WHEN NEWSLETTER Problems Facing Haymakers, = But Pastures Are The Finest ' By J. LINCOLN DEWAR ' The custom exhortation to tmilk production resulting. make an early start on hay; Nevertheless, in spite making has fallen upon rather ldiscouraging start in July muddy ground this year. Wels hasn't disappeared even are now past the eighth day ofl though clouds appear to have July with few being sunny so. taken over very permanently. tar. With a tremendous crop i FIELD DAYS ' should the weather not im-l We had the opportunity ofat- prove a very serious problemliending one of the tw1hght will be facing hay makers.lgrassland field days sponso However. there are compensa-t ions in the very finest pasturel Grass Crew On Sides 0t City's Main Street By NEIL A. MATHESON Provincial-Farm Editor NOTES WRITTEN by John Morris in 1875 recalled his early days here when Charlottetown “had 12 or 15 houses scattered ‘ ever. with profitable meat and of a the ture and were impressed by by the Department of Agricul- 51 10mm “Wm”. July 10. use} HIM. the attendance and evidence of interest in matters related grass pm 'on. Slowly but steadily the lief is developing that there gold in the grass but there management, plan- ning, and the application of fertilizer. CENTURY F be- is For Forme By HANNS NEUERBOURG FRANKFURT (AP)—A new youth centre in the West Ger- m Ruhr bears the name of Kurt Gemtein, a lieutenant in the Nazi SS (elite guard) who had the job of supplying poison gas for the Auschwitz death m' is. This does not mark a blatant revival of Nazism in Germany. ARMS ‘ Most of the Century Farm 'gns were sent out prior to July I. Once these signs were displayed a new wave of inter- est became apparent on the part of quite a number of per- sons who hadn't applied or in the signs. The original stock of signs is now exhausted and i come nece ite dead further application for who hadn't displayed interest t In fact Gerstein’s cause had been taken up by Jewish or- ganizations. , “If there had been thousands more like Gerstein. there would have been no Auschwitz," says Issy Wygoda, 43, in Frankfurt fur dealer and one-time concen- ration camp prisoner. Gerstein died under mysteri- ous conditions shortly after the Second World War. but be pro- m; vided important evidence which n. was used at the Nuernberg war Jews Taking Up Cause Nazi Guard crimes trials. He risked his life to obtain much of it, Wygoda believes. Wygoda is incensed becau West German authorities have classified Gerstein as a Nazi of- fender and ave nied his widow a pension. Gerstein joined the Nazis in 1933 but fell out with them after finding they conflicted with his religious views. K111. SISTER-IN-LAW In 1940 a sistenin-law was killed as a mental patient under the Nazi “mercy killing" pro gram and Gerstein began check- ing on Nazi killings He joined the SS to gain inside-knowledge of Nazi crimes, Wygoda says. He eventually headed a section in the SS “hygiene institute." One of his jobs was to procure Zyklon B, a cyanide gas used by extermination c m will be considered. :- ly applications received after 3] no will not be considered L. E. filing purposes. Those interest- ed are asked to govern them- selves accordingly. MODERN AND TRADITIONAL over it. when the main street had a pathway up it and at each side there was good ass." r. Morris was the great. great grandfather of the late Jack Morris. and of his cousin, 1‘, Harry Morris. Charlottetown both of whom helped me compile the information for today's column. John Morris was born in County Carlow. Ireland on March 19. 1794 and came to this country in the ship “Four Brothers" in 1 19 3 . He built the first brick house in Charlottetown ill-1824 and was laughed at by the grand jury. A prominent mtizen, Mr. Dockendrjrff. told him “ it will fall within the year"_ But the old house is still standing 140 years later. Folk here know it as the building that houses the Harland Apartments on Water Street, Harry Morris tells me. “THERE WAS one grist mill. about three miles from town owned by a Mr. Wright". according to the old notes, which must be the spot that is still known as “Wright’s Bridge” on the St. Peter's Road. though I have no proof of that statement, and am open to correction. ‘ ‘ : There are many interesting revelations including “the mem- ’ hers of the House of Assembly brought their food wrtlh them generally." Unfortunately Mr. Morris did not say how many members there were, He also omitted to give first names of people to whom he referred. Roads Nothing But Bridle Paths ’Ilhefirst tes . . . . .. .s...‘-.....