Wrfilllhllylobuo. Jar-refinance. Milanese-uneven.‘ v Ylee-Preolnlent-J. B. Burnett. D. A. IleKtnInl, D. I. 0. Associate Illtowll. I. Currie i . " itouoay, ocrolaun 1s, 192s i‘ - AN eoAnooF TRADE ,.. it.‘ la confidently hoped m“ the '1 ‘doting of the Canadian Board of "ltl- which opens in Saint Jon-i, “" w-B» 0n Tuesday will be represent- illve o1 all Canada and that its de- m§°""°“° "l" Drove beneficial. It ‘l! Effllllylll! l0 know that, as al- ready reported in The Guardian, the Charlottetown and other boards of'the province have elected a ltrong representation of delegates “Wnlllead the meeting and we trust l-htiy shall all “be able to go. ‘The Canadian Board of Trade ls midi! up of representative and ac- tive business men from all over the ' domllllflll- They will discuss quee- tioas of national interest and will Illllltd their conclusions public through the press. ‘The Board is IIOIPDOHUCIII and, although repre- senting all shades of political op- inione and all sections Iof Canada, neither party nor section will bc permitted to colour decisions or- rlved at. The deliberations of such an tis- 59111111886 of representative men should be of great value to our governments, federal and provin- cial. lThe government or the country is not 1he business of leg- islatures and parliaments alone but oi! the people and by the people and these are represented by their leaders in every community. ———-—{Oi_ THE TRUTH LEAKING OUT. The truth, suspected for some time,_is now becoming clear as to why the report of the Royal Com- mission under Sir Andrew RaeDun- can-is being withheld. if it were only the refusal to publish the re- “port until it was first submitted to (Parliament, some show at least oi’ an excuse might have ‘been tolerated. but when the interval is being used by the Government for propaganda against the recommendation of the Commission, then it is time for the Mnritimes to bit up and take notice. "l- The Hon. R. L. Calder. senior counsel for the Government in the Customs inquiry, has been talking in bu-blic and in different places. He contends that "Canada has per- formed every one of its written ob- ligatlons to Nova Scotia." The Duncan report, so far as we have been able to learn from what has been revealed oflt, declares in effect that Canada has not perform- fed all its written’ obligations and it makes certain recommendations as an offset to the unfulfilled obli- gations. ‘Why Mr. Caldet-‘s propaganda? Premier King, when in Charlotte- towlt and the Marltimes previous to the election, declared his Gov- ernment would carry out all the recommendations of the Royal Com- mission, for the formatlonof which he took credit. What has happened? _Did he meet ‘with objections from other sections Iof Canada? Did some , member of his Cabinet protest against paying the dl/iaritlmes the subsidies recommended iby the Commission? Did lPremier King find that the payment of these sub- sidies was going to endanger the Government? And did it appear to him that the people of Canada, east ‘and west must be educated along these lines? is Mr. lCalder the mie- eionary erhoolmaster? And is this the reason why the report is being withheld? These are grave ques- tionl and thb people should ponder rthom carefully. ‘~ THEY SAW CANADA We have before no ‘speckle; pub- ‘fished under the authority oi the '_ lfllbtor of Immigration and Colou- lflflol l4 Ottawa. The foooklet i! ‘What American Iliiitore‘ pout lined," ‘with an ex- , "Brief oom- This galaxy of United States gimnpaper editore, 65 in number, made the trip, to 'quote from the booklet, “front Chicago to Vancou- ver and return in a special train routed in such a way as to give the best opportunity to observe the country and to investigate condi- tions. A boat trip from Vancouver to Victoria and return was a fea- ture of the western end of the journey." ‘iln the following pages, 2i inall. the visiting editors give their pull- lic opinion of "Canada” and on tho last page is a map of "Canada" showing the itinerary of the editors. By this may the reader discovers that "Canada" consists of British