\ ' ‘Alex. McPherson, Queen Nireet. UR"- ABAOAHLIJTTETIIWN EIJAHIJIAN oplttlinedtoaell early in order A ‘Inning Dally (founded 1887) $5.00 per 1°" U! Mlvll") flvllflfld- u,“ p" y“; (l. gflygpgg) mailed In Canada and United Statel- ‘WFr-‘azn;"1I.:;;l;...m.r<. s. '1..r.‘.....:“ m“? "- Iditnr and Manager-J. B. Burnett. Secretary-Lint. vol. n. A. ilm-xlnrum. D- 8- 0-- Anaoelate Editor-J). K. Currie. Till GUARDIAN can be obtained from the following ugentillu (‘llurlottetuwnz ‘_ “gown” ggump vgndflf, Mr». L. l)u|_|eett_ 2| Spring Park ltulul. ‘nun,’ gunk-gum (i. Tomlllliu, Kent Street Went Illlthlm iltutlonera, Grafton Street. Hteplleu Duffy,‘ Richmond Street. ‘J. D. Taylor, Grafton titres-t. N- Tlwhllll 375"". 135.51"! 5Y9- J. P. DufIy_ Queen Street. N. Tweel. dl Elm Ave. - Freu’ (iuudei, Great til-urge iitreet. Carter h (‘u., queen Street. .\.lrtl. Jul- can. Dnrrllnlcr Birmi- lrruiu n, Kaye, l0 lilllubhru ‘Ntreet guygpnynglppfil. I". Melanin, McNeil Building.- SOUBIE- RI. A. Paouet. MONTAGUI-‘l-lt’. A. Johnston. NEW GLASGOW’, N. S, (‘hrlatnpherfi Book k Pltutlonerl. IIIDNIY. N. bL-(‘enlrlal Plmrmnly- HORTON-Old South Nowa; M. Anillenunn‘ 1H5 Tremont Ht. NEW \'()ltK-l.l0tullnga New» [Depot 30M went 40th fit. TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1927 TllE PANTON MAGAZINE THIS WEEK. . .This is the n-Jngof a “Festival 0f Arts and Letters," organized and published by. the Pantun Arts Club. of London, under the patronage of‘ the Right Honourable Earl Beauch-i THIS will l3: an important one in the history of the present sum- mer. Following the visit yesterday of the delegates frourthe World's Poultry Congress at Ottawa, onevoi the most important delegations that have ever visited the province, one al- soof the most enjoyable. there will arrive tomorrow one of the largest excursion parties that have ever come to us from our sister provinces. We refer ‘to the 225 excursionists from the province of Quebec. It will be a very representative body, including some oi the most prominent citizens of the old historic province, includ- ing clergymen, college professors and prominent newspaper men. Pre- parations are being made to give them ‘ warm wexcome and we feel the librarian of the University of, m“ our people Wm respond geneplBritish Columbia, in Vancouver, andl ously to ‘he appeal made m them mtthe winner of the bronze medal fol-I provide cars in Order that the vxsn-‘authorship of a short story and au- ors may be able to see as much as‘ thor of a poem entitled "isoquxllcn, possible °f our province‘ 'Thc Coroichan Monster." Cunccrn- ing the latter it says: "This renlarkq able poem deserves to rank with? Hiawatha and The Ancient Mariner. Asquith, and others. The Panton! with the object of ‘fthe encourage» lnent of creative Art, and of co-op- oration between the arts?’ and The; six months of existence, it is stated! this magazine has gained a wide- uspread reputation for quality. Mu- sical and art notes, poems, book re- views, concert notices stories fill its pages. In the literary section of the number before lls speci- al mention is made of Lionel I-Iawels. As previously announced the peo- ple of Summerside, under a compet- ent committee, will see to the com- fort of the Visitors and convey thcmfFhe task of the author was not an ln curs m Egmont, Buy There will easy one, and it is no srvzall achieveq 315° be u v15" to Ruslico, where a ment to have caught the vcryspiritl picnic is being arranged for the re- cf Indian folk-lore am! reproduced, cellfllon. At Charlottetown also ar-Ili IhPOIIEh fl EUTODPMI DW-"C 101T"- mngements um belng made my ulThe author has woven myth and sultuble uunuun- recentlun unu Hi5 incl together in such artistry that. Hung;- Lieugenun; Governor Heal-ulna breathes life’ intc the chief per- wm‘ his usual nnsnnuntyl Wm glvegsrmages of the old tale, which seems them a mnnu] reception u; 01d Gov. in have had some historic founda- lion." hl H‘ the Sue The Panton Arts Club assists To make the w o e a n r lmembcrs who are elected m the ht t b , . t -tlv ol . ' 0:52;‘ Dug ‘If; gevérle: an: zmjqualicy of their work, ln every pos- e g y cars w requu‘ - l is bei d f these welsible way to obtain recognition. To appea ng ma e or . I this cud a half-yearly competition feel sure the appeal will be gener-l It t tlhas been instituted under the llama ‘may responded m’ is impor an lof “The Festival of Arts and Letters.“ that everything possible Wm be donefat which llledals and certificates are to make the visit a mutually pleas- lawnrcied;—and Mr. Hawois is one of ant one for in this as in many other the winners. instances it will be found equally pleasant to give as to receive. Our EXTRAVAGANCE, province is honored by this imporb! ant and representative visitation,‘ and we shall do honor to ourselves: in making it pleasant. ernment House. XTRAVAGANCE is one of the be- setting sins of the present day. The trouble is not that men and wo- men have any love for spending mo- ney, most of them begrudge every PORK PROSPECTS dollar they part with regardless of ’ ’ what they receive for it. Most of them spend freely in order to show they have it to spend. Generally speaking extravagance is largely confined to those who can least afford it. The thrifty man or woman does not dis- play their wealth, rathenthey con- ceal it and explain their unwilling- ness to spend by an admission that they haven't got it to spend. The man or woman who desires to ap- pear comfortably or well off pays out their money with n. lavish hand. They are on the ladder that lends to the higher level in which the four hun- dred are basking in the sun of sup- posed affluence. Curiously enough the lavish expenditure of money, one‘s own or borrowed, is the open sesame to the covetéd gallery of the presumably ‘wealthy. ' Extravagance is not only a crime i against one‘s self but against society as well. In most cases it is a cloak worn to deceive and many men and women keep themselves in per- petual poverty by a foolish desire to appear rich. ' ‘i1 Common sense in the use of one‘s earnings is a virtue which needs to be encouraged. Honest poverty is an inconvenience but it is no disgrace and is the more easily borne if can- didly admitted. If the appetite calls for champagne and the pocket says ginger beer, it will be the part oi —-—<0}-———— HE Trcsident of the Canadian Packing Company, of Toronto, Mr. T. F. Matthews, brings from England a rather pessimistic report concerning the prospects of the Bri- tish market for pork products. Hc states that “there has been a drop in pork products; and the market is bad. There are heavy shipments go- ing in from Denmark and the mar- ket is continually fluctuating. It is very unprofitable for Canada to ship to Britain just now." Those in whose interest it is to purchase at prices are apt to look at the dark side of the markets, so that too much confidence need not be placed in their statements. Yet those who will have pork to sell in the coming fall will not be surprised if prices should be somewhat lower than those of recent years. But no one can now measure the supply or the demand for farm products in the coming fail and winter. If it should happen that pork and potatoes should both be low, the profits of producers oi these edibles will not be so good as they have been in re- cent years. In any Ivent the prac- tice of economy and care is advis- able. ‘Ihe thrifty farmer who is not low ‘may obtain money to meet l4 nah.» uom-uie-wuauu-a’ ~ 4 / the B. N. A. Act come to be so un- ~ that has grown and increased since lince and the sister Provinces have} "crop of grain in Canada in expected A?» no -~~-- Notes by the Way EVER before was Canada. so‘ highly honored at home and‘ abroad as in this year of Jubilee. Never before has the Dominion been so firmly established in the hearts of the entire Canadian people and ivcrsoliy regarded as a “glorious and most timely charter" as in the pres- ent year of grace. And never before have so many distinguished person- ages-far too many to be mentioned: here—visited the Dominion. It is sufficient that we name the Primer‘ of Wales, his royal brother, Prince George and Stanley Baldwin, the Prime Minister of Great Britaih, among the notables Whq-hié conic to our shores, who have been wel- comed with patriotic enthusiasm their appearance in this country. ,should not be spoken oimus {healing art,"_ but as the “healing, THE “C 6WN' m. \_By [can Bqgion, M.D ' THE_ HEALING SCIENCE Some one has been saying rec- ently that the, practice of medicine science." .. _ _ In other words before a patient undergoes treatmentya number of things must be figured out. What does the doctor find when he makes the examination? lPulse, temperature, breathing, at- titude and. appearance of the pat- ient‘s body, blood pressure, quality of the blood, condition of the urine and so forth. Then also what the patient tells the‘ PRINCE EDWARD Described For “G cAvruvnisu-mv vmw -—lQ--—» a By- Harold Messervey u»: There isXone-more event of tragic interact to be recorded at Caven- jdish.’ ‘This is the "Yankee Storm." It took placein 1851. Thcuname ‘sounds rather strange; but you lmust know‘ that in those days many {American fishing vessels used to visit our North Shore for a share of jthe rich hauls of Cod and Mack- Never berm-e has cuugdu rggelvgfllilhe doctor; nature of his pain, ltsierel that the sea hereabouts yield- so much notice and such flattering tributes from the press of all civiliz-; ed countries, British and foreign] -exact location, how - it started, hiked m n5 wuem appetite, food eaten, movements, and so forth. What does the doctor intestinal have to _ But times have ‘changed, and no sail of Gloucester ‘fishermen is seen ofl! these coasts And it seems to be equally true thatlknow bBf0r6 he Staff-S t0 1198B them"? mm‘?- the number of summer tourist visit-l ors to every province has been; patient? a He must know his anatomy, that is the structure of the body as he One October evening in that year, ythe sunset light llay very red upon Bream than in any previous year-‘sees it with his eyes, and by tbelcavendlsh CBPQS- 1° had bee" *1 And never before has our own Isl-f ed and enthusiastic visitors as dur- presented a flourishing and prosper- ous appearance to ‘our visitors and of the comfort and content which. prevail throughout the Dominion] from ocean to ocean. ‘ The great tower of the new Par- and the international bridge at Ni-i agara bears a like pacific name as typical of the peace that has so long help of the microscope. He must ious tissues function, that is what and physics. He must. then know his pathology, works when it is in a disturbed con- were, and just what is the nature of the cause of its disturbance. Thus when he knows the struc- ture and function of the parts in health, hc is in a position to give and clever llament Building at Ottawa has been treatment. ‘fittingly named the Peace Towerp Th“ “hm/e kiwi/ledge takes years to acquire, and yet a physician must acquire it before it is considered safe to give treatment. One of thc forms of treatment he ‘calm, quiet day-one of mild will). file 3011015958 °l Oxmrd “nmand-Province received such unstint- 315° kn°w his phY51°1°3-v- that lslAutumn days so like in their at- ‘how the different organs and var-l ' mosphere of mellow and serene Arts Club was founded in June, 1934 i112 this Summer 0f 1927- Ii 1S a hfllh; they actually d.) 1n the body Thlscontemplation, to the closing years py coincidence that our own Prov-l includes a knowledge of chemistryog Vlftuoug and honm-uble 1lfe_ l All ‘iday a fitful breeze had teased the What is now an organ m. a tissuegulf into tiny ripples. just giving steerage way to the hundred sail oi P11111011 Mflgllline i5 its OFBMI- Afleijthey in their turn have taken note ulglolughul l5 when l; ls sick, as lilymkee flshefmen which could be l . seen now from the shore dotted _}'l0I‘6 and there far out toward the purple horizon. But the little health, and when they 0P9 110i? in breeze had died, and all lay be calm- ,'ed, their sails flapping idly, m the ‘surge of the ponderous rollers. lwhich, coming out oi’ the evening ,darkness already spreading from ‘the North ‘East, hardly seemed to subsisted between the two important nwy apply is drugs- What the drusidisturb the defld- 011v Surface 0f the English-speaking nations of this; continent. It is true that we hovel had some squabbles across the ‘bor- der arld a spirited tariff warfare asl well, but otherwise there has been? peace between Canada and the Un-, ‘will do in small and large doses. waters’ though the Why a certain drug should or should not b»: llscd in a particular ailment. Other forms of treatment are heat, electricity, massage, bathing. rest, exercise, and so forth. , 'What is my point? roar of their breaking reverberated‘ dully along ithe shore, like the booming of far ‘off cannon. . g And there was something sinister fabout the sunset, too, notwith- ited States since the struggle of Ill-l Thu; 1f your doctor dues m: glveltstanding the suberb beauty of its 12-14, a period of 113 years. And with you much in the way of medicinesnynrbln-lé coloring Low down toward the assurance that any future diffi-i culties that may arise between the! two neighbor nations shall be set-; tled by peaceful nations have any future tween them unthlnkable§ and impossible. Both are proud of the prolonged peace, without a fort or_a garrison} along 3,500 miles of their common boundary, which supplies a great example to all the nations of the world and of which" the Peace to ‘ conflict be-P come armed as Bridge at Niagara supplies the latest- ‘ a monument. The abundant rainfall throughout Canada during the growing season has given the double benefit of an excellent growth of field crops and greatly diminished loss from forest fires. This has been especially not- ed in the provinces which are well timbered, such as New Brunswick. Quebec, Ontario and British Colum- bia. In the last-named provinces do\vn to a recent date there had‘ been only 216 forest fires reported, compared with 570 of a much moral serious character in general in the, like period bi last year. Births in Canada last year totalled 232,205, the birthrate for the nincl provinces being 24.8 per thousand of population. Deaths at all ages num-f bered 107,318, a rate of 11.4 per thou- sand. The excess of births over. deaths during the year was 124,887. There are few branches of manu- facture for personal use in which the demand is so steady and constant as‘ that of footwear. The item of boots? and shoes with leather or fabric up- pers, apart from slippers, moccasins, etc during the first five months of the present year totalled 7,372,260 pairs, an average of 1,474,453 pairs per month, a considerable increase over the average production of the like period in last year. The Dominion Qaccau of Statisticsl estimates Canada's grain crop‘ this year as follows! min 375025.000 bushels, of which 300,052,000 bushels are allotted to the Prairie Provinces. The total yield of oats is estimated at 389,758,000 bushels, of, which 226,-, 297,000 bushels is aflgned to the‘ Prairies. Of barley the total esti- mine u 30,030,000 bushels, of which the Prairies are expected to produce 71,724,000 bushels. The estimated crop of rye is given 12,189,000 bush- els, oi which 10,004,000 is allowed to the Prairies. Of flax-seed, 5,319,800 bushels, all but 107,000 bushels is credited to the Prairies. From this statement it would appear that of the estimated total crop of wheat, oats, barley, rye and flax-seed about 870 million bushels, 616,949,000 bush- els are expected to be produced in the Prairie Provinces and only 251,179,- 000 bushels in all the other provinc- es of the Dominion. In other words, more than two-thirds of this years‘ or pills, do not think you are being neglected. With his equipment of knowledge‘ of the body in health and illness, arbitration. both; he is in the best possible position to,___ >__ fegflfdlapply the “Ylect tremmem? °f Ymlri 0+o+ve+v+ ailment, because only this know- ledge can render any form of treatment safe. "M11905; The practice of medicine then can‘: be rightly called a healing "science? 0-000004-00-04-0-0441 Daily Selections For: Guardian Readers . August 9, I927 . OUR. DWELLlNG:—-L0rd, Thou has been our dwelling place in all generations. Psalm 90:1. t PRaYERz-O God, may our lives be hid with Christ, in God. IF ONLY If only I‘_d a friend to give me greeting, ' A hand outstretched to help me on may way, t A whispered word of cheer to ease my burden, A little smiling glance to light my way. _ If only I'd a friend to wish me courage, To urge me on that I might do and dare. . r If I but knew that in the crowded highways Just one was there wl\o'd under- stand-and care. ment _ , Would step out from the hurrying. bustling throng, He'd bring to me the? heart's-ease and the gladness That I have waited for-so very long. Won't you pause for a moment in your happy. busy day To cheer the sad and lonely folk who chance to pass your way?‘ —S. A. Maycock, in Pearson's. DAILY LESSONS ll m ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon wbnos OPTEN msusno: Don't say “at the . the race was already human. thc western horizon hung a black and sullen bank of cloud, edged at itllat moment with a ribbon of fiery ‘THE SCRAP BOOK A SERIES OF LITERARY' 0 ‘Q l YA QUOTATIONS FOR l; BOOK LOVERS "Q i l 0++¢+++e+§+oo++o++§40+o Tuesday, Aug. 9th. Walton born, 1593; Dryden, 10311 nnfiolcs. ' l Q FOR ~. Humanity would seem at an early [period to have wrenched comfort ‘from preflguring man as the hero ,of the cosmic romance. For it was nnpleasantly apparent that man did not excel in physical strength,asset against the other creatures of a ‘ planet whereon may be encountered itigers and elephants. His senses were of low development, as compar- ed with the senses of insects; and, lndeedl senses possessed by some of these small contemporaries man pre- sently found he did not share, nor very clearly understand. The luxury of wings, and even the common com- ~ fort 01's caudal appendage, was de- nied him: He walked painfully. without hoofs; and, created nakedas a shelled almond, with difficulty out- lived a season oi inclement weather. Physically, he displayed in not a sol- itary trait a product of nature's more ambitious labor . . . He. thus, sur- passed the rest of vital creation in a nothing except, as was beginning to If only I'd a friend who for a mp- be’ rumored, the power to reason; and even so; wits apparently too mlignanlmous to avail himself of the privilege. ‘ But to-‘acknowledge such discon- certing facts would never do; justas inevitably, therefore. as the peafowl calrle to listen with u desce ’ lto the nightingale, and the tortoise to deplore th'e slapdash ways of his con- temporaries, man probably began very early to regale himself with flattering narratives as to his nature and destiny. Among the countless internecine animals that roamed earth. puissant with claw and fang and sinew, an ape reft of his tall. and grown rusty at climbing, was the most formidable, and in the end would triumph. It was, of course. considered blaaphemous to inquire into the grounds for this belief, in view of its patent desirability, for S0 the prophetic portrait of man tread- ing among cringing pleosaurl to browbeat a frightened dinosaur was duly-scratched upon the caves wall, and ,art began forthwith tc accredit u, human, beings ma. every trait and rectly.) » - synonyms: indolent, idle, lazy. inert, siothful, inactive. WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it is yours.“ bet us increase our vocabulary by master- ing one word each day. Today's word: IMPEHTINENOE; that which offends propriety! lmlllld once. "I could not tolerate his im- pertinence." destlny which they desiderated . . . And so today, as always. we dc- light to hear about invincible men and women oi unearthly loveliness- corrected and considerably augment- ed versions oi our family circle- performing feats illimitably beyond our modest powers. And so today no one upon the preferable side of Bed- lam wishes to be reminded of what we are in actuality, even were it possible, by any disastrous miracle, ever to dispel the mist which; ro- mance has evoked, about all human doinzl: and to the golden twilight lair-ea and the mountains. Good days m hay making over the last week-end. And a full moon com ay to enable In - v , .-....»......a- V. of which old usage has so accustom- ed us that. like nocturnal birds, our vision grows perturbed in a clearer atmosphere. lAnd we have come, very firnxly to believe in the exist- ence of men eve I , notrac in mt um are. buwizabpgn ought bQ.".u~---w-~ um») , y n. /‘-'.""m AS A TIIIIRIST RESBRT , Some Interesting An1Delightful,Locati0ns_ fred. The sun‘ had sunk half his .bulk behind thlB,_ while from hi5 ‘upper limb a stream of wild and 1 ISLAND uardian Readers." \ ruddy light flowed forth‘ upon the iealth and sea, staining all a weird ,and startling crimson.‘ Soon he ‘had gone, and the night shut sud- denly leaving only a dim. lurid patch in the west, ,like the reflection of some distant but ter- rible cqnflagrstion. ‘ Toward morning the dwellers near the shore were awakened by the wild howling of a rising gale, whose violence was such as to maken even their substantial houses trem-l ble with every blast. The thought)‘ of the Island fishermen whose boats. were resting snugly in the harbors; -.td which it was their custom w‘: return each evening after the days: toll was done,,flew to their brethrenl d: the sea, fighting for their lives‘ out there beneath the rim of that; dawn of wrath. But no help of man‘ could avail them now: each llttlei ship must wage its lonely battle‘ with the tempest. Hourly the wind; increased, and the towering waves fell upon the shore with a fury» which carried huge pieces of debris‘ up into the fields in the low places and caused the sandstone rocks of the head lands to crumple away before the eye. .The crews of the‘ schooners hoisted small patches of sail, and tried to beat to windward. It was a vain effort. Their sails were blown to ribbons before they had them set, or, if perchance one held. no progress to windward, away from the white fanged ierrork of the shore, could be made in the teeth of the breakers. Nor were the anchors any use. They_ dragged, or the cables snapped, and each ves- sel, swiftly or slowly, was born to her end. Lucky were those whose fate it_ was to drift early in ‘the storm? upon a sandy beach. Willing hands were there to help, and most of their crews were saved. But those who struck upon the rocky head- lands were smashed to pieces in a. few minutes, and’ every one on board was lost. ‘ " ‘ - ' The "Ornament," Oscar Coles" and “Llon," we are told grounded on the sand hills which lie to the west- ward of Cavendish. the first two were saved, but that of the "Lion" perished to a man. Several bodies were taken out of this vessel after she had come ashore. maybema Capital $10,000,000 x ‘cl Roz/u! Fllnll turf/ll‘ .\l"i‘( )!\i (il~'-ll.l£ tlon) Lower Queen Street. I .._, _ u h I f0 iIGOUlAIQEI Voyage-d . tougijuy and coo-i tacfayithag-anvgéxpeoulq-l tbccqgg are. irc-ilaicngat l thg, . delights of Travel, available‘ to those who, ' KIM: Bank .1010. welcome Saving: Account. ‘The . . BANK QEQQYA. Relourcce‘ $245,000,000 " ’ Here's a hand (full of auto- mobile protec- that can't be beat. any “com-liars enoracrlon‘ ironi- llYlliMAl "v81 00., , 1T0. The * Oldest Insurance 22:. 1v =_.- 7- a-c-w-"L . . :- eavc money. Depoafn do by mall. _ ~44‘... Reserve $19,500,000 s» -<-».¢s-r_. V‘. i - Tlle-‘iive coyeralfl —l"flrm Theft, Property Damage, Coi- ‘ llalop i . Public Llabiilty- 1- co ' ‘ complete protiec-v _ Ifitltin‘ the ‘automobile owm‘ er, covering the value 0i his .. automobile, as well as his own liability for damage to the blowfly-bf other: pruerwli! injurlesvcaused by his hllltP. mobile. Thqomlssion of any of these coverages leaves the automAbillst open to Ions. in r.‘ s. l. "W? , . _ . . .. - > ""-'»‘Uharl0t_tetmvnI‘ = ..i ‘Bay, or of the dark promonotory of Cape Tryon, which lies silhouetted lin purple distance against the con- The crewgofliiflfiflnfl blues of sea and ‘sky. Should you tire of watching this beauty roll by on either side of the car, and prefer instead to let the eye ling- er for a while on the ever The “Ornament? did not prove to be a total loss; she was taken off l and repaired, and, it is said en- gaged in the wasting trade for; some years. Our Chronlcler, Mr.‘ Simpson, writing in 1899, states that the remains of “the "Lion" were then to be seen upon the beach. Whether they are still visible or not, I do not know. The "Mount Hope" came ashore below Cavendish, and all were saved. At McLul-es Cape, further east, the "Franklin Dexter" struck on the rocks, and all hands Derished. At Arthur's Cove the "Mary Moulton," a d at Robinson's Island the “Skip sck" foundered and not a man was saved. The “Liberator" went to pieces at Park corner; while no less than twenty five other vessels-were stranded in Malpequc Harbor. Many ships mlmased to escape bY T911111"! B10118 the shore to the Westward: the skill with which they were handled, or, it” may be, the hand of fate enabling them to work 911011811 to windward to clear the intervening points of land, ‘and fln- ally to round North Cape. or perhaps to make their way safely into Mal- Deque or Cascumpeque harbours. A vessel, hailing from New London under command oi Capt. Benjamin Bell, and with an Island crew, made such a hairbreadth escape. The? Just managed to reach North Cape. and no sooner were they clear oi the ‘treacherous, reef that strctchesfrom its end far out into the gulf like a finger of death, than the-wind blew their sails into rib- bons._ I In all, about one hundred seamen lost their lives on the North Shore in this terrible. storm. Many of the dead were‘ buried in Cavendish Cemetery. Some of the bodies were later claimed by relatives and were taken to. their homes for final interment, but many stilt lie in the cemetery with no atone to mark their resting place. nor any inscrip- tion, so Mr. Simpson stator, to tell the story of their death. From Cavendish our road runs through a beautiful, park like country, to fly View. One ie never out 0i sight of the sea for long; between the‘ trees the eye contlnuq a m“ - sailor's changing color harmonies of earth iand sky and waters, there are near (this place two excellent inns" to which you may repair. They are |"Sunny acres Farm" and "Sea Side Farm." At either you are assured of a splendid vantage point from which to view the loveliness of the country side, and, if you wish ‘to stay for a little while, here is a matchless sandy beach on which to bathe, or, when you will, lounge lazily in the sun among the grasses which grow upon the dunes. And oi course, on the ‘table will be the best that our Island gardens, fluids and waters afford. What more could be said? _ ' Continuing along the shore 130911 not far from these two hospitable inns, our car descends into a little cutting. The bank on the right is high, and from its summit the fields slope up to the crest of the ridge, which is crowned with a dark grove of spruce. To the left the bank is quite low; one looks down‘ over its rose fringed brink, into a. ‘little wooded valley, where, between the at times the silvery gleam of the small river which flows throughdt. Ahead, the road seems to lead straight onto a wharf which tent of which is as yet veiled from our sight by the hills and W096i either side ‘of the road.‘ ‘As ‘wé- g6 farther on QIEHDIY opens out before us, till stdthc. bottom meal- that ~- all-its beduigirdwnf nde the m; "iobudifi their my ciloulders ggainst the sky. Over some oflflfe more dullicol of the chequered squares of green wmi‘ which time hills are clothed. we can we. if we watch small ob-‘ iecta moving slowly, one to each lit- tie square. aloiig their aides. A bino- cular will reveal these to be mowing machines busily at work in the ripened my fleldaOfi towards the north, the cm ‘ water: of tbl basin are sharply cut oii by 111$ range of gray saudhllh which pro- tect them from the fury of ll north out galu of Autumn. On}, - weeternond of mu maul-album lulu "i-Biee ‘ ‘i. no lemon emf-two mitigation-mingling u the littleharbour marked by growth of spruce and flr we can see. iuts outs into the languid blue .wat- I A0 clearly ‘against ‘the green of farther shore. ' "Y Y A Nearer at hand, it becomes evi- dent um. the» wharf, which had seemed to terminate our road, n05! serves but as" a. reminder of thosl days wglen, in_ the fall, the bulk d: our Island produce was conveyed by small vessels, trading oui of all our harbours lo Newfoundland and Cape Breton. 1i It is in a sad state of disrep ir. ilbeveral of the piles have rotte off, "and the cribwork has given way-pat many points, causing the earthen roadway. to cave in. N0 vehicle could traverse it now. But wild flowers and weeds have thrown a many colomd cloak oi beauty over the nakedness oi- its decrepitude. Here our roadwby turns ‘sharply to the left, and goes out upon the approach of long- ‘ooqen bridge. Drive very take this why‘, iflyotl would avoid broken springs-for, at any rate at; the timewirlfassed oven it! the ap-f preach was Vhshamefllmte. It wasliilct sf "i heavy rail, and our car ‘was constrained willy nilly m‘ And, as if this were not enough known depth, in each of whicp v1; three nod tomtick fast. But b9, careful navigation we tinallygol through, and after one flnal tcrrillt bump, were glad to find ourselves itself. _ ,_ (‘xblne contained.) . Mineral’: Llniment for onta and brnlfll ers of a lovely estuary, the full ox- ,. of the old iwnnuu lug". revealed,‘ in‘ ' n, I flgnnuesfronn y , “RELIEF - ‘LFOR GDIANS _ hes-nodular: a one of "éalnivlniteefleénl. »: M“ Blue a .'.-"~»~'-. ' 42%“ "Ailllbblllscs lillVl. II‘: -. . _.,'.nflOI|Inlll-l= l -\i ' t . .140. -'\-§o-ie.-ys_-.<:. w.‘ - ..".:_.e..‘ -.. mfiee-zr. _,,-v,- fully ole, you who -' travel in two yawningnpavrallel nets. ‘ each ‘oi thaseruts at intervililfl. .105!‘- _‘ itself in Jilimy mud holes of till"; . upon the wooden floor of the briw 1‘ $87,. 0 .vv~