.- .¢-r. .. ,flpql-liiflllfihli’ vtntfnfl-Ofl-Dl _-u\_A_p_-_.u_______________:- I . -u-i.-1.-.-.-.-.~4I1.-..-. .-.~.-.1-..-.-..-.;'.1'~'.-..~..,-;_5_=_=,_._;.;.F~:_:;:_:~.;~.,_ -' - Wo-uiivwl-c ~.'-.'..'.'-‘-'-T i . tbsp... i. “TIE jlll-DWETOIII SIIIII ll IIIIIII} Dilly (Minded In IUTI ‘Pro-Meat: UOIL ca w. 01mm s. mun V mum. ab; Burnett. ma. 1L Klnnon. 0.5.0. Irwin: J. B. Burnett. IJ-l. ~Wulker and Llelt. In: n . . JL (On Active Servlnei Hie Strongest Memory is Weaker T; the Weakest Ink.‘ ._ hm“. 1111112 .1‘- 1.11.. N. B. Power Plans u q. , .. Premier McNair has neither denied nor con- firmed the allegation by the loader of the op- position in New Brunswick that the government was planning to take over privately owned elec- tric pCHVCI‘ COiiipaiiies and. by combining their facilities with those of the New Brunswick Power Commission, create onc big system for the province. l1' the idea had not ticcurrcd to :\l|'. -\'lCi\':tir bvfnrv, sins the .\l<\llCl(1ll ilirziii- scrip: (Liberal), he inziy bu izilcing time in think u ovvi‘. The’ purpose 111' the plan, it is said iii the dcspzitclt reporting .\lr. Rlarkzrfs statement, would be to give l~1\\ er pouvr rates to consum- ers and to ti: iii 111v piw=vIiive-\\ide |‘.\1\\.'C1' far- ilitit-s willi the ]litlIl1\§\'(l Pctiicodinc tidal piiwt-i‘ (luyclopiiiciii. Lfiiiisiiiiit-rs llC\l‘l' have shown any objection t0 reductions in the price of electricity 0r anything elsr. The old question of private Vclislls public oiviit-rsliip, lnuvcvvr, would lll‘ raised. Tihose who oppose any extension of public Qwiiership would he inclined to (liszip- prove. Whether or not the prospects of savings they would enjoy under the plan would over- come their ttltjvfllttllS is another question. l-iirst, iii (irder to win yiopulzir approval, it ivoiild have to be (lElllDllblHtlUtl that there would he a sav- ing. liliminatir-ii of federal taxes would be an item. There would be some reduction in over- head by combining all the producer units iii one organization. To (lCIPTllllllE whether govern- ment opccation hould be sufficiently economical to prrserve flux-v aivliigs. the record of the pro- vincial commission would have m be studied, _.\lean\vhilc, however, although these specula- D0116 may he of some interest they remain pure- ly academic until the statement promised by Trainer .\lc.\'air is given to the public. Gas Attacks Unlikely According to Drew Middleton. London cor- respondent of the New York Times, the rea- sonableiopinion of Allied leaders is that the Germans will not employ gas as a Wll‘ weapon, either 0n the field, or dropped from planes. (hie of the first things the British Govern- nicnt did after the declaration of war was t0 furnish every man, woman and child in the countiy with a gas mask, believing that the Hun would he true to his record of the last ivar. As time went on and the Nazis did not drop gas bombs on London. the [ieople gradually left off .. carrying their masks to vwork or whenever thev went Olllhillld now nobody carries them at all. The)‘ believe that if the Ger-mam hid intgndgd to use gas he would have done it long before now, \\‘e iii:1_v be sure that it is riot from human- itarian reasons that the encmv has refi-ained, If sufficient precautions are obnrvgd thgfg i5 little to fear from gas in almost any form. Some types will kill, but they quickly evaporate. Oth- ers hang about for a few day-s, but their ef- fects are not deadly. Th6 ffiil "i501! f0!