Columbia, Alberta Saskatchewan, Manitoba , the extreme boundary of Ontario and the Ameri- can border line. western And so they saw anti described "Cflllflilfl", evidently the Canada known to the immigration Depart- ment, namely the prairie provincial: and British Columbia! The booklet is neatly printed on caieudered paper, gives excellent portrait-s of the visiting editors to- gether with lileii" “Canada? Government Printing Bureau at Ottawa" and will be paid for by the people of Canada, not the “Cau- atia." by the tlI-stinguislled visitors. i This boosting of the west at the expense and to the injury or the rest of Canada, by the government which is supposed to represent Canada is one of the which. the neglected overlooked portions of the dominion and espec- ially'the Maritimes complain of an-l is one of the main causes of sec- tional divisions. All efforts of rail- ways and of the i-mntigration Do- impressiotig of i; was “printed at the “S9911 grievances partmcnt are directed towards se- curng colonists and immigrants for the West. figure in any of the The east does not even land settle.- This matter been referred to frequentlymroittises have frequently been extorted from department heads, always before elections, that the east would be given fair treatment yet, in the op- inions of these heads enddn solicit- ing immigrants Canada is that sec- tion of North American which lies west of the Western boundary of Ontario. -——-——to¢-———— JOURNALISTIC CHANGE The sale of the Saint John Globe to a new company marks an event -in the history of Maritime news- The Globe was founded 65 years ago and during G2 years 0i’ that time was edited by the laze ‘Hon. John V. Ellis. Since his death in 1918 it has been successfully curried on by his son, F. B. Ellis. The Globe was always an independ- ent Llberal Journal and it ls tinder- stood will so remain. 131W. Mc- Creudy, editor in chief of the Saint John flelegraph for over twenty years, is now vice president and meat. schemes. ha"; DBDETS. managing director of the Globe Company. ‘Mr. MoCready is the only son oi Mr. J. E. B. MeCready of this city. EDITORIAL NOTES The electrical storm ‘which swept over the Maritime! Friday night was a. somewhat unusual disturb- ance at, this time of year In many ways the whole season was naus- ual, but science has not yet auc- ceeded in solving the secrets oi the weather and the comes for its vag- aries. Sun spots account for only a fraction of our atmospheric dis- turbances, ill even a fraction. el- though they are ineqently quoted ‘when anything unusual happens. The fact appears to be. that the scientists know no more about the lndleae and the feathered and fur- weather and its chatlgeg than the. Canada hn enjoyed “a lueeoaeion of good crops for several years past. This has been true not only or wheat but oi niost other products of the ‘field and has been a main factor in our reviving prosperity. Title years wheat crop of 400 mil- ion bushels -will largely increase the purchasing power of the two millions of people in the Prairie Provinces. lFive bushel of wheat provides a year's bread for the average of persons old and young. if we deduct 45 million bushels to feed our own nine millions of peo- ple and 50 million bushels more for next springs sowing there will still remain =300 million bush] s. or its equivalent in flour, for export. There promises to be a market for it all. The United States wheat crop was not so good as ours anti will be mainly consumed at home. Broadly speaking ‘Europe's ‘Owl? 19 below the average and the import demand will he greater than it has been. The Far East is enlarging its purchase of wheat from year t0 year. Good crops and fairly good prices go fur toward assuring good times in (‘anuda till the cnil m‘ 192i. The choice oi Hon.’ Mr. Guthrie as Conservative House leader for the coming session has inoved u score of ‘Liberal journals to coin- meut upon in various ways and spt-rttlate upon the ilnal outcome of the choice. They pretty generally admi-t that but for ‘Mr. Meigltetrs inslsfance that his resignation should be accepted he would have been promptly ‘re-elected to the leadership without a dissenting vote. And this has led a number oi the Liberal papers to think and some of them tioJloubt to fear that Mr. 