- l~lffffitfiiiiiiiililiilfiii ‘@- " PAGE 1... ...... u. T IIQIICIIO—". m- gqsntnry-IJQIL-Cal- a TUESDAY» Cluster l. lobar-a. I. some an laaallll’ Blvflfld- 5 5"”- Auoulata ldltaro-Iraal IalkQ and D. l. Darth i. |1||||| mu, founded m1) I-li as 1w 4h In") “""""- _ flM,,,,m-¢uusnmlnsuuucuneuusu P. DoLIballlIOI-D-IO- slblllaaaa. JULY, 10, 1H3 ‘HISTORICAL SOCIETY ‘In tel-day's Forum appears a let- ter from Professor Harvey, Archivist, flaiifax, in connection with the Pm" posal that the Prince Edward 1s- land Historical society be revived. Professor Harvey attaches to llll letter an extract from a Halifax: paper of 188i giving a rePOIt 0! i116 first meeting of the original Hie- wylcgl society including the mem- u... who enrolled. It will be seen tba Original membership was rep- resentative of the proiessbns and public leaders of the day. The necessity for the continued existence or"... Historical Society must. be obvious to all who know the value of the systematic reoordmgs of cur- rent events and happenings. The use of history is to give value to the present hour and its duty, to dis-i play a chart arui compass for the rising and succeeding generations, and it is the main object of an Historical Society to give the facts and events themselves, leaving com- mentators to draw o-nclusions and, adorn the tale. Of course, to begin with an Historical Society here. would have to go back over the‘ past and attempt to gather the data that has been left uncollected. As Professor Harvey mentions, there must be someone here havingl possession of the minute book and records of the original Historical Society. It would be an act 0f pat- riotism on his part to hand these over to the Public Librarian, as suggested by Professor Harvey, or hand them over to the re- suscltated Historical society. But whether these be in existence 0r not the aims and objects in the first instance of an Historical Society here would be to collect, as far as possible, the necessay information on which history could be based. We commend to the citizens the suggestions contained in President Harvey’; interesting communication. CONFERENCE REPORTS No admission except to delegates will be permited on the occasion of the Economic Conference at Ottawa. This is following the rule observed ,, at the Imperial Conferences in Lon- y. don since 122s. Reports of the pro- ‘ ceedinss will be supplied officially. The official announcement reads: “The meetings of the Conference committees will, be private. Arrange- ments will be made for public an- nouncement through the press of the general progress of the Con- ferance. and of the conclusions reached. These publicity arrange- ments will be under the general direction of Hon. R. J. Manion." ' “It. is proposed to make an ex- ception to the general rule by pro- viding for as large public participa- tbn in the proceedings of the Open. ing session of the conference, which [to be held in the House of com- mons oh ‘ffhursday, July, 21st, as the circumstances permit." The arrangements for this session will in large part follow those adopted in the Indian Hound Table Conference held in mndm 1n 1930, ‘nab coferencc will be opened by His kcellency the Governor-General, who will read a message from Hill Mhjesty The King. , Provision is being mad. for ad- mission to the galleries of privy, Wimeillefe. Senators and members of Parliament, together with such: guests from overseas countries as‘ ah, limited facilities will permit. m" view of the interest of the public, provision further is being mm to broadcast the p. “ gs, grid a‘ sound film of the opening is being arranged. i The Conference is a Business: meeting and it is the unanlmouslths mg o; y," wish of its members to concentrate attention on their difficult and im- portant taslu. so for as consistent with this object, provision will. how- " ‘IN-Y Y1K» ‘TF1’? 7L~'T'7T=Y"»‘.‘YIW’QFW5T",<FTTTZYIFIJ‘T’“. r- <4.»