‘ this ebbtension, however, ls that the Germans know that the Allies pos- bcss a secret gas far more. deadly than anything their scientists have knowledge of, and that when the first gas bomb or cylinder is let loose among Allied civilians or soldiers, the Allies will retort in the most awful falhion. Sliortlv be- fore the end of the lust war the United States had produced “Lcwisite,” a gas so deadly that the factory in Ohio where it was made under the direction of Professor Lewis, the inventor, was quarantined for miles on either side lcst my of the fumes escape, and shortly after the war, rather than risk keeping the stuff indefin- itely in drums the entire output was taken out to SQ/QHWClglICCl and dumped to the bottom. Tlfé ‘Allies’ have vast quantities 0f deadly gas '11 stag-age but they will only use it if provoked. More Butter Prod uc-ed Creamery butter production in Nlav moved up to 33,9t8,942 pounds. This represents an increase ofgapproximately 1 3-4 million pounds or 5.3 per cent over that produced in the same month of the preceding year. .-\ll prn\'iiii"cS except Nova Scotiii and Ontario shared iii this advance. This reverses the trend reported in the preceding month when -a decline of 13.6 per cent was registered and is due to the fact that the season was iiiorl: advziiiccd, providing more‘ luscious Iiflfilllft‘ than in Nlay, i943, when the weather was inclined to be rather cold and backward. The accumulative production of creamery butter during the January-bitty period amounted to 89,(ili2.221) pounds 0r 6.5 per cent less than that reported a year ago. A marked improvement in the butler supply situation in May, coupled with fieriorlical cuts in the ration, offers more favourable prospects 0f building tip reserve stocks, so much iicedcd during the winter period, than was the case a month ago. Mr. ,Crera ifs History Oflg member of the King Government ‘from whom time 'is heard these days is Hon. '1. ;-\ 1,1,“; Minister of Mines and Resources. \ct p’. cralapwag “n. powerful political influence i, i,“ dai- “Jfhgiifxtaivtfjournal recalls that it 19g just twenty-five ycars ago, “p; ed to quit the Uiioit Hov- ileatlhkn agrarian uprising. to he the ll lief of a Progressive party which. rd; would "take us to the iip- land; w {h air is pure and sweet." lt ivzis l 1hr o! ‘attrgin, hopes, of rosy dreams. up] My, (‘rar “phmgl c llC\-t'l‘ reached "P151141; ~ -‘ a vast iiivreasc in im formidable than the CCF party of today. Why did it vanish? The answer, suggests the journal, was in Mr. Crerafis temperament. Au amiable, kindlya moderate man, at heart a conservative. he was not of the mould of the fighting cliieftaiii. The Whiggish Liberalism of Mr. Mackenzie King appealed to him far more than the radical dreams of the prairie wheat-growers. And while Mr. King used all his genius for blandishment, Mr. Crerar, anxi- ous to become a statesman while it was still ne- cessary that he remain an agitator, moved closer to the camp which was really his spiritual home. A day came when his party, now mostly tired radicals, their rosy dawn turned to a drab grey, fell to grinding CON‘, in the camp of the Phili- stiiies. Mr. Crerar, bad he possessed the tempera- ment of the true radical. could have exerted pressure from without or bored from within. l-le did neither. The label of "Liberal". the post ol minister, the pomp of power, the telling to liii1i- self that, after all, more could be got by peace and EXp€(ll€llC_\'-—tll€SC things were more of his nature. lt all brought hint iii time to full meni- bership iii the Liberal hierarchy. The