A strength they had that day who“ ‘ PAGE ITOUIZ Y TIIE BHARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN u," 9n your (In adv-anon mllll Inning Ilmlv frmimfru rnndenb-tb. Chum-r n. Blfl-llf-l firrrotary-llivul. (‘|\I. l). Idllor and Manner-J. ll._liurnvll U"?! $31M: nmf fmlnl minim-oi rlmmn v-m no n-r ui-r-Pnenuu-ul-J. n. flurrrll. A Film lflunnli, :0 I4. 0 . Arunwlnlo P-ulu-r-li. (‘urns- FRIDAY, APRIL 12th. 1929 THE Macrame AND run ream} Perhaps the most significant move- ‘ meat. in the world today is that from i the farm to the city. The rapidity? of this movement. may be gauged by‘ the fact that in the decade preceding the census of 1921 the urban 001W" latlon of Canada increased by 1.079,- 115, while fhe rural population iv- crouedby only 502,665. or roughly speaking’, the population cf the cl:- iesJnci-eased by a million, while that ofthe country (as apart item the urbanicentres) increased by only half a million. In the Unliecl incnt from ecun 11v lo cizj; is even‘ more marized. In 11120 l\I‘(‘I)i‘dll!'§ 10 fire census cf that year, on: of fort)’ one and a half millions cilcugctl in graiuful oecupa inns, cnly 963 i)" cent were cmnllwcd in llgilcldiuix’. lliifllfll iiusban:l:y' and IOlLsmy- The machine is drzivsiiig the Wim- klilcn from the farms at s razci ‘which, ii it 001111111105 much longer,‘ will endanger the food supply of the I world. The cilies must be icd and the cnly means of feeding; them is‘. by (h; product c! the farm. True the invention of labor saving ma-J cnincry. Ls 510.3411; of!‘ the cvil day‘ while at the some time increasingly" dcpcpulating lhe farms, The ma- diine is a doublc-barrclleci power, Iii enables us to do more work, ‘while, States the more-i a‘. the same time throwing men cut 0f employment. f‘.nc:liei' of ‘the machine is to produce in ex-. ccss of dtmatzd and this is nznvbeing‘ keenly felt, csprcially ln the United‘ Slates where, azcciuiing to reliable giausgigs, 40 per cent of the product cf the factories never reaches its function . " intended ziesiinalion and is scrollllfil to prevent a gfilt and a consequent reduction of prices, thereby (‘filling to the‘ ccst cf lhinl- This roughly is the situation to-, day. How i. is- gain”. i0 “Elli 1C9" it‘ were idle to syccuirie upon. On: thin; only is sure; ilic f: ‘m is fir: world's stcnrlby and i‘:.o.":2 who am drawn away from l: Will b’! 05313"!- to reixarn .0 if. In million". of sooner or lrtcr. Canada ivhilc tlicrc -. 591-5}; of good land mailing cxilll- ration, the inimcdiaw PYOYPBEI 35 encouraging. The grorving centres oi polrihiicn both in Canada and he United States must be 50111711011 ‘"1111 the‘ products of the farms. Tariff. walls, will no‘. alter the fact»: they mayi i "Ii he (Premier Saunders) will ‘refer io i120 very carly pages of that irepnrt of 102s he mu find that in .1027 the debt of the Province-not iLhf.‘ "llabilhy" but the de-bt—wa.s in- iereased in that year by the sum of 15131000. If he refers to his own ex- iernal audit, the last of his, appar- cnily, firs‘. will ever appear-fire out- :ldc aucii‘. of . Poole and Scarth-hc will find that when he 1 lock office in August, 1927. there was a surplus In fhc treasury. Therefore ‘l do not think i1 lies in hi5 mouth uuxv to say that he is not icrponsible for iiiai increase in debt of $159,000. (Applause) If he refers to the siaiementcf the iliobilltles of Lhc Province in the last {provincial audit, he will find that |ihc dcbt was increased in 1928 by jscmc $106,000. So that out of the mouth of his Provincial Auditor, by ‘ whom he swears. and his own exter- nal ‘nudlforti whom he appointed last year, lie has increased the dtbt by some $350,000 since coming info powcl‘. (ApplauseL-JIDTI. J. D. Stew- art. in lhe Budget debate. cause inconvcnicruc for a ‘time but eventually they must yield to the everlasting law of sulllily 5111'- d?