t ‘aion. \ \ PACEFOUR‘ ' A _ TpllE cllnlltcmrolvn 1111111111111 Homing Dflly ‘(Founded In 1m) nun-inn u Second c1»: 11:11. n»: 0111» Dalia-taunt. Ottawa wrcddont: Lleut. Col. W. Chutar S. McLuI-n ' Vice-President: J. B. Burnett. F.J._I. Secret-try: Llout. Col. D. A. MlcKInnou, 11.8.0. Ill»: 5m] Mlnlgln‘ Director: I. Burnett, EKLI. Auochto Editors: Funk Walker and Llout. ha A. Burnett, R.C.N.V.B. (On Actlvo Service) A “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." SATURDAY, DECEMBER 29, I945 Mr. Cotlolfs Donation All our citizens will appreciate the Dublic spirit of Mr. Robert L. Cotton in makinE lllfi magnificent donation of one hundred thousand dollars to establish a trust fund for rural beau- tification. Nothing is better calculated to en- hande the beauty and value of this Province. both to its residents and as an ideal tourist resort. Mr. Cotton has had the idea. of developing this in hi: mind for many years. He was the first to inlugtirate tourist resorts in the Prov- ince, and ever since has advocated and support- ed the improvetiieiit of the rural districts gen- erally with the view to making the Island so at- tractive that people who visit 11s once will be de- sirous of rettirnzng again and again. There 1: no question but that the future of Prince Edward Island depends largely on its development as a tourist and health resort, and ,placc where people of moderate means may come and settle for the education of their fam- ilies. One hundred thousand dollars seems a lot of money but if is only the interest on this that will be available. At 3 per cent this would atnount to $3.000 annually, and, as noted in the news report, an accumulation of earnings from the fund will be required for the erection of the proposed buildings and nursery facilities. Would it not be a. good idea. for the Govemment to show their appreciation of Mr. Cottoxfs gon- erosity by contributing an equal amount t0- wardsthe project, thus making a capital fund of $200,000, the interest of which could be ap- plied as a. yearly expenditure? There should be r10 question as to the value of every cent expended in work 0f this kind. Both parties when in power have made expenditures toward tourist promotion, and Mr. Cotton has now provided an opportunity of enhancing our tourist trade enormously through a, long-term policy of rural beautifica- tion. Golden Jubilee Year The Navy League of Canada is now ent- Ofing its Golden jubilee Year, notes the Mont- nal Gazem. For it was in December, I895, that :. charter and certificate from the Navy Inugue of London, England, were obtained, and the work that has developed in this country so notably since then was commenced. The League plans to mark the event with lpecial celebrations during the year, and these will be held from coast to cent, for the expans- ion that has taken place, pa ' rly during the war that has just ended, Jafésulted in 15 divisions and hundreds of branches being es- tablished throughout the country. These have organized the operation of sailors’ homes, the distributinr; of comforts to seamen, and other phases of the League's work. But perhaps outstanding in the minds of the public is the League's sea. cadet corps, which now has 1 membership of over 15,000 in 93 corps officered by more than 60o volunteers. This cadet movement has done splendid work, for in addition to theoretical and practical sea training. it lias laid emphasis on character-build- ing in the bovs themselves. Though the war is over, the work of the sea cadets musf g0 on. It has proved its value many times over, and‘ the occasion of this lubl ilee is perhaps a fitting one on which to con- gratulate all those who have contributed so much to the corps and the work of the League in general. It merits the continued support 0f ',lll citizens. Population Changes __I___ According 1o :1 recent Ottawa report, no fewer than 7.000 persons from Prince lldward Island went to other provinces for work. iu war plants during the war years. 