj. Secretary-uncut. Col. D. A. llnltlnnon. ll I. 0. Iglltor on! Million-J. ll. Burnett BOSTON-Old lnlflh Nil": 31W YOIIK-Ilollllnln N Aunrlnc lidltorw-l). I. Omnlg ll. Andlerman. 1N Tremolo l0. owl llmnl. I08 Wont MRI ll, NEW GLASGU\V. N. l-I. I. Fllllilll, nUhlllEltfillllfi-lluntor Book Illnvo. IIONTAOUE—\V. A. Johnston. BOUBII—I. I. Logo‘. III GUARDIAN can be obfolned from the following IIIIICI In Oflgvhflgg." l. Brown, Pout Olfloe. I. D. Taylor flvnflnn flirul. l‘! d Gludat. (in-at George direct. Jilrlilmo n. ‘I. Th0‘ ll Whlto, \2fi Elm AID. firm- t 0b.. Queen biirrrf. ll. Whltloeb, Great Gem" street. - Funk N. luayu. l0 . nully. Richmond strut. Jinx. blc-Piinrlnn. Quecn 51rd“, n. Trveel. Lin: Ava. Tomlin: Grocory. Oor. Kant Q [qggqpg J. .. Duffy. "noon Giro-rt. Canada New! Cm, Depot, lilrn. Jannbso , lmnhollu llnfl, Illllnhoro 8 no}, TUESDAY, JULY 23, 1929 .A Manmua axniarr A gratifying announcement has been made by Mr. R. W. Burnaby, Maritime Trade Commissioner in Toronto, that the three ltfariiime Provinces will join in making an effec. five exhibit at the Canadian National Elhibition at Toronto this year. It will be recalled that last year Premier Baxter, when the President of the Toronto Board of Trade suggested a Maritime pavilion in the fair grounds, declared that if the Governments of Nova ficoiia and Prince Edward Is- land would join, his own province would do its part in providing such a nructure. The three Governments havng now agreed upon the matter. tho 7119s are being worked out. While detlii of the exhibit are not yet complete, it is understood that each province will have the opportunity of exhibitng some specal features and the three together will make up an exhibit that will be of great advertis- ing value. As Mr. Burnaby points out, the Iucoess of the enterprise depends up- on the full and hearty co-operation of producersbs well as of the thee Governments. The widest advance publicity should be given to the event, so that all our producers will be acquainted with the importance bf having a. representative showing of the agricultural productions of this Province. Attention must also be paid in the selection of the proper officials to accompany the exhibit and to see that the products of this Province aie properly featured. In view of the increasing market- ing opportunities in Central Canada. the exhibit will beof great importance to our producers. Not only the qual- ity of the products exhibited, but the manner of their preparation for the market and the distribution of at- tractive literature featuring these products and the general attractions of the Province should be considered. The decision of the Provincial Gov- ernment to join our sister Maritime v ’ Provinces in this promising adventure is l step in the right direction, but this step should be followed up by in- suring the very best exhibit of Is- land products, and by seeing that these products are featured to the greatest advantage. In the matter of industrial exhibits we will naturally bc overshadowed by Nova Scotia. and New Brunswick, and the emphasis must necessarily be placed 0n the suP- erior quality of our dairy and agri- cultural products. Whatever the financial arrange- ments in connection with thh exhibit may be, it is important that Prince Edward Island's appropriation be not cutdown to a point which would in- terfere with the opportunity of dis- playing our exhibits to the bes: pos- sible advantage. If the position of our products It the exhibition will depend upon the full payment of our propor- tionate share of the cost, this propor- flbh lhould be paid ungrudgingly. The INDY. il. judiciously expended, M1111- wm‘ m lnvoltment of incul- niil-hlo value w me Province and to the Maritime; ‘mm-uh; have no more than 100 children each, and of these 3,300 have less than 40. Over 1,000 are one-teacher schools." Approaching the question of why the movement towards centraliza- tion, whch offers so much, has made such a little progress, Mr, King 8W8! various reasons, same “f which are o1 general significance. He nye: "The "inertia of committees and officials may account in part, bu?» the major cause is parochial and