. ls . r" 1 t‘ .31‘. s._.... . lit.“ ps0 - [learning upset several months should have call- . mode to the Surnmerside Town Cour.- .1)“ , Iroeldent-Vhfilsesi tlnlilro. ldlhv and Bungee-q]. B. Burnett. year (In advance) nellorl "ran. euqvmv nrzlusunan "Rumors oi iurther irregularitiec m ‘louhectlon with the Prince Count? Jail ‘are circulating throughout the ‘roilntry which the Provincial Govem- v lnent in its own interest, would do weuwo investigate. The ulsgructilll condition which has prevailed in the management o! this insttution ior tbs gdildl‘ immedieie drastic action on the pert o! the Attorney General, % the iect that no such action has bser-rteken and that an oiiieial zil- erzoe has been permitted to envelope the whole scandalous afleir he not tended to alley public suspic- ion. 1 I1 prisoners, ooniined to jail, can get drunk end disorderly with im- punltyQii they can commit, assault and battery upon each other and even attempt to set iire to the iali building in their drunken irenzy. what assurance have the law abiding people of the community that their- own lives end property are safe? what assurance have they that the incompetence end criminal neglig- ence of the authorities will not re- sult in even lnorelalarming outbreaks? Bloodshed hes already occurred on a public highway in the jail vlcmity whenflrurlken prisoners, ‘at work on m; . m“; and presumably undel- gusrs, ieil to blows and had to be re- taken into custody by "i9 5ilmmii" us. police. Complaints have been ru- that oiiender , placed in the Sail. [rave walked out unhindered, and one Bummerside merchant has come for- were with the extraordinary griev- r... that the eorlzressrlnz c! bwt- loggers end rowdies about his D1!” otvbusiness on one oi the lrlflirl Biirtflie‘ ei‘ the town. ii not checked, would lorce him to close his shop. These corn- pients have been the subject of mucil discussion at recent Council meetings and have been (QKWKIQM M! the A!- tolrney with strong re- oolnmendetions ‘ha; prompt action be taken. The Government however. continues to mlslrk time. the Jail gqntlnue; to be e iree-and-eesy in~ etitution where bootleggers and other ilwhreokers, ye . ably wniinerl wider lock ens key, are ireeiy acces- sible to their friends and can PIN‘ do es they please. The iallor. leis ssla, is selsom n his PM. and the county Sherifl, whose oince is in the jlii building end who is SUPP?!‘ pd to keep an alert eye on everything, happens also to be a prohibition in specter and spends much oi his time prosecuting this side-line. The result. n: might be expeced, has been 0M oi- general wniusion. The illll has become a beer-garden. ‘ ‘ The lstest reports irom the Prince county Jell ere ill calculated to susy public unrest. 1t is stated that the prohibition embers themselves have swung liquor in the ieil for ei- lsged safety. It may or lney not be liqum on which the Prisoners w! On the other bend, the gig; met liquor was iound there would cause suspicion as in the right- zul owners end orlrill- flweiy the time hes come ior ll thorough investigation loin the coe- ‘ pumurlcing the lnlueillnflii- therrinee County Jeil. The re- _ ‘epeeteble people oi Bummerside W!" be eetisiied with 1m. and f. “downbeat the Province more"! dare}; the ieeling thet tiie denser been reached and the oov- " l: iliaieseier ell. should lulliomrowllg iiiiiiilli; Beereleswliient. Col. D. A. Ilnellnlen. ll. l. 0. LIIIGII Duly (ionndsd llli) ll.“ pet your ill ndvtlie) , . ‘l SEPTEMBER 1-‘, 1929 Institutes, the Red Gross nurses and medical profession to convincetour people of the-necessity oi-oomplying with the law in this respect, and o! rm-um-‘oi Iridey lest deals with. » boys end cigarettes." It ehowsclesriy‘ ~ tbetthe‘ cigerette is very injurious Zesboysvsos girls, checking‘ their ‘ physical growth and mantel develop- “ ' ‘ ‘ inent." It sllodorlnl e hlbitwhich ' iiquiie eshnlvito break‘ oi! es the __', drink habit, as many old smokers - freely admit. "Ono's e smokes-Always remoker is the rule among men. ‘Meet smokers also readily admit thettheuseoi iobecooin snyiorm is ‘to ‘eboutnine outoi ev- ery ten whokprsctice it. It istomeny vlee-rnsfsese-e. phones. i n. Inter-d). l; Our-no, in our...“ and nerve ltntes- delivered. oompenying en older brother in e shoemaker who "mes-lured" hislieet ior e peir o! shoes. . Sear: BDII-Qiluhaflllell. “Ibo 4c- SHOES All DlPOWd-‘ANT I remember. as e youngster l0: My brother thought he was taking ; srr"".ie.i_js.'l.gj.....vg seeing to it izhetiheir chiidrenlers aBlist smell-pox. More than-oncsin recent yl-srswe have had =epideulic scares, when smell-pox cases have been introduced iron: the lumber camps in our_ sister Provinces, and eceineied es e precauilo y pressure there is no telling when there be a fresh outbreak. It has been de- monstrated time and egsin thetvec- pereons s mortgage ‘upon their lives, held by the‘ tobacco imp who becomes their ‘Iniltdltllid they his slaves. Wilenvthednip cells they hasten to getpipefelgsrs or “oigsf end-matches and men‘ smoke. It costs Oenediens tens ofiniliions yearly Ior the weed end it's eiuipment. and millions more from iightednieilches, cig- efretts "and" cigar-butts, or pipe cin- eereiesslyfiiroplied or thrown away.‘ " measurements that were very tight and told him l0. , The shoe meker dimly stated: "I always make them very snug because they will gradually stretch ens will then look and feelrtoe large ior you." New this seemed like good sense to me st the time, but I learned trom the ieet I sew during the examina- tion oi recruite-ior the~_war that "tight" shoes on children were the cause oimuch suiigring end insi- '~'~'-~- on. --b . sweeteners-renew: sirhsiérer..." ‘ - ‘ I o. WhoiltheDominies-rltstistie- m" a ~. L . . A Btetisticienis 8.3.00“; B._A.,I.B.8.-(I-Ion.) P. It. S. Gfirhe department l] s "h. tiveiynewonswbiehbesbecolae an important teeter oi. Government in theooilection and dissemination“ (By in The cens- dielllegesine.) .‘ One oi the rusty colored roedsthat runtbrougbtbequietcountryoitbe Beiiestdistriet -_in Prince Edward Island lends upwards from the seein- werd the crown oi e hill. upon which stends a white ohureh- oi simple. striking beauty. Iiehind thechurch end eilnoet in its shadow is e low. white gravestone. ‘fin Loving Jiemory oi Mary Doug- las, only daughter oi Lord Selkirk. died October ‘i859. lged sixty." reeds the inscription. . Mary Douglas’ grandson lives down tbetIIong straight road naer the eel. oninnd set aside by Lord Selkirk for his littiedeugbter when ehecems to the Island belittle lnlixethenen in- ient. Around the name oi her iether clings s glamorous interest in west- It also collects statistical dets ior most o! the Provinces and its pubug. film we of much velue. due lersely to the eble guidance oi m. Ueets. -n-u»¢_ ths distress of the Highland Bests home. . ‘ms, Williams of llrkeedbright Wandering about qcotiand st the timewesecurious ehsreefervin the Persono! Bandy Williams or Kirk- Oildblilht. Bondy hid, been mgpy iniormstion regerdinl the i st. Z-ination is a p. ventetive, ens the ' iiciency. ernVOenads. Yet it ‘wee here in 91111181. l- tlilm’. end a soldier. end Wilsn-youneed a new pgig _, _ecieeore,asl:yourhusbin¢g° you e-vailf. frm-bysrbelrleg Rosebud. cut‘. plug tobacco, u; "Vi"l,~"ii=h°.f?0ker Hands" u.‘ .I!'¢‘Pfl§|i0d'withit. Them-gel“ Pediile one "Pekgi Hess." 1s... pgdq‘. ' eontainetwo fPokei-‘I-Iandslj ‘ complete sets of “Pokq Hand)’ can be ‘Qchenged for s only 0M known ‘ w mew” idlrevesn eieetioneome science. In cases of epidemics oi this disease the victims are always the un. vaccinated. It is hoped, therefore that parents throughout the Province will co-operate with the health elrs thoritles end take edventege’ oiiihe opportunity now being presented»! having their children vaccinated e‘! smell cost and inconvenience. ‘ ONTAIIO ELECTION An election in Ontario, seemingly on the horizon, will have-iew _ele- ments oi drama, says the Ot- tawa Journal. Not since. the collapse oi the old noes Gov- ernment has the Liberal party in the province been so barren oi virility. While the most that can be expected 0i the Progressives is op- position on a iew scattered fronts. In the lest Ontario contest the Iiiberels end Progressives hede sol-g 9g gm. ance. That eiiienoe., ‘judging from recent developments. no longer exists. Mr. Sinclair has comeoutlor fir. Ferguson's Liquor Control Policy} the Progressives are still bgslnst it. More than that. the Liberals have. begun nominating candidates inbrogies- sivs territory, end the Progrusives are retaliating. It ell prelsegelefldlv- srnment walk-over. THE BENNIT noun. ‘ while the political experts arejdivi ided in opinion as to results erHon. Columbia, eeys theilndependent me- enciai Post, irom one aspect the lee/ril- car's visit was e mmendous success. ‘ Mr. Bennett departed from the beaten paths and went into the out- oi-the-wey pieces. He visited‘ logging camps. mining towns, fishing viilnlel and cross-reeds settlementsylje peid little attention to the larger centres of population. He paid the m... and women who produce the reel wealth of British columble the compliment of e personal visit. When hdfiflliv“ Alert Bey or some other outpost “o! civilisation, he lnelserltelly received nrsthend inionnetion upon conditiops m the particular basic insurer; eer- ried on in that nQlRhWYhWQ _ .. l-rls public utterenoee Yin .311"!!! Columbia contained lmle thlt Iv" made in the East. m some the leader oflended certeinvbdlitlflvli friends. On the whole, the will‘. "f e personal iriumbh. In it the 0on- servative lesser disbursements! to serve the people ens reveeiedhim- eeli as e first-class cempeilflif- ~ __ snnonmrufl ,7 _--. will be. m. a» ma, in mil m letter when. tune-viii a} ‘hence. on Octoberiil, on the ‘result oi which mush will sepehs The I-iberel opposition cannotcom- bieinthlt sire-notice hee not been A l use cbbringflconteet in-Qnterim’ ee- - peoieily lnjyvlerrosthe ieotzthgifa n. n. Bennett's recent tour 6: nriilsh Y new, being s repetition oi » blocked with snow. "$119M ~ given. l It ~is no way e surprise; at- teck ' the electorate that __Pre_- is making. Hrand his Government m. however. evi- dentiycoeiident‘ that their record willbsfspproved by the people on W11i"¢‘¢!¥~. i v ’ A‘ sliortitilne since The Globe gave e clean-intimation that it would not beprudent xor the Liberals of the Province to" recs an election under their present ‘ieeder, Mr. Sinclair. not no eheezehss been fnede by the perty ilrthet respect since the warns ilig wefgiven. ‘The Globe, which has epproverioi many m. oi the Fer- guson Administration in its indepen- dent fashion, is still an edvoca oi prohibition and is stoutly opposed to government-control oi the liquor traf- no. ether-light- Qln ‘several were oceupiese peculiar. ens iplvotsl ‘position among firs Provinces of the Dominion. It is situated" lnidwey -» between the pro- beyorld "the Greet Lakes-in the west,.s'.rl_d Quebec and the Meri- times in th'eesss,;.,,,41hss the larg- estpopulanon view single province. nxoeptlngin grslrrégrowins. it is tore- irssst lnsgrleulture, in manufacturing in the value‘ oi its mining out- put...‘ ". ‘ Thermos Qwerhmerrt. which has been insinglcontroi or Province siier crevasse; wherein we; strong. she hlsiultn" 1M1" held-m 5'."- kitchewin,‘ ‘be "oblivious ‘o: iessrsl election ‘ls inevitable in‘ _.the » not jar distant ~ future. remar'_keble'le\ier‘written_by elr ago. we; recs" by President 1:. mneetty. oetheoesedlexrrselae ‘nellwey. in sdisoourse-fwhiehvhe delivered be- fore theDs-nedibn Ohelnber ofOom- luepeeet oslgleryflon Tburesey. lest. w. nesttyb eubieet wee ‘Ii-suspecte- wm. encore-room or alr-sobn lieedcneid’: letter. which b; reed was addressed.- to. q, J. Bridlelithen ~ e oitne ‘qr-ens Trunk neu- w..." lt.l.l-,hfli‘i.,l'lw0dildedi— Nut is quite evident m. ms that the ‘ United ‘Jinks; Governmental-e resolved to..,do.eii_ that they can‘. Zehortffloi Lwer. wan, possession oi~ me western ‘Ilerritory. and wemust’ ltiviilhnmlnls-lmc vlaoreus- mn- lb eeuirtsreetgtbebr. One oi the s... ‘mica to, be done.‘ um show grnmiliekeebiyourpsesolve to build ‘tbeheéideiteflwfl- l ' Eri ing ground than prohibition. ' As e matter oi iect statistics show thit in comedian-lots es many as 4o to b0 per cent were rejected es class A men simply because oi poor ieet, And the mejority of these ceses oi "bed ieet" could he traced totightiill fitting shoes in childhood. . W11!!! youthink of baby's lint pl-ir oi 1shoes..wil.ich someone has describ- edlas "like e new bll." you are per- hebs ihenkiul that the ahoes oi 81.“!!! "P's are not so unshnpely. And yet theivery purpose oi. those roomy baby shoes is whet you should keep in ‘mind. That isthet the ieet should hove rooni to "work" in. A boy otiltl. men or women. could not weer‘ shoes ‘or. the -b_eby. typg pg. eellso. although rreesom . ior the sction oi the muscles otths .1001; gns toes is-neceseary, so also is support iorthe weight»! the bosy, wmgh eiier ell rests "Wu the ieet. Now iiris not necessary in these lily! o! well medeiootweer to have 81108] Illdddtb OM62, ilflflg thg 10gb it unusually narrow or breed, s1- the W"? lmll-lllfilly hidh or absolutely net . . Ali ivhlfi i5 ilvko get], I110! thlt is 1on8 enough-longer then "w Mt with m! lying est: end wide 011011813. wider then the width oi the foot. . ' A short shoe bends the toes up- Wflfd end theioint sometime; gets 5g ltifl-anhvlosed-that themes remain mm- nllb}! celled “himmer" toe. ‘rhisceused rejection yo! many gg- cruits. _- _ _ _ . A “W”? shoe squeezes the iront erch-iroml side to, lifidq-QQ m“ m, Xront ends, oi_ the ioot bones rest on the rrvuns-lnstessoi being r-sremg» "P 9M1? PI .11.! e normal ioot.. '~ nk9.°;l_i‘.° "your children's. end m!!! 0W fmby setflnsshoes that . . Ill Ieyirlrebe rouse-tier‘. muse: '1" Bilflwoeer miseries-mum st Bfiflirlwd-oe-A .- more Alhbthluwlelsss ineiietusedinms tombethkhhreiiiwyeerssge,‘ ' 'I The men went out in seek s beer, s bear to m his prey. Md by e sweet coincidence i They met upon the way. ‘rileiluntsr sot behind wreck, free bear behind s. mo. And each uponeeeh other geees With senguinsry glee. ~ Thebesrwessleehnnd oihis skin, _ overcoat“, "_ ‘ ~ iubesurveyss tbs nib. 1 . in thecvlili is e piece oi rurei. gentle Prince Edward Ielend that he an his picturesque experiments in ‘ooi- enisstion; here iounded his ieme es the ietherof moderncenedien im- migration end here he had e sturdy. seli-suppcrtingveolony oi e thousand bwple beiore belsentilis first party of Bed River settlers inin the un- known. untried West. . The greet eolus-zul-rslihs Province ‘beauty. n beests neither rocks no: hills, ior its red. serrsylosm yields readily jDJ-Yiflllflls and year by peer the waters nibbiest ‘its shores. eeting itsiowiy sway. ‘rbejeceeiliine of the Island ,is deeply ‘indented-with beys, eusiilssl rivers that ebb and 'flo_w so 11°" Ila/mes‘ as e sort oi lewyer. He was active end restless snehad iolnedtheermyinordertceeesorhe- thing o! the world. His regiment wes sent to garrison Quebec, ‘m; flfere. Bandy epentsome‘ years. No matter where he wandered, Bandy curled witkhim two books which he absorbed with intensity, one was the Epistles oi 8t. Peui endltbe other Blackstone's commentaries. They eon. stituted meaty rare ior the us“... tetive Scotsman. He had them with him in Quebec and heatiil had tbeln -....,..'_.Qn’.e ‘pair .0! these excellent quguq scissors, in plain or fancy style s; ‘youprefer. I » y RDSEBUD ~533M- . .an_d‘Snv'éiiié_‘*Poi_<evl-Iands" My yen-e later ‘in Prince‘ nswerc Ieisnd. He was‘ ‘nstureliy endowed with e cieer, ‘vigorous intense; ms by his constant compenionsbip with ~ vleror male-blesses. . the old books he ieerneda commend oi English-end Letinéthst‘ served ill many e tight corner to brulvbeet in adversary. _ ‘ ‘ ' 0n his rllturh‘ to" sooth-ha‘ irorn Quebec he set out, like some ‘old bard, _ to rosin the ‘countryside and recount Highland colonists. Little hes been his teiee oi adventure ‘ in Cenede. written oi that eplsosebut the coun- Lord Selkirk heerd o1 him, perhaps tryside lsnrll oi traditions and relies listened hlmsslr to; the glowing ple- concerning the emigration which Sel- tures oi the lend beyond the see. kirk ‘himseii supervised, nndoi which Sandy was‘ just the sort oi agent he he wrote seweilln his journals and needed end so he engaged him to books on’ emigration. round up his emigrants. ‘ ' ‘ ' Bandy was in his element. He es- liighlendes-s in the Belfast District. eured the eager. anxious Boots that -- . I Prince Edward Island was s. sort oi The district to which the i-Iighiend- "rum, ‘undue’ m" we" ‘may m "n" i“ 1°" i" “W” " u" w‘ would rind ell the wood they needed fi“ dilm°b ‘M’ b°°"“‘° 9‘ “In” lor houses. iences and ships. which "‘°°‘°-“°" bi"- bww" °! ‘ ‘?‘°u° was true, that tee grew in the swamps “WIMP”. i" 9h’ °"'““‘ “m” equll w shy in ohms, that the-Inn “m-m." "m: TPW- °"°'Y‘"‘°" diens were ell Ohristienieedmndthet eboutthe districtlere tbs piece names a b“, hunt w" u” in“ m," m.“ "'4 femur "m? “mm” °° 5'1"" world. ne sls his work so well um. him-m! "imn" h‘ “u” ‘ "m" m“ m addition in thepay ior which he ierliniendthet » they have almost severed. the country into irections. Three rivex-s._iiow “into Hilisborough nay end twopcints ,0! lens enclose it mo. Northumberierld emit. On._the peninsula southeast oi the BlY. Iflfllldlkllk ldiifldfl m! flfli; l‘ sellers. "with established allow‘. l Ha more thins." eels be m.‘ some such brightvtbeulfltxhed see. to see the settlers saieiy leaded. ‘more is the Oove in yhiohth-cships landed, the” lplfing from which the travellers drank the iiret ireeh water m1 Anierioe, the church they 111W! ' tlfsuehgellerous hands. and the ‘stones, which mark the ‘gr-eves oi some omhemmrbs‘ aged sexton will m! you there srieet ewnee in the tenth but of themsior the living had little to epereior stones for tbs deed. parlors Beikirk one oi thefmost piceurelquefllllfes oi his ege. ‘e mall baiqre us time, ior his edvsnex ed idols brought him ism unhlPW wee e sorroi e noble line of Douglas- see abs heir to iine traditions. obs as bis iereietbers bed carried the iielrt o! Bruce the Hoiylnnd and flung it into the "midst oi the Berecens, retrieved it. and brought W beck to Beotlead.» Selkirk was born ls ml our at. Mary's‘ Isle. et the mouth oi’ theliver ‘Die. 1M I!!! thereforlroiily thirty-two whm be eems em to rrlnee-mwerd mend- end etiii lmmerried. He was the leikirhbuttiledeetnoioneliier him leriet. the!!! of twenty-eight. eelkirivl. will»! mo. squatters»! lsrserreblfsbersbelssr n. see mas; ilev 1M MUM menswear the iourthleri of__ spesbei-er-blsslrelssrneervrsarrs: “ Wlfiddtiiiifn, Oolviiie. d! Qehiitrep. l! had contracted. Lord fieikirk gave him two hundred screeloiiend ior his own on the Island. v Eight hundred men. womesr and driliilen ioineddeikirkfa . ditionio the oulr ens they three shiPl- Jmd Eelllirk bimleii we: on one oi them: esanwes en another‘. the greatest oi the three. the "Polly." which ‘cerriedmwwthirdl of. the oerty- . ~ ’ - ‘There could be littiqboredom inthe vault: M the story-Milly: Bebdy- But in addition the firefly’? \y‘to keep her ocoupiedflon the long weeks of the voyegei Part weyasreu the “P,°"Y‘_' Wl"°'°¢lil1§4 b! e381“ ish warship in search of conscripts; ‘rhewhrewd old see captain: eeved thsperiy intent by sensing ell the‘. peelensere below and telling‘ the‘ ‘$375 r "vain-in. I ( . Synchronous! ' . all entirely-new Jodie. Victor's“ new ‘super-lllfiuhlaflc,‘ run-vision dial i, new‘ simplicity and sleeve-accuracy to tunini- Judas time Victor iesrlneloeombieed with principle to . W’ Plow-r. Ind- . Chflrldttetown‘ 8e‘ ‘Summerside Eiectmln. _ ‘Then consider the boarding party of eeiiers tbateiiwsre down with shipbievc. ‘The ssller-s hastily withdrewnndwile supremaci- of the worship, in his wmpflflbn-QQ the euiiererl. lent out-the ‘Telly’ e supply o! biscuits abs ‘fresh fruit. on...» subs... l . ¢ DeniQfiStIation 44 so» oelsrwlrb arms-s uelnd” iIIIIF~ - " ’ 1 .- 1 ._BE*E”.., \E$$ L‘ FOX.“ l . riri