- and of the committees and sub-l‘ ithis country. with the ever, be made to enable the vfltifll delegations to become acquainted ‘my, m; capital and with sue-ll 0am. 90mg g moi; engagements will permit them to viltt. TIMELY ADVICE nun simmer been an swelling itoll of deaths mm drowning. Bush ‘a -u. hsplnn here M i" “h” lnovinces, and the worst p!" 01' i" is that many of these tragedies could have been avoided. You!!! pgoplq especially too often have an exaggerated idea of their slllll m‘! "prowess in the water, and do fool- hardy things as l. oonseqiimm Th5‘ point is emphasised by the 0"!" ;Journa1 in a recent issue. which ‘quotes some good advice by J°h°BY wsusmlul... one of the greets"- swimmers on the con“ ". M1‘- Weissmuller sI-yl: "I am a champion swimmer. y" I would no more swim a half mile from shore alone without l. Nit ' in attendance than 1 would but l loaded gun to my head and pull the trigger. It is as dangerous as that. Don't show off, and just I keep cramps in the back of W"? ‘ mind when you are tempt-ed to swim out of sight or aid of others." g This is but common sense. lmrle ‘who can swim but a little or not ‘an. all should never swim beyond Ttheir depth; and the stronsefl swimmers dice with death when they go long distances from .the shore. Swimming, after all. is but |good exercise, and there is no need ito go hair s. mile from shore. or imuch less than that, to get all the Exercise that is necessary. FOX FARMING In the current issue 0! United iEmpire, Mr. T. T. Meinoss, Presid- ent of the British Fur Breeder!’ As- sociation has an ill-formative article ‘on silver fox farming in the Mother .country and British Dominlons, in which credit‘ ls given to Governor Dalton and Lord Btrathcona as the originators of domestic fur breeding. Discussing the present markets and the prospects of silver fox farm- ! ing Mr. Melross writes: ' l It can be estimated that practicum- ly the whole of the largo quantity Iof silver fox pelts which are now ’marketM. annually at the Inudon Ifur salea is produced from animals bred in captivity. The sliver fox, ibelng originally the sport of the common red fox, is not produced in the wilds by nature in any large quantities than in former years, when the finding of a black fox in ‘his snares Wls a red-letter day in - the life of the trapper. In those days I the market price of a natural silver- ihlack fox was anything up to £500; now. of course, in view of tho in- creased quantity which is made ,a.vailable, the prices are very much ,lower. but at the same time it can be said that the silver fox pelt is one of the few raw materials the price of when has not sunk below the cost of production. Prices have been low, but at the last sale of the Hudson Bay Company in London an increase of 50 per cant. was re- Yba-Inalleaa-I. I. lavas“ IUTES BY TIIE WAY hum Saskatchewan comes the latest lesson that banditry-il folly in Canada for the reason that el- cape of the consequences is well nigh an imweaibilliiy. Last week Corporal " Ieonard mus, of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. stopped an automobile to question three men Iuspecwd of being crim- inals and one of them deliberately shot him dead. The story has been told in the Guardian. The whole country was aroused and people flocked to aid the Police. The ban- dits were reduced to two and fl-i nally to one and he shot himself. The two remaining ones will be tried and will receive the punish- ment they deserve. The Saskatche- wan affair is a " ‘ example in proof that crime is futile in Cana- da. Mr. Magi-nth, Canadian chair- man of the International 00m- miaslon, in a recent letter said: "In I your case many still hold to the advice of that great Americanl George Washington, to keep clear of Europe. No one can interpret the needs of the future much be- yorld the period in which he iivoel Washington's views were unques- tionably sound in the earlier years of your country. Yet the power and prestige of the United States today in a “ of nations would be a. tremendous influence for good throughout the world." Proceeding from these introductory remarks. Mr. Magrsth suggested that the two great political parties in the United States co-operato in an ef- fort to assist the nations of Eu- rope to come back economically and to arrive at a real measure of actual disarmament. In his view. it is difficult to see how there is much likelihood of world peace un- til the powerful American republic assumes its share of the burden. Senator Borah offers a atrong hint to the united forces of morali- ty