denominational opposition, A vil- lage may do little to help its own school, but it has a. sentimental ob- ‘ jection to losing it. Parents wish l their children to dine at home. 8nd- pcrhaps, find school meals B. little more expensive. There is a pre- judice-probably s. dying prejudico -agaixist their travelling by motor- bus. , “Objections such as these will not survive experience of a. better sys- tem. and are vanishing already where it exists. Children who have tasted the brighter side of a cen- tral school have no wish, to return to the dull monotony of their vil- lage school: the parents will follow the children's lead.” SAFETY ON THE FARM with the present flare for safety on highway and in factory. says an American agricultural exchange, it is a little suprlslng that no more ut- tentloh is being given to safety on the farm. About this time of the year it i! not unusual to read of farm boys and men being caught in the wheels of tractors or under the sharp edges of farming implements and being killed or injured. In spite of the general attention that is being paid to safety devices. manufacturers seem to be giving less and less attention to guards and protective devices 0n machinery de- signed for use on the farm. Few tractors are manufactured that provide adequate protection for the operator. The result is that farm accidents apparently are increasing. A sudden jolt against a stump or stone, and the pparktor is thrown under the sharp edges of disc or plow or harrow to be mangled and maim- ed. It seems to be a little problem that needs the attention of the saf- ety councils. Just as the toll of hands and arms taken by the corn shredder was reduced by safety de- vices, so accidents from use of trac- tors may be reduced. A POET ON HIS ART Dr. Robert, Bridges, the Poet-Laur- eate, whose literary work is o! that quality which will outlast the bulkier volumes of many of his c-uiempo aries and will pass into the cultural achievement of the race, thus defin- es the object of his art: "Poetry is the power of concen- trating all the far-reaching re- sources of language at one point so that a single and apparently cflort- less expression rejoices the occ- thetic imagination at the moment when it, is most expectant and ox- acting, and at the some time u- tonishes the intellect by a new u- pect of the truth." EDITORIAL NOTES According in medical opinion, even cool-headed men take a hazardous risk when tho! dllpmlo with but: IKE SMALLER- SCHOOL PROBLIM mum‘ m. u“ ‘um.’ The vexed question of maintaining i‘ The new Bonk-noun llama in mo the small school appears to be troub- 3mm; m.“ u, ‘Nu ,4 t” ‘u. ling educntionklistu in mginnd quite o; m, om m“ TM‘ u "m, w“ ‘ n much as it has troubled our own qum, ‘pprgpflgfi, u tug purchulo‘ oOVlfllmflfl ll! "Ill PIOVlDGO I0!‘ power o! ‘h, was!“ “OW.” " lovml your put. and the local ob-‘about 08 cenb. u compared with the joetiom to bringing into affect Iomoldoillr of 18 ‘your: ago. mum of school centralization which would IOIVQ the problem seem in be Jult u insistent. Mr. Bolton King, for many years n Director of Education M Wlrwieksnirs, makes n fmnce to lllil matter in his “Schools of To- heavily in comparison with flu fir.” "The magnitude of the ques- fln,“ he nya, "is lmwn by the flct um 021m you and out of all pio- ponion to the lncmn in an lun- W. 93 31n°§§I¢§°h_ 7£1‘_“ “"- 3‘ The Halifax Herold il authority m- cm statement tint the admins of mOtOI lwfdbllll ma 465m u Nun 800th in 1020 hlvfiflolfillfl Q‘. -.-u-i~.... lgloies ByThe Way Twenty-nu yam In Cecil Rhodes founded his famous scholarships in order to realise, if possible, hi; dream for an educational tie that would promote understanding between the 19161118 nations of the world. He was the fourth son of Bishop Btortford, Hertfordshiro, England and was born on the 5th of July, 1853. He was sent for his health to Natal, where his brother was a planter. Later he went to Kimberley, and there in the diam- ond mines he accumulated a. for- tune. Rhodes died at Cape Town, South Africa, March 2B, 1902, when he was not yet 50 years old. In his will he bequeathed about ten million dollars to provide for the scholarships above referred to. Tenablg at Oxford, Eng- land. The income for each scholar- ship is $1,500, and two were offered for each British Colony and two for each state in the American Union. During the quarter century since the scholarships have been available there have been elected 1,519 Rhodes Scholars, 764 from the United States. 