m Ci O ~ ev >1 manevntr9wtfié-7ild. u» m§~uFWn u-i w.»- _<- ESNIUHL—“ race FOUR IEEGHARLOTTETOWN GllARlllAli ufllflfle‘ Iii. l‘. Vice-Prillileut-J. it. lluluelt. l1ll‘\‘--i:i\.‘\.lL-C()l. l). A. MICKIIIIIOII, D. B. (J. ' {nun hlanuziug luroi-ior-J. u. liiirnsri a liiliio l-‘ruuk Walker and D. K, Currie __. - - ~--—- <<<< -————— _ I , H]. { l.‘ ) 35,00 per year (iu ailiance) delivered. m;€l:zil‘LPI)]l‘1JVP-1fll" (‘llll11l1\i1l1\'flllI.'2) mailed 1n l-‘lilldn llid U111!“ S151"- ZIITIPZING REPRESENTATIVES M nor-group special Agency inc._ New York Central _ (leiieral llurors Building Detroit interstate Buiiii- ' 'l‘o\vcrliuililing, Chicago; byndiciite Trust .\ hi 31f‘! S. S Building. New - l‘: l. _ chbv . lillilililiniinhhl. lmiils; ll; .nn liullding..-\tlniitii; llonaduock Bui1dli1g_ San Francisco, 115i?- .\'u_ (if-ill Strong Philadelphia Morning Maxim ' A good loser is a man who laughs about his lose in public and then orders hi: wife to economize enough to make the Ion good. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER l, I932 ROOSEVELT‘ ON TARIFFS m1! Wed 1°Y Pe-lfl-Ylfli. The highest- priced oyster in the British market The argument has been advanced‘ s the Whltstable native. These in Parlament by Hm W- D. Euler. loysters sell from 30s. m 50s. per s- former Minister of National ‘Revenuekcore: the Holland oyster is selling in the Mackenzie King Government. m», from 17s. to 42s. per 5-soore for that the Ottawa agreements mlghtlrhe top sizes. Dutch oysters have llfilifliffip Canada in negotiating risen in the last eight or ten better trade trrxus w.th the Unitedmonths from. a low price of from States. Mr. Euler's argument is. basedfizs. t0 17s. and from s. high price on the supposition that Governor}; {ram 175,10 42s. United States Roosevelt w‘)! be returned in the oysters are being quoted at the prcsidc-irtini contest and that his iprcsenfi time at from $8 to $9 a bar- eiection ivoiild pave the ivay for low- rel f, 0, b, er U.S_ tariffs. It Lscvidenhhowever “Bluepolntsv (or immediate con- thrit the Democratic [iarty leader sumpflon begin w be imported 1111-‘ 11° inwmiml- 11 °1°°1’“1»»°f 1°11" iabout the end oi September or rims the tar-ITS» ai 111W 181° “fine; nning of October. For bedding. Canadian farm products. Speakingflmited states oysters are imported at Baltimore a fvw night-Z ago, he gabom the begmnmg and middle or " April. They are bedded in the Irish ‘Free state. in the County of ESsex, l-rliild cmpha’. c "O3 course i‘. is a1=3iii'd to £01k 2f, “.°""’{’“,f,,.1,§§§1,1, p221 land also on the shores of the Island pi. iy in the broader sense springs at Angles“, A5 may are ready for from the Sol. 1 giriiniised i0 en- ‘ ’ v dzmvnr t.) ,.,._._;_,,,,. gm puychagng i,c-a.ing in tvio or three weeks. these “WW” 0' 131° - 1 ""11? 113’ pysters can be on the market before zuaking the tar; ciicctivi: fol ' "d raising: the price . ducts. I know of n0 ‘Ive excess. high tariff on farm jYOClliiiS. 1', d0 not intend that such dutc; .=h:\ll be lowered. To do no would he in- . farm rim: m, and c\:r_t' farmer knows i: and Will not be deceived." Poussette’ should award an °p_ It is thus clear that if Mr. Roose- pormmty of Lesfing the market for irrit is elected president he will favor lcanad-an oysters m the Unmd no yudllCtlflll in the prohibitive %Kmgd0m_ The" should be American tariff against Canadianinme risk’ he says. u the oysters agrxculiliiral yirociurks. One reason lure properly pwke‘; Shipments o; ‘ the Democratic cand date takes-Canadian oysters have been made {the and of May. During the surn- lmer months, when imported oysters are being sold, the English variety are out of season and of‘! the ‘market. , The present season, notes Mr. t. .5 stand. 