Progres- sive yiarty became a 1iienior_. EDIIURIAI. NUTIZS _ Our “Million Acre Farm" produced nearly two million ($1,<)4)0.00o) worth of poultry‘ and eggs last year. as against a 1nillioii-ziiid-ii-lialf the previous year. a it v i- Surprisingly little interest was evinced. out- side the province itself in the Saskatchewan (leciioii. This was due largely to the war dc- u-lopineiits which put all other happenings iii the shade. w it a v General De Gaullc denies having broken an zigrcenieiit, r1‘ sending Free French officers to France for the invasion, as he, or his govern- ment, had signed no such agreement. Evidently" someone has blundered. v u n- v The Periodical Press Association in a brief to the Government points out that the com- mercial revenue of the CBC had increased from $355919 in I938 to sortie $2,800,000 in the cur- rent year, and that the time had now come to abolish the licence fee ti) private set owners. 1U Ill Mai-Gen. Howard Kennedy, quartermaster- general of the Canadian Army, speaking at a post-war conference said lumber and paper would continue to dominate the forest industries for many years to come. Iii addition, there would be niuchvdcvelopmeiit of by-products of the pa- per and "lumber industries—'alcohol, turpentine, vanilla and probably road materials. I‘ l #1 It Here is a curious and enlightening comment- ary on German propaganda. A Tass News Agency (lespatch from Zurich, Switzerland. to Moscow quoted “neutral arrivals from Ger- many" as saying that books, pamphlets and pictures of the “Atlantic \Vall” have disappear- ed froiii Geriiiarfibboksliops and itewsstands since the Allied ‘invasion of Normandy. “They were reported to have been withdrawn from cir- culation on instructions of the propaganda min- istry,” they said. iv in n- a- - john Churchill, Ist Duke of Marlborough, died this date I722; had distinguished military and political career under King James, William of Orange, and Queen Anne, his most brilliant victories being at Blenheim, (1704) Raniillies (1706) and Oudenarde (i708) ; bilarlboroiigli is the ancestor of Winston Churchill who has in- lierited his fighting and political qualities. and who has written a biography of the Great Duke. a w a v Some of I11 employers attending a/nieetitig of the Ottawa Employment Committee criticiz- ed the continuance of Reserve Army camps during a period in which the manpower situation would reach its critical peak, and opposed the “draining” of essential workers into the home defence army. The employers, in an open forum discussion, criticized also “young scal- awags with no interest in their work who re- ceived good wages, gave a niinirmim of work in return and thought of nothing but having a good time," and said industrial plants were "full" of these young men and women, mostly between the ages of 18 and 23. W! I? I i (Tanzidas biggest problem Will he to control a boom, and not utieiiiyiloy'iiieiit, in the years immediately after the war, Hon. Humphrey Mitchell, Federal Minister of labour, told l “lashington press conference last week. "All countries must he prosperous or we will all he iii the ashcaii as we were iii 1930," he said. “The great accumulation of savings, the hack- log of public and private construction, and the necessity of catching up on civilian production will provide plenty of employment in Canada for years after the war is over." i! 1 Ii Finance Minister Isley punctured the Que- bec criticism of Canada's war aid to Britain ‘by d-eclariiig it was an exaggeration to