'l‘his is a tre- mendous population loss for so small a province, which of course is over and above the figures l‘ 3 of Island enlistuients in the armed services. Every province sccuis to have been affect- Qd by the wartime population shuffle. The ‘Jwcstern Prairies. likc (JIIYSITlVCS, lost heavily. Quebec has remained on the crest with its heavy natural increase. Ontario has taken a ' heavy dose of munitions workers from outside, ' and far off on the Pacific (fonst British Colum- liia is suffcr1ug_ from an over-plus 0f popula- All tihcse changes arc by no mcans trace- le tolhe sarlzc catisc. But the years of the cofiflict just ended lcd to a bit of redistribution g brought Ontario, with its busy industrial ‘p ‘u, ‘Jain of 152,175; Quebec added 54,416, 1nd British Columbia 54.171. On the other lost 33.430 and Saskatchewan e ma: grain-growing province of Sask- grcw from. 91.000 people in 1900 to lfillllolin 1930. Ye: from a population ‘ .000 in 1936, i1 declined to 842,000 i , and Alberta. although they iflnkage. temporarily, at least, food tide. and reached a l1alt. ‘ of this century Ontario 2.172.000 and has grown marl: of 3.917.000 in 1943, l» . In that time Quebec 3.45am Bv nar- ~~cnuu» 1 . over deaths in 1941 of 54,871 < compared u; Ontario’: 33.035 and of 61.231‘ compared to Ont- ario's 39,073 in the following year. British Columbia, whose natural scenic charms, good living and high promise .make it a mecca for many who will go out there t0““take a chance" on a job, and has lured many war vet- erans once stationed out there, as permanents, finds its increase a bit embarrassing. It, too, has never retraced its population climb and has come from 170,000 a1 the turn of this century to its all-time peak of 900,000 in I943. But there are signs that the province cannot easily handle this post-war invasion of outsiders. The middle west remains the great popu- lation enigma. The financial cirash of I929, im- mediately followed by disastrous drought years and a rocultivation of Europe's wheat fields on a ‘fself-sustenance” basis, knocked immigration to pieces. \Vhe1'e between 1920 and 1929 more than 100,000 new citizens per year were com- ing into Canada-and mostly to the west-the figure droplxd suddenly to 27,000 in 1931. From then on if dwindled to a mere trickle, and about one-tenth the number that came to the Dominion annually before 1931 were coming each year between I931 and the outbreak of war. In I936, as an example, the figure was 11,643. QEDITORIAL NOTES: Tomorrow ‘the last Sabbath of the year. *~ 1K i ll‘ _ The Second Canadian contingent arrived in England this date 1939. \ ‘If ll i A reader supplies the following: 1945, total real estate in city, $6,883,175; total per- sonal property $2,583,720; total taxable assets $9,466,895. In 1944 the figures were: real estate $6,753,450; Personal $2.553.308: total $9,306,715 -— an increase of $160,137. The in- crease in the value 0f real estate and personal property in the I6 years from 1929 to 1945 was $1,973,017. The rate of taxation has been increased from 2 per cent to 3 1-4 per cent. i! i l I Thomas A‘ Becket, Archbishop of Canter- bury, assassinated in Canterbury Cathedral at the instance of Henry II, this date I170; from the period of his death to the Reformation, his shrine in Canterbury Cathedral continued to be visited by crowds of pilgrims, whose offering: proved valuable as a source of revenue; the Canterbury pilgrimages have been immortalized by Chaucer, from whose Canterbury Tales we learn that piety and devotion were by no means uniformly characteristic of the visitors to the shrine. :- Nearly seventeen thousand churches and ecclesiastical buildings suffered damage in Britain and Northern Ireland. The War Dam- age Commission has worked out an equitable compensation scheme with a committee repre- senting all tshc Inain religious denominations. The Church of England alone has to restore six- teen hundred churches and rebuild six hundred which will cost nearly twenty million pounds. Each diocese has a reorganization committee working in close co-operation with the civil planning authorities. Illfilll >k >l= A request that the Canadian Commons adopt the procedure followed in Westminster and place a time limit on debates was made in the Commons bv Mr. Rodney Adamson (P.C., York West). Mr. Adamson said a revision of House rules was necessary to prevent too much work from being crammed into the dying days of the session. Veterans Minister Mac- kenzie said a committee on House rules would be set up at the start of the next session. He hoped it would have more success with its 1t- port than a I944 committee which had recom- mended a time limit on debates. :- :- 4. w- ' Very general regret is felt in the city and province at the announcement of the passing t0 his eternal rest of Rev. Dr. R. Morehead Legal: in Paris, Ont., where he went on re- tirement from the pastorate of St. James Church here. Dr. Legato was loved and rev- ered by old and young alike wherever he min- istercd, but especially so in Charlottetmvn where he was held in high cstccm by the veterans of the last Great War of whom he was one. He was intensely interested in the Boy Scout Move- ment. and did all hc possibly could to develop it. While in Australia he llZKl the distinction of being host to Lord Baden-Powell when the in- augurator of the Movement visited there. i 1- v w’ r The allocation of canned fish for- the vears 1945-40 by the Dominion (jovcriuuent, accord- ing to a joint statement of the Department 0f Fisheries and the Department of Trade and Commerce, show that Canadian production dur- ing this period is expected to be about 161.4 million pounds. 0f which 27.5 pounds is allocat- ed for Canadian civilian consumption. The dom- estic allocation is made up of groundfish. “kip- percd snacks". "sardines”. mackerel, tuna, l1ali- but. salmon, trout, lobster. clams, lobster‘ paste and tomalli, pilchards, crabmeat and fish paste, with the breakdown and management in the hands of the Wartime Prices and Trade Board. Canadian Services, including purely military re- quirements and ships stores. account for two million pounds of any kind of fish request- c . d n a s n Calculating machines now in use ‘ltdthe Department of Scientific and Industrial Re- search laboratories have shown spectaular re- sults. Recently, for example, die Government Dopartment started to work out a table of fig- ures for a particularly urgent and complicated problem. After some time if was calculated that if would take ncarlv three hundred years to complete the fable. They then appealed to D. S. I. R. mathematicians who with their mach- ines completed the tables in fifty hours-aid every figure had been checked and cram-chock- ed for accuracy. These mdthemaliciana :1’! n_ow making a practical and valuable contrlbui tion to the United Kingdom industry’: paw: Notes By The Way —_-_ It make: reflcmlng an! Illflflon no culm- to bear In this country to loom that a: many u em. lfiyoe: of the United Ivatlon: Re cf and Rehlbflltatlon Admlnlslrm tlon In Europe have been dismis- sed for Incom tency during the tat fewmont :. -l-lamilton Spec- or. ' 110w time: d elm-n: l P par: October l2 la-H Smart c302 carried a tch from New O1‘- lean: stating that 32 girl employee; of a molanec packing plant [her-g had walked out on strike because the management had insisted on them donnlng khaki trouser: while at work-Bruntford Expositor. A great number of liquor p91‘- mlts, we predict, wlll be allowed to lapse at the next; renewal date after rationing ends. There will be fewer wives, sister: and girl friends seen at the vendors, and few, If any. non-drinking workers making Journeys for convlvlal co-workcr: or employeds. It will be a wel- come development, for the du- pllclty which has been wldely prac- tlsed during the years of ration- fng ha: been one of the most re- zretable feature: of that perlod.