'Melglten’s retirement is but temporary and that he will be re- called by the convention of his party which is expected to meet after the session. ' Mr. Guthrie, although he is a vet- eran parliament‘ lan, has had no experience as a leader. This lack of? experience is referred to by. his Liberal critics along with the irrit- ating fact that he was formerly a Liberal. The same objection was made to ISir Robert Borden when he was called to the ‘Conservative leadership and to Sir ‘ Thoinafl White later on. lBoth of these dis- tinguished ppblic men had in their earlier days ‘been lLiberals. Surely there may be a chance for Mr. Guthrie to make good as they dill He may render good service during the session and~yet give Place l0 another after the session. Some Liberal editors already see the stage nicely set for Mr. Mcigll‘ en's return. ‘The Toronto Globe !points out that he has a legion of personal friends throughout the country “whowill follow his career with interest and good wishful M111 that many of his former followers will look ‘foitward to his return l0 the post which he has relinquish- ed." The "Conservative Ottawa Jour- nal, referring to the high tributes paid w dvfr. iMeigheu at the recent caucus of the party, goes on to say: “One thing is sure. it is that when the national convention meets here next summer the lname of Arthur Meighen will come dlrst for the leadership." The news from London concern- ing the question: to come before the imperial Conference and the manner in which they may be dis- posed of is of the gravest character and will awaken serious thought in the minds of all who have at heart the future well being and destiny of Canada and the British Empire. The deliberations of the, Confer- ence and the attitude and utteranc- es of its leading members Will ‘be watched with intense interest and concern from day to day 110i- 0111)’ throughout the lamrlre and lll° English-speaking world ‘but beyond those wide boundaries. {Heaven grant that the Conference may he wisely suided! m, r ‘L _ thunderatw... in rare In Prince Edward Inland and that of Friday evening came as a sur- prise. ilt was also of unusual viol- lence and ektended roughout the Province. At this writing the full extent of the lose resulting has not ‘been ascertained ibut it has Ilfqb ably been heavy. Three churchel arb known to have lbeeltlatruck by the lightning and one of them den- troysd, while a barn with its -valu- able contents of live Bloch lllll stored grain and ha! l! "l" 1"‘ cluded in the catalogue of lones- ___-oo>--—- DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH ly w. |.. om» ‘ WORDS OFTEN MISUBBD: Don't lay"‘hie ill-bred manner twee __ aggravating." 8a’ "provoking." IA \ u. “mum fl lug one word each day. i ran cnanLom-arowulc Notes by the Way‘; ‘ 5,1...“ w. no f’ CAUSE OF GALL STONES A Danish physician makes the statement that 25 per cent oi the adults who died in .11 large institu- tion during 1925 had gall stones, but.were apparently unaware of the fact. ' Thme are exactly that were published more twenty-five years ago. in other words c-ue in every four of us who have grown to manhood or womanhood are carrying gall- l-ltollee. and yet only about one in hundreds really sufler from‘ the ef- iecls thereof. Now although _gail...stones are usually found in the gall bladder, tlfis investigator found seven cases in the four hundred examined, where the stones were in the liver itself. ‘ Though bile is manufactured by the _llver practically all the time. that is during the entire twenty- four hours, less of it is manufac- tured when there is fasting or dur- ing the night. The amount of bile tnade in twenty-four hours is from one to two pints. The gall bladder, which is a sort of store house or reservoir for the bile, only holds a ut two ottucee, which is a very smal quan- tity, but the amount of solid matter in the bile in the gall bladder is four