‘ mamiAnd then the Canadian far- mer‘ will come into his own. SO TIIEY SAY! The followinr: hgyéHbi-Etn culled chiefly ficzn i112 Budget ‘debate and arc presented nor; in tile form of a bouquflt in o1‘- dcr that their fragrance may be cn-‘ joyed while s ill fresh. "I would advise my colleague; Unit f; mgy be a little (iangcrous to be too sanciimonious. This epidemic miillli Bet into this House and carry H 200d k many of us'aWSY!"—H°"4 Di" Gm" 9W9 dontwcnt Government C0 - u“; Th“ is the kind 0f a country w; have. Charlottetown gave it i?‘ them: they are the class of people wgnythat stuff. But we are not that class 0f people. We dozi“. mint firm-Mr. n. n. Cox. "When you can get a man to snefiii f as intelligent as he (Premier Saun-i ' deta) did for over two hours, with-i cubs note. Just from his mind, we mun take off our hats to him. I thWlk he is wondcrfuF-ffon. Mr. “Page. “The teachers were 100% Fed- eritlon but they got the wronl! cm‘ mand, and today they are smashed to piece; and will never regain the they rushed to destruction like 10¢ whip 8-: IfundredJK-Hon. Dr. Grant. ‘ ‘ _' ' .~1;;n the descendants of one ‘m: .090»?- nmivn to u» roumi no fig funk! a pile eightJlmfl a: an u div druid-Mr. f. n. Al- Ilhblbfflllinthefifb rhetorical flomrs ‘ Hon. B, W. LePage. "There was some objection by the Opposition to the restriction on the Indian vote (in lhe Pls-biscite Act). They were afraid in case of a scrut- iny that some of them would lose H1011‘ vclcJK-Hon. Dr. Grant. "All they (the Conservative Gov- ernmcuil done W85 to fill in the time and take oil the iaxes."—l\fr. H. A. Darby. _ ‘ _ "We are proud today that our LFRKIPI‘ stood firm on that occasion" (cf the teachers’ strike) “and he is , getting great credit all over this Pro- v.u:c for so dolng."—lfon. Dr. Grant. “it is not a very serious crime, and I don't see why the penalty should be so heavy. Why should we put laws on tile Statute books that can‘: be cuts": d. or that, can't legally bc e".foi'cor‘?"—llcn. i111‘. LePage, (dis- clzsnng a clause in the City Assess- "ment Act penalizing tax payers for knoivlngiy making false statements rcgarding property valuation). SETTLEIZS IN CANADA "It i5 anonuriccd" says ihe Mone- ton Thncs, “that Hon. Robert Forke, Canadian Minister of Immigration, has a new plan for inducing settlers to come to Canada. But it must oc- cur to most people that it should not be necessary to coax and pay settlers o come ‘lo Canada. This country has the largest unoccupied wheat areas in the u-orld. it has the greatest 1'9- msilning pulpwood and other timber resources, it has the mast exiensive coast and sea fisheries in the world. it has the worldst richest nickel and asbestos mines, with great deposits of coal, iron and other minerals, and yet our Government is takinglmil- liens of money collected in taxes in the effort f0 altract new settlers, while many of our own people are leaning tize country. If Mr. Forke and his colleagues would devote more attention to formulating policies that would result in the detrclopment 0i'_ our rcscurccs and the creation of izsmo markets for the lymefit of our own people i. would not be necessary to formulate new plans for attract- ing immigrants. They would flock acre in such numbers that Canada could take her pick and choice of the bcs’. in the world and exclude all unclesirabics. DEBT VERSUS » LIABILITIES EDITORIAL NOTES Mr. W. C. S. McLurc pointed out in the budget debate yesterday. it is very difficult for the Opposition to discuss the public affairs of the Pro- vince when the Ministers in charge of the departments lag behind in their reports. Owing to the ill- ness of the Hon. Mr. 1e: the House will have no speech on his depart- ihent at mu session, and although the budget debate hu been in prog- rm now for several days, the Minis- m- of. Public Works maintained a stubborn pllunca until int night. This obvious attempt at jockeying {q- pa- siiion should b0 beneath tbl dignity _ P! i Notes