— Klnglton Whiz-Standard. Thom l: I good deal of nuobbery about cigars. There ls a popular belief that only rlch people smoke them, and when a novelist has oc- casion to put a cigar lnto the mouth of one of his characters he ls quite likely to describe It as "a rich Havana," The Peterborough Examine:- notes. But In actual fact people of all sorts like cigars and there are plenty of excellent clgars which have never been any nearer to Havana than Montreal -1r Tn- ronto. Canadian cigars have u aplendl‘ re utatlon, and are gain- Ing popular ty In the U. S. A. The Brltlah soldier who rang 2.016 London doorbells fn one clay looking for hls ulster has a great future lf he wlll but come over hen, thinks The Chicago News. Sulesmnnshlp has become almost a lolt art In this country. During the war years American doorbells have had a long rest. Think what l man who can ring over 2.000 doorbell: In one day could do to- ward putting reconverslon In hlgh sou-selling u: things we need and on’! need at such a rote he'd soon have all the factories In the land booming. How about borrowing hlm on reverse lend-lease? Unfll tho film board’: health I: certified to ublfc satisfaction and until It: fu ure course of actlon I: clearly let forth, let’: not hear uny more about the grandlose scheme for bullrllng a Hollywood at Hull. An elaborate new Nation- al Film Board building with sound stages and all the other para- phernalia of "blg time” motion Icture ‘producing has been pro- ieeted. Th1: would doubtless add to the tourist and other attractions of Hull, but since your and our tax dollars at? involved, lt is not unreasonable c ask the Govern- ment 9o demonstrate why this Is glnlelgsentlal expenditure. -Finan- a 0st. - A new and decldedl, Important use for whey has come to the fore- front. Durlng the past two and n half years millions and millions of pounds of Canadian whey, gather- ed from factories In eastern On- tarlo and western Quebec have been crossing the St. Lawrence ‘in tank-trucks to be converted Into special products In the state of New York. They are principfllly milk sugar and whey powder, the former being largely employed for feeding the peniclllium mold from which penicillin Is refined. The whey powder is used t~ enhance the vltamln content of livestock -Brockvllle Recorder‘ and feeds. Times. Tho Infect Christmas message from the rclentlsta suggests that "bacteriological warfare may rank with the atomlc bomb in another world conflict." This picture of the nations huddled below the earth with one sldc hurling split atoms and the other typhoid and anthrax germ: I: not leuant. It ls, In fact, uppalllng. ut more appalling still I: the off-hand manner in which Intelligent. people discuss "another world conflict" and the weapon: that may be used In It would be conslde ably more good if tho time thus spent was devoted to the next peace and the methods of preservlng It. — Winnipeg Free Press. The Shfo Department l: asklnlz for “a permanent American spy system." We are told it wlll only be used In foreign lands. but. ll: stlll looks bad to us. There ls nothing new about. these Interna- tional spy systems. History ls full of them. They have never produc- ed anything good and never wlll. On the. contrary, they have invari- ably Involved In trouble the na- tlona whlch supported them. If our State Department cannot get along wlthout a spy system. Presl- dent Truman should look around for new men to boss the State Department. We have just crushed our enem es. and lf we can't net along with our friends without hlrlng a lot of nples, there must be mmethlnl wrong with oiq methods. ' ‘P111: Ia no casual hour to lay asldc An children was n plnythlng Into To bemfuorhotten. Guard ll. with And if”? ‘iii ‘time an...» In It: 31:1? lrfgadm- hurt, : well of 11.1: l: no?” to month wltlryour OIOIMMWIHIIGQIKTIIOYMOIIM Wboworntlicbcrrcnvctoeofun- mammalian-cinnamon»- It sir-ii born of veneer, Mari And‘ llllll And :1 Iflmbn l _ time drive by 11.1.11... from itsohoulder: a 100d _ ofeompllcated attain! ruarcb. ' i p, and forces. _ Anlly for its llnt re: ',' I11 211:» The North, Nova Scolia Highlanders 1n. l‘ IfOIMANDY ' Q" lllldlls at Bérnlen ur about 10.30 hr:., tho villas; M” fairly quiet though bunch” and street: bore evidence of bli- ter flzhtlnl. ‘hoop: from 8 Br!