AUGUST 6.19315‘. jrmeriall-Iose far me were born I“ llfliiy they're bee! 9,! winning their way West , . theltjgppearancc . . . It's the Z I g . f .-»—iA"L~__»——G’J*~“.“‘~»TV . .151... Jr-Qfll IMPIE Al . %l..t'.l°§'§ i within a year . . 4. $3 B262 . , _ 4nd It.‘ "m? Price b . . It's will’ iheygwcar. ‘ 100 U18‘ j ATLANTIC UNDER ‘ MkL-IMUNCTON JZQEQF ""- com: EARLY rc new Alma An immense crowd is expected-ii the weather proves favorable. The ad- vantage of parking positions will be with the early arrivals. An average of about thirty persons per minute will have to be gotten through the gates between 12 and 2 o'clock. Come early and avoid the rush. \\.s- i HELD DAYVS AT THE P. E. L ILLUSTRATION STATIONS 5793-8-5-21. ‘m: Dominion Government illus- tration stations are a national or- ganization, there being more than ewe hundred in Canada and twelve i: P. E. Island. A few of the major projects might be outlined as follows:- i-The introduction of pure bred bulls into districts. where needed and the weighing and testing of the milk from individual cows. Z-Applying thg practice of after harvest cultivation, ‘This has proven very valuable in the control of weeds. Ii-Compiling cost of production data. t-Applying nitrate fertilisers to tL-nothy. b-Oomparing manure and fertil- izer for potatoes. et-Demonstrating new concentrat- ad fertilizers, ‘l-Introducing new crop; and vai- ietles. &-Piomotion of vegetable gar- dens and flower gardens. UJIlIlB the growing season a field day is held at each station. This is merely a gathering of the neighbors at the station on an appointed day for the purpose oi seeing at first hand the various crops and demon- nratlons. Besides this there i5 usu- ally a cow judging contest. a pcul-| if! culling demonstration. or al 88W nlmng “ministration, and there are usually one or more spe- cial speakers on the program. The attendance at these field devs which last year averaged B0 Noble gives one an idea as to their popularity; During the coming summer twelve 561d days will be held and since a lamb: o! entirely new demonstra- tions have been planned. every one lhould make a, special effort to at- tend . ' The first of these field days for the season was held at Rose Valley Monday. Aug. 4th.. and the second at Rusticc. ‘Tuesday. Aug, 5th. The lttendarlce was large at each sta- i-lon. and all were impressed by the" excellent crops and the neat appear! ence or the station. A feature oi lveclal interest was a spray mixing demonstration put on by Messrs. Hurst and Hewett of the Plant Pa- thological Laboratory, Charlotte- town. o Made by Murray a {Mull film/l i/i it". h ALEXANDER Murray- PROVINCIAL DISTRIBUTORS R. T. Holman Ltd. lnmnarlle covaiman‘ amp ‘sioor“' A shoot was held at the Oovehead rifle range Saturday. Aug. 2nd, There was a strong wind blowing across the range but some good scores were made. Mr, Joseph Ber. rigan made the high score of a4 out of a. pcssible 35 at the two hundred Yard "Ilse and hfr. Bernard Maya was high man at the three ranges with 94 out of a possible 105. After the shoot was over Mr. Ber- nard and Cecil Maye picked sides for a scrap match which ended in a tie. They fired over again and it ended in a tie again.’ Familiar Fig Again Take Seats r l1 THEO - ._._..- . ... .._.__-_._ l¢ 1'88 I A In New Parliament OTTAWA. Aug. §.—Ll-kG all new Parliaments. time next House cf Com- zmons will see the advent of many ‘new members. bu; at the same time |a coztsiderable number who were once familiar figures around Parliament ‘Hill will return. The lure of politics. sis. irreslstabie‘. many a resolute in- jontion to abandon the thankless lsphere of political activity has been gdlssipated by the call of the siixens. :Great party stalwarts have from {time to fime taken their farewell of ithe parliamentary stage with the Jrequency of prime dcnnas. Fortun- Zately for the interest which the peo- ple of Canada derive from following the progress of their public men, the 17th Parliament will ccntain a good proportion of members who in the good old days" loomed promi ently in the national councils. Whe her the in- fluence they then exercised has been projected down to the present is some- thing that remains ic be seen_ Regarded years ago as the "en- fant terrible" of Canztlan politics. Armand Lavergz-e. successful Con- servative candidate in Montmagny. Que.. fC-EIICBTS the House following an absence of many years. The Na- tionalist movemen‘, in Quebec. of which Mr. Bourassa was the com- mazzder-in-chief. is recalled by the election of the latter. As an orator the member for Montmagny. has an imprmlve delivery, a genius for the apt metaphor and a power to sum- mon ‘from an inexhaustible imagery the most appropriate oi parables. For years the House of Commons has been without orators of first-class caibre and the advent oi Mr. Lav- ergne may once again supply what the book-reviewers are ivcift to term “a long felt want." _ Hon, Robert Rogers once more comes out of the west to take his place in Parliament. The career of Mr. Rogers has been replete with it:- terest, one oi unusual acfivity. Few names are more familiar than his in the contemporary politics of Canada The scores were as follows;_. B. Mayo C. Mays H. Oudmore J. Berrigan 1. Carr F. Auld L C . lliaclviillan Hughes The next shoot will be held Thurs day, Aug. 7th. $335388??? . NOTES It was too bad that Bernard mig- ed his last shot. The reason that some did so well was that they had lots of bananas. and Plums. Joe can show them all how to shoot. WHERE THE OLD NORTH RFTER FLOW? There's a place on the Island thats dear to me. Far dearer than other fair places. I see; Where the sweet scented meadows And wild blushing ‘m. Bloom fresh on the banks Where the North River flows. There's a cot‘ on the hill I'm 1on8- ing to see. Where dwells a sweet lassis who's waiting for mc. How fondly nui- greeting. true love only knows. When we meet on the banks where the North River flows. O well meet on the banks where the North River flows; And we'll paddle about where the water cress grows. we'll sing with the lsrk when the day nears its close: For we'll always be gay where the North River- flows. We'll meeet on the banks where the lldg rises high. Or we'll walk in the shade where the soft breems sigh, But we'll always love best when the sweet scented rose; Blooms fresh on the banks where the North River flows. F. H. M.. Lorne Valley. POOR Al}! Jonas-Ah always aims fc' to tell do truth. Ruhr-Well. den‘ you's lalk nh woman in dat respect. You seldom hit ivhsf. yo‘ aims at. bifioow» DR. J. P. MILLAR DINTAL IUIGIOI Q IOUIS-Itellll ~ 1108.00 xgyQiQgjldlkllfll i. i. associated as it is with rugged bat- tles both inside and outside the House of Commons. A colorful figure. Mr. Rogers was never dull and his esrgy was limitles. ‘ R. S .WHITE DEAN OF HOUSE The dean of the House R_ S. White of Montreal. returns. to the 17th Par- lament with the hrnors of the Mount Royal division showered thick un" him. He. is ‘l4 years oi age, and was i 'j.'ielding thatypost w the firs‘, elected to the House of Con-i-_ mons for the now re-dlstributed coz- ' stituency of Oardwell, in 158B. (Cazd- . well has since been swallowed up; by the riding of DUIl6HIi-51flmC08.)_ w. White is therefore the sole re-l mainlng member of the House of I Commons who sat in ‘Parliametft dur- i lng the second admiriisfrafiori of Sir John A. MacDonald. A. U. G. Bury of Edmonton. and Hon. Raymond Morazd. representing; East lilssex. are two former mem-' l:ers who will be seen once more in the House. i Of the new parliamentarians, one of the mast interesting is Arthur Sauve. who wrested Laval-Dew: Mont agnes from Ligouri Lacombe. For many years Mr. Sauve led his for“ lorn hope of Conservatives in the; Quebec local house, a small groupi ivhich for nearly three decades hasi sat in the cool slhades of opposition. l ll‘, was only las: year that Mr. Sauv- ' es laid down fie scep-tre as Con- servative leader in the Province, I i dynamic i Camillien I-Ioude. Mayor of Moztrza! Courting federal honors in the riding which has returned him to Quebec. Mr. Sauve proved a successful cuit- | or and he brings to the new ParliaJ ment the prestige which goes with; unbeatable perseverance. I W. H. Moore. former chairmen of l the Advisory Board on Tariff. and’ Taxation, an economist and author will take his sea‘. on the Liberal side‘ of the House and is a newcomer. In the last two sessions. Mr. Moore was’ the butt of several sharp attacks by] the Prme lviirllster elect. the Hon. Mr. Bennett, Having conducted tar-| iff enquiries for several years. involv- i ing as they do exhaustive inveztjga-t-i ions into every ramification of Can-l adian industry and all the subdetis, of tariff making. Mr. Moore enters‘ ing in a vifval element which. t) the layman. continues‘ to be an iriexplic-i able mystery. Parliament Hill is interestod in Samuel Factor. the Liberal. who reached the Conservative stronghold! of Toronto and defeated the redciibfi- i exactly in effect. to the bite which i Jacobs of Montreal and A_ A. Heaps». of Wirnipeg. as the third member of the Jewish faith to sit in thQcom- mcns. Conflicting Stories Al@_ 5.-'I‘he officers and men told ST- HUBERT AIRPORT. Montreal, different stories today about the storm damage done the clirlgible R- 100 shortly before it completed its 3.500-rnlle flight from England early this morning. And the story of the men was one to make the heart quicken with thanksgiving that the peril was past. a. peril that struck with the speed and ferocity of a serpent. For the men, a dozen of them who dropped into the hangar press room to cable relatives at home or tele- phone friends in this country. told of a “cyclonic current" that buffeted the ship from beneath the other side of Quebec and hurled it upward, practically standing on its nose, for almost 2,500 feet in less than half a minute. It was during that, terrific mo- ment, when all aboard "just crossed their fingers and waited." according to some of the eye-witntsses. that n strip of fabric about l5 by six feet was ripped from the port fin. opening a. hole as big as a barn door into the great envelope. exposing the in- tricate interior of the largest airship ever built to the fury of the storm. MINIMIZE DANGER. In radio reports from the ship it- self yesterday ancl in interviews af- ter the dirigible was moored today. officers minimized the dangers that had been encountered. They said the peril had never been critical and the jury repairs effected in mid-air rendered the damage of negligible importance. But the men, who spoke informal- ly and were not told in advance. as were the‘ officers, that they were talking for publication, scoffed at the suggestion that there had been no serious danger and point for evid- ' ence at the rude patch that but par- itially clcsed the jagged opening and almost covered the fluttering tattors lei/the slrshipb torn "skin." DANGEROUS WORK The Sudden Dangers PV/zich Beset R-IOO Over Quebec Told or a until midnight Assistant Coxsrvains G. E. Long and L. A. Moncrleff, with a crew of 16 men, including every rlgger aboard. worked out on the stripped skeleton of the damaged fin. clinging to the metal frame above the waters of the st. Lawrence. and ,with a patch of spare fabric. But even then not all the holes were filled and even today as the great ship swung easily in the soft sunshine from the great mooring mast hundreds of visitors stood un- derneath it and gaped upward at a still uncovered opening a few feet distant from the bulging patch over the larger tear. During the hours that the riggers and cthcr members of the crew were said to have been bending all their efforts to closing the gap in the side of tho R-l00, the ship was dodging about the sky between thunderstorms and for a time even drifting back- wards as the engines were stopped. pair men's task easier or in fear that further breasting of the wind until repair were made might increase the damage already done. GUAFOIAN Parliament with a thorough grcund- ~ is almost parallel in principle, if not 1 _ the Conservative party took out of ‘ A Quebec. Mr. Factor reinforces S. W.§ ' finally stopped the largest opening . either in an effort to make the re- i Zia-i» mun-mg Montague Rage Wednesday, August 13th. ._~ QFQ-n . . EEESIG AT NEW ANHAN RACES“ Much Speculation In Appointment i 1930 ___..___:i I I Of Commissioner It is the aim of the managcmenti . to make August 6th a banner day for‘ music. The Miscouche Band of twen- ty-five pieces has quzte a fine repu- blflflflllfl - PURSES - $1030.00 lilllldlln Press) OTTAWA. Ont, Aug. s-Jfiic de- tatlon. Capt. McDougall of Char- . . _ 7'"— __ . lottetown with the wipes" Wm my cisicn that Hon. R. B. Bennett and his . . ., . .. . Cabinet will maize as t: wheth- pense the imrrutaole slzirls which new _ have been played in the glens of er Cr not Ho“ Vmw“ Nnssey .15 m C “Auld Scctis" since the dawn of hls- so to Landau as High Ccnwuffiwzel‘ _ , ,,_- 0!‘Cnd..'l1be c" c. tori. and have inspired men of Scot- comstuaioanaili-l 1 veay: n: a’ c1 ‘ _ 2J7 Trot and Pace I I v _ _ _ ‘ _ ‘ Pursc $560.09 tish blood to superhuman efforts in ' “we!” “hJ n?" '7 Trot and Pa‘ 1V1»- broached as to what action should‘ ' -“' Ce ' ' - ' ~ - - - ~ pur5e slfiéUif-OO great battle crises ‘in all parts of the world. Johnny McAulay from Sydney is reputed to be quite some singer of Southern Nielodies and a banjo play- er of note. The well known Dixon's Orchestra of Charlottetown. which is to play for the big dance in Kensington rink, ' nd the races, and will prob- ably i; e a. selection by special re- quest. The management respectfully requests the spectators to cooperate by keeping absolutely off the music stand at all times, thereby facilitating the ruziiiing of the program and not obstructing the view of persons in the 3rd"; stand. The music stand is for r ‘formcrs only-while paforming 0R1 5'7!l3-8~5-2i. 2.27 Trot and Pace . . . . . Purse $300.03 2.30 Trot and Pace (for Horses Owned in King's County and Surrounding Districts Purse $100.00 be taken, declined to express opin- ions on the ground that it was a matter of policy. not one governed by any constitutional provison. Lord Strathcona was appointed by a Conservative Government. When the Laurier Government came into power, ha was retained and l'0l‘.l.1ll‘.l'3.’l in office throughout its 1on3 form 0i prom- Three Seconds Allowed Trotters in all Classes. 