tc- ilvc times as much as Iwhen it is first manufactured. Thus iNn-ture, which is always just a little ahead of our requirements, again makes provision for any entergency need of bile by having this rich or concentrated bile always ready. liowever the point for yc-u to rc- member is that practically all the stones are formed in this gall bled. der, and that the pain of a. stone passing down the duct from the gall bladder is one that is never forgotten. it is ‘beyond description, it is so severe. And the cause of stone form- ation? Sluggishness of the liver and in- testine, general weakness of the abdominal muscles, interfere with the outflow of bile, and this stasis or stoppage thickens up the bile and helps to form stones. ISome infections like typhoid. are blamed also, but a well-flowing bile would carry the infective organisms away. ‘Diet is impqrtant. Cream, liver, kidneys and all forms of animal fat should be eaten in moderation, where there is sluggishness of liver and intestine. So keep the middle third of’ ‘your body moving, by bending front side to side. and fonvards and backwards, and you will prevent the sluggishness that is the real cause of gall stones. i the figures than ___4,>.___ Daily Selections tron Guardian Readers October 18, 1926 TRAY-ER OF It'd-IE ST-RAlNGiTR —~“I-lcar thou in heaven Thy dwell- ing place, and do according to all that the stranger calleth to thee for; that all people of the earth may know Thy name, to fear thee. as do Thy people Israel." 1 Kings 8:43. ddltiAlfildlb-We» bless Thy name, O God, most Iiigh, that no one needs to be a stranger to Thee. FAREWELL iii- ' Tile golden rod is modding on the lblllslde, , The hullrushes stand stately in the dell, ~ » sumochs gently wave their lbaming branches Whispering softly, "Summer, fare thee iwell." The The maple trees are gowned in gold and crimson, The spreading beech its fruitful boughs display, .'I‘he poplars yellow leaves are all a-q-uivver- "Farewell, 0 Summer," hear them sigh and say. J A haze of blue enehrouds the dis- tant hilltops, A fragrant murmur steals among the pine, The swallows wing their chatter- ing way to southward- ‘Tarewellf’ they call, and leave us far behind. I Oh, I have loved thee very dearly Summer, But Autumn now reigns in. my heart supreme, So with the birds, the whispering trees and flowers, l‘ll say “farewell" and wander on to dream. —Mabel MoGibbou. misfortune. sickness _or wound mdy be "aggravating." 10F T E-N’ MISPEONOUNCED: u entry}; OFTEN MISSPELIM: mantel (shelf); mantle '(clomk-) SYNONYMS: vacate, leave, eb- andon, abdicate, quit, desert, relin- quish. WORD STUDY: "Use a word three times and it ll yours." Let us increase our vocabulary by master- .calied upon to ask i cemetery. Pronounce "tery", not as t ti‘ .1~.. ‘i "i Political Party Leadership 11,. Nqeogllry Attributes ._-f-—- . View; or a Banker on the Problem 4,, (Historical) This article contains an extract from a National Ballk 0f Clmlmerce of ‘New York, which quote la the belief -that it applies to the iwllll- cal party system of Canada at the present juncture. It states opin- long which we think are correct and also some theories which time may dissolve into thin air. The question of the 1881118111119 of ‘he great Liberal-Conservative party is now abaofblll! elwuxh nu‘)- lic attention to lt for the moment. As the public know Riel-ion. Arthur Meighen fell ih battle in dtis own. constituency in the-late election temporary-or a House Leader— during the coming session and the appointment of Mr. Hugh Guthrie to the; position at a Liberal-Con- servative caucus last week. Thus the question of the ability of the temporary leader to successfully lead thc illouse becomes a deeply absorbing subject. ‘Even the Lib- eral papers have‘ been gracious enough to tender very sage advice upon the capabilities of ntore than one who tulghf be selected. They have, also been true to their record under such circumstance by not venturing any opinion since Mr. Guthrie was chosen. They appear to know enough about what cott- stltutes leadership during the ses- sion by keeping