fn the United States to nominate him as President, since he is not willing to take chances merely with the prohibltionists who asked him to lead them. T‘ ubtedly the united forces, of morality in the United States could elect their can- didate. The trick would be to get them out of the Republican and Democrtic parties, where they have resided for so many years. Canadians are 890d eaten. "y! the Farmers‘ Advocate. In addition to being the world's largest eaters of butter and eggs, we make a very good showing in respect to meats. In 1931 we consume‘ 148 pounds per capita. If we can stand ft~we may be able to eat our way ‘even- tually into better times. ~ » Whatever tentative conclusion» may be reached in an examination- of the present situation, the funda- mental goodl sense of the British people may be counted on in the long run. They may be apathetic, stolid and “egmatic; they may glory in being thought stupid; but in this baffling and probably for- ever insoluble problem of the orga- nization of human society they are not unlikely to assume the leader- ship in the future as they have in the past, deriving from experience and from the experiments of others the methods best adapted to their own particular character "and tern- peramsnt-Lord Ponsonby. The American people are looking for new leaders, for men who are truthful and wsolute and ‘ uent in the conviction that the Ameri- can destiny is to be free and mag- nanimous, rather than complacent and acquisltiye, they are looking for leaders who will talk to the people not about two-car garages and a bonus, but about their duty, corded for the better grades, while the cheaper quality registered an increase in price even more spec- taeular. This in a time of depression is ex- tremely encouraging to fur farmers, both here and in Canada. ‘the Brit- iah-bred fox is approaching a stage ,in its development where it can "successfully compete with those ‘reared in the Dominion, but it is still necessary. and in the opinion of the writer it will be advisable for a long time, to import fresh blood from Canada. Upon regwtration in Canada a. certificate bearing the breeding and petigree details and carrying the seal of the Department of Agriculture and signed by an of- ficial on behalf of the Minister is furnished in respect or each for, spaces are provided for the trans- fer of ownership, each transfer be- in! recorded in the books of the Assocation, after the manner of ordinary shares in a company. The same system has been followed in that there is no Government con- trol. By this means, owneluhip of a fox is u wmpleh as the on". Ihlb of shares. This allows of silver foxes being owned by those resid- illl iemnenrily in other pas-h o! W! moire. who are due to retire in I Y" years. and as insurance of by death can be effected a0 Lloyd: for a reasonable premium. it provides obs of the and about the sacrifices they must make, and about the discipline they must impose upon themselves, and about their responsibility to the world and to posterity, about all those things which make a peo- ple self-respecting, serene and con- fident. May they not look in vain. —Waller Llppman. The Prime Minister, Rt. Hon. B. B. Bennett, has reiterated his con- viction that the Imperial Economic Conference will result in Canada. and the other parts of the Eln- pire leading the world out of the depression. This indicates that Mr. Bennett and his ministers will do their utmost to make the confer- ence a success, and contrasts pleas- antly with Rt. Hon. Mackenzie K108’! rlther gloomy speculations on the event. When a British soldier consumed American munitions he served America as he served his own country. Is it not obvious that while the Americans were preparing an army which only fought in ths concluding phase of the war the munitions they lent to the Allies wan really saving the lives of the moat attractive investments pu- sible for the official who dufres an outdoor occupation up” m; m‘ bythole wholent them.the sacri- JIccwu-outbootbnrsidaftwu return home. - ' "we visa.