1101/35 the Mail £11161 at odd times and Brmsh consumers rmimr- 3 11"‘- 1": “m1 1115 P3113’ regard the Canadan variety as. of d»: p-‘ird for their prcsptcts of arcturn excénent quality’ but the-u. lame 1"’ 40w": 131's 119°“ the i 91°31 size, which reduced the number *5 Q1 1-113 bnglfnemer barrel and thus the- selling v A5 111° 11901117111331“ value, has miiitated against their iirc the authors of the present duty successful markeflng‘ The li~_1lllll§l, Canadian farm stuffs, therc|most in demand are those which seems, therefore, t0 be no reasonwm pack (mm 1,400 to 1,500 to a why Canadian agriculturists should barrep look for any measure of relief through increased markets ‘in the neighboring Republic. The situation thus created rend- ers all the more important the intra-Eimplre trade agreements ar- ranged st the Ottawa Conference. Indeed. if it were not for these agreements it would be dfmicult to lee in what direction our farmers could turn. The situation is bad mough, owing to the world-wide fall in commodity prices, but there ls a. definite prom‘se that conditions will improve for Canadian agricul- turists under the preferences grant- ed to them in the markets of the United Kingdom and other parts oi the Empire. ‘ Ell/SS . RAILWAY BILL The Railway Bill has been intro- duced in the Senate by Hon. Mr. Melghen, and is receiving favorable press comments in view of the ser- ious difficulties facing the railways at the present time. The outstanding features of the bill are thus sum- marized by the Canadian Press: The bill specifically states that "nothing herein shall be taken to authorize any amalgamation of any (Canadian) Natonal Company with B-HY (Canadian) Pacific COmpany." The Govemor-in-Council to abol- ish the board 0i directors of the Canadian National and substitute three trustees, the chairman to hold otlloe for seven years and the Others for a lesser period, all eligi- ble for reappointments. BRITISH OYSTER TRADE An interesting article an the NOTES v nt- wiu Whatever may be the advantages 0f Lh¢ Imperial Czuilcruuce to Great Britain, says the nfcibourne Argus. there can be no doubt of its advan- tage to the Dominions. It will be for exporting countries to make thfl most of their advantage, and to sec that the quality of $110 products O1‘- fered‘ in the Brtish market is de- serving of the preference that the tariff bestows upon it. We are convinced that it is to the positive advantage of Scotland to have its general, social, and indust- rial problems discussed along with those of England and the experience and needs of the two countries c0- related. Condtlons north and south o! the Border approximate far 111016 closely today than they d d even a generation ago. As time $065 011 the connection is bound to become even closer. “mat is to be gained by emphasizing ciifferences of tradi- flun 3nd making alterations lfi prac- tice wh'ch coukl have no other ef- fect than to put obstacles in the will’ of the intimate commercial and so- cial interchanges which mean so much to born c0lllll1'iC$?—Gli15g0W Herald. with :1, capital of $33, Mrs. Mice Foote Macilougall opened a coffee shop in New York 25- years ago. Her business grew into a $2,500,000 chain. A short tine ago slic was taken 111. l-icr business suffered and passed into receivership, Lnst June Mrs. MacDougall left the hospital. She axinounced she would make a come- back. It has taken her exactly four months. She is now solvent. She has regained two of hcr important shops, one in Grand Central terminal. she has cut pr ccs, restored the orig- inal atmaspher.‘ and her customers are swarming back. Same men who have had business reverses might trike a lesson from Mrs. MacDougalls pluck and business acumen. A Belfast evangelist has prvach- ed a. sermon which has caused riot- crs voluntarily to return goods stolen from shop window's in the recent disturbances. History may repeat itself. The Wcsli-y revival did more than ihc Battle of Train‘ n‘ to prevent the spread ol the s1 “t the French Revolution lo 12:11,; and. ____ Those uliifadvocafc no tariff or a. much lower tariff for Canada Qshould (xplain how the. rcrcnne ‘would be iaiseil except by tar-fl en- actment. and they should eiiplaixi how Canadians vrilh ltcttci" nver- age living condlt could com- pete with the i mass produc- tion of the ilzziicd States or Great Brtain and Elgfillifii, the products of such coimtrics as Russia, Germany and Italy t0 say uoiliing of Japan, where living can . 