mum for the pic- sent. ' Such thou. being a matter for the Liberal-(fottservativee to act: on with authority. and they ‘have so acted we may e permitted to ail- ply ‘the oplnioi of the New Yorker referred to above on the necessary qualities of leadship in the strug- gles oi’ life generally. I-ie goes on as follows:- "lu every illdustry—lu every brunch of commerce some mun it: inexorably rising to leadership be- cause his fellows, have confidence in his judgment and faith in his honesty and purpose. “Leadership is not a reward but a job —- la command from society to make selfish interest serve the in- terest of all-to point the ‘way for oll-—to point the way for all to prosper. ‘tThe greatness of a merchant is measuredby the number of people who believe in him. “To build a powerful organiza- tion, an employer must, first win the loyalty of hm employees by be- ingwloyal to them. ‘ _ - "Business is pushing forward to- ward the solution of many pro- ‘blems. iMelt look for a broader ac- ceptance of economic truths and for the observance of higher stand- ards. tional conflict, social unrest and commercial uncertain-flog must conic an era. of better methods, better banking, better business. “The leaders of business must as- sume responsibilities greater than Imen have heretofore been asked to shoulder. “Upon the character of our lead- ers--upon their vision, courage, de- termination, wlsdom and honesty-- depends our progress‘ to better times." ‘The reader of the above quota- tiob-althoitgh it is directed tc the affairs of ‘battks-tvill- readily dis- cern that it applies to all other bitmap affairs with equal force and effect. They will nearly all fcel themselves I ‘, Mr. Guthrie able to measure up to this standard, and then conclude- l have not had an opportunity of have made their choice and until they offer a differed; opinion I shall follow their lead. We may say that Hon. Mr. Gut- hrie has been for many years n participant in our political activi- ties in and out of parliament at Ot- tawa and has achieved at least one measure of success hw has won the confidence of his fellows and the respect of the general public. lDlfferent writers have different hobbies as regards how to judge the marks of great leadership. Some de d on phrenclogy, others rely urgyachievement, others are in- clued to judge avman by his vari- ous‘ contests in life's battles, and contend lthat conditions are so un- equhl that they should all be placed on the scale and weighed for and against him. For often the real I battles of men's lives are not known or considered although-the seem- ingly trifling ones—-over which lbe had ‘no control-being the most ruinous or the most beneflcent in his whole career. 180mg can t; .195. tiny; others attribute if. to luck. “Pot an Feu” Favorite Dish With The French E-AIRJIJS. "Oct. 15.-—lI-l_ere is the recipe for 'lPot au Fen," which is the favorite dish in_ France, the land more celebrated than shy other Ithfvlil cookery. ‘ Tie a string tightly about two pound! of beef and place it in a saucepan containing ten and one halfpintrof cold water.‘ Add n good luuuiflul of coarse salt. A email piece iofham or mutton may also be added to improve the flavor of title-broth. Place the saucepan on a brick tire and Bl a whitish foam begin! to dorm ohlm it oi! until it ceases to appear. .'l‘hea add three leekl. the Today's word: LETHARGIC; drowsy, stupe- fying. "They remained in this leth- argic lute of inaction." ‘ m,» put-pt which should be tied _ t ofparsnlp, thyme. n. _ ‘hallo, a bay leaf, a bit of thrust. up let the pan stand on a eiow fire until the broth is boiled before aorvlal- _ flui hie beef for "Pot an Fen" igholipf info one packet, and the villa. another; four carrots. a om H4 clove Munroe onion, -into cloves have been at lent nix hours in all. Remove tho ‘grease and strain the broth ' out from the rump, should- % round of beef. which necessitated the choice 0! 