‘ l‘. a i-‘ruan- '- Amarican soldiers? so n; from War Debts representing» sacrifice 0:- Bgl W-Bqbv-JLD 1D“ momma you: balsa-n Ono of the tests for thou wish- ingtoenter theairaervicoisbold- ing the breath. After taking a long breath, the candidateholds it as long as pog- sible, and with the ordinal‘! hell- thy man this is about 46 seconds, and with a woman about 40 sec- onds. You have perhaps seen a pm- foastonal swimmer in vaudeville stay under water a number of minutes which shows what actually can be done by training. Anothertestisboblowtheairall out of your lungs, and see how 1on8 it takes before you have to take in a breath. This takes as seconds in la. normal man and about 20 sec- onds in a normal woman. However you would be surprised how you can increase the length of time you can hold your breath, or do without breathing in some air, by exercise and training. Opera singers have so trained their lungs or breathing apparatus that they can hold their breath two or three times as long as when they first began singing. Even the average individual can soon learn to hold his breath for a. minute or more, by brisk walking daily, or slow jogging. It is this slow Jogging or ‘road work’ as it is called by boxers. 100t- ball players, and other athletes that develops the strong heart and the strong lungs needed in athletic contests. Physicians are now making use of this simple test of holding the breath, in estimating the condition of the heart and blood pressure, and also in severe cases of thyroid trouble or goitre. In all these conditions the length of time the breath can be held is less than in normal individuals. The physician thus makes a test and then advises certain treat- ment, rest in some cases, less food in others, omitting certain acid foods "in others. ‘After some weeks the pfitienf."'.l'0p6l‘l5l again, or the physicfanvisits the home, and an- other breath- holding test is made. In cases of severe goltre where “ is necessary, the physic- ian can, by making these tests fromtlme to time, finally get the patient into such a condition that operation may be considered. He knows that the heart, blood vessels circulation-elf the blood, and oxy- gqnlntake by‘ the lungs are all so much lIIiDmved-ithat it will be safe t0 91395150. ‘.9’ -" It is certainlymaimpie 1711i’. QI- rective ' test." Lond0n’s 8,000,000 (Manchester Guardian) The first of the reports compiled from the census returns of last year is published. The area dealt with is the County of London. The population of the area within a fif- teen-lnils radius of Charing Cross has increased in the past ten years by 723,741 persons. This Greater London's , pulatlon now totals 8,203,942. The increase in the population of Greater London is 9.7 percent. on the figures for 1921. This is nearly three times as great as it was in the preceding decennium and nearly twice as great as the current in- crease for the country at large. This Population was divided into 3,982,- 916 males and 4,371,020 females. The largest contributor to this in- crease is Dagenham, with a pOpull- tion of 89.368. which is an increase during the ten years of 80,285. It is one of the few districts in which men outnumber women, the figures being 44,870 males and 44,492 fe- males. Ilford has an increase of 45.867. with a total population of 131,001. The population of the City of Iondon and the 29 Metropolitan boroughs which comprise the ad- ministrative county of London do. clfned by 87,520. In the administra- tive county lthe population numbe - ed 4,897,008 persons. ‘This is the third dec um in succession in which the county population has shown a decline. Population h“ declined in 21 of the Metropolitan boroughs. The greatest deer-eggs h“ been shown in the City, with a pop- ulation of only one-quarter per cent, of that of the whole county, the figure of decrease being 19.8 percent; The dwellings in the county now number 746,980, as compared with 720,004 in 1921, so that the net ef- thoee who supplied life who mad; the real sacrifice, not those w)“, supplied the goods. We IUppIIQQ both. Every Brituh citizen, there. fore. i" gled w think that British Wiley after the war pursued this "wtmalmmvvungwJ-r- 'r_-.,.,s~.x '_,g._ s. the line of equity and declared for _ the cancellation of War Debts. room. _ i The Midsummer ldyll (Montreal Gaabtte) We take much mfllfijwedle 110k or tbs seasons in thala- transitional mo.