- sr“. .111: n; ".r'“"...':.."1* "' e-n a co ev e. tou behind schedule, the Battallonilclfli about 17.00 hrs and pruned on, brushing aside the local defends easily and reaching the outskirts of Vlllons has Bulsllon: u l: wa: zettlng dark. ‘ During the nlght the enemy went around the Battalion. and were repulsed b the Regiment dc la Chaudlere n rent. In the morning the Brigade ro- cceded c: luuied and the vllruc of Vlllon: e: Buluon: wu cleared without difficulty. The recce troo found opposition In the next vl- lage of les Bulasona which lay n- aheud. The vanguard dld n ulck right flanking nlovemont an , af- ter a brisk lklflllllll, got through the village and went on to Btujon which lay about : thousand yird: beyond. Once again they broke through quickly and pressed on to Authle which they reached about noon and roceeded to clear. Up to l: point the unlt had pmceeded with great duh and vigour. They had cleared out large number of enemy pockets and the advance guard had not suffered any casualties. They were further inland than my other troops at this time. and the ob- jective, Carplquet aerodrome, was tumult In sight on the second rise ahead. Capt. E. B. Gr: , who then commanded the can er platoon and was later killed In nctlon. was awarded the for hl: work. About thl: time B Company on the left, coming under heavy mor- tar fIre, dismounted from the tanks and were ordered Into Buren. The squadron carrying A Company on the rlght were fired on 11v ene- my tanks. The Company dia- mounted and dug In on the right of the road about halfway between Huron and Authle. C Company meanwhile 11nd cleared Authlc and were digging in as they were threatened by enemy tankl. Soon a full scale armoured battle de- veloped u a strong force from the 21st Panzer Dlvlflon we: making a counter attack. ‘I111: was entire- glven no Indication of thI: poul- blllty 11o won after landing. The remainder of the Battalion was quickly consolidated near Buron and every effort made to contact the forward companies. Tank losses were heavy and loon only thirteen tank: remained the Regiment. Their ammunition supply was 10w so they fell back on les Bulsson: where the Stor- mont, Dundas and Glengurry High- landers were consolidating, and from which posltlon they could cover the up cache: to the main Battalion pa: tum‘. ‘ During this afternoon the guns just came u far enough to reach in front of t e Battalion, and wlth their support. and that of the tanks. the positlun wag held agnniut re- peated attacks y the enemy» _ strength. By dark It was conclud- ed that A and C Companies were untenable, the battalion wn: with- drawn to les Buluons where 1: remained for the next thirty days. The decision-was later, proved correct as stragglers coming in that night reported both Companle: having been completely overrun by overpowering force: during the afternoon. All but nineteen of A Company weroflost and all but fl!- teen of C Company. Total B88- ualtles for the dnv were 210. 