ByThe Way The late Basil King in hi! llhlb book recently published, treat: of the Seven Torche: of Character. One chapter treats of the importance of honesty, and stresses dishonest, as a great national vice of his country, the United States. “Not only has it. become our national vioe —cf proportions far more appalling than the drink evil ever was"—-he says “but there is almost nopublic opinion to counteract it." He goes on to remark that the press does not talc: it up; the Church does not take it up; good citizens hold no meetings to protest against lifeless submission to such attacks upon their public safety, and take no measures to see that it shall not be indefinitely repeated. Apart from what is done by the police no thought of any kind is given to the subject. Mr. King finds . it a matter "of common knowledge that the crime record in this countryis the most ap- palling in the world. but nobody seems to care. Three years ago the American Bar Association published a report giving the statistics o! crime-that is crime directly or in- directly connected with dishonesty in one or another of its many forms- and some good people expected the churches to take it up and deal with it. But the pulpit was practically dumb. They left such matters to the police. But that is not the worst of it ac- cording to the writer we are following. He tells that it is right out of the churches that the grafters, thieves and bandlm spring. The shady men of busines have been brought up in Sunday schools and are sending their children there. Thousands of thernhave been choir boys, altar boys, members of church clubs, of Boy Scout troops, of Bands of Hope, according to religious affiliations. Th-ey are not as a rule dark creat- ures of the underworld; they come from respectable families. What they have lacked is sound moral training. The wickedness of theft has doubtless been pointed out to them, but it has not been ground ln.. How often do our ministers of re- ligion talk to us of such a. theme as honesty? What Savonorola. what Wesley, ever warns that dishonesty. from small filfering up to stagger- ing nation-wide fraud, is undermin- ing our characters both as l. people and as lndivuais? This very morn- ing, “ln the language of-thc book. I read in the papers that yesterday the houses of five of my friends and neighbors were broken into, and that the church which I attend had its poor-box robbed. 5o it is all over the land, a daily annoyance when it is no worse. It is not so in other countries, even in some that we think backward." Mr. King goes on to tell oi’ spend- ing some months at a large hotel of international reputation in Cannes. France. He was locking his‘ room door behind him on going out when u passing housekeeper reminded him that there was no need to do so. He found it true as she mid him, th:t nobody locked their rooms except when going to bed. The chapter on honesty closes with a question and a warning. “What is the flaw in the Ameri- can character which makes us look like a nation of potential thieves?" the author asks. Some one else will have to give the answer which Mr. Basil King declined to give. His closing words of warning are these. “I cannot but feel that the situation is serious enough to warrant crying a warning from the housetopa in season and out of season, whether men will hear or whether they will forbear." We hope and believe that thing's are better in Prince Edward mend. but the daily recordsof our police courts and magistrates courts lhow that n‘ very large proportion of the criminal charges that come before them have their origin in' one or other of the many forms of dishon- esty. Petty tbievery, stealing foxes and other valuables. house-breaking, burglary and hold-ups come within this category. We hnve a plenty of preaching and teaching from pulpit and press commending prohibition u temperance, and ‘ condemning the moderate use of wine or bur ll _l crime, but who pruchc: or mums common honesty u a mourn-y ‘vir- tue, or in like manner donouncbl the vice and crime which mung from dlshoues‘ and, palpable pri- tence? In luch matter! it wo Id seem um. oui-‘wny: ma.» cq ." J m u the intuit would u mu action‘ impuu doubt’ planni- ofpucb continuance. ‘ .' in Nov: emu u ammonia eminent arc aublaiiainl v THE . CIIARI.O1"I‘I~‘.TII\VNi H!