«_.. THE FEES! roads "were nothing but bridle paths. road. heading to Malpeque. was opengl7 by a Mr. Ya ‘l‘heOldToumRnadwasopeneduil. "The first store of any note belonged to a Mr, Cambridge. n Others were owned by a Mr. Brecken and a Mr. McKay d this paragraph interesting though a bit unusual. ' c it The Bishop came over from Nova Sootia to consecrate it but refused " Wlas'l'bere was not a regular school but Mr. lBulpitt had a school. Last Tuesday the Lorne Val- ley Women’s Institute made a community contribution to Centennial Year by combining a dinner with a program of en- tertainment and the presenta- tion of Century Farm plaques to some 12 persons meriting these in the surrounding area. knowledge of Lorne Valley we know that it is a progressive district with good farmers carrying on a modern type of agriculture. In addition though, it has manag- edtop se esomeoftheval— uable traditional qualities of agriculture manifested in com- munity effort and by a fitting regard for the history and achievements of the commun- tty The 12 farmers who received the plaques had all a back- . d of association with ag- riculture going back over too years. In all cases they could be described as “good” farm- ers. It is interesting to note that while we are many of the families receiving recognition as Century Farms had been engaged in agricul- ture for many years before the meeting took place. These families have certain- Mt‘. Morris recalled that a Mr. Chappe who kept the post office. had a weathervane, the shape of a fish over‘lua house. which indicated the way the wind .was blowmg andn‘by this he could tell when the wind was fair for Packet —A Mr, Smith kept a small vessel that ran between Pictou and Char- lottetown." I THERE WERE no waggonrs or gigs in town when Mr. Mm- ris came. but a Cambridge got a Carriole (a small open from Quebec soon afterward. There were a few saddles "The courthouse was built sometime before I came _here. and it was used for the House of Assembly. and all public as- semblies into oatmeal." There were a good many dances and thicken- ing {relics when i came," the notes repm‘l. Some Moose Reported On Island BEARS. lynx and wild cats were on thelsland. There were moose but they were not native, Mrs Morris observed Island papers reported many bears were killed in earlier days and there are few here now in 1875." I "The first blacksmith was a Mr. Robinson. he had a shop on the main street, in Charlottetown A tailor was new Trambhn" and a shoemaker wars nam . . All off the Morris statements were, in a reply to a panes of printed questions. but it is not. indicated who was seeking the information. One question listed a series as localities, From Souris tn Wes-l Cape and asked. "How did people from those areas get to Charlottetown before they got therr present roa The re.va said "very few of those people ever got to Charlottetmrn and those who did came by blaze. This! l:lodc on . ace .ufliflllllflflnllfl linens Elli I. I. N I. I. on It a ans: I: r hutnntju .. o- n flung... .. ..... enter road In K Malpeque. the old notes indicate, For people who had to travel lt‘cm Malpeque to Charlottetown there was “an empty house to the woods where ‘hey stayed." The first houses were lighted with oil and very few had carpets on the floor. Mr. Morris did not know when people started to use kerosene for lighting. Dr. St. Croix was the first medical man he recalled He lived. In Charlottetown. e first house was one in which Col. Desbrisay. father of the parson. lived. "We Seldom Hod Mails In Winter" HERE‘S AN Interesting commentary on life In Charlotte town 1% years or more. Question—“Whore did the mails cross in winter?" ‘wer—" e seldom had mail in winter," It took about two months for letters from England to reach hch. “I don't. know what the postage was but the post- master kept. it for his foes." . Mussel mud was not. used In the earlier years. Farmers who lived close to the sea hauled sea weed from the slhore, Lime wasn‘t used on land either in his first days in this colony (as it was them but was used later. "Fox hunts were held on the Island about 1840_ Govemor Sir Charles Fitzroy had hounds from the Duke of Grafton. old papelrs contain many accounts of such hunts." o pant potatoes in the earl da "they made i ’ the (tearfrth andk‘dibhleil them in." Aydibbigr was‘a pointedhtinegtrfi men or ma rug hoes in the round for Seed . b l youn 'plantsth the dictionary revoals.g 5 HM or g ” ere were very few bridges tn the counlr' 80 ego"—~that would he in 1795. 1' yea" r. Morris knew of plowing being time in January and February. and had heard of some being done in March; which aficifi the weather must have been somewhat different at . 0. Teachers Officiated At Weddings r . NEPLYING to a query How were weddings cel in time of your earliest recollection?" Mr. 3 ‘ was married about 60 years ago idiom 1815) by Mr. Deahri say according to the rites of the Church of England. but the. r were others married by schoolmasters. 'Ilhere was a law making all val ." Before I leave Mr. Morris’s notes on Charlottetown. I must mte that he referred his questioner on one occasion to a t history of the Island written by John Stewa‘t. I find it the 1‘ library that Stewart in 1806 suggested there were tout 70 in! . IT WAS the late Jack Morris who first made the of his great. great grandfather available to me. tlmm had also told me mt them before that. And It w- to Q this is i it "Grain was carried to the grist mill on horseback. and made I ly made contributions to nation building and have provided a continuation of community building on which high value Vshould be placed. IMPORTANT MEETING Probably the most important gathering this week in a ru- ral stand point at least Is the 51st annual convention of Wo- ‘men’s Institutes. ; This year the Island mem- bers are honored by having .one of their number President of the national