3' From the tangle of internzv‘ judging Mr. Guthrie, but my recogJ n-ized leaders, who do know himt Grandeur fol Yukon JUDGE TELLS WHY MEN QTILL LIVE THERE. Judge Macaulay u: in his deck chair on the steamehip “Princess Entry" as it ploughed its waynorth t brough the Pacific waters of Queen hnrlotte Sound. writes C. B. Rob- ertson in the Toronto Star Weekly. The Judge in a hale and hearty white-haired man of the Yukon old- time!‘ Biihwl; lfihtle. courteous. with a humorous twinkle in his blue eyes; Mrs. ‘Macaulay eat nearhym charming lady who has shared the !jud*ge's life in the Yukon for the past twenty-five years, with only occasional trips "outside." "lDo {I love the Yukon?" said the judge. "indeed l do! l have ibeen down to visit my people lir Belle- ville, tnyold home. where my son is now practising law; but, flue as it was to see my own people and to make the acquaintance of my grand- son, i am more happy than I can say to be going home to dear old Dawson." "What is this lure of the north. ~ Judge?" “it's hard to explain-to a chee- chako. Words don't express it. It's something w-hich the sourdough knows and feels to tho very depths of his soul! -But the reason that we're comrades-we old-timers-is that we share that indeiinable love Invest Now in C Hilda? » Growing Industries Sound reasons why im- mediate investment in ¢h= securities of Canadian basic industries is cleelr- Y ' able are outlined in fh¢ current issue of our Pub‘ I lication Investment Items. If you are. an investor‘ you should read this pub- matlon. ‘Copy free on ‘ request. , , , ,., l Royal Securities ..Corporat10n- j LIMITED ' “ ' ‘ Riley Buildins. Charlottetown use; was a W Montreal of the north, which we never talk about. except to say, when wo come lltome from a trip outside, ‘it's good to be home!’ We are a simple peo- ‘nle. l suppose, and a bit inarticul- ‘ate. The silence oi‘ the mountains unay have made us so. i “When, as o. young man oi.’ Thirty-five, I was first appointed n iYukon judge. my philosophy of life and imy reli-gion were a .bit complex. Both were speedily simplified, fotul with the tremehdous responslbllityi thrust upon my rather young shelli- tiers, I coulil meet it only itt the‘ simple faioh that, greatly needing‘ spiritual strength and wisdom, that. need must ‘be ‘filled .by the inspira-j ltion emanating from a Power inilnq iitely strong and wise. And it was.‘ “You know that poem of Service's‘ in which he speaks of ‘men with the; heart of vikings, and the simple faith of a child?’ Well," the judge, laughed, “I don't flatter myself that; l. personally, ever was possessed , of the ‘heart of a viking,’ but there is sonlething in the immensity of the north that makes for the sim- lpliflcation of religlon—‘-makee one very humble, yet conscious of pow- er, of a sufficient courage to tackle big problems such as were those of the judge's in the old days of the» Yukon gold rush. -“'l‘he iln-mensity of the north!" The judge gazed toward the distant shore-line, its towering, snow-peak- ed mountains. its spirit of illimit-' able iastness! _ .“The miners were a line lot ‘of adventurous chaps, on the whole‘, none better, and few criminals among them. But following every ‘gold rush in history have come the irabble of lawless men whose aim isnot work but plunder." "Why were there so few crimes in the Yukon. compared with the number in adjacent Alaskan terri- tory?" “Can't you guess the answer?" said the judge, proudly. “TheNorth- west Moullted Police, of course! We had four hundred men in that force, and each lllilll, it seemed, was possessed of unbounded cour- age, an alert brain, endless perse- Iverattce, and a passion for fulfilling his duty. "But the days of the gold rush are ion-g past. We've had. in the past ten years, in all the lv-ast Yu- kon territory, only ftve .murder trials, and they, such as might hap- |peu in any province of the Domin- ,ion. lDawson is like any other l-man’s lit-tie home town. Ourvpeople are home-loving; their children are given a flue education. We have ipublic schools with good teachers in every district where there are oven a. few children. These schools come and go as the miningopera- tions change from one districtto ‘ nan: BRUSHES ‘ ’ of l" Big‘ ‘Discoun at 1-3 off regular