0! whom 1'15 were mlulng. This fl;- ure includes 1'1 Offlcers, of whom three were Company Oommllllie and four were Company 3 1'“ $- About two hours after moving back to les Bulssons, the 12th Pan- zer Dlvlslon mounted a full scale attack on Huron which they held In strength untll pushed out : month later. The next. month we: one of con- tinual contact with the enemy while waiting for build up sullllllei The breakout 0n 8 Jul 44 WES B large scale operation, .the first phase of whlch. on 9 Brigade front, was done by the other two Bat- talions which took the villages ,0! Grouchy and Buron on theurlzfll; and left relpectlvely- The g" n Novles" then went through urn ;- t Intense hareiiiinfhenuCgxrh wrilsumozxpericnced the utmost dlf cult)’ cettlns o" "l; start llne at the front of Huron. very high proportion of dthe em casualties auffered that uY Y 1 received on the move UP- " “i, number of ocket: of enemy 5m nllve behln the forward unh added to the difficulties. Once t. z start llne was Blllleli wlll!‘ Xe?“ well and Authle was ca? “l: as n qulck shat‘ action. A! ~ W bang moppe up, 0 Com an, pressed on to Franqllflvllle wnlféh were now geemluken “me ‘L I 11 gnu was mo rlghl. to left. and the thqtJlunk was relieve . The nex‘: moral“; 1 July, 144. they move Into Cnen without oppultlon when all the part of town well- Ol "l. Orne wu occpplgd- ' After four day! 1mm MWQP" men flro the unlt mrveé‘ e913‘ “f0 nt rehanlnl 1°! g and that night day out Wll 31w Ornc e rnov ln lihQ mornlnli 0 ID "n" (Jun on the out :Ide o l." Pi. "".€.'. “.31” t o a ory » a th dvnno: ahlltlllflhlkoilwggffihtvlfill‘!!! dish-recall Novlu" were, I M l M‘ flanking m venmit 11nd Ill! factory. ‘rho h dimolltlon: and the bomblnl mullet In the d1! mad: the W "m"! e11 Mondevlllc on th: lout ‘sags of 0:011 n It wu Imtlnl d k. ~ lat 111811110 .1‘ .2”..ll'..‘.”"u.. a.........".l Bu: on the left. cf lb: Cnan-Illg ‘ i h ll! that Mon am "Cildnmou: null fir?‘ for “Di ‘wuuecouml nmmpt: Io o null: l: its assembly urea at Bony-Sn: Mo: cross an open field about 800 yard: Edwud a Edward to Authle. The enemY d“'“‘l‘/° n" of rcplred _1.o are? u rue c1i§s1i1orr1srowi~1 i" ousaioim - in? 8h: dhcludcn w" moment: of uuuflon: of, Infant. Th: Cblrlcilotowu l mm ‘on u wu ul: to u- n1: machinery 1a not for mo use? as more farm work." "It l: mas u; opinion uture of employment called mlxod form: of tural workcn ed In the near nature In Prince I look for ot-hod: c: ml. lnlllflthofumnnofPrlnco Island wlll be mleued from their 72 you: of ‘tr-an:- portatlorltflfervltude. Prior to 1873 Island Ina vemols were culling lnlaervah :4: many 1H8 market: dncc bum almost. ll not out»! 1y, loot. Th1: export trade come an end. not use the Island cnlterodlnbo Canadian Oon-fedentlon. but u l. mun of the competition of ooom :1 that: Mme k1 their Infancy but: which within : few yeam drove the polling vesoeh off the sou. In order to bnld lihue foreign markets It would halve been noc- ossuy to “ utldcctory dock- " for ocean bu- ly unexpected u Intelligence had 111 matters 1111c. We do know. how. ever. that un to the present time no attempt ha: aver been made Ottwwu f0 llve the Inland fac- 1 the for ocean 11 harbo d f tenal to tn: gllwaywirxcrf. v6 mm" Between 1873 and 1914 the Inland only lost and, as the Buron position was bV . lck Newfoundland and St. Lawrence as far as Quebec City. Blnco 1914 by mans of the Borden fe . the Canadian National Ra way has carried Island duco Into Canada and the U tad States. In Canada, howev , q. most-everything which the Iolmd offers for sale l5 pmdlwad m p, sumlus While the freight ra no new prohibitive. “m: . oarflmllar 11mm sum market u eluded w a heavy c tar-If n m- sult of these serious w; m pared has been the Island 011-, port; trade that her best people .....~= w» tlon. “ililundreds e of faximamgiamx abandoned, livestock been seriously diminished an e n 11ml as? has bee“ belied; dhiglng the tpaafoflftlff p 0 any I18 l’ , lklng f "W86 l-lllflss pinto conalderaqp o 2. e Dominion Cover-amen has at last, thong: not very wlll- Ingly, consented adopt : new policy of lnvltlng ocean ship: to call at Island harbors with 11 view l-o the delivery of IslI-nd, not: all- da to market: brou h- out thedlworlgfigt ‘winch the“ p: may c . min lmrlottotown but? an: folio ti: Dali's to the railway whim gm illlllply l1 ll?