698 from the British lands oversea and 57 from Germany. These last were suspended during the war, but were paid till 1914. lnaislent demands are being made upon the Ottawa Government for a withdrawal of clearances granted to rum-laden vessels from Canadian to United States ports. As has been al- ready notnd in The Guardian, there has been a demand, which was strongly supported by leading Liber- al newspapers. Hon. Mr. Euler, Min- ister of National Revenue, throws the entire responsibility upon the Dominion ‘Parliament. The Toronto Globe in its issue of July 18 returns to the discussion un- der the editorial headline, “Must the Voters Decide?" This article raises the presumption that probably the great majority of American readers are quite unaware of the fact that this traffic is largely, if not wholly in the hands of Americans, and that if they would jail a. certain number of their own citizens it would be greatly curtailed for the time being. One thing the American people do know is that much of the liquor comes from Canada and that it is shipped for export with a. ceremony that appears to give it the official blessing of this country. “Since it is the business of Parlia- ment, to act, in this matter then 1t is the business of the people. Must one of the issues in the forthcoming campaign be the cancellation of these clearances?" asks the Globe. And it goes on to say, “It would appear so, if the members of the Canadian Parliament are so short-sighted as to make a. national issue of the routine work of an excise official-and pos- sibly an international issue. And it is to be feared that if the voters are to be called upon to settle a. matter of this sort they will not go to the polls with a high opinion of the Government already chosen to gov- em." 1t is good new: that rain has come all over the Prairie Provlncel. al- though it is too late to wholly save the wheat crop. It will no doubt. ben- efit the later wheat and other field crops and do much good in other ways, as to pasturage, etc. It cannot save the thousands of acres that have been plowed under. It reads strangely down here in the Far East, that there is considerable unemployment in the three Provinc- es between the Great Lakes and the Rocky Mountains. Those now idle, we are told. are "waiting for the har- vest and the threshing and shipping" seasons yet to come. The chief Liberal organ in Nova Bcotin appears not to be 11111" 5° phcrisaicaily dry us its chief Lib- eral contemporary in this Province. but appearances are often deceptive. And the plebiscite in Nova Scotia. is not due until October. Many things may happen during the next two or three months. And the unexpected happens almost as frequently l! W“ which i: confidently predicted. Our Jsvoml Jrévinco is blessed with glorious weather, frequent rc- frllhing showers, field crow 810W- ing and tourist visitors are loud in their praises of the beauty of the Gordon of the Gulf, I'll of which is very satisfactory tn Guard-inn rndm. ' » Ancient llnooh Found vlombin marrying at lime-kiln! ctormwmumtromuy found on mmbrooobinacrmce all Jodktwofutbelowtbo n:- fmoftblmmuuanntingmmun manure 91B- ofilmoi. More‘ than 010.000.1200 worth of Amman ind trill machinery m rm: cmuznorr What I012 of curs By lame; If. Burlon, LLD. ,_,__ ANGINA PECTOBXS You are reading quite often about angina. pectoris. that ctr-angling op. pressive pain in the chest over the heart which unfortunately jg becom- ing more common than in former years. The paints very severe, of a suf- focating natura that causes the put- ient to stop in his tracks. unable to when attack comes on he make; no attempt to sit or lie down. If sitting down he remains in this position with every muscle tensed 1n a. sort of ef- fort to ward off the pain, ' The skin “appears grey 1n color. covered with cold sweat, and the whole picture