describe llritain as an extraordinarily rich and power- ful country’ and Canada as a very small and poor country. Britain had, to a greater extent than any other couiitry, disposed of its foreign investments to carry on the war. Canada, while its population was small, was a country of great actual and potential resources. More im- portant, Canada was removed from the scene of the conflict and in a position to undertake production on a great scale. lt was unthinkable that Canada should produce less than was possi- ble. Fcoufiiiiically‘. the suggestion made by op- poiiciits of the hill that Canada take sterling in payment for war supplies or carry a debt on 1h: books was unsound. Such debts could only be paid iii the end by arc fling goods, by either i!» 3 sharp (lecrrase in exports. or lVtlll. llizk M‘ ‘i-"ntivg of the whole Caldim 1g way. _H_e tpolll them to the point where, in 1921, they reached Ottawa with more than 6o seats in the House of Commons: a compact, militant group which, given purpose and direction, might have alter- ed greatly the story of our politics. The Pro- gressive party in those days was far more THF CHARLOTTETOWN llotcs By Tlll Way "the v iii at the nu“ imu anomas hood referred to snow as "me be ma; rielt-her uoet. nad to o niucn uioveuing, aiuiresis t-ne ontreai Gazette, wim inuzit-bicaxlnu Jeni- ismficratfora beacon-newton The perslllent refusal of Nor- weimns to s11. beside itiermans or oiuty, he mo win be punished. b0 say the warninas. — rrom News ITO!!! NOPWTLY, - \\'1l€il tliililtlttfb‘ UH} 1-. H1611‘ MJIIODQAHR DA 1D:., L.\. uiio iii tiTCC-A-lll»; domes. nniczi tllrfl bllLlll ll sb we bulvlnllflllb me. Aurel)’ uali. 110W- Uiii ) uni‘ A124- h. A;4J¢1liA(:\ ll MIL’ $0.1; Luz» - Annruati Legion wkmtliiy. Arrangements tn melity services fioni m. r/LMYS UIALIJCJ, Cliaiham, DO 111i uJJUIIZAI-p‘, nun uituu has. WIT.) Want (01.1 5A1. aim 51mm“: 8S ‘i ‘ ' 11.5mm iuiiznr, 11...: scorned u trn. ‘no '.i.‘.trll.:'.t tilt. 1.21.1 t0 ClLOy l! DHX.‘ Clitial A-LSILO U15 LAAuIL... smoking useu LO m: s.» 1:11;... LJJ tinai. ‘ilui-lef-B-OKS. anti even s»... were ILOVIUHI. unu in HJJCS. a, . as inc iniucue 1.1 last. tun. .. sum. c1 trio sermon vats as a general sieiiui 1:.‘ i... bars oi mi: coiut-ieitanun to Readers o1 "I'm: rieari. 111 11m" will remember an peisonage woo rfll-Jllgnl 11-1 uie ot..|.IlDn smuiam ion o roweu tram u ' WCl5AlnJpCli§s —- Manciieswr. (all .1111. Armed with bCN-fa 11.11;. M... o1... i». B 101-4...‘ 14.11.}, ab,“ stunt... \~\d Iunnnann. 1.. ney. m-“ng tun: but“; AA planned but: ma-.. trunk. we gun: caastavcs in- J~‘ . 11.111. int; beuvdl 11i.i.»-.-...1.. i.» ll. “.1 me 51.1111», airiu \1lA~al- \~\? axe nl~<lér~i~l Wt: 3E4 nnu Uilt/a bfltzill Mlul UUI film-it). rtwil u}! h~1_..r.: hi“... ., the “nuAnst/Z 1 t|,¢..-.1..cu iWu ,...t.v Iiiuirses on 1.111: run tins lflflfltaarh, on..- cigm leer. 10111,; anu tin: ca... {Ell Alibi. JAAQV “LAD |H>~4><1k> ~u._ 1o;- uie inou or manna‘... wt: \ m. mum‘ ultatn uni: kiwi.‘ 1.116111 1:14;- btmig We nan. we nit...» 1.....- --..a..u ent. because they i-uaneu out. to sea ugaui. Aflflevt uuliii tug». 1!. wt. 1...": not mucu any 3st. 0.1.1. “e unis. nave isutllfu r....i-.i;u.> c1 n....——.t tnoutsaui... tantrum. —~ nusnunan ntflm nuetter. The average length oi life of the Anieiioan Dfivlltt: in Ill-L. cuirtsuonu- in; to on: niurtanty uUIIJIJQLB men current, was 111.02 yum... rite highest. on reccru to date. 111.1. new ILAl-llrc 1umeseiits_ u. Ruin o1 more tiiiiii 1o; 19.1.1: anieu uh: ue- ginning 0L mu cemu... “MCI! nie average 18118141 o1 111i: huS u1lLi ‘sol-l years. 1n uie wnrie QQHTDJLAUII, iii. avert-we remuhvoi nie or Infill}; Ill- creaseo by iauwears since 1.1.0. wniie the gain ioi" icmaies u... somewiwt. gllll‘i€l'—allalflfil,\ . 111.: years. Lien w. fiat: 4U iliu tneiKl-A auit-Lr-luetime increased Dy ..-_» years 101- wnlte 111810.: iuut 4 .16 years for wiuie ieniiiws. As tut".- tiared vi-itih ivmbe tier-xiii: iii ib-iz. colored Dersc-iis of mien sex iiau an average tetigm of‘ 1iie sooner“ 11y about 10 years.—ivlel.ropuiii.iti Linc Bulletin. The British Columbia. legislature's ii committee on uttrieulzure lust wees urizeu tne itovernmenutu provide omtoozers and other equiv- mernt for Inna-clearing, in: tanner to pay me 00st o1 operation. 1.0m- Imz takes the heart. out. of a D1011- cer tanner mote compleieiv man the necessity oi clearing his land 0t spun-rims. ‘me work uivoureu ls en- oximous. Particularly _1n me coast area and mere is so nine w mow for ft. 1t 1s no exaggeration to say that. thOUSAQGS or ineii have iniuei- tnken wi-in nizli hGDcS mu to.) o1 hewing our, iariris I01‘ themselves and biiiuuuia names and have slvv-l up in the end. utterly QISCOUTB-EQ iuid perhaps half-starved mm me bat-gun. Abandoned liomesteaos on whxh a vast amount o1 tiara “Yum over me coast area.——vzuicou\ei- Province. Mayor LaGuardla o! New York once mid mat were ii. not IOI‘ Afifib than one per cent. ot me WONIHI-wfl o1 ma; city there would be no twe- essiiby for a Dome force. in evner woros. IBWQESSIIOSS ano lilahAJlAComY- In BM OK MICK #011115. H1133» 01' Hill-lb. are nmwtiseu by an itiiuiitesinini irucuon o1 any community. wiui me vast tnajuiitty iaiw-woluuitz, soc- mpnu hBTG'DvOTKlIIK-_FCUJAL_ nau- 11151 me nc-wspupeis, rift/J Liieir clan)‘ rectltai of mlSflefllsdllOlddllt-Z Lip» t.» 09001119 UODVIITIZBu LATE/b CTJTW Zltril (IISIIOHCSTY 818 Wlflfiéiflffillll. WAX/h» mey lorgct. 1s tluii. BUUAA 1.11mi.» t1..- peair tn me tiewsuwpers BEECH-um: titey Ire exceptwnzii mums; me timep- loins ma» make news. ‘i116 com- monplace clecenuies oi iife. tiititresty, industry. uni-tit, are not news simp- ly because they .11. tiie iiurimi ‘illllllflfii tnings LUKE“ 101" graniw like amienme iinu rresn air. Ab I8 a. trunh 1111M me cvmcs, us those who "view with niqnn." o try to keen in mtmL-uttawa Journal. The Natlonal Dalrynien’: Asso- ciation was its aitripeai to that oi the Food Ministry for qiiink return of all mils bottles. ‘I'm: average "Me" expectation oil a milk botiue 1a tragically low. 1t IIIBN Ba over bhe doorstep top anything between Al and 80 times out the IWBTBRE is n more than 40 before ti. is 10st. or broken. Home notion of Lhc im- mense number of milk bootues in service may be ctouuced from tne fact that even the extn milk a1- lowanee now granted means an im- dltlon or five million bottles Ibi- London a-lme and ncmeuu like nitctrtnsmulton moat?“ for "TE whole coun ry. Amount m-iutv causes of wartime casualty to mtlkLbotges may be “x over in the bliwk- left about. on to the housewife balm . on war work. dumam by actual air raids, and removal to shelters whee they are ant to be 1 . But even ln peacetime the muk home morality was alarming. Quite n lesion of these useful dom- utlc utensils are Improvised as bulb pots. grave vases. fiddler au- uartume. lam lure. t-rol holders and other mlawful ' tnaa. includ- tm even, inverted 1n cement, an ornamental garden oaths. — horn Imdon . GUARDIAN; PUBLIC FORUM 10nd llolv termed snowflake: beauihui". The explanation may MB. KICKHAM