“ m4 gnu-p comb-ash than when nature. by 8814M "=4 m‘ perceptible degflee. mounts Wu" full orbed richness and beauty a her summer festival. ‘rhera are vast- 1y more poems about the hells young charms of May and the flam- tug hues of sertember the“ elm‘ m, pgggantry of June and JlllY- Nor should this be a matter of sur- prise. For all words drop down in?» prosaic luv, fence beside the won- dzvus picture that 8R6" W1’ "'9 m tbs midsummer solstice of the y"; Am 1g 1g very much better to w; mo; oompanionablgtouch with m, my,“ that grow and blow than to brood over botanical diagrams and scientific tomes. Better it is b0 feel ourselves c8118“ by “l9 d"? pulsations of the world, with lie Eontan music melsuring out the mp; of time, than in pore grub- bingly over the most learned dis- quisitions about nature ever set down in cold print. For nature in he; suminl dress is instinct with a vibrant emotion that overtolle all the gtilted school jargon about laws. unlformities, pmpulslons and nflftle- les. as much as the sunflashing waves of a. singing brook overflow the fixed pebbles in the bed of the stream. The gamut of light can no more be put into a desk-made formula than the soul-stirring strains of a musical symphony, with its effect upon the imaginliiiflll. can be bound up with the inked score. "One impulse from the ver- nsl wood will teach us more than all the sages can." And nobody in his right senses will wish merely to match his wits against the variety, wealth, wonder and superabound- ing charms of the summer lands- cape in order to fashion out some pet theory about nature's constitu- tion and method. We may devoutly thank heaven there is something on the universe that cannot be stan- darized to suit our pedantic whims. Alt midsummer the impulse comes over us to get away from the whole drabcyele of dry-blottenimpres- slons, and to breathe inrhythrn. with all clean things that rejoice in the fulness and beauty o1 their ex- " IIVFAIIOI 11w Iwmbladdnlomsuuhal- lowdland , ‘ Wherenoblrdsllfll Nocrandompetallflutterfrfll hand Oftlmiddaflnlflflflli Turnover-had I anon Invadstheeklllx Butdweltiulivtddarknamflllit spun Awagathwartmyeyell u. Thdallmyiifahadbeenlfll"! night Gloomy and dense. Yet loving you I, lbw" h" spring‘: defiant And dawrfs mncnlflesnfl- --L10tl8l Stevenson. _____,_________i.-_. bout the sky. and glflivllilv min all about the crowded IP14!" 9! u” earth. Richard Jefferlea aptly My" “steeped in the perfume of flow- ers and the pollen to the music of the birds and bees. the atanelflh!" becomes a living stream." And no note of midsummer is more charac- terlstic than the gay cbimln of the cricket to whom every Neil! °f grass is as a tall tree And what man could better read the fdyll of good old smnmertinis than honest Izaak Walton? ‘Turn out of the way a little, good scholar, toward yonder high honeysuckle hedge: thm we'll sit and sing. while this shower falls so gently upon the teeming earth, and gives g, sweeter smell .10 the lovely flowers that adorn the. verd- ant meadows." Good old-fashioned poetry he calls the blended notes of the summer landscape, and we think no holiday-makers or nature lover is likely to quarrel with this famous anglers verdict. " - Transportation Events bush" L e (Canadian Railway Worlds . _. The Great Eastern, than r-tha largest steamshlp, 1n" thcnworld,‘ are panding llfe. And the opportunity is within our reach in the scent of a: thousand herbs and blossoms and! in the "grtaful sweetness of thei new-mown hay." What fragrance‘ can excel the subtle perfume of the mown grass saturating the aifafter a shower has fallen upon the win-j rows, or when they lie prone andi crackle dry under the glance of thei sun‘! Whatmusic can vie with that of the hidden brook that "to the sleeping woods all night singeth ei quiet tune?" Or again, the sound‘ of the wind gently whispering per- feot sea-music through the tremb- ling leaves of the trees? What makes the summer and tends most to impart to the landscape its sum- mery “beet? some will have it that the grasses and herbs, runnnlg into * myriad 10mm 0f green stalk and eiillllllie “B0617. gives the scene its elivring spell. Others point to the 001011111 blooms swaying and tossing to every