11s and wages are on a much l. 11121113 than in this part oi the wox l. x It is said that when the telephone was invented Lord Mount Stephen head of one of Canada's greatest financial institutions in 1816 refused to invest any money in it. Now The magazine Canada, published in London, gays: "If the British Is- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUQRQlAN iitiiat i fiver of fiuurs By Ianm W. Blrlnn. “D- llOW T0 AVOID THE NEED O_I1‘ MENTAL TREATMENT The difference between a patient inside the mental hospital and t-hn individual outside is that the one inside cannot get along with his fellow man, cannot fit into the or- dinary scheme of life to make a living, and the one outside can. Sometimes we meet cases outside who seem Just a. little queer or ‘un- ‘ usual’ in their behavior and we per- ‘haps wonder just whether they will ‘continue to remain outside the mental hospital for any length of ltime. One oi these types of cases is known as that of “rigid personal- ity.” Dr. Wendell‘ Muncie says that the study of any mental patient be- comes a study of his personality. The rigid personality 1s made up ,of many factors such as obstlnacy, laggressfveness, pride, serisltfveness, in rigid code oi personal ethics or unorals, an inability to make eon- fcessions (give and take), a hundred per cent attitude on every subject, and so forth. Now as you and I look at the above we may wish at times that ‘we-were a. little more obstinate or firm about some things; that we were a little more aggressive in- stead of standing back and letting some one else do certain work; that ‘we had perhaps a. little more pride or dignity at times; that we did not agree with other people so easily or so readily; that we took a. hundred ‘per cent stand instead of straddling the fence in our opinions. l Dr. Muncle points out that in general these qualities are valu- able; these very quaiities may achieve considerable success. However these same qualities are like a “two-edged sword," and many of the difficulties that best the pat- ient and make it hard lor him to be really happy and able to get along well with other people are ,dlrect!y due to these severe or rigid ‘qualities. It is to prevent the rigid person- ality that teachers and parents try now to have the ‘youngsters take part in all the affairs of liie in school, in the home, and outdoors. A youngster will learn to seek his rights. but not to demand more than his rights. He will learn to undergo just criticism without feel- ing to deeply hurt. In other words he will not live within himself too much, but will learn to live with and for others. Snowden’s Record (Toronto Saturday Night) To those familiar with Philip Snowdens cotirses during his two trials ‘as Chancellor of the Exche- quer, his present concern lest the Empire be "disrupted" by the Ot- tawa agreements is nauseating. Judging him by his record, we American Telephone niltl Telegraph ‘might have a right to assume that Company ranks next to the London Harbor commission anlnilg the great corporations of the world. There are 35 mllllon telephones. in the world. more than 20 million of which are ‘gether. During his two terms of oi- in the United States and Canada. ‘his recent brain-storm was due to the fear that the Empire might benefit from the Ottawa agree- ments and be drawn closer to- flce he was constantly threatening to abolish the McKenna Duties and his "cat and mouse tactics" were damaging to both colonial and Ies could be lalcsscd In October with ‘British lndllitfY- H15 “GU08 did Canada's weather the hfiff: arid 11111911 1° 51911111111119 BflU-Bfltlflh 86n- encrgy of its people ivoulci greatly timent in South Africa and reduc- beneng who that has cw. inhaled ed the West Indies to a condition of the flnc keen October air in Canada deslmr- W111‘ T935111 1° 1911B 18191-9!‘- oyswr trade in the north oi Eng- land ls contributed to the current issue of the Commercial Intelligence Journal by Mr. H. R. Poussctte, Canadian Trade Commissioner at Liverpool. The importation of oysters In the United Kinldom has shown g considerable increase since the year 1028. In 1930 it amounted to 64,535 cwis., valued at £152,831. 