is one of unspeakable agony." Whilethe Pain is most severe, it is the terror, the feelin, of impending death that is the outstanding char- acteristic of the attack. ‘This fear seems to be a. symptom in very many cases irrespective of how brave of hearifthe individual knows himself to be. There is a “sense" of impending disaster, of breathlessness, apprehen- sion, melancholy and such emotional agony that the suffering is nearly as Erect as from the pain itself." Notwthstnnding the fact that these patients have numerous attacks from which they have always recovered they are nevertheless always terror. iced by them. _ Unfortunately physicians are un- able to diagnose this condition by an examination of the heart itself as it does not give any characteristic sounds or murmurs, and the blood pressure may be normal or just slightly above normal. 0f course if the physician sees the patient during an attack, the dlag- nosis 1s simple. I havcqseen cases where the pgfi- ients were able to’ swim or walk con- siderable distances without inducing an attack, but walking at aslightly faster pace, going llpstalrg, m- umng an object. would almost always bring on an attack. ' The most frequent cause is emo. tlonal “stresses and excesses. Anger, grief, even pleasurable emotion ex. periences. are the most frequent; ex. citors of attacks." Overeating is another cause, Treatment during "an attack is heat to the heart, one or two nitro. glyccrine tablets 11100 grain which most patients carry in their pockem, 0110411811111 grain tablets of morphia is also good treatment, Rest between attacks, sllfflical treatment has been suc- cessful in some cases. THE LAND WE LOVE BY FRANK YEIGB THE PRE-CAMBRXAN snmu) Q- What is the Pro-Cambrian Shield? A. The Pre-Cambrian shield lg g highly mineralized area stretching from Labrador to the mouth of the Mediemle River. around Hudson Bay 1""! T580111“! as far south as the st, Lawrence River. Hundreds of mu- “"11 °1 dollars v! sold. silver, nickel and other minerals have been ex. "Tmlted fllmldy. but such quantities "6 Deillgiblc in comparison with the vast output that _ is in prospegb, The mineral wealth of that area has scarcely been scratched. Much of the ierrlivry has not even been explored. and the current activity in explora- "011. 6511961111? by aeroplane, prom- 1m to yield important results in the near future. ' mm FIELD-LARK _ (To A. E. D.) Ah, though doubtless you over Other songs are loyalist,- None caste such a spell o'er m; As the field-lurk’: sorcery, It recapture: one swift yeti‘ When the Golden Age drew near,- Summer by the Bconset lhori With the ocean at the door“ The worm smell of bayborry And sweet fern comes beck to mo, Andthofioorof blue and laid ham the bill's ‘foot in unrolled. I can fool tbs loft wind blow, speak or even move. If standing- ETOWN GUARDIAN ‘Vimy Memorial "LB-R." Ill The Mlnllobl F866 PIGII It takes the express train from Puis two hours to make the run to the city o1 Arras. Two hours is not very lone 1n passing. When we got of! It Arru and looked out of the station-o new station “nd looked at the town, whose streets radiate from the station plaza. like the spokes of a. great wheel-we saw the town was a. new town too. We strolled about-between heavy rain gusts out of a fickle June sky—-and took a look at the buildings. Good streets“ clean dwellings, couriways, walls tav- erns. cobblestones, pavements-all‘ fresh, agreeable, pleasant to see. we were looking for the Rue d: Fold-j herbe and couldn't find it, so we ent- l ered o. tavern placardcd with they sign "English spoken," and inquired; our way. ' The waiter called over a slim, brown-faced youngish man who was taking shelter in the doorway; a youngish man who wasn't so_ young, but wearing on a bit; and he told u: in real English-he came from the town of Cambridge-where to find our street: he stepped into the rain with us and walked over a bit of the way. He had been in Arras. or the Ari-as area, during the War, and was now working in Arras as a taxi-driver, and he explained that. all the part of the town there before us was re- built on the site of the old town which had been blown away by the bombardmenis. The station had been destroyed: "that's a new one,” he said, "and a better one: the old one didn't have those concrete bridges." So only two hours’ train ride from Paris, cities have been blown down or whole sections of them obliterated by shell-fire. It made Paris seem awfully close to the battle-front. We knew, of course, that the German line had pushed much nearer to Pur- is that that even, but standing in the streets of Arras, and looking at those rebuilt houses, when only a couple of hours before we had been in the busy uproarof Paris, gave the thing a substance and a menace we had not previously been conscious of. The Germans, however, had not held Arras; they had destroyed 1t by artillery fire, and they had com- manded it, and all thehadjacent ter- ritory, from ‘a strong defensive po- sltion known as Vimy Ridge," some eight or nine miles north-east of the the town. It was Vimy Ridge, not Arras particularly, that we had come down to see. ‘ Vimy Ridge is one of the great Canadian battle-fields. On the 9th of April, 1917, beginning at half-past ilve in the morning, all four of the Canadian divisions, with some bri- gades of the British Army, made a full-dress attack along the whole line of tho German positions, and after heavy fighting drove out the Ger- mans,‘ and took possession of the Ridge. It was one of the greatest combats of the war; it was Canada's battle: and it is on the summit of Vlmy Ridge that Canada's memorial to her war dead is being built; on the edge of the Ridge, where it reaches out in two great curving arms to the plains below, Canada's memorial will stand, with its back to-France and the ocean, and its front to Germany. Captain Simson, who is In charge of the construction of the memorial drove us out from Arras to see how it was progressing. The sky was full of towering livid clouds, sweeping down at inetrvals in showers and then faring off for brilliant intervals of sunshine: the east heavy with storm as the ca: ran up to the high ground on which the memorial over the Ridge. Two hundred and seventy acres here, containing the system of Canadian trenches and tunnels used in preparation for the grand attack of April 0, and contain- ing also part of the German tunnels and counter-mining shafts only aiew yards away from those of the Can- stands, ands. strong wind beating " my 23.192, of I A S Midsummer Sale 11.50 Will Buy Any-One of so Mel». Suits Worth $25.00 to $29.51) Come Today! We are Cleaning up our Stock. Henderson £3” Cudmore m . ‘ m 'Men’s Suits. $17.50 MEN'S WEAR i i fl . ~11 forward on the war memorial. There are squared-off blocks of white stone lying around-each wishing some twenty tons or so; white as marble and hard as gran- ite: beautiful stone. The size and weight of the stones convey an idea of the heroic dimensions the monu. ment will have when it t; finisher-L The concrete foundations and under- pinning are completed and the structure of the memorial itself is beginning to take shape. workmen B" 901111111113 stone surfaces with hammers, smoothing them for the perfect jointlngof the masonry. The facade is up-a wide white wall 1,111,. ty feet high, and the whole frontage of colossal white blocks ‘is smooth as glass. Llntels are being moved into 1111168 and levelled. The hammer tlnkes on the crystalline stone; the lintel is pushed a little more and the level BCYIIPBS across it: the workmen are conferring in the Frenclrlang. wise; underfoot are white chips and slivers of stone; there is an iron drum, a windlau, and an inclined pllme to pull the massive blocks to their position; four years’ work have already gone into the monument, and two years more, we were told, would be necessary at the very least to finish it. Over on the graded ter- races in the left is a cluster of rusty German shells, and out in the east- ern plain lie Lens and Loos and Vlmy and other towns-all new, fresh, shining in the sprakllng rain- washed air: they are the new cities which have arisen on-the sites where the old ones were overwhelmed by the war. From the top of the facade we look away over the Belgian plain across which the Germans storms in 1914. Against the skyline on the left is