breeze like fOflm-bubblgg upon the crested wave. One Erlgllsh writer tells us that if one thing more than another proclaims the ml"! of summer. it is the mounds °1' ills trees clothed with leaves so ihwk-illfli they stand like a solid hill over against the upper cloud, and that a bird peeping from the inside of this branched and leafy screen would see a quaint tapestry henetrated by innumerable "cracks" 0! dlylight. What observer does not Y¢°°8TllZe the truth 0f this impreg- "m" Bummer hangs golden all a- fect of all new building, structural °|i"i'9¢l0h. demolition, and conver- sion to other uses during the past ten yo... has resulted in an m- crease of 28,926, or 10m- percmh of the earlier figure. Concurrently with this four per. cent. increase the number of private families has grow by 6.17 percent; and the average number of families P" °°°"Pi°d dwelling. which was 1.51 in 1911 and 1.00 in 1021, has "I" iqths further height of 1.0a. Th9 “IO-Person family has he. "m" increasingly nredomln f and 7m‘ u" "WW-Person family now accolmts for 45.6 percent. of all fa. fill-UM. Families 0f eight person; 9f more have been halved in number: dim-III the Pest twenty yen-g, mg now account for only four pol-cent, of the total. Considerable reduction has been made in both the numbers and pm. portions scheduled in 'ths “over- wrest" esteem. . The number of "overcrowded" families had been reduced by macs, :1: the population therein by 143,. Notwithstanding the general fin. movement of the families of from liltfl ten persons in also at the rived at Quebec, July Galfll." Contract. for "construction 10f Grand ‘Irunk Pacific-Byvaigued-aa definitely known. of property can this j of i ‘larcase. fProvlnclal Managers Try I It may be by yeerly. or helf-yeerhrslenosits, It is not and there is no worry about interest collections. n is bound to moi-ease in value,’ and h. worth in ten, fifteen, " . N 11931111 iii Wl11Pl-All..1§7ithqut expense, to " the desired beneficiary. , l " "Consult us with regard to a". suitable p1... saving and protection for your partieu. There is no obligation. llvllnullll "a. to. lrn. Lower Queen Street-Charlottetown. Brahmin Orange - _ Retail prico'50c per lb. I , UNI Ollbll Ill Alflllllf PIQiIIS. ,, - 9119 Plymenii. or 9i‘ twenty. years is 0f what other type be aaidf. ' The arose-woo: us. \ ‘Pekoe Tea PUBLIC FORUM HISTORICAL SOCIETY Bin-In viewof thopropolal to organise in historical society in Island it seems to ms that the enclosed copy of an account that appeared in a con- temporary Halifa: paper of the elimination of the Charlottetown Historical doclsty would be" inter- estinm-The society III vflluiaed oifllnnfly, Beptember i2. 1881 and Built bah functioned for some Ottawa July 9, 1908. . Hon. A. G. Blair, Dominion" blin- ister of Railways and Consume- signed, owing to- his objecting 1n National Transcontinental Ry, and iGrmd Trunk Pacific Ry. projects. July 18, i900. Be was appointed Chief Commissioner, Board of Rail- way Commissioners, Rb. l, 1904, which position he resigned, bet. s1, live aleadto somsonewho wtlllook ' iuptbs Island papers of this and First god turned on ormvspsst subsequent dates to follow the for- ‘Pass line, Canadian” Pacific ayJtuuss of-the old-society. 1 do lwpa "July i4, law. " ‘ " '" 1904. He died Jan. 25,1907. First locomotive driven through the Rocky Maintains on Canadian Pacific Railwiy, July 15, 18M. / Oxford Branch. I-otaroolonial Railway, in Nova Bootla opened July 1s ,iaoo. ' . Grand ‘Ihmk Ry. opened Jfflll Montreal in Portland, Ila", July 16, 1553. The Britannia, pioneer sham- ship of Cunard Lino, arrived at Halifax. N. 8., after i2 days’ pass- agefrom Liverpool, July l7, 1M0. Railway from 5t. John to lione- ton, N. B. opened for traffic, July . 