“ 8WD l-o be followed no doubl- bv the Improvement of other harbors throughout the 1;- lond. Such steps, n: only“, will depend largely upon the extent. to which the Charlottetown “lulled by ocean vessels uid In turn wlll depend exitlroly 1111011 the Initiative and enterprise a! the Government, buslnog men and funnel-s and fishermen of the mltm- Ill "w 81111118 or summer of 1M7 the opportunity will b; 0111's a there wlll he no cum: has In : Mounts lottu- 1 shin en- i1'i1liv°nli':'\iltou?h:er:::ii1u'wblien If had ‘can wed lomcndhtlerlico miiiniiflti. 11 m Wt z : w 1- 1t "an: W15" ‘met D G G : urn. t the pocullnr ntmo: erlc condition: the Attacking tmo : were gluing“. ll llllnut :1: only morning 111M and came undo: vary more 1n:- chlnc gun flre. The only cover w“ In the otandln n nnd It: 11:: ed. ‘I11: troop: who dlfl ueli the villus wen In mull m“. °l’.“’.l°““lf. "an. ~ n ul- 011:. w:: 10:1 to luch :11 nun! 1h: lttcck uful‘ only uuedwh isrnr - ‘~1- """-‘."'“' r- W...“"iil: thin‘ sh: l foul- d 14AM. worker: 10mm to rural urns and. t . 90mph . a In lb: 1121:!’ .. Ofl-IIWIG Mo! to ‘hail-slim oraurm_ . ..i}-r.'5._-_".ii: = . 1E. snarl £5 a‘ *1 Eirgli‘ E in ‘a .55 i sissy Eriggégiig E s *1:*§1i@~ns"f- s r1=i...i....;.ri.i.ni. 5E3 i; a ii‘ s 3 ii an f; f‘ "§.**“.'F&1.F== "'ig§;iiiiii§§§§'§%§g. i? E hIJbMWQN fiéilsiii =1 wanna-m HAL BOHAKER ' 1mm manners: 1|: nwurlpnn swan! onuo-rrumvm l A delicately rimmed > fiction which ‘ unborn nil be: -, ‘the 11:11‘. - uw nnrHuiHHlfd y. f} znauz}:rxrryu-nnmmnm ‘Iiliemperance Act "" Before Privy lzbujpf . 91¢ Ontario g b th Nyew °B§1g1i:vivlldnk?n:|3 m. _ M d 1.1 Pit-iii ii~“'““°'=-°ll"“m. 0 9 l t ... .... earn" =~ l “an . . . l" . u. o Cindi-Gilli welmcilltfedir lodimh at vlce of the Church of Bnzlag gulch, and temsgmnee prim _ wgriicnh of four u lcfllo- count»: The zrnalifinw i; limes In um and revlud 1111 c and 1W1, ltatcc that local mp n » vote: may be taken anywhere . Oanndn when 25 per cent of q voter: In any county prelgnfl“. petition to the federal overnmgit 11:11.11: for :uch a leblacltc. .. ~ n er thus cond tlona the -.-*. ‘I mo! Perth, Peel llld Huron . - Ind Munltoull , . . tlrlo huvrvnted‘ In fatvoi- o- he - - N Act the provincial. - . Temlw cannot now allow .- fl _ ’\. than decide Commonwealth’: but the heurln: ha: been h: by the war un_tll.t11= present 81ml. The essentlal polnt :t 18°11: mi l: whether on act of the mlnldb parliament caifbo by my other body or by any other mou: than b amondmont: voted by pim- llunen Itself. The Dominion gay- enn ‘ ls not roceedln on a moral but: In t l: action, but tho constitutional balls of pro: -. In: what it consider: a fed fleld of leglnntlon. ~ l The act was upheld by the raw Council once be on, 08 year: 11R‘. ,. In the cue of Rune] versus eon. - Tho Qntarlo government l: bli- lng It: appeal on the argument that th. original measure beenpured In u tImc of nntlcull emergency, :nd such condition: no longer exist. They argu: tint. a: thl: fleld ls exprculy run-vii! for the provinces under the 8.1V . Act, the federal government co only Invade It In" the case of. s; ~ tlonul emerzency. ‘ l The Dominion iovornmont r 1n tho armament that t _ Council mltalnod the act n _ ' hnmbcon the rovlnclnluftoztlflatllonxfigme I : or c : a c o lo n?‘ l: claimed that‘ c 0100 0 ¢ on 1| ttcr untl be qvq-lncrculn liquor prover . poruico Fedentldn argue: 11L .~ of It because of IhQJIOQII-sfilsl democratic channel ‘thtofllh 711135 resldenta of any area conf 1pc bar: Ind beverage room: If g6 I . . ‘» d" r” poll 1: of Interact :0 o The op nodlon: ouhldo of- Omtarlo on counts. It I: :1 lflcnnt 1- cnuse of the eomtt l whethor or not the Privy Conrail can upnet the sot Maplfllllflflm- and 2~Becauu 1f. do : wltb .1 quertlon of widespread Interelt nnd controver:y-,the lqupr question; ma} p" witty/II" l . . ca. lllllll IIESTOII ».., i v- p O v t it's..." "".*:a."'i"""' “i f‘ loch-u“: 2.211‘ trill-TIA- as nTd-vsllm l’ “votes-tr. "I I u fi orfni. 'Y' ' ~ GA!!!’ ‘Til-dukes: " uahrili: ' 1 1 ‘aha V: 4 I