lwruiizs Sin-On the back pane of vcurl Sat. J1me 10, 1944 edition you car- ried s. Canadian Pres quixunus on street, can informing tne. DUDLIO that it ts nmnmitea w sumo as 1on1: as there are tiny sears leit ooaupleu. reopte vmo a0 not, obey wui i101. only be out. 1.11 he at the nexi. stop. but. win be nun- ixneu. to 0001.. ‘me tesuoiismuxvv for seeing w lit mat me IIIIDLC obeys the new rule is 11m to vine oona ,a-.mi£hezal.ismc.o111s dated “Says Liquor Deniers The last. two DGJQZIELDIIS of this story are as Ioilz-ivs: Miss C. Rosamond Diufl’. Ont.- aa-fo field secretary. who toured the province o! Prince Edward Island much of what she bad seen In Can- ada's cnlv uzuhibltloti tirovince." Native posted on a mess hall bul- letin board on uusaaicanai, agn- cu 0v a cruel of u ruiyiicsian tribe: Ameiican S-Hfllttfa ate Tefldiibseu to piease be a nun: more careiui in their mitiice ui IflnRus-Kc. {Ellullltllrj All had acteinictzd to rail- .. ‘ 1L u But tlieiilettai‘ had itct. b’ l '1 risen and united out that the move had .ke to publish tlu-ouizh u . i of voiir IICIISDEDQI‘ the Itiiustuuu 10.. mien. 11111.11.» “J5 among us 1111.1 vhogléllt its \I.U in“... a Legislative Assembly cf e\er, AJIEHZXIII solute... i... 1.10-6 \.' - ,.. .....Ii1i)-— COIILI: n t.) some tunic ogotr; if. l‘ l1 . i‘ 17s» to make 13 ncrsrinri! It iliis _Cau:idiiui P 1n satin.- uziigusn UOJJ-l-TY cnausizes 1', ,, 1' flizs, sltuiighalzl. "c. =.- n. araittetoirn Gllflflllfrlli ' i.:.ic, carried a Canadian Press dispatch. a ciumina 0t Wliklftl I um ciicloslui w YOU- You are fCQOIMEd by t udiun Press as stmtiné’. that the liquor dealers in m1; taro- vlnze lmlil twbelulpted to raliroud the ionisation through the . islzitivc Asocinuly iii connection t 1 um the prxvate metiiber of this 1101.124: wno brought. proposed amendment to been, nor cxpqcr. to be emnlorcd 1W the lfsucir intcrrsts or A SALUTE 1'0 oua DADS! FATHER'S DAY 1 SUNDAY, JUNE 1e11- D AD’S working hard these daysfl-le deserves ape- clal recognition this J une 18th, Father's Day. Give him something to wear . . . a gift he'll always appreciate. Our store is fairly brimmlnj over with attractive wear- ing apparel the kind all fathers like. $1M’ Broadcloth Shirts FORIMU) Give him one of our fine quality shirts, tailored by Arrow or Tooke in plain or handsome stripes. S2 to $5 Sport Shirts $2 up Wool Sport Shirts $5 through the CJ-lliilillikll Press 1m- iiiedtzitcii. ialiiii-i; Wllifh- I “"11 “m” New ones just in. The " smartest coats ever refresher with one of shown by us in rich our camel hair cloths and smart tweeds. THE CAESIHVAY. ETC. —-—-—- 1 Sii:—W1ieii sending S011 "ml- lei‘ Icvv weeks ago. I did 310l- pect to be back agiiln so soon pccirilly as I lniad my doubts whether you would accept so lbnél ti letter. although I never h. Bur. I realized ivhat mantis tmon vouii" space. and iiiembcred liow newspapers to tine Government‘: continued , peals to conserve paper. I made I13, letter short as I could. but the s ‘L!- jects took in so much territory t thcuzlmts and lIlCDS, kubl; crc-ivaiifl- ln_ continually 50 that, 1t bcca ft: so miwii what to but fn.but wntat to like justice w the subject. and a camber extended letter W65 the sult. But. I wish to thank you 1 for accepting itfiand the good 1 up you tzavc it. The tvootzriiviucal c rors, for n hiurrliiu daily newsrpaim d were verv few: one line was dro bed near the end. when Buealdi of the possible attitude ' fcrundlund. but these errors -. "l all m has been dam “e w De ‘emu and were so