4 Entries close WEDNESDAY. August 6th, i930. Entrance power‘ The Tatum cf Bcl.dz,l__imlll‘~ell' must accompany the entryfiHorses must b2 eligible Government brought no change. l“ that date’ ‘When the King Government conic] , _ into power iIl i921. Sir George Fer- ' Entrance fee 0% of purse‘ winch must accnmlmn m. a; once cabled M‘ Icing n: wcniry. Five per cent deduction from money isxi to be permuted to resign ms p05 liiorse named unless these conditions are complied with. as soon as it could be convenient for the new Government to dispense 3 the _v each " I\' o All races mile heats; to be raced on the 3-1102‘ * with his services. Premier King laiei" [1073 of 9°!‘ pqrse will be awarded the ‘vhmeh the granted s... Georges request‘ .to be divided in three equal parts, one part to be one Cf the 1nd,“; v C5.,_:er.\.1h\.e:mach heat. In the event of there being {Iii-cc 11"‘ here today ma.‘ the Vie... 1.x; mare iihcy shall race a fourth heat to determine the winzier < c-veni. was a difference between a man es- k tablished in a position and who had all the information to give him an hat | vaq ‘ . 11*!‘ ti‘ l. a . llfost Enjoyable Voyage Over (Canadian Press) MCNTREAL. Que. Aug. i-Not mort- tiizm fifteen minutes. of the cnflrc llipli: frrln Cardingggn to Si; Hubert could bc called uncomfortable stated Wing Command-er. R. B. B. Colmcre, director of airship develop- ment. speaker at today's Canadian Club luncheon to the officers and pazscngers o lie dirigible R-l00. Few traits-Atlantic trips at sea could be l {advantage in carrying cn anrl i t1 icf a man who has nc: ye: lover the pcsltzon. While to: , I I _ “hm, ' w dmerenx m the _ If weather is stormy, or track is l!1 unfavn: {he was (5 the 0pm.“ ma. i, “CUM [lion so that racing cannot be carried on at i110 ‘ilsed. the management reserve ihc right to iro: be considered an actual cliflcvencci 4 _ when ‘m. new Cabin“ “M; m, _clnvc the races off, and return the entrance mama-s. matter up. I I "I've a letter from a fellow "ivlnj says if I dorrt st:p taking hi5 girl? _ _ _ out he“ t,“ dram: ac-Jmm- iillllifiill, and will be governed 11s ; ..Wha.' are you gum, t3 d9... lccnflict with the above condzticzis. ° J. A. BIcINTYRE. order of programme, decline any entry. bar any d: l‘. cic- clare off and fill without roe-advertising, any races not suits- .. ilzictorily filled. ‘lo condi- I-Iay, straw and siabling free. This Track is a member of the Nat o l ..',,._ sllv$g nal c similarly described. lie said. Major “Immmgy G. A, Scott also spoke, While the air- u "Nothing?" ‘W!’ he might Sh”: 3p could not compete with other l'°“-" 111‘ i011 X011?" i113 w m0?" kinds ct mqnspng-t rm- digtanpg; up “Yes. 1 know. But what can I d1? Patient; “He told me to came to’ Patient: to imo mles. it me a decided He hasn't signed it" nu!" c". [thginjg (WC; 0993-35 commander Doctor its new: patient»: "Have The patient was examln-ed with-l Cc-lmorc said. t you been to see anyone before cc-n-i-lout further remark. able Mr. Church. This achievement- _ ' 0st people buy the tires which have given them the greatest value... that is wiry ltioula aeolian "ulna on oooiivatn vines nus on ANY omen KINDl [$121 their experience likely also to he yours .7 »~ / GOODYEAR MEANS Whore you Ice a sign like this you will find a reliable merchant who run demonstrate f0 you fhe superiority of fhc Superiwist Cards used exclusively in Goodyear Tires. The 44 men czi tho R.- 100 debark- Just 7B hours and 5i minutes after hours by the mishap yesterday. day's liberty and the ship was turn- ed over during refueling to a detach- 'ment of the crew sent over here from England several months 13o. The great literary critic was being licnlzed at a. tea party- “And what." asked his hostess. "Was the finest thing you eve:- sow in print?" "Ah!" said he. "Shall I ever forget her? She was about 23. and she was standing on the steps of a bungalow fit- Then a matrcrily form entered the room. “That. of course." added the great ‘meyseidtnetfromleteafteraoon men. "was before fgiet my wife." ed almost as soon as it was secured i _ to the mooring mast this morning. ‘ leaving Cardington. England. the ar- ‘ rival having been delayed manw Officers and men were all given a ' l i, \ _r._/ S... ~-----— _-é¢, '. r The management reserves the right to declare off. chance “a I i’