HggPTEMIiER s. 193s - clilnr Iiillsli 0N KEEPING ilalsrliulln ==== THE CHARLUTPETUWN GUARDIAN “Liberal Leader’s Speech Largely _ A Repetition Of a Earlier Campaign Remarks BRITISH lABilR VBTES Til rial anvliimlir if l It!!! ultlro ll] lljgflgfl l cents a word strictly pqghie u Till REGULAR Monthly Meet- illG of tbs B. I. B. will be .. tsponed ill-l Thursday. sent. i2. mm SPECIAL zuzsasm ARDEN hes Powder. regular sins for n20 ‘ - r —.—-— Jamiesorrs Drug Store. I l Firm Sgand Taketl; (lay ‘ b““"'°‘9'm' (Continued from Page l) gauscdu‘ c‘ g unemployment. (tligiliéd A: the gflléle time, he main- Urgeg Drastic {Action Prem e1.’ Benfi 8.? mfnfmgfuf, Plfilygwglgmggkxlz; Bdlinst his own party. Mr. Stevens hlzhelirglltsmf-gl-Itlgo 1:313:02} 0:11‘: der the glfrllserlatixg? mud ‘m- Ulldlll‘ Lfiagllfi CUV- . 3 l“"-°"°”rl' ° ‘ ' v mum ...... .. flit: ;‘l‘;’“w.fi°ii‘ii..ili..°lfl; 3'...“ "all" i» w“ errant t» Halt Italy’. oven-fresh nation. ' '11‘ aired to apologize and because he D Mackenzie King's alicutfy and Aggressive AClIiOIL cuallfleetl as a statesman. No Ollie!‘ Policies but Liberal policies can save Canada today, he mum. tained. , Mr. J. J. Iarabee, Liberal can- didate for Queen's, added his m- was shut out of the caucus. "Mr. Stevens may have felt very biiiel‘. against Mr. Bennett," 551d Mr. King. “But what wrong had 100 years ago in Ontario his Mr his other colleagues done him and Macks ' Klngkgrandfather, fought whatabout, the whole Conservative EBB-inst autocratic government- and Miss Annie n. Iowther, Coven. 41811. left on Wednesday morning 101' Moose Jaw. Soak. While there she will-be the guest of her uncle glf-iilrdaunt, Hon. J. H. and Mrs, ‘ ‘ - _ s m wus r “glTYwgrBrf;tI."i5—l€;P.)-Tiik)- “"1"” "m" 1W8 th stand that comp lance with gfmfi... demands for. removal of “amen import restrictions would (0- P- Br Guardian's Special Wire) MARGATE. England, Sept. 5- (O. P.-I-Iavas)-British labor-showed itself tonight overwhelmingly be. hind any move to block Italy‘; q. b, "n, direct "attack upon the prin- dple of the right of a people to mintsinits standards of living by means available," Prime Min- fsiel‘ Bennett, as tary of state (or external affairs, has sent a for- m] ultimatum to the Japanese government that unless the 50 per wit. surtax imposed against prin- qjpgl Canadian imports is remov- u. we Illa auremm be- gyeen the two governments will be germinated. -The - note was handed w sotomatsu Kato, Japanese Min- Eye Witness Descripti o n Of Rescue (The first complete description of Pill-i’ which made Mr. Stevens all that he was. There is such a thing as gratitude but it is- NOT m; me to settle the quarrels of Conserv- atives." It should be remembered, said var-s a defeated candidate. He had NO seat in parliament. Mr. Bennett had come to his assistance and asked one of the British Columbia members to give his seat to Mir. Stevens. He, personally, had heip. ed by asking the Liberal organiza- tion not to oppose Mr. Stevens be- wondered if today history was not Mr. King, that in 10x0 Mr. Stevens,“ repeating itself. He pictured him- self as leading in the age-old fight vi“ democracy against dictatorship — dictatorship" in this ihggahee being the, authority granted by par. ament to Premier Bennett to take any action by olfler-in-council for the P9309. order and good govern. merit of the country. This he de. zmuxwed l“ "bill-l"! cheque legisla- ion which no British Government had ever asked its Parliament "to 55°F”? ill B period preceding a. gen- the Liberal ies." Premier nut DEB-l to the electors to "stand by" under Mr. King's leadership, who had given to Can- ada "an era. of prosperity that he; never been equalled." sion of the past ilvc years he at- tributed to "high tariffs, high taxes, broken promises and-Tory p911. c The depres- Premier the Hon. W. M. Lea. the next Speaker. expressed regret that owing to inclement weather and eral election." the radio brmdcasts the audience gressive intention-s toward Ethiopia. The ‘lkadeg Union Congregg de. aided on a. card vote of 2,785,000 to 177,000 in favor of a resolution call- ing on the government to back the League Covenant to the utmost, by armed force if necessary. The vote followed an impassioned plea by Sir Walter Citrine, Secre- tlu-y General of the Congress, to keep "the Italian bully" from crushing Ethiopia, Wants Conquest “The word ‘sanctions’ means In lioi, muggy weather, wlierrnroet cereals lose their freshness, Kelloggh Flakes reach your table ‘ . oven-crisp. They neverelny shelf. An exclusive method them greater crispness. And only Kelloggfir are Protected by the heat-sealed WAJKTHE hag, inside the red-and-green package. In summer particularly you want the extra qual- lty and value Kellogg’: Com Flakes give. Match less flavor and crispness". Many generous servings for a few cents. Insist on the best. Quality guaran- lolig on your grocer-E of manufacture gives liter to Canada, last night for - mnsmissionh) “km the Yflcue of was puslcngcfs from the British cruise stoamer Doric was given in the following wireless dispatch to the Anrcisted Press from the Chief Offlcer of the Vite. “Dlfttgcigillrip. lleltiigidlores, would u . National Gcvell-nmentfumda w“ a I" ‘his ""416 Island. the Cradle was not as large as it would other- teed. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. wise have been. The small min- ority of Conservatives left in this Province, he said, had been "chas- cause he believed Mr. Bennett should have the men he wanted in his cabinet. Had it not been for these things lvltr- Stevens _ would penalties and punishments," Sir Walter said. “The Italian govern- n ~ J ' . ' ' ass 3.32.322?“ o 01in nu nus one way to deal with a bully, and ~ k - OVEN-FRESH FLAVOR-PERFECT - ‘w’ ‘r 0"‘ ved ‘imiamsnro-nriuuugsi, SSENEERS a 1 Jepanlmposes Sui-tax Japan imposed the surtax some f Confederation h h d weeks ago when Canada refused to i-oy of Indll, one of the rescue not have been minister of £11m 1 ' e ope h“ “lied in Spirit” He ridiculed the “move the dumping and exchange drills). trade and comme cu and would ewctlg; {Zfifisegefixfnedwzlglf idea that Mr. Kmg‘?! pfilllltf: are? thaw by the use o! wrap... cs5 were unpr-o s g n e es- "Moral resolutions are no good," Sir Walter said. “Pious declara- tions about peace are wasted upon Mussolini. The only thing ‘he would understand is the collective force of nations who are determined t maintain peace. “It may mean war. but that is a thing we've got to faoe. We've got to face the fact that there's no real alternative now left to us but sanc- tions involving us in all the possi- bilities of wai- . wmpellsfltlfill duties applicable to mporis from all countries whose currency has depreciated in its re- lation to the Canadian dollar. At out time the Dominion Govern- ment formnlly. advised Japan that such action would be considered a violation of the Anglo-Japanese treaty 0i 191.1 i0. IIch Canada guiisoribed in 1913, guaranteeing equal treatment. Japan was then advised that ap- plication of the proposed surtax would lcaveCahada with no option but to impose on Japanese goods the 33 1-2 per will. ad valor-cm surtiax provided for in (By E. Lee, Chief Officer. S. S. Viceroy‘ of Ihdll. Copyright, 1035, by The Associated Press) (A. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) ABOARD S. S. CERDY OF INDIA. Sept. 4--At 4:16 a. m. today we received an SOS from the Dorie, which was about 30 miles astern. The ship turned at 4:20 and pro- ceeded with utmost speed as dir- acted frcm the Doric by wireless bearings. " At 5:20 we ran into a dense fog. We sighted lights of a ship at 5:56 close by which fired rockets denot- inlz the Doric. We sent a motor lifeboat to the Dzric, which re- not even have sat in the last par- liament. "D0111? imllgine a party that owes its origin to a division of that kind is going to succeed in solving the problems of Canada.” said Mr. King. - The social credit system should be tested in Alberta before being tried elsewhere, said Mr. King. It would not be wise to experiment in both that province and in the Dominion as a whole at the same time. If it succeeded in Alberta it would soon make its way in the rest of the country. , "I am all for letting it have the to stand four square for your 11b- any‘ but to maintain it u wen." em Provinces. The farmers in the last cection had been stampeded into voting against their own in- terests hilt f/his time, he predicted. they would give Mr. King almost as sweeping a victory as the Pro- vincial Liberal candidates received in this Province. Mr. King arrived at 7.10 p.m. in a. special car attached to the eve- nine train from Borden. At the station he was met by members of the Lea government and other leading Liberals. From the station he was escort- ed to the Forum by a procession of automobiles headed by a brass OPENING SPEECHES W ifgixij.i“fi.iliswu ‘éfiéfluki... if? REMUVED FRHM‘ BRIPPLEB SHIP m"- A~ E- Mwlean. M. P. the first Speaker, predicted “a, mum- phant victory" for Mr. Mackenzie King in the coming election, The Conservative policies. he charged had “set the countryback a full de- cade“ in its trade development. Mr. Bennett and Mr. Stevens were "iiish-pressure salesmen" in whose promises. he thought, the people would not fliluin put confidence. Mr. Peter Sinclair. Liberal can- Precautionary Measure Transfer of passengers from the Doric of the Cunard-White Star Line, apparently was only B pre- cautionary measure and she im- mediately cancelled her SOS 51$ l: the collision and refused 1mm ' late aid. , A number of passengers of the The Question "If we fail and go back now. war is absolutely certain. Are we going Settlement Urged Today's-note urgss in: Japanese Government to remove the surtax and open the way "to a friendly settlement of the present llnfortun- interest." Piliitlilll Rlil n E R Indian-s Aroused By . . .Feal' “Evll Spit- drinks were serveli- Yell"! B80 in the highlands of York markets last year received e g e1 1 k d 0 g 1 D 1-1 kngwn n5 ' n A thanksgiving “will w" mid Peru and Chile now leads the 23,670 carloads, or 12.000000 bush- sighs or foime heme coil upon “t. M11611 ill il- Sflllce 0i’ chopped onion, ..CTh§d'16'50h1 finbeoauc-iz cf en- st. Charlottetown P E. I Lon: It‘ ‘ abmrd the Vioelfivdgl figs: worlds food crops with 5,500,000,000 els, all‘ told", nearly 200,000 more gghgtiilrliselzlcignthecglilifle. was no bBYJeEI and mllsllmollls, and 8101+ ggggmeiits gosnltirfg 5 from its Amelia, daughter of Mrs.’ Pea all passengers we" 8- bushels yearly- Last year saw aaa- than the amount consumed in Tm... was a M, years w, when fies the braised mutton. Again, it mums‘ was scmusly damaged m Hermann o, Pom,“ to Am, Wolsiey, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. g ‘ (C. P. By Guardian's Special Nil-c) WASKESIU LAKE, Basin, Sept. 5. -Strange tales of a "Weetigo" spirit were whispered by northern Indians we sent the ship's launches with 240 passengers, a certain amount of baggage and the assistant cruise director. v Later our launches assisted in the transfer to the Orion (another to render assistance to passengers. such as blankets and medical at- tention if necessary. Those Wlw sorrel-ed from shook received spe- cial attention. Breakfuet was served immediately and onwengflfi 0i the Viceroy cheered the arrivals. Many willingly offered their cabins. mon- The rescued passengers state the collision occurred at 3:30 a. m. The digcipllne of the crew of the Doric was excellent. and the Pflkllellsfl" were full of praise. A sing-sons was held, pending transfer. and 310i i-oy is expected to arrive at Til- bury at one a. m. Saturday- The Doric. returning from u cruise. ran into u. fog and speed necessary to maintain wages and provide- ployment but. the facts proved the opposite. The high pro- tection established by the Bennett Government had brought wages to the lowest level in history and Premier. ‘During M‘. King's regime we had 8140.000 spent on public works in this Province, while under Mr. Bennett." the speaker claimed, “we and John MacCormack, 0t f only yeceivcd from $112,000 to $l40,- N§$,";i,l’,',’,"“;,‘;f,,;f‘ m“ °' Flaherty, staff reporter for Canadian Press; Robert Lippsett, correspondent of the Toronto Star: “V65 0i iile DPQSS- lllfiilldill! P? J- rejected the resolution, “it will be the resident the (By Dorothy Beaver in New York Times) ‘Twelve months in the year the potato is the nation's most popular food, ran-king high on every family board. But the supply at this sea- the potato!" the farmer asserts stoutly. "It is the staff of life- like bread." And those who know its history agree with him. For the grubby legume that began s. rom- antic career more than a thousand 105,000 bushels produced from Am- erican soil. Sometimes the potato New York- ers like to eat is confusedwith the pounded into a pastry and eaten hot from the griddle with sausage, bacon or stripped ham. However, it has been the 11~15h who have made the most of the potato. The Irish peasant cats it baked or boiled and dipped into e Whisky. called “poteenf similar to that which the Russian peasant lat- er distilled as "vodka." Today the per capito consump- tion of potatoes by New Yorkers is about two bushels a year. New i933. There is a present surplus on the market and potatoes sell for a cent a pound wholesale. Thus they are so cheap that they can cut the lowly vegetable spurned as too "fattening" even indigcstible. Today the cream- Fall and Winter, the honey-color- ed sweet potato replaces the white potato in the South. "Any potato, if it isn't mealy or soft," the deal- er says, "is still a poi-ato- And peo- ple eat all kinds without complain- ing." But at this season the house- Auguste Parmentier, it was called poisonous by physicians, although Parmentier had lived on potatoes in a German prison. For than a century it was cultivated as a flower in English gardens, The mOTC was again and taken as a direct endorsement of Mussolini and will encourage the British Government t; run awayf’ Thunderous applause greeted the Secretary's speech, made during . turned advising there was no lm- did ~ . '°" “l” °1 m“ Mm“ "m" medt u Bl‘ nd ggestin the best chance possible in Alberta." “"' m’ °“°"‘" w“ “"3 lmllle b d r ith Albert w Wil Ass eluted , - “l” “;’§“”“’s “mm” °l’°" oauzrfgerinli-snzler ‘L’. daylight. he sills. hllvfinrcflengdlllallir Ilgfiind wiYfuhd aglalellllls Willi MP- Kins in uu- L? Psfeailiolgctlerlrl allaegaygulltl’? ' my Press-Staflsntzrlior) o 19°12: elilfllelwellthféleilzo 32ml" itive on uy . 1 hood 1,, A; 7:40 Protection had, be h lded ' l‘ ° l’ th il ' t - t. 5-B'tih - wl on a seew rh- The vcemy Y en em as predicted would be Canada's next o er spec“ c“ are mprwn a He told the delegates m“ u they maligliligosilrrfrlpu doub; li-iuzieylh they had previously been takers today by saving the lives of mow than 1,100 passengers aboard Eut- lsh ships after two dangerous ac- cidents at sea. _ While the band played "Imper- ary" 736 passenge , many of ritory of a fel‘ow member of the League." is served on a separate dish with the creamed beef. And scalloped potatoes-peeled thin, baked in milk and seasoned with cheese- substantial, hardy flavor is never lost. At foreign restaurants in the city the potato puts on airs. Under the hand of the French chef in a midtown hotel the vegetable blos- soms “a la Bordelaise,” when it is camcs “1ulienne" or “Lyonnaise." when it is minced with onion and sauted until yellow- “Potatoes suzetto" are demanded this evening in the English Chill‘. nel as the coastal Puddle ilcamu‘ Whlppingham sprang a leak. The 400 passenge a were able to remain aboard when the ship was taken in tow by a sister sidewhcclcr. Flares Light Scene I B,’ n, assmanoe and c1-th|ng_ son is even greater than the de- saucer of salted milk, or the house- - 5M1 women and married coupieg mand). Indeed, the potato has been wife mashes it with boiled cabbage giifvets the “gm skinned new have a popularity dating back to ‘_ 1 H u (on By Guardian sped“ who‘ were “noted cabins an," em 1mm“ so a undant this year that-Ccn- and browns the mixture in the Despite popular use, the potato New England church suppers. Or. Searchrghts and fares a nl fr; LONDON Sept‘ 3_H°n G Ho“ . w“ stripped o; mmieuge (m- the gress recently voted a bill to con- oven to make the frugal ‘colcarl- has no; risen wiehou); handmap to cafeteria menus the potato is slug- the ure-dawn nescilem s-eDe rick Md mrgusén Canadian fligh- can“ ‘ use of single men. Allhthler 11min trglwzur iultéue nottatol crop. h t non" or "pairlyP And the some its place in the diet. When it was sad with mayonnaise in the all" misled c“, sffercy missicner 1...‘... represented the Don pgssengefg were very e ea u. cou n gc song wit cu is a source of the clear liquid, or_ mel-oduoefl my, fiance by Antoine or deluged in cream sauce; but the Little the worse for their expmb mmmn today at memorial “the. enoe. more than half of them were taken aboard the Orion of the Orient line and the rest were transferred to the Viceroy of In- dis. of the P. and 0. iinc- Boiil vessels proceeded l0 LOHCIOIL her hull when sire cznshed into the French steamer Formigny. Steam- ing slowly under her own power the Dozic arrived tonight at Vigo, from the Laurentic, which collidu ‘ed Aug. 16 with the Napier Star. ; These passengers had been given . the privilege of resuming the holie- day cruise started on the Lauren-u tic aboard the Doric. ate controversy," but gives notice rescue ship). Themaloritv of pas- mehmmm-v diggugiqn of the res- ,, . - ' | - i] y e k Miss Marguerite Miller of Ion-i :3 f?“ “ugh? it? l: frzrllig-efiieil-rgllgelft sllii-glotgrxi‘: rigging 0 A M l “"4 m“ °l "ill-lie into B» rasuut-“mywegfggtfiyyrpgrcgffiy;we. “X11339”- Nsoluum demanded that $3,, "Qfifig $15‘ Y.,.',,',°;{§, don, one of the p“ o reseller! lgrflalyfiillfi the agremcnt of c1913 was facilitated by a calm sea and n enus 2e Bum]: Egan“? ‘ad m“ With the bis Idfliw 10f Elle Blld ‘the league Council take “all nec- ship Doric earl! ‘midi! "ii the ‘mm m” Dmtc “ha; "Them 81w‘ u ~ rmlin " ar e‘ are o er nat- b 1 eh 1- no panic whoever. e were vefl "a “M a :r"=.'::.r:;~:":::i ..... .. — 71w Potato 1n m- izitlaz’ “ii‘."..“l.i2§".§."“2§..‘§‘£ w" “‘€§.'i'.".’€.°f‘-.‘°l.f§;% M....:.".'....§°ii"§“iul. ° we w beset =0 <1»- my be required in the national e _ mark the lamrdepeemn" 15 m“ ness and ggundance Later in the 2.1T Sggaciotllspattiflgck upoll the ter- The second accident occurred an!‘ Pig gmlllii dsllméaffi- Th! ' ' ‘ ship's n paye an c passs " angers sang songs before taking to the boats. Nobody was inj i ‘ The Doric was badly damaged an has a severe starboard 1ist." nouns MEMORIAL smvitm. - for the loin Queen Astrid of"'thq Bggiarls at Westminster- Cathedral. g ___‘___lti'AltRIAG_ES BROWN-HERMANN — On Si“!!! y day, August 31, 1935, at 10 Ambrosq’ Brown, Charlottetown. P. E. I., Rev. tel ,. ,, d tatoifdtbbl;l it lmghltlililllheplgllxocfeleilaritxirilll rgprglggg m) tirizdusilgi w: slfulacfxgathg P°‘“‘g-l °" l“; Yale” Ylllll- a fancy figure on the poorest iam- is Ill’: long; econslriegeueslutlesrljlng ill il-Slllmlllb!“ 1““°h°°“ esiwusg‘ 51ml." “m” m“ 63pm“ "largo: -- DEE“ . to have attacked two natives as plmmgny 1h the forward poi-t, z <1 W85 scover much earlier iiy menu. They are eaten in salads, on the weipbeigheed dlef“ merits; here the chef bakes t e panic broke out BIIIfOIIQ Lhpasse i?‘ MARTw_At Hunter River Se“ they camped on me “ML wwch shook the Sh!” v,°‘ent1y_ y navigators on the Caribbean stews, and often served mashed in The new geiehee o1 dgeeeeies has potato and stuffs the shell with a ers for a momenta tcr to egos“. tomb“ .5 1935 Bruno Mama a“ My,“ Canaan“ Mounted Ponce M] passengers m": immediate“ Sea. This potato now boasts a souffies or boiled in place of merit. been responsible for giving the mixture of the vegetable, grated The Fflrmiglw nus no shy 6G vmrs Funeral {mm his Intakes“ a were perplexed. The phantom raid- can“ to the bu“ station “d ma, guchnsmorle“ Blxlacllzlil/C exrgourage New Jersey and the home State petgm ehe vnamin rank 1t demrves‘ cheese, milk and balgtexéed crurzrsib: damaged. and inure-dad on or dean; szlturday at 830 _ an w e er. .. .. . u - - I s a " er apparently was gone hood and m“, Wm hwered, All passengers '° e W5 wllllibllifl 55 P9X‘ will 0f New York As the spud, eaten skin and all a‘? i??? £622}? 821,5‘; tflgswu... Passengers, win were awakened ROGERSON-At Fanningbrook, on Wcfiircsdliy, Sept. 4, 1035,'Mrl. ltfnrrzal-ot Rozorson, aged 92 years. Funeral from her late residence on Friday, Sept. 6th, at 2 o'clock. A ordinary potato, cherished by poor and rich alike, is the dusty outcast that reached Europelm shores in the hold of a Spanish vessel sail- City's potato supply. Long Island this year is second largest pro- ducing centre for the city, sending some 5,000 carloads. by European sailors, it gained rep- utation for its anti-scorbutic qual- ites. One pound of cooked cabbage 0r boiled potato, scientists declare, about 3 n. m. by the crash, said they were cheered by the dance orchestra llnri a girl pianist: who payed “Tipperary/F lii—iust as mysteriously as he stalked across the northern stage. But to the Indians there was only one answer-a "Weetigo" or evil assembled in an orderly manual‘ with their life belts. There was no panic. The heavy list which the Doric ists sample in France is cooked "a la bourgeose" in olive oil and gar- lic. “Pour cele," the French maitre d'hotel states, “one must have the Switzer says, is complete without lllifit. heed, lng from South America about Th bi sh - m; very quicklyrig _ c ggest ipments from a ht 1 _ 1h d 11 1, 1 1t - First word of the attacks came azdaqoelfhzlgoflc n,“ rocket, to i580. From there it sprend north, distance, 3,000 carloads annually, $111M: neecesgagl shill?“ sleqvmfi. tasio." Rush m Rcwm ‘ _ , gluing‘ tiff“: h endows halbbleedl identify her The transfer to the south and west, and in 1883 was come from Aroostook County Mo. health With the Swiss. cook, who is a ‘ ‘ lii/NflillAgD-‘Diigd 191;’, iii; M01? | m ea y. turn up at Mon tell ' i was then ms: cultivated as a n id cr- l Fr th r '- - ' 1t in New York, the stuffed _ , ,_ Bosnia. eu- . o - like irobedays ail)‘ with ti; scsyldcd ‘ogggéesnfigefgedgrlbggak. Ireland. Introduced info England‘, 1a 03rd Frogs glzrililaorgrrgllevlrlilllililt fiilliligyfhsertriowpwltlhmsczlirlixdefniiiloan: halal: reaches perfection as with MEET; dgmxélg “Qgaéfilé M:"Q““id1“g°d 37 f?“ pagan l ~<a - . r * f- ii. .te he, ' . tom. r "Noun er n“ e D m —--"—"" it mm °'°”°d m” Ammlikth“ 1-372 ""1 1-1“ °lill°ls le-‘Pwllve- butter and served with fried chle- m‘ "ma" N° SM“ ‘mm’ u“ the side of the Wllluuillshdlu glimpse,’ mxfggfgcar abort; "timewestwsrd. 1 went -11 . pi Y~ Y V9 01' MOTH Siutfs ken or a roa t, d li hts the mas- _ Chicfiwlillilflotlnlimglrdfzlleltllxee Speaks BQFOYG mPNPBWd as a main dish. out up contributed w the city's supply. culine sppetlste ‘lengst. But the illlki’ WW" if‘? twllel-ll" lesi. signalled by not: for help six S" Mm‘ chm“ lreal Lake Reservation, 25 mill-l n soups‘ and boned or baked m Maryhmdl Idlihil. Pellllilylvllllill French-fried potatoes in thick gol- the 31mm? wh ° a: e33 A d miles west of the Ncz-dlcs, from‘ BQWMAN_A¢_ Rusmco, Sept, 5. north of here, when he met tlie Service l‘ iwket- “l” mm“ h“ bee“ a ‘l-"d N°Tlh cllllliillll eomlus lleXi den brown strips, or croquettes, run “ill/med with Glu-Yele ° “m- “ Portsmouth. _ _ 1935, Mm Den Bowman aged g5 phamont Re w” “one m the stock food in a score. of lands. Po- on the local market list. the creamy mounds a close second he "*5 B llallkill '4’ 511°" ti" W5‘ The Whippurghnnr, cirryiirg ymyg, pme~n1 Saturday a; 3 p_ m_ tato soups have been ample fare Of the twelve varieties anion", when 1t cemes 1,0 11.1mm‘; the tom Swiss lwllsewive! MW 015119- passengers between POTLSlIlOlIIlI “on, m..- mc resmenea Inger. tuthering dusk, squatting over his temp fire. The fi ure f th a sack M - 599'" 5'“‘P1“°m5 d the name is “pomme de tori-e," or and the Rose are the best known. - . _ over nughmgfhufigfifl? Xf, the eye-g, probate, divorce and ugdalgxlflzi, earth apple. For centuries the The natives of New Hampshire lugwpffiffl igzgagrtifiqaff; W251, mixture through a pastry bag and Even after she ivns heading brick g h v [talked o“; °H,h,bmh_.5¢geeyge1¢, matters under the iur a)“: o! spmhrds have spoken endearmr pride themselves on the Green butter running 1mm u... crévlces baking it until the egg sets with to Portsmouth under tow nl un- MM siiyaiN — m. Mt _ Hops wrestled with him and tossed ‘onil- one division of thenlllsh l mgr,” aly of the"'papas" which they boil Mountain potato and in the Mid- “ ' the potato crust. _ -. other rescue hlllil, ho. on...“ \Vcdn4‘sc..i_\'_ Sept. l, ma», Milfiel lug water on~his back from a kettle Justice oi EnBiB-lld" N‘ "3 °.. .._ ' e Continental style is to serve South Sea was sent out to nrcom- Ann. aged l year ll month; matched gmn m, hflfJu-Qgdjfl", ticn of wills. WOmQll-ll-l“ b m “—“'”_ — ‘ m, poem, n5 the only vegetable puny her. daughter 0f MI- sud Mrs. A. he“ the “not” ‘ t l‘ w“ “ghamilldanllwrlgoiifiitullderrlman. on the menu; and the German Although the livcsr of I nil tthe Sterling ‘Macswain. , Chief 31rd geigyed the gem] (e Hon. l’ ' ohm; gncake swims oftentimes in many passengers o LlCS-t‘ wo P _ n of that division. in P P _._ c’ . MORRISON-Died ..t Darnley, Constable Wally Laird of the Wnr- KC. rs ide t gensdlan Club. sole state in meat gravy or paprika Ilggiztglétetisliltrtto wgm 18h Sept. 5‘ 1935' Mary Emma “or_ lulu R. c. M. r. The investigation which followed is still underway. KILLED IN STORM o! “Wm mu judges‘. . dice it and fry it witth ‘gluon, flshflmen were Nscmd. 09mm...’ Indian Rivet BPANIARX BAY Nfld. Sept. i he slid. m” ‘mm the High 03:.’ p" “lid Dime“?! ungok “an wgnh A "wireless messaile from, ‘ ‘W mo. PJ-One woolen wis killed was estiblisrifisu}: are a: W bggggédfifn mglaemmng mm Formigny. the Olh vessel l -- ~ _ I urn “my 3 O . C | ' "’i?-_____swz—~=c x r .'. _;:__; _: ‘ hnxmviuotn‘ ‘mmlnxrm ‘m: ‘enm- tho "mum ing it out in large flat cakes. As . . i N M E M o R I l n , w, an 51g an! said it was - back as 153B, Bieza de Leon in s A oln ted 1 ‘ y “tmmnl the President o! the iilllli" i” voyages referred to the potato as PP - . l“ and pl‘!- .. d b whlm boned be. r~- In loving memory of Mrs. J u“ "W" m‘ S efa f Randall Marks who departed ' come; u A “flit will‘. ecr ry O m. Septemb '6... 1925 nut, utw asno cers - - ' ' ; . , can s twice" we. ewwdusll» Lord Tweedsmair "s" o" is" "um- "v M '1: W H5. N lnJNh he ground it up in a rsgout, call- OTTAWIL Sept 5__Al_flmr Thy 105;.“ Mm“ an“ M“ i‘ FljiYllljflllS ____ (c. P. n: emu-w- ere" "ml ONTREAL in Ireland and in France, where white potatoes the Irish Cobbler gourmets steak. the skin of a bak- ping an egg into potato ed potato, then forcing the th . li-Zlei: :53? ccneturies was it the h matters to be dealt cmmm m, ‘fie court, and b! i319 York WC! husband. use. Amalia _ g service. flour, In this country potato chips =———~‘——-~~~ *1 V" ' “"11" W I‘: ‘mlmlnlln have a wide market, and since re- Marie Antoinette wore in hcr hair; ~ ‘MB . _ peal come even with the cocktail. a king,“ they say. cut oil oars and i 5.1M!‘ Never forget, however the po- noses subjects who refused _io n m“ “M. . _ ‘ u; ; tom's romantic career. ' Scientists eat it. Children find romance ‘in h k "d v ' ‘ ‘ ‘ recall that it saved a race from roasting the potato in wood ashes. Norfil Wlitshire H" tr... cesium. us" m. McArthur. plroiolflpliell before Mr. Black set out from flillsll naive-v. ....\ land. in“ an attempt to lower the flight record to Cape Town, south Alden, ~ .4’ sauce. But the Spanish and Italian ' cooks are famous for their ability to put; the potato in its place. They ed calluela, or mixed it with other vegetables as a sweetmeat. scientific cultivation puts it to many uses. Potato flour and a fine white from the large crops in Germany where as many es 400 bushels are produced to the acre. The frozen an ddried product, known as chunyc, is famed in South America ‘ is a starch as well as a biscuit (amine and still might mean much to China's rniillions. Others point to it u the vegetable whose new: starch are manufactured‘ when the vessel. lacking a ixiro- and Bournemouth, got into trouble during heavy rains and squnlls. drowned in tho collision of fishing vessels off the mouth of tho Tyne. One vessel sank and sort": T liar Shuldham Rledfcrn, fornrcr Gov- ernor of the Province of liasalla in the Soudan, will be secretary to Baron Tweedsmuir when he assumes office as Governor-Gen- erai, it was disclosed today. Mr. Redferrrs rank as {lilkil-llfll‘ is equivalent to that of district commissioner in the British Civil Service and deputy minister in the Canadian lit has inspired pocfs to rhyme. and provoked politicians te-disou mcnt Saint Mark's Church Ceme- toly. Rustico. rlson aged 66 years. Funeral will leave house Saturday morning el 9 o'clock. Interment St. MIITI more, Inserted by Husband and Family. -8 5. i 111.0. MacLean Phone ll!’