setup-evident that D8 lumps I should nut mention them at go ll In his madness. of my loyal w Britain hlmsell. bul- , , men than ever are and naughty lo oer-writer Brmsh “my, d to me alni st n total m 1 1 al stanniiter. it is Ttiistli praise He realizes, no iuiubt, that it to be the fate of‘ all such letter- ill this coiuntrv at least sutlt as tilie late J C. b_ derhay. to be res gnrdcd 11s a "Vote of one cry- 1 ‘sift. iliudvn no liltrher than selfish. chase of utilitarian‘ trrounds he must see Railway mart Britain ls no as ft always was Eire acne _ sons and dauafitm by the tipndred F nd iilovment in Enslnnds WBP- days from prohibition America to plants. scattered. as they Hm. "l1 3Y1?’ fi‘ ibfillfffiiffifilt 1.1%; B ‘ of g1: mung £321; flwvflvenlgliittcihé‘; Siblee as pigialtable as “l!!! ' CGTTTQlIn. ‘m doing tut-iv well without. his l“ W“ help, and when we get the whole iievea" stcrppczldlhcm. suppose ever will. What prompts iiie to write fur the-r now 1s to correct a 98m‘ “final suggestion" as dealt w th Hemmlrig runner t-he heading. to doubt. in an ef- fort to curtail l ' letter, 1n giving my suggestion he fails tolmereatégxi original letter, 1i d unable to find a oopv of the tiuzzier coritaiiilng 1t. bewiusc of urry extra demand for that. number alt nll, but. simply became you prim; now buff. few tn: copies over arid above mediate requlretnmilts Q Sport COATS $15.95 t0 $25 DACK'S SHOES HYDE PARK SUITS Henderson & Cudmore minority. B5 MW‘ anti his tzovemment more ‘Irish- ‘a t/ural products. W e; on the 5m ‘y wast, an so leaving tt m)“. nee“. nnglpndthw the main and _ h; NGEBOIQQM "Emil the a‘): ‘in’ south m . u lmie mwMm~m-Mumamnmmwn ' i m, 21th. M. true ' In h” 1mm 20f Balm. John anxd lhflllllhdl 0! x “the necessary ocean served under hlm. mu o the two Canadian Personally. 1 remember him u hide that. I ever w stems." He must know the um |n Sport TRUIISERS Give his suit a quick Light Weight lYOPiC-‘ll neektles, rich new pat- terns for Father’s Day. i E ‘m lisp tlo "get glen tthfifl h Pram er oil "We ' “ III 1-‘! 8n " iilsoitibitiedlygseems m have "method the ice for weeks at a time, and “and knows his his- when the use or . and seems to know qulretl to iiiove them. and so keep e mere as well .118 910W" up the pretence of conttnit w, by the meet election returns. Just- munfcatton, 9'. now conning in, and which 886m l” millions were readily available to conflnn him more strongly i118" _ ever as Premier. I do not. wish W United Fruit. boats, running from l; defend his attitude. maxill- prsa 115g; ’ '1 en 116 bY the °°"$°*- sim l a some a es In h - m“! "1 m“ l” “ndmswnd 5t. ‘fibril? Siii-eeet. MonItii-eiiliatwant- l“ ed ch an: or o- .e 'I"'-'"°' “mum”! l" up there ethgg: 3.1.135“ icheapeioxiiiignr, ,u~a-1qva1 ‘Poironto. and which twl- although m |erallv Speaks iilalnlv. iwt fwflnv c m, m to call a Spade B. snide. I10! 1W! fl‘ Se“ sustaining‘ A mabushfi ‘;,‘l,n°’r:?l§£n0m:,5 Prince wward Island were forced to hold our old ice-boats ready as a "Stand-by". dynamite was 1e- compete with the long-established the West Indies to refineries on the At- the same author- n e plea ualtlOttnyéiéi, while ‘still. fgnpyl; vln thl-ll" 11¢ er wr en conrac. %ijnfizelera Tor iili this: this Province had no difficulty tn stands for. Besides. to finding more millions for the pur- Central Vermont w especially. but Mountains best. market Montreal, While he!‘ wealthy, but. thirsty. American desired quick transit the oasis Quebec province. Later on. when ventures did not. 0d f0 l Mgifl-IOUZ 1611155131 I-Ieriilryd Thornton. ut 8W" 5"" e8 wmder l” my‘ Henry ciiiceii. bmlng engineer on 555A‘ the maintenance of wa h y t which we neummv o! m" mm Iiiand Railway. pioiied his land and 'Wa.l e lut war, and there got tn reeognltlon of Hallway min who rI-fl . m! - 98B a" bpgwsjyiiply fprueta p: state. t at aJ- mi... 0t cuse me of dlslo, lty. I do notingeel the oversight is not. Intentional. but as! donotexpecgtobewrtttn feet. for (mute a. while a- ipkiamy position W!!! I “one Iona mtg" for the hlhdlhl: m. "Wnlteaoaal 1w “M1118 l M derstood. but th reminded of hav- i7 the 0.? R, over 0N Halifax. for passenger lfgnflflc. nn m“ u it Wu,“ w,“ can§;p_ed_ "n; .,'},°",§§Y Henrv ‘momfnn alone. Prince Ed- ygd 3511;“ o; ma; mud, n]. pant Inland would long‘ ago have so. although of rorituzmiidfnz lie- .t. MW ohn. And Ottawa claflmllmcfillll" literally millions 1B H‘ r55 I'0ll'!‘hlV divided lriito sect-lofts. viz. "the! heathen era. the era"! I do not wt I to be bracketed no t. at ttist time hid in that. catmoryrlut De-Valea-a. otlto nlnk on the Oaiiatltnn Natlonri; Qealh- niacin up In Bteanahlpn n the Oonfedtiirnilon Cliamner at gny Jharlottebown repeatedly field out glgg y_ m he wt and. u I mid 1n mv 11M for out Inland roi- the osmium. ever than W»! National miiwm, unit r um .1" hlrn tn calmer-filial’ . unlv loln ii. filwhflg, “ °‘ m‘ is doubtileab aflamlllnr wlfl-i NW1 MM not onlv w be un- soon - Que rornlsea of how Ivy-maneu- < O H 3012mm, Ihlll we ""_ province. 0111- interview wu auppmed to i had minutes, but Sir ll lived lri Hallie: for some veers as °°°°'d' ‘nm"1y' pmmlnd l‘ l° 1 dld he would vivmiv mailm- ,§*;"Y-'l"° i ‘ ‘ ‘ there V‘ m“ curl i-egula. m lo, ent. m" l l" dfmi“: r e f’ m an iatus had an up up-to- ate term —- lay-passed. to l-‘lm "m" ""5 Portland. Milne. and‘ continued m" there for uvernl years. Not that but. the ruining! righting of lwgite 1mg V?“ not matter now. but 1 still believe had been ft. t d They kept banging on the door of and gaberdine cloths in browns, grays, g'l'L‘L'Il or tan on display to- day. $5 to $12 STETSON HATS lng to tunnel Mount Royal, rind for digging a "hole" for a central station 1n Montreal. already, they contended. well supplied with stations. But only last {all your paper. and others. was filled with descriptions of the opening of l new million-dollar central silation. upon the very spot prepai-r-d 111i- der direction of Slr Henry Thorn- ton. and even today. in the l1ll'l5li of war. they are talking 0f W0 other tunnels. also under Mont Royal, one running due north arid south, and the other. at half M length. crossing lt at right an- gles, and, of course. runnliiz 115$ 11nd west. They evldeiitlv do 110$ tlizure oii transmutation by iilr tn rripet._the1r_r_eo_ti.trements _then. _ bu‘? (continued on vise 6i C01. 3‘ y: -_i__-—_ar_—i——_.___- lrr-r-s-r - an: YOU TROUBLED wrrit LUMBAGO on SOR E BAC K If m we have one of lhl but | remedies to offer e BABK- RITE TABLETS h‘ lnlly effective 10f Luna go, Sclatlu. Nani-tits, In mumull and olhll‘ arms o! Rheumntlim which ordlna y treatments full to ranch. Price 50o oer box" We Have the Proper TRUSS For your uni-flailin- cue T0 than otlvou who an unlor tulle enough to n l» weer n Trim we Ill ‘h’ question. Are vou unlined with the one vou are "l!" lug‘ n1 cnmlorllbl! or l: ll in out. ol date 1M0- Wa luvs lust received] Ihlv- mum. of new rlvle TIIISPIB‘ All elm and at nrlcea l0 l" evervbotty. TllE 2 MAGS [l9 flrul Gentle Slrrfl Mull Omen fltvu- rmmnl Attention. calm of hi: career, lot death,