0f this total 23.302 cwts. originated in Holland, 5,048 in France and 21,891 in the United States. Practically every liner from New York entering the Mersey between October and March inciuslve carries several hundred barrels of oysters. Oysters from the Irish Ewe 5th“! B-re 1101 native to that country but are al- most entirely the product of the United States that have ‘been import- ed‘ into Liverpool and reshlpped to OMbath, county Liouth, for re- bedding. A substantial proportion of the French oysters originate in pgnugal and are sent to the former country for re-beddinfl- Two grasses of oysters are import- ed from the United States, "Blue- point," and "East Rver." Most oi these oysters are bred ‘at West Say" ville, New York. The 10111191‘ B"? imported for immediate consump- tion, and for bedding; the latter are The trustees to act independent- Parliament, and to appoint on terms arranged by themselves, a. chief Operating oflloer to be ranked as| president, responsible only to the trustees. The trustees to be in complete charge of financing and to submit to the Finance Minister requests for such moneys as may be required, all deficits to be provided by imoneys voted by Parliament. The tnlstees to maid; an annual report to Parliament of operations. receipts and expendtui-es, and Par- liament to have an audit from year to year by auditors of its awn in- dependent selection. _ Cooperation between the Can- adian National and Canadian Pacific and all their allied companies, in the way of poolng resources, Joint use of tracks and facilities and the formation of new Jo nt stock com- panics. Appointment of an arbitral tri- bunal composcd of the chairman of the Board of Railway Commission- _crs and two members appointed by the railways, t0 settle dsputcs that will deny th s! If the tired profes- rcalizc the extraordinary health- cure a month in the Canadian woods can give there would be heavier steamship book ngs and increased longevity for the health- seeker. In its wonderful autumn climate Canada has an asset and an attraction 0f great value. It has vastly npprccatcd in the United States, as is shown by the great tourist traffic, but it is not all sul- flclently known in the Mother Country. An exchange says the Canadian bankng system seems to compare with the loosely controlled United States banking most remarkably in these days of economic stress. In the ‘last ten years there has been one bank faliure ln Canada. During that period 8.613 banking institutions have failed in the United States. In 1930 1,345 closed their doors there and Ln 1031 there were 2.290. In the first six months of this year 800 United States banks have failed. Not one failed in Canada. The depres- sion is more devastating to finan- iclal institutions over the border, but lhcrc also is no adequate unl- form control by law in the United States. From a rraifng of the newspaper may arise between, the two systems "'n carrying out provisions not. of thel reports of 111s speeches there seems in be some ground in thc statement of a prominent social economist and there was a clash between himself 1y of shareholders. Government andlsiuna, m. business ma“ could only and his old Sociailstic confrere. Lord Oliver. Another famous Fab- ian, Sidney Webb, Lord Passfield, While Secretary or State m the Colonies, found Snowden a bigoted obstacle whenever he sought to do anything for other Crown Colonies. When J. H. 'i‘homas,p‘ ‘layout scheme to mobilize British capital for Empire development, and sup- ported by leading financiers and industrialists, it was promptly kill- ed by Snowden. Snowdens genius for political sword-play has long been famous and was responsible for his steady advancement, which in course of time carried himfrom a stool in a solicitors office to the |House of Peers. eer does not record a solitary act of constructive statesmanship, and today everyone is done with him. