l "l \.wednesrln_vn nml Snlurrlnys. Re- Tw i. Jfrv 1i stars ‘m lvl- G'- M ‘s i THURSDAY — FRIDAY — SATURDAY Plus . . . COMEDY and — CHAPTER FOUR _. ADVENTURES of FRANK MERRIWELL. DAILY 3.15 MATINEE llc - 27c l FOR SALE Bungalow property in very desir- ‘ ablr location at Brighton No. 6 Yurth River Road, Consistspf large Living-Room with fireplace, Dining- FOPIII, Large Kitchen, Pantry, three limiting, (boiler recently installed.) 53 .\' 135 feet. Riley Building, or Dr. J, S. Jenkins. L-6618-9-4-5-7-9-1l. l l carpenter. After leaving Prince l Edward Islandl went to Manitoba, , where I worked as a. teamster for the Canadian Pacific Railway " After many ups and downs Mr Craig finally settled in what is h, h.‘ d; m,___g.a_l now known as Parksville area i.‘.£.\,\.,';‘ .,7\__33c_38c_ Jim Craig is a noted hunter, hav- ‘ ' " ing killed scores of crougers and w. wit-V’ c f bears since going West. He has _. ja§wlm_ _) f l ncv er shot- a wolf. though he states , in the early days they were quite ‘E ‘ numerous. To go back to the winter of 1869, when over six feet of snow fell and eik roamed the Parksville district. Mr. Craig can recall a certain morning when hc found five wolves lying dead beside the poisoned carcass of an elk. It was a trap, The wolves that winter became very bold as a. result of their food stipply being cut off by the hard winter. A trek, which Mr Craig often laughs about was undertaken by himself and his late brother Robert when they walked from Kamloops to New Westminster, a distance of ‘;".1t'1§s.‘ l .-~li ill-RAW l‘. Al. Professional Cards “JM“W"WWI§ ac». lI iluvyu, Eg-a ' (‘hnrtl-rl-d Accountants H?) l ltivhiunnd Street l l l ' Phullt‘ -i'l. l _— , N? 300 miles. 0n this trip he claims AIQX. VI?’ . Malhesml they averaged 30 miles a day, carry- BARlHWfl-ilf. SOLICITOR. ETC ing packs of 40 lbs each. There (‘tillcctlnna wasn't. any Vancouver then. Street. l Purchasing a canoe and meagre supplies they traveled in this man- ner to Campbell River. but-en route mct with many difficulties as well , as the loss of their canoe l ETC l Mont-y to I-OiLll 0mm Sm Great GI-llffle M. Alums FARR ER ll- 2... LLB. BARRLWIIIK. SOLICITOR. Mr. Craig exploded the old belief ;' .\l0.\iI\' T0 LOAN that Crougers never have more l Bank m‘ (‘tin-aura Bldg. ; than three kittens, when he shot Charlottblfi“ a mother while his dogs accounted for four youngsters. IYICIJJOd & BCIIIIQY Bears are still numerous in the \'.' i1. lily 'i‘l.l-1\'_ ti, C, district. killing many sheep and | \, Hi "i fir, K. , dccr each season. and only recently he and other settlers pointed out to the Provincial Government the , nccd of a bounty to keep them in 1:1: 05110000550011 Isllziiitleit ’ “m” I Bilrflfsrllflx and Arttllrnvyvul-Law MONEY TO LOAN Mr Craig is a real Pioneer of the place having cleared the land on which he and his family now 3 lives. It was a hard grind, to say the least. but like other indomitable 3 Islanders ‘who have helped to blaze new trails it may be truly l said of such mom-They came, they saw. they Conquered! , . Cfrnr "'(‘i' many thrilling . ' - suilod on Van- Ilurrl uhcrc he has es- tabhslrd :1 lflllllilili‘ Aulomobllfl‘ Camp nL Parlcvillc and Crates-by- ohe-sf-Fl Mi‘ _______________ cmii; was born on a farm THE DOORMOIISE PARTY thrrc zmlos from Mnlpcqttc. He left ‘this l’:'i‘.\'.i‘.f-e M ch 28. 1882 when I only zunlvvn years of age _ Go-nrr bark to iiiosr do.“ Wll/h its golden mfmoricr. h‘? Says m part: “I ‘vnz-knd n httfc on the farm. fishsd n rs 0:! Richmond B513’- Thc doormotisc gave a party, She had seven litllc frogs to ion. Thcy sat all around her in a ring And ate and drank of everything. And then they danced in twos and threes, They really were not hard to please. -—Amold MacPhee. p. SATURDAY MATINEE 2.30 Bedrooms and Bathroom. Hot Water In this n“ mm? P055 °f 153F191" B5 . New Fire Proof Roof’. Garage. Lot Wm" today fipply H. F. MncPhee. Solicitor, H” 5 value lWhcre they gathered round the — 7 -— 8.45 m. EVENING 27c — 33c- Your Movement Is Standing Your monument is standing at the entrance, to the park, Like 5- 591101’. watchful, guarding . Wham We P-‘luse a while tomark Every 018111” so humble that would raise you over men, within the Scottish glen; each homely relic of that. knew your birth past the envy of the the earth. tho scene riches of There's a. little lassie playing mund your pedestal of atone, Where ha‘ Dmnls now have rested humble folk. the sort you've known: And the sort for whom you vision- i? when the carking cares 01 e From their shoulder; had b”; lifted, and when mankind oeu- l IIAD RIIEIIMATIG PAIRS for 25 YEARS His Arms Were Becoming Useless It was about 25 years ago that rheumatism first marked down this sufferer; and finally the day came when he could hardi 11ft his arms. But he found reli — here ~ 1n this letter he tells the whole ory.— “About 25 years ago I first experi- enced slight muscular rheumatism l in my ann and shoulder. A few , years later lumbago also attacked l me. They gardualiy got worse until the paln got acute in both a Jugful of water with my tended straight out. About months age I bought a bottle of Kruschen Salts and by the time 1t was finished‘! was agreeably surprised at a slight improvement. I bought another one, and when that was finished all the pain had disappeared, and has never appear- ed since.” T- R The pains and “stiffness of rheu. matism are frequently caused by deposits of uric acid in the muscles and joints. The numer salts in Kruschen assist in stuggf latin the internal orgy); m ha!" y. "Hull-r activity, and help than to eliminate this excess uric ac . Word “Manitoba” Embodies Legend‘ BY fifth"! Honey. Canadian Press Stflff Writer THE NARROWS, Mun, Sept. 7 -—(0P)-—Waters still ebb and flow in the straits off Manitoba Island l5 miles north of here. Lake Man.’ itoba's sacred temple of Indian tradition is now a. quiet nirai com. mlmlty but when black shadows fall in the forests the island again be. cemocs the haunt of Manitou. The march of civilization has not the key province prairies. Virgin woodlands and streams that borden the lake have changed little since Pierre Gaultier de Varennes sieurde la Verandrye and his son first glimpsed them 14g years ago. Indian tribes crossed the half- Strip oi’ water at this point centuries ago to make raids on "more peaceful bands. Here, also, they met to flnoke the pipe of peace and ed from strife, when the day had come "For a W113”. when to man the worm and o'er Every man could be a brother, so to live forever more. 0Y1 the Beeless stone theyye grayed them. scenes you knew and lov- ed so well, Drawing everyone to ponder what your thoughts to mankindspeli. Overhead the airship droning, your feet the motors glide, and discarded. but what's thine shall long abide. Gfwyiuggyouhger with the seasons, _ growing truer every day, Rising ever more triumphant o'er Soon outmoded pay tribute to the Great Spirit. Tribes of Crees, Ojibways and Saulteaux believed their Manitou lived on the island to the north. They called the Place Manitowa- Duh-a contraction of Manitou. from the ‘island-dwelling place of their Spirit. and Wapah, meaning Narrows (the spirit of the Nar- rows.) Because of conflicting sound the white ‘man. according to early authorities. curtailed it foManitoba. History of the name dates back centuries when only the Red Man roamed the lake shores. It was be- lieved a. weird sound caused by the rapid current passing over the shingly, limestone rocks on the shore of the island was the voice of the Great spirit. the passing shows display. And your face seems almost living where you stand, in metal formed, On your four-square base of gran- ite, where the passing heart is warmed By the piacque that holds the pic- ture. hoids the scene of evening DFZIYEX‘. hearthstone, while the father's “reverent air" Led a worship rising upward from sincerity of heart, That were greater in its grandeur than all time's cathedraYd art. There. the other side recording Tam 0‘ Shanter on his mare, straining every nerve outrunning Tam’! wild fancies on the air. With an awful scare behind him and a scolding wife ahead, Tam were surely ever after safe at home at night in bed; And the harpl-es in their belfry held high carnival, no doubt, 'I‘il1 each self convicting conscience laid Upon itself its knout. And the scene that held est: there, they stand, Where the plow is in the furrow. whence you look across the land, Far away into the future, far be- yond the eycs of men Who like wheat. before the reaper, fall today, were falling then; Where you look beyond the striv- ing. where you look beyond the ear me lous- the horses where ‘Phat. makes mortal man a coward . iimca \vr~rl:cd~rus‘ __fl 18-day Round-trip -AUTUMN EXCURSIQNS CHARLOTTETOVl/tl: via SAINT JOHN, N. B. i Going nny sailing from Sept. 16th lo and including Oct. 7th, 1936, S. S. “SAINT JOHN" j.- DIudvrn slnlornnms for as lillle as 81.50 will lccomrnodlte mo persona Round-trip excursion fare: from CHARLOTTETOWN $1 7.00 up SUIVIMERSIDE . . 17-00109 SAINT 1mm . . . 11.00 Equally Low Inna [nun (JIM-r Pnlnn Igglllnlg from Its-rife Point Wharf, Tuesdays and Friday! l! 5 P. M. I N Saint John, nt 7:30 I‘. M. (A. T.) (D. S. T.). Efiocllve September ‘ 29th; leave Boston lune dlyc at l s r. m. (a. s. 1.). I! i rnlng leave Imlia Wharf, Boston; R annular] ' nun , . ‘In lnlornilllun Ind nun-nun Ipply any Canadian Nnlunl I-lluuyi coupon l rim-hr nfllfi n chill all!» l"?! 7".‘ 'h"'" 5"” I'D" mu '0 from the cradle to the bier. Aye: The simple things are greatest and your “Spark o’ Nature's fire" Burns away the shallow prutige of each sycopnant and liar; Every strutting imitation of "The noblest work oi’ God". With "His riband, star and a that", When the south wind blows wat- ers in the Narrows rise more than four feet. The receding tide makes a rushing noise which can be heard for long distances. The district came to be a sacred place for var- 10us trlbx W\') gathered there for ancient ceremonies, war dances and feasts. Present-day Indians have largely embraced the Christian faith but pagan beliefs and superstitions die hard. Older natives have been seen to throw pieces of tobacco into the water while prising the island as an offering t0 the Great Spirit. An example of the extentto which superstition clings ls furnished by Hebron Monr. pioneer postmaster of The Narrows’ community. when a Hudson's Bav steamer travelling down the northern shore of the lake was becalmed at the entrance to the straits. Alexis. old mdian member of the crew, was asked to appeal to Manitou for a fair wind. The native did so in a dramatic manner, Mr. Moar relates throwing the usual offering on the waters. Immediately the surface rippled. A faint puff of wind became a. steady breeze that filled the sails and car- ried the vessel on t its destination. (i) all commercial hatoheries oi’ over 1,000 err: capacity to obtain their hatching eggs from approv- ed fllccirs and to operate under Dominion supervision as regards hatchery conduct. operation, and advertising; and r2) approval of flocks as sources of- hatchery eggs to he under provincial supervision. '1'" 1'1"" 119*". ..mav,be started by of hatching eggs; (2) of day-old chicks; (3) of pul- lets ready to lay: and (4) of adult breeding stock. Whatever method is BdOhl/Kl. one thing is certain -- a great deal of annoyance and loss may be obviated by purchasing from R. O. P. (Record of Per- formance) or approved flocks. For the-individual tanner or for the professional poultry breeder in A >- v -¢ if Q '9 Z ~r that you never could applaud: Till each person, now, they label like a prize bull at a fair, Makes us Join you. Bobbie, mulling, while we stand before you there. -Jaines M. Maclean. (Written while viewing the statue of Robert Burns at the entrance to Stanley Park, Vancouver. Canada, August 22nd, 1936). _____,__ Help (‘z-cafe Farm Flock It ls recog-ntaed throughout the poultry industry that one of the most rapid and effective means of improving funn poultry flocks ‘is through the 1p- pllcation of the Dominion Hatchery RORHIIIIOHB. These regulations. with the co-orpemtlon of the pro- vlnces, are accomplishing good re- vults. To lay the foudatlon of a profitable farm flock. ft ll neces- sary to start with good healthy stock, To enable, the fa to ob- tain this kind of stock. lotions for the control of hateherls were Canada there is no lack of dc- finitc and authentic information on the lack of poultry. Also there la no lack of personal service to those farmers who are within reach of the various experimental farms. illustration colleges, and other recognized centres of agricultural activity. The farmer at a distance can always make his wants known _ rm; CHARLOTTETOLIT GUARDIAN TODAY ONLY-(jAPlTQgals-v-a-is RETURN 0F JIMMY VALENTINE Plus COMEDY and NOVELTY lANAlYSlS l or truism rt unis (GP. By Guardian's Special Wlmll 1210mm, Sept. ‘l-The Aug. 1'1; vote that unsaddled the Liberal. party after 3B years of power in‘ this province and elected the Un-; ion Nationale forces was the larg- est ever cast m a Qurvcc vmvuwlah election. l The landslide that elected ‘l6 un- ion Nationale candidaffl. Yedllwd Liberal representation to 14 and left all other parties nowhere reach- ed a total of 565.528 votes. ‘This compares with the four 1119"!!!“ elections as foiiows: 1935, 536,361; 19:41, 459,695; 1921, 311.966, and 102:4. 290,638. What proportion the 1938 vote bears to the total e'igible voters will not: be known until official figures for the total are published. The population of the province is about. 8.000.000. but women do not have, , the franchise in provincial elections. l As usual when the P01911181‘ V°lbl '15 analysed, the vote by Dailies 15f not completely indicative of the: wide swing in the result. The com- blned forces of Conservatives, for- mer Actlon Liberale Nationale ad- hepents and others who marched to victory mama the crusadinB Pre- mier Maurice Dupiessls are credit- ed with 320.056 votes. Although they have only 14 members in the 00 seat legislative asscmb-y. Liber- als under former Premier J. Adel- ord Godbout nevertheless ref-‘Clyed 225,163 votes. It therefore took 4.211 votes to elect a Union Nationale candidate and 16,083 to elect a Liberal. The following tabulation shows how the vole wasdivldcd among parties in the two past elections with percentage of the totfil VOW each party obtained: 1031 19:5 Union Nation- ale 320.056 55.59 ——- Liberals 225,103 39.81 249.486 40.50 AL.N. -._ 102,205 sou Cons. 1.761 a2 01,389 1am ma, 1.10.9410 1.01 23.299 4B4 Ind. Cons. 167 .03 3'7 91 Labor '10 .01 2218 41’- Others 9,105 1.6a 1.101 B? Total 565.5211 100.00 535.a51100.00 On voting day there were 205 can- didates in the field, divided among 90 U. N., 88 LiberaLs and 2'7 others- The 90 U. N. candidates were composed of 26 former Conserva- tives, 32 former Action Liberalo Nationale adherents, one Independ- ent Liberal and 31 candidates whose former affiliation was not officially established because they had not previously been Dmvlnclal candidates. O.‘ the ‘l6 elected the"! were 25 former Conservatives, 29 A. L. N., one Independent Liberal and 2i of doubtful former affiliation. Actionai Liberals Nntlonflle W55 a group of dissatisfied Liberals who broke with former Premier L. A. Taschereau before the 1M5 elec-l tion They were headed by Paul Gouin who took an, active part in the recent campalzn- when M1‘- Taschereau turned the Liberal lead- ership over to Godbout. the A- 1'- N. Joined the Conservatives, most of whom acknowledged allegiance to Mr. Duplcssls, forming the 119W U. N. party. The following table shows the number of votes each 8P0"? m m‘? U. N. obtained. the percentage of 90 candidates each group had in the field. the percentage of ‘the U. N. vote each obtained and the per- centage of all votes each obtained: percent percent percent of 90 of U.N. of all candies vote vote! Cons. 99.891 28.89 31.21 17.66 A. L. N. 122,237 36.56 28.19 21,61 Ind. Lib. 3.653 1.11 1.14 .66 No Affil.. 94,275 34.44 29.46 16.6’! Total 320,056 100.00 100.00 56.69 Botany Factor In Good Food The science of botany to-day has a. direct bearing on every individual of a nation, for no branch of sys- tcmized knowledge has closer or more multifarious contacts connec- ted with the practical production of agricultural crops. In Canada thl-i position is clearly seen in the work of the Division of Botany. M961"!- mental mmis Branch, Dominion Department of Agriculture, directed by Dr. H. T. Gussow. It was against (liscnse in cereal, fruit, and other food plants; it furnishes knowled8¢ available for the extermination of weeds and for the conservation of pastures; it ensures the growing of good food plants, particularly of potatoes by inspection and certifi- cation of tubers intended for seed viurposes, and, through r arch in its laboratories, deals not only with the problems affecting plants and their diseases peculair to the vari- ous localities, but makes Dominion- wide survey of the prevalence of plant diseases. The central laboratory with an arboretum attached for the study of general problems in economic botany and plant disease Ls located by letter or postcard. In addition to the field service at the Central Experimental Farm. work conducted by the Poultry ser- vices, Live Stud: Branch, and the practical experimental and re- search work of the Poultry Division of the Experimental Farms Branch, the Dominion Department of Agri- culture in Ottawa distributes free of charge on request many publi- cation on poultry, as on other branches of agriculture, all of which contain important and ' practical information. . l ___..______-__._._ , HOW T0 CLEAN IVORY If your ivory toilet act is liifllfid- t mix a little whiting with refined turpentine to a thick paste and i cover the whole article. Let it re- l Ottawa, and there are ten other laboratories distributed throughout the Dominion. special investiga- tions are carried on in all of them. For example, in 1935, the laboratory 1:" X. r- caaii steel .. .. _ P. luuatrexlifisirritealtal]: 1310': “ma, a Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to rce to the system. r drawn up. with the cooper-sum d l "Mu on a few how. the“ “l” °" Irlfig-aprgven dependable reatorativl. several of the provinces and It , "u-lr i-"nu-s‘ Briefly. the." hatchery regula- WPW M‘ t" .- Ind polish with drv vhlunc- My dealer in toilet articles will sell you a cream fm- clel-flifll 3V0?! l! v . evurtt ‘ Ilafllulifi III! E 9» 1936 -._.. ._.2 T“ R YA A N K or cANAoA oven 10o anancnzs IN cannon AND :0 oruzn couu-rmrs tories at Winnipeg, Saskatoon, and Edmonton, in combating, diseases affecting grain crops and the effect of fertilizers and rotation on dseases, is of world-wide repute. At Summerland, BC. all apple diseases are studied, and at Saanicitton, 13.0., considerable at- tention hus been given to diseases of ornamental plants and bulbs. local potato diseases, greenhouse tomotoes diseases, testing of sprays, and resistance cf mangels to stor- age rot. 'I'hcsc references to the work of the Division of Botany deal only with some of the principal. phases at present being undertaken, and merely represent the wide range of the research and general activities with which the Division is identified. ‘ at Charlottetown, PEI, investiga- ted brown heart in turnips and. the use of seed potatoes previously ex- posed to freezing temperatures. At Fredericton, N;B., much attention was devoted to research on the identity, transmlsion, variation, and control of virus diseases such as mosiac, leaf roll, and spindle tubes. and efforts were made to discover a practical means of con- trol of club root, as well as methods of controlling diseases of potatoes. At Kentville, 10.5., one of the prin- cipal problems relates to fruit growing, such as the seasonal de- velopment. of apple scab, certain physiological disorders, and sim- plifying and making more effective the methods of spraying orchards. At the laboratory at Ste. Anne dc ‘Yes. I have had tizcm l.\\':c:~.‘ those who have said, ‘The p0 is lumpy this morning,’ need r be shaken. “They have not bccn guilty of ,1 grave gratumatical error. I find, is used in the plural o the obscurer Scottish and E dialects. “Measles have a perfectly good singular ‘measles,’ with an ancestry stretching back respcctnbly to the Old High German ‘Mcaslc?’ "The modern tendency to mnk-g measles singular is widcsprcad, but by no means a binding rule. "There isalso a vex-b to mcnsle, Lean measle a friend —i.e., give him measles; or I can just mcrivle —i. e., develop measles. (‘I .0- la Pocatiere. Que, the diseases af- 11A“ eapnef medic‘) ma“ M. fecllng apple crops- and studies m‘ IS MEASLES 1T1 doctor correspondent wrote: “The lating to late blight of potatoes and - child is measnng nicely," the spreading of virus diseases of Many persons have dlmmnty m mmtoes are being conducted‘ At deciding whether some nouns are Although pnaire dogs eat some St‘ camermes‘ Ontario‘ pmgress is singular or plural. The Edinburgh cut worms the grasshoppcrs. and reported in many projects, includ- ing apple scab, peach leaf curl. peach branch canker, control of can digest nights-brides and {ct-o Scotsman gives a couple of in- weeds that poison cattle, tltcso stances in which there is uncer- t b t_ t, 1 f tainty- ‘ animals are still "pests" because iaggéeg? Tasha: Galilean gr "With reference to a recent note most of their dict is good vege- mmawes, and me shlpmng o; on measles a doctor sends me the tatlon needed by western sheep and cattle. Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone in 1876. following postcard. -Porridge are them, but measles is it. "Those who. when asked if they have had measles, have replied- peaches to western Canada and to Great Britain. The work of the three labora- l i‘ B|LLIH0w did you fix up a club-room in your cellar, and do away with all the dirt and‘ 9: ashes?” “Well Jack, I got an Imperial G. & B. Oil Burner from Palmer Electric. All their installations are care- fully engineered, and the terms are great. —FIVE YEARS TO PA Y- Giyve them a c-all and they’ll survey your heating sys- ‘tem at no cost or obligation to you.” Si PALMER ELECTRIC Phne 1444 155 Great George Street J COAL COAL Highest Quality - Lowest Prices . LET US HANDLE YOUR COAL PROBLEM AND YOU WILL ENJOY THE UTMOST IN HEAT, COMFORT AND SATISFACTION DURING THE COMING WINTER. OUR REPUTATION FOR SQUARE DEALING AND GOOD SERVICE INSURES YOU GETTING ONLY THE MOST RELIABLE COALS AT PRICES THAT MEAN A SAVING TO YOU ON YOUR FUEL BILL. i WE RECOMMEND THE COALS LISTED BELOW AND GUARANTEE THEM T0 GIVE YOU ENTIRE SATISFACTION: AMERICAN HARD — — — — — — -— — — ' $13.50 PER TON “GENUINE” SCOTCH HARD — — — — — $13.00 ” " DOMINION COKE - - - — — - — —* —- $10.50 ” ” OLD SYDNEY SCREENED — — -- - —' —' 59-50 " ” INVERNESS SCREENED — - — — — - $9.25 ” " ALBION NUT AND STOVE — —- — — —- $9110 " " SPRINGHILL SCREENED -— -—- — — "" "" $8.50 " ” SPRINGHILL SLACK - — — — - — -- — $7.00 ” , ” OLD SYDNEY SLACK- — — "' "" -' -' — $0.50 ” " we WILL ALLOW YOU A DISCOUNT 0F FIFTY CENTS PER TON orr ABOVE mucus FOR PAYMENT WITHIN THIRTY DAYS C. Lyons 8c Company PHONE 111 QUEENS WHARF