19, 1800. steamship Neptune left Halifax, N. 8., for first government Juven- tlgation of navigation possibilities of Hudson Strait and my, July 22, 1884. sir Sanford liming, (oi-me: chief Engineer, mteroolohifl fly, and Canadian Pacific Ry, under Dominion Government, and a dine- tor of Clllldiln Pacific "my. diedi July B, 101b, , Ship Jonas arrived at Port Royal, now Annapolis, N. Si, with colon- ists from snubs, July n, loos; Unique Expedition m. s-itbvugh 1. peso-momm- never seen any of its proceedings. [Perhapsthsmiuufsbookof the so- leietyisiitprfvata-haudl evsrhuftwfllbepatriotioennudh toturu "ttover tothsugislativo laud Public Library, where it can baconsultedbyallwbnknowhuw tousoitLike/wisethuaccountmay that something will be doueto re- vfvaour inhrest in history before next summer. when the afxtfsth anniversary of Confederation in P. l. 1., is to be commemorated. I am, sir, etc. ' y D. C JAIVI! . , Archivist Halifax, N. 8., July 1s, i982 Canadian Place ‘ Names (lfaiiaudmpirv) CnJulyutheTemlskamingand Northern Ontario Railway, under thaohairmauahip of MnGeorgc W. Inqisformally to- open the completed extension of the line from Cochraua to llooaonae, on Jamea Bayflrbcoorsulonywlllbe eonductedbynolmoaorgomflsnry, Pramierofontarlaltfssxpocted that a number of plominent per- sonswiiiattand-thaehrtlteuingof Ontarfobflhtmdcniyseopas-Llu lhawalathlshsadquartora at Ingefuld Bay when the "Snow" Babrwubornmndnowthsnuow Babyharsclf iareturuing fntha Bartlattexpeditfoutothssoenacof tbosauploratlona of-fortyyeara (Exchange) There is an expedition calling intotheArcticthatmuatbauulql-la among the many expeditious that havoveylledamidnoticlplsn inrecentlummom- ‘ i This one now on the water h unique for several reasons. It is ledbythatAroticvatsrmCaptaln “B0b"Bal'tl0tb,IhOflIlVflIldflIl interutJorhsgoeaArctto-wardto eroctamonuusenttothamsmuy of Admiralrsamandwhenhry wucuthetrailtotbmdlleovary oftheflorthlfoleiufltlloblagt- lettwaathewhitemanhataokfar- thectwfthhim. ‘maAi-ctlc butts while they haralymaybogmqu. lbimthstrocmnecntingemnltlou havebecomafamillarfllbewamau outhcwharfwhobadaqood-byato recent census there were as many ll 3.033 each occur"? -~ " - ~_ uhlswifo whcnhc didhhvbeet this expedition accompanied ‘Peary l“ . . Poarfldaughtor, m1. stones-d, haabaau‘ invited to. unveiltha msnumeatbeinaerectodtotbaPcla discoverer. Ifttfugly enough aha tahawithhcrherowntwoboys, Paarybgrandaonl. ‘rbegatbacfng partahaalmcctofahomatowure- mica. I ‘Ihematarialaforthamouumant sic/bus; ammo/ta by om. hlslaothnunaheanbaardfecber mgrmlflgugia-nauolnnd. r Ihlera ll, therefore, . making this announcement we rather regret the selection of Moos- oneeuthsnamooftdsmuh northern terminus. It would hm ‘ bcenmorenttlnllwethinhiftlle’ name Moose Factory, already fu- mills: to those who know the his- tory of Hudson Bay, had been u- lected. The Hudson's Bay Com. pauys‘ post of that name, which oc- cupies an island immediately on tbs maiu shore, goes back in history I long distance. " It recalls tbs Governor and com- pany of adventurers of England tradinl into Hudson Bey. chartered by"'Cha'rlea"1'f in iflihunder the chairmanship of mo". Rupert. an historical flavor uboutuooso Factory which fl entirely lacking in Moosonse. We think, indeed, that there has for dome been an unfortunate tendency to abandon significant and even picturesque place names "in favor of perhaps ~ more pleasantly sounding butcartainly less describ- tiva nimisflwdwfilnlr" or mt Poc- ma, whlcliilliovvlfeuora: ofPill o‘ Bones Crack, which is now- no, gina, Medicine Hat has had the goodsensetoretainitsoriginslarr resting name. Bohas Seven Persons in Alberta, Angle Lake in Alberta. Apple River in Nova Booth, Crow's Neat tu British Columbia, Bad Heart in Albertapboctor’: Cove in mm 800th. Gallant Settlement in New Brunswick, Ghost River in On- tarfo, Hal Hal Bay in Quebec, and Swift Current in Saskatchewan." were‘ is another tendency which we regret. and that is the tendency which woregret, and that is the tendancyto fettison the original. musical and significant Indian place namelfiThls particular com- munity gavaagood lead to the rest of Canada when it substituted the word Toronto for York. Toronto hll a peculiarly Canadian flavor. It i: anamakuownasftisailovvcrtnl world. which impresses itself upon the average mind much more defin- itely than “York” would have do" There are so many Yorh in differ- sutpem of the world. luoiualnl New York, but there = is only 0i" capital city of ‘Toronto. . Tush Island's In your travolllll Ml 0r. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. Noted Phyllohn treated Ille- eelsfully aml obtained - "manta. " to the mm- » och with a penal-Mien which we Java all! '9"