organization. present also is the President of the Nova Scott: Women's Institutes We have in the past express- ed in this column commenda- tion for the fine work being done through the institutes. The provincial organization been a member of the Fed- eration of Agriculture for some years and the director in every case has made a valuable con- tribution on the Federation Board. The Institute members have had a program ‘ over the years to improvement in home. school, and community. In many cases many of the as- sociated problems have been solved or lmproved. While gratuitous advice hardly ever appreciated. would suggest that if the wom- Is 3‘ res and sctivi y t portant role to play in agricul. ture in future years and her as. sistance and increased liner. est in the policy making field call! be of very confidmblc va ue. FARM EDUCATION Endorsed at the recent sn- . nual convention of the Federat- omen’s Institutes were two resolutions dealing w ith training in agriculture. One resolution called for the setting up of an additional and epar- ate program under the techni- cal and vocational agreements to provide solely for the training in agriculture. The se- cond resolution pointed out the need of providing re-tralntng other than for information and “‘1 gress being made in standard- izing grading standards 'lk The Federation meeting was concerned with potato plebis- cites. farm education policy, beef survey, machinery com- mittee, and certain resolutions originating at the annual meet- ing of the Dairymen’s Associa- tion. for those in agriculture in or- der that they could adjust to changes taking place. The stitutea in each pro- vince were urged to draw at- tention of a to depart- ments to the importance of ac- tion in this respect. OA-RD MEETINGS During the past week both the directors of the Datrymea's Association and the executive of the Fedforntlon of Agricul- ture met midws u m m e r meetings. The Dairymen approved the assessment voted at the Inland meeting made mvlsion for carrying on the booth during Old Home Week, for m. “1.... tion of a Dairy Princess, for the Poo-tide M of the Britta: Dairy n. the Pasture Improvement Corn- petltlon. and decided on action th diluent _ Sweats reported to the "seating pro- duction and quality matters and advised the meeting of pro- fou- deuce a pa. rsteJn tried to sabotage tit: operations in a limited way. Evi- in Germ n court shows stopped one shipment of gas marking it no good and or- dering it buried. But according go Wygoda his main effort was to tell the world outside Germany of con- centration camp horrors. A Lutheran. he got word to German Bishop Otto Dibelius of be by mama. formed Swadill chrgymsn of what was gang on in the'stl camps. He was allegedly away when he sought an sud! ence with the papal nuncio In Berlin, and later wrote: , “Could one expect that an or- dinary citizen can do something when even the vicar of Christ doesnotwanttolistentomeal- though tens of thousands are murdered." INSPIRES PLAY Years later the unsuccessful visit to the apostolic mission in rl pined German author Rolf Hochhuth in writing be largely fictitious play, The Dep- In 1945 Gerstein armada-ed to the Allies and gave the most detailed report on Nazi crimes ever to reach Allied hands. As proof he supplied bills for Zyk~ ‘ n o . The Allies could not be sure of Gerstein’s anti-Nazi efforts and was interned. He died July 25. 1945. in a Paris prison. Officially the cause was suicide, but there have been recurrent rumors that he was murde by SS fanatics held in the same prison. ' In 1950 a German court ruled mat Gerstein was a Nazi of- fender because he voluntarily stayed in the $ after realizing that he alone could not halt the Nazi crimes. Testimony by n chm-chine c . His widow. Elfriede Gersteln. appealed the decision but this too was rejected. Wygoda heard of the Gersteln case and got Mrs. Gersteln's permission to reopen it. Jewish organizations in Germany and France have taken up the cause. CARS TRUCKS: special features that go with the OK sign. It’s a welcome sign if you don’t know your cars—because it stands for a man your community does know— a businessman who’s in business to stay. He offers the facilities and services of a new-car outlet— The yacht Ilala. seen hen. with R.M. Ellison of Eng- land at the wheel. crossed the finish line at Newport. R.I. Thursday, just an hour ahead of the 21-foot French sloop, Golif, handled by Jean AND Iacombe. 'me Ilala. rigged like a cannon junk. lost her foremast in a storm a few days after leaving Plymouth, England in a 0111ng Transatlantic race, won by .stern TWO YACHTS FINIItSH OCEAN RACE French Naval Lieut. Eric Tabarly on June 10. Five 311- tons and a Dane are still at sea. The Ilala has an auto- matic steering vane at the Illa surging sales ofnerv cars a! your filler-0M: dear/art mean liar/19’s getting the pic/r offlla rap Iradeéins - and reserving tin forynu! What’s more, you get the extra benefit of all the and he’s more than likely got the right used car or truck for you, because you’ll find the biggest choice and the best values at your OK Usedme Car dealer’s lot. ISLAND hfié‘iif‘i" buss. 'i'ITD. 203 FITZROY ST. 1 canromrovvu "Ia sure to see knot-s over Chanel DENY-Wat "wickets-mm" \