price.» We are clearing out then Brushes to make room for new stock. The White Drug Store J. c. JIIMIESOII ONLY ll WEEKS UNTIL XMAS‘ p OUR XMAS STOCK IS NOW COMPLETE in almost ‘every detail-In a range embracing over 2000 items only about a dozen are yet to arrive. r ~ ' l lf you have not already placed-your requirements for the Holiday Trade-write us and‘ we will have our -Salea- man call. Tbys-Dolls-Games -— Decorations-- China—Papeteries—-Fancy Goods in Endless Variety. Orders filled promptly and complete. The biggest and most modern wholesale warehouse In Eastern Canada. Baird-Thomas-Scott, Ltd ‘ Truro, N. S.' A ‘ SERVICE AND QATISFAGTION. another. We follow up the little settlements, and educate the younk stern until they are ready for high school,,at which stage manyflof them are sent to Dawson .by their parents, to proceed toward matric- ulation. and ultimately, sometimes, to universities outside." , "Do you ever regret the old atl- ventttrolts days?" the jud-ge was asked. l “if I were a young man, I might regret those daji, the thrill, the ex- citement, the ever-present sense of adventure in lbelng in touch con- stantly with -men whose every day was a duzardous thing of inexpres- sible hardships, met with indomit- able courage. But ‘I love the Yukon even more today. and the little town of Dawson with its dwindled population. _ “l think the older we grow, we old-timers, the more we love the Yukon. for it was something more . than the thrill of the old days that we loved even then, and it is some- thing more than the harmonious and peaceful life of the country that we love today. . “it's the glory and the grandeur, and the unntteraible beauty of our Land of the Midnight Sun that holds us, and brings ue back (when we fare ‘outsldddor a while), with the song of service, execratlug the more civilized country: "Pmiecared of it all, God's truth, so am! It's too big and brutal for me!" “Cancel your trip south for awhile. Stay a year in the Yukon and ‘I promiseyou won't lbe ready to return even then. See the great Yukon river freer over in the fall; see the ice break in the spring; see the Inmmer mountains a blue of color from our gorgeous wild flowers! "Then you'll be, a eoardoulh. maybe. or one in bhe making, and you'll understandnwithout being told, the lure of the Yukon, the glory of the Land oi the Midnight Bun!" _.__-¢Q@__-- al in HOW THE DIVORCE GETS A START ma.‘ Newlywed: That's angel cake yotrve been ehtiug. denr—my first attempt. . Hubby: tom Ht thinking] would soon need a harp. hank merger, combining the Irving ». 811k 611d fh-uat Company and the American -EX01’l8.I1§8-iPBlll.fl0 Nation- proximately Dfoved by the directors of both in- stitutions today. The new bank, which will be known as the Am- 1 erlcan Exchange Irving Trust gom. Deny. will rank as the third largest Fought Duel tnca, all.» puts over th f l . vlded the_ grog-rid? igfhingfwgi-h duel today between (loom; pun] D0 Vlllers. a Frenchman and a former British Army surgeon and Dr. iflcalini Jarvis. The Count afidwalgzied in the ear during the the combat. but the duelllgfg m. fused to shnite hands and left the l field unreconclled. The two men were arguing about the dollar and pound rate of en. change. 9107 laid thipll to ueh othe sweats r FEED nl; COAL ‘tees-genome! in order 0 VI . .1... chili!!!’ r3’... run the on and chance of ‘In burning howdy) L . ..::.":::s".?.:."..:':.l i.'.§.§'.".'w‘?l.".2.’.'.'.'T"" A. Pltikkso Phone 2'40 n‘. ‘a ‘nan 44 an ‘ma’. in size only by the National Cit! Bank and the Chase National- ‘e nti ‘by ‘ Parcel Post Iswhlatklur Coun- try ‘name-a‘ ‘rite Our Mull erupt- department Jiavheomo aimportant ce- Jlmot toom- junlnoel. - Rural residence hive; found ‘our method of a tapping. no cont iibnltnt th . we ~ receive Huge ‘Bank Merger. iNiEW YlORlK, Oct. 15.—<A huge Bank with total resources of ap- l $735,000,000, was ap- U i? ,',._ 91°" Yo"! City. being exceeded At Nice, France ce, Oct. 1-5. -a dis- A ill, Y!!!‘ . ntoggy thin.‘ 665ml or“ MI H w." n Ii Ieteeltbi in pet-eon. station A rttuu. anon The second stopped ~Durinr the argument