the dark tower of Loretta, where 50,- 000 French soldiers lie buried. Var- ious other memorials are in the vi- cinity, and a German cemetery with endless rows of blackening wooden crosses is in the vicinity too: "forty. seven thousand Germans buried there." ~They are still burying the war dead in the cemefkries around Vimy. As the farmers clear out the corners and tangles of their fields- although the country generally looks excellent, and in fine cultivation-the remains of the fallen, hidden and lost for twelve years or more, are often turned up, and can sometimes, too, be identified by their discs. You can see the open graves in the cemeter- ies; and the gravediggérs are at work as the car passes. The monument on Vifny Ridge is being erectzd by the Canadian Gov- V . i Science Now Says " SUNLIGHT FOB. VIGOBOUS HEALTH , AND STRENGTH" But never a word about Sun- burn or Sunuorob. True Bun- ahine in moderation l: good. adiana, ' u, r e - bu‘ . . a '__ u“ by the Government of France. It is ,g|n,_m;h| 1g pun]; ung u]; H m . . . A ‘m in this am‘ that the in progress. and the Ridge itself is being preserved as the war left it-- trenches, shell-holes. mine craters- tho punched. gushed and shattered cm into which the smooth B11911 mound was transformed by the guns. S Time and nature. however. l" N- pliflng in their own quiet way, the wounded and torn ground; and thou- nnds of Canadian 111"" b!" 59°" planted and are rooting in among the craters and mail-holes: begin- ning their silent work of salvage and healing too. We go over to the brow of the Ridge to see the work 801118 Iromanutupopthelrmmdu . - filmy a morning in the hills llyencbcntndcpiritthrilln xnvauuqb-mtmum. Ofnnuloniufpeu. nmamlbornofucwunu humor-amoebic: _- bearable polo. Now this ll when we ntep In and fool OLD MAN SUNSHINE, next time you: nkln gall nnsoorohcd 1on1! 1M1!- MAC‘! WITCH IIAZIL OBIAM Almmt immediately that sting- mg pain is cone. he'll: WI!’ nth 5| ooftly, Illflltfll] mold vent 9" out int mouth on Ian's 0mm and powder our it, um it with!!! wbongohgon nitlnmfiulytloonlopubpttlo- e1 t ‘ to commemorate the entire Canadian sacrifice of men in the war. It is Canada's memorial, ‘and it gives promise of being ‘one of the great monuments of the world war when it is finished. Every Canadian who visits north France, or Belgium should aee- it. The clouds have vanished, and skylarks are singing high in the sweet air above Vimy Ridge. The Belgian plain spreads itself out lux- urinntly in the rich sunlight. From the monument comes the murmur of workmen! voices and the thin tinkle of the hammer on the ringing stone. O Canada! The true Nor and free! Here on this battle-mum wind-swept Rldflfl was {he proof Game (lemon by Alwyn, A ma“; o! his Same of Mask“ being made from the air by the u aska Game Commission. on o, flight over the Big 13ers, "m southeast of Fairbanks, 500 “m, and nine moose were coulited_ y“, the Toklat Rive;- 20 machine trim, ened the caribou, which m, j, shelter, but the moose were my, iurbed. AN EXCELLENT ASSORTMENT OF BATHING CAPS AT THE CENTRAL DRUGSTORE We are showing a complete line of Bathing Clpg and Bathing Suit Bill, in all colori. shapes and Ilzeo. The Bathing Season in now hero in full lwlng. so n1 brown-ea t» enjoy it o» u» mum oxlnllt by getting u. new and fashionable bathing outfit. Our price; range from 15o to $1.00. Sec these goods before making your , ‘ , E. A. Foster n13; ab?» Sunnyside Potronize Our Bods Fountain when Tired and Thirsty. Excellent Drinks and Good Service, b . A New Pension Policy— providing protection to age 60 in event of death or total disability. and an unfailing monthly income begin- ning at age 60, and continuing throughout the lifetime of the insured. plus PROFITS, which may be used annu- ally to reduce the premium, or left with the Company to accumulate at a high rate of interest, and drawn in a lump sum at age 60. ‘ For full particulars consult your Great West Life Agent, or Hyndman £8 Company Ltd. Provincial Managers Lower Queen Street Charlottetown, P. E. I. ‘A It'a_right full of it and you‘ can t chew it out "be: use it a grown in'tl'io_lea . and kept there by the cure‘. Alvnyu all t»