‘ nu u \ N, , Q5001"! 5| Inna W Brion. u‘ nwrnsnny m rumour ma ' DEAFNISS n_.i.. I have spoken before about dia- thermy, the method o! getting heat into the ‘inner part of the body with- out burning the skin. It has been used by Dr. Orile of Cleveland in maintaining but in the abdomen during an operation. Dr. l". B. Granger. Boston tells us um. it is of value in pneumonia. a it lessens pain, improves umporlriiy the heart's action, and induces sleep. By relieving the pain and increas- ing the amount of rest, the patient is in better shape to meet thé crisis. And now Dr. Dan McKenzie, Glas- gow, Scotland, says that in favorable cases of chronic middle ear deafness, diathermy improves the hearing and diminishes the noises-humming, ringing, whirring, and other noises- that accompan some forms of deaf- ness. The middle ear. as you know, is where the Circe little bones are loc- ated that carry sound from the drum of the our to the brain. He describes the method ll follows: The electrodes used are of_ metal, of the same sizeftha superficial meas- urements bein! 1 inch by 1% inches. One is placed over the mastoid pro- cess (the bony lump behind the ear), and the other is laid 0W0 the face Just below the prominence of the cheek bone. A pad of lint cooked in 10 per cent salt solution is placed be- tween the electrode and th skin. The current used varies from 0.7 to 1.4 umperes; it is [raduglly urged from uro to the point when the pug. lent begins to feel the skin becoming too hot. and then reduced to the point where the patient can bear it com- fortably, and kept there from 7 to l0 minutes. , The patient should remain lying down for a short . time After the treatment. The treatments lhould be repeated every other day and 1m- provment, if it is going to occur ‘at all, should be noted ct end of the second or third week. There may or mly not be a reactionary dulling of tho hwrlnz for the um 1a or an hours. In the presence of pus, or in cages where the little bones in um ear have grown together, dlathenriylhould not be used. I have quoted freely because you miy be a sufferer from Ceataess, and yo"! H? Specialist will be able to tell you whether or ‘not diathermy may be 1191M’!!! in your particuln- typg o: deafness. ‘III! SPIDER A noiseless, patient spider, 1 markd where, on a little promon- _ fory. it stood. isolated; Mark?! how, to explore the vacant, vast surrounding, It launch‘d forth filament, filament. out of itself; Ever unreciing them-ever tirelessly speeding them. And you, 0 my Soul, where you stand, Surrounded, surrounded, in mesure. less oceans oi space, Ceaselessly musing, venturing, throw- inp-seeking the spheres, to connect them; ’ Till the bridge you will need, m; form'd--liil the ductile anchor hold; ' Till thl Iossamer thread you fling, catch soméwhere, O my 3on1, -wuc- Whitman. Montreal, Canada, aircraft plant. Many new nutobus lervlcca are b"!!! liar-led in Japan. ' ‘is to have a new pruaed their pleasure" by chairing her heartily. ‘ - 11h- Two Provlnm. um our; and Prince Edward‘ faiilikf. which have retained their prohibfibry in: until now or: both iskinflpiobhcftu cm: yesr to ascertain vubtiriii and: peoplo cum w oonfinm u» minority m or usage m n». um r mum dovn-ndfui. ‘inc The March of Science (Excerpt from Scientific American) were started ue the 30, 40, or 50 faster than ones. be greatly improved ministration. What. st: I idings policy, armaments, Niagara Pails will cord authorizing m; PUYQMQS. recover quickly from much ca! zondioadde can also b: applied which suffer greatly where the soil is badly tr by crowds. The air for pneumatic drills Science service. Henry has beeen granted a 2d inio a rubber ion 920i; t0 live, then, speed! Automobile hearse; are much the old horse-drawn cefera, they are, Indeed, need of improvement. Compressed air forced in‘ the roofs of large trees that have Men transplanted has been found m be of csaistancein using the tree to Proof to show u: positively that speed is oftau a saver of :0 little time as to be absolutely unneoelllry is offered, by the American Mad Builders’ Association. ‘Ii-ifs associa- tiom cites a test made by c. Chicago tell-cob oomvony to show u» mt- iiity of unreasonable apeed u a means of gaining time, "Two ab; simultaneously. dos. ilncd for a point nine miles distant, over n. main thoroukh fare of that 61W. Ono traveled at top speed and the other at u reesombla speed. The Fpeodln: cab arrived at if: destin- ation only four minutes prior m m; arrivd of the safety “b, 13mm o; lauords were created (by the fami- cab), lives were endangered, prop- eriy imperilled. and law: violated- all for four minutes timc."--ll 0111i’ 0M W108 further need be aid: u’ 5”" "We l “V1118 o"! one half a minute per mile more than you u}- years you ex- by all means, Fflfihlly an asteroid, or miniature planet, discovered by Professor Jon. ann Pallsan of Austria. was named "HWVBPB" by a. unanimous vote of the senate of Vienna. Unlveraimln honor of the mm who fed starving wutorn Europeans during the World War, ‘The loci: that our new Presid- ent conuriands such respect and m. mlratlon abroad lends us to hope cmn§ that our international relations will (during m; .4. with misunder- ‘mnoaming questions of war debts, ct sadly in be saved. Early in January, William Mackenzie King‘ Prime Minister of Canada, and wu- "am Phillips, the American Minister signed in Washington, D. C. an ac- construction of the remedial works recommended by the InternatlonalNiagaraBosi-d/rlm work is to consist primarily of “h. "lifted weir: and excavations in the Nliids above the falls, ‘ bended tb Preserve the scenic beauty of the Falls and to poi-nut diversion of more water for power genemtion among the disturbance as in most planting operations the dirt is thrown back into the " soil with s0 much water that if puddles and prevents the roots from getting 09°85"? air from the soil. The Mme oompresua u: treat"- meni is stimulating to fr”; m lawns where, apparently. the roofs 0! the densely matted $113595 19pm. m! tho sod sometimes ' ' l0 in respiration that the supply of oxygen in the soil is dangerously reduced. The method , gas mains and from soil compact- neu due to paving, or to park trees . A recently invented machine, the ‘reietypesettcr, sets type by telegraph. It is not a. typesetting machine it- self, but operates such o. machine autonltlcnlly by electrical impulses. At the lending end, l. machine sim- fliar to a typewriter perforate: a piper tape in code. This perforated time. automatically fed into another xmchine. causes perforation of a similiar tape at 1hr.- recoivlxxg stat-ion perhapaihundred of miles away. This duplicate tape is fed into another mechanism which operates a type- setting machine at lrmt speed. A mechanical "printer" also typewriies the menus at the some time. That this imchinc will have a wide field of use is unquutlonable. while it was dealsned primarily for transmitting news more rapidly over long distances-for example w a chain of newspapers or to subscrib- era of a brass service-m: will be of great importance in book publishing and in sending stock quotatloim to newspapc a. Book publishers usiu this machine need not save tons of new editions but may simply keep files of the perfomted tape rolls. Ohe o! the most ambitious plans that nun hl-l aver considered is that for reclaiming part of the waste land o! the Sahara Desert by means of, not irrigation in the general lease o! the word. but actually in: the climate of the region. In Northern Africa are many 11110 dry like beds. All 0f this ter- ritory is below sea. level, and the present plan is to construct n. canal to the Medlierrmian Sea. When this in finished the waters of the sea will flow through‘ the man-made channel and fill the below-sen level basin. It is said that the result will be an inland no with an are: of 80,000 square miles. ‘Thus far will the W01‘! of man Bo in the achievement of the desired result. Nature will take up the burden. The dry wind: sweepin: up from the south, moss this new inland sea. will pick 11D evaporated moisture, and con-v it tofha range of mount- ains to the north. Here the moisture will hi! as rain. and the entire 011m‘ adc conditions of the realm will be chewed, _ _ n m‘; been proved that the land of the section under consideration is inherently fertile, needin! only wai- eg- to render it fruitful. If this project is carried tin-ouch to l. auccessfui conclusion, and ifs mlcnitude lhbuld not be an obstacle in Pro-Bollt-day engincerini, there is no doubt that Northern Africa. will bloom forth as one of the garden spots of the earth. and will become one of the important agricultural centers. Th: Public Forum | This ‘column l: open for the dlscnnlon by corrupnndents o! question: of internal. This to street trees gram 1mm.‘ t-hsrloiiefown Gun-dim don not unusual-ll endorse the opinion: of w" pendants. is supplied by DOGS any air pump such as those used to fill air tanks a; service stations or and is forced info the soil through a deep nozzle. “any dying trees Cnn be encourag- ed to take a new lease upon life by a treatment of compressed air-- Ford has entered into a rontract. with the state of’ Para, Bra- zii, under the ilcrms of which he concession of 3. 7.0000000 users of land to be develop- piantation. The Ford Industrial Company of Braall contracfs to plant rubber trees n1: a specified rate oer your Ind 0511mm! itself to pay a percentile of the bro- uu after the um twelve yam‘. o the state of Para and the muncipnl- ities within the borders of the 00m cession, In return, the company i: to bu exempt from taxe: for 50 yuan. mport duties on machinery, and equipment, and is authorised to m- atruct warehouses. noon. whool: and whatever other buiidinfl- my be memory, m i: ollowodbb’ export it: rubber‘ without gupcrvlq- facmipi, For" centuries the famoun 10min] Tower of Pin has been sinking vh- tieoliy into the loft river unavoid- imlntl on which it reltl. It till: I'v- Orlu rate‘ o! a milimitcr a do. manhood Bin-A grant deal is being said about dogs at the present time and I would suggest that the members of the Legislature now in session sec that these animals are I kept out o! the Provincial Building. Tint building is frequents’ by a great number of children who go to the library. yet snarling curs are con- tinually roaming through it. 1 am Sir, etc. DIOTI-IER. . A QUERY ANSWERED Bin-One of your readers is ap- , parentiy perturbed by a sign ap- pearing over n Whippet Car now IhOWIDI at the Crl-llotietown Motor Show. This :lgn state: “The only car with finger tip control." Your render who signs himself "Guardian" ask: u: to answer through you: DID. er u to the truth of this at tement. Our answer i: unequivocally "yes," it is the only car with finger tip con- trol. and the Whippet vru the pion- dflr 0f thll wonderful dQVIGO which we claim in thrgrutut driving an. vonionoi slim the self starter. It ll truo. howlver. that Mormon Motor: lave brought out : new mo- del which in: just been announced,‘ an eight cylinder car. in which they .05" WWW!!!“ the finger tip con- u-oi. _ , v I m. lit. etc, l, Iblrlllll IIIVIOI ITATION ‘autos saunonun liq-m mun-ovum: ny the Wfiiuaauoaflhbik sum by IMHO. million no noun w damn alumna» a "Kill find-alum N"! metal plates with which to print . From here on ' (hose a. Sanborirs S" PIRIOR TIA aLAcKn-vcassn -.-- on. Mlxip In sealed air- Aumphwlllbedndlymlllonlnnrqvngg tight pagkaggg to GMSB l SANIQN, Montreal-l l. m: TOOOQQ§§OQOOUQPQQQ OQQQQQQQ ‘.1 POQQQ C‘ QIQQ QQ. > . P. BROW » 14s Richmond sc, ' Liiarlottefown ' 4: Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness and < Plate Glass Insurance at . . Lowest Rate. I Good Strong‘ Stock Companies “ . Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis. > > P b l 0 1 oooo-oooooooovoauoaoaoo neglect to accept a money compensa- , _ tion for the expenses of the upkeep of the enlarged building, Could not the money have been used to reduce FOX OWNERS AND RANCHERS the building, or build a smallcrone? u“ um new. (cw-u. m It looks as ii’ the "shoe pinched" on account of the fact that. the gift was "P"!!! dilly what pa“ u. you um} m‘ 1.1m by a. prominent Conservative. Everyone will be glad to see Mr. Lea sufficiently recovered to‘ take his place in the House. It will take all of m; talent and ability w satls- “i” °' y°"";'u u“ factorlly explain such extraordinary yakflnuhu n, dealings. mend ma"... l’ ' l I am, Sir, etc. Bvnaou ' w!" One who Finds if. Hard to Ilnder- Gaga‘ com mnd- (bum, lug.) wow ‘amour, ~08- NIMA won: unsung but up by PARKE, DAVIS -&ago_ Both than - runodliul no" Inn-unload b. destroy mud WOIIIII. , Book Wong m‘ Stomach Worm.‘ DON'T DELAY. Price 750 and ILOI IQ Bug, The 2P Macs DRUGSTORE THE LAND we LOVE BY FRANK YEIGI FORT PRINCE 0F WALES Q- Where ls Fort Prince of Wales? A. Fort Prince of Wales is an his- toric ruin in the western‘ shore of Hudson's Bay at Churchill, The Hud- son's Bay Company built the Fort, Prince of Wales in the years 1733 to 174'! as the strongest fortress of its H! G 0 our“ b“; day (46 cannon lined the bastion: Send fungal“: IIIIGOMQ; then), a formidable structure domin- » ' i sting the harbours mouth. It was, however, fated that this stronghold would full without a shot being fired. Admiral do la Perouse. with three ships. 1n 11x2 captured it without a struggle, and after destroying the place carried to a. French prison the governor, Samuel Hearne. There still remain 33 cannon in the debris of the bastions, which are now heap: of ruins, fitting testimony of what men - ,....___ A recent shipment of 2,000 ‘m. "w" "m" ""911 from Sydney to “"811 h" around lcntimcnt um: Minor o Xoomucn of lhaop from Australia to tholovilb country. Because of the p“; 1am”. 1n n. mend for iron ormthl Swedish ad "mocha aim kiln" m 144m; "W ffiliht om and fnonulng flair income of $0,000 for the rest of his Ghlllfl a‘ . accomplishes in those days for glory, Milly notable navigators and explorers have visited Churchill in. eluding David Thompson... The Mounted Police had a. post hero once, and the Church of England ha; a. Mission nearby. Gift Forlapoirite ' OTTAWA, Apr, 9.—The JournahQ carries the following story bodayz- ' “Admirers of Ernest Lapointe, Min- ister ot Justice, have contributed a '. will 01’ $125,000 "to assure him of an life. lvlr. Lapolnte was anxious to ‘i. retire sometime ago and take ‘n su- preme court. Judgeshlp, but men high in the “councils of the Liberal party prevailed upon him to remain at his _, nooi- / " “The gift which was rirised was an expression of admiration and good .11; will from Mr. Lflpfliflbfi’! many friends in his party. The Minister of Justice has been sitting in the house for 35 " year: being the first elected ‘at a by-eiection in 1004." 1418c country estates are becoming o. drug on the market -in England, the treat demand being for house! containing 10 or 12 rooms and vim land covering about so notes. " Many railways of Germany 1n beinl electrified. ‘bonus’ schedules from tho mm“, government coal hi“, ,. Tho Netherlands is opening it: us-rmomu. (Not ukod {up hon: Okotokl. Alberta. ' ‘Ihiuperun moot uoolol m» m sauna-mum‘ ondhailbilfoiln- cream, mini-u. . ' Jllkoh 11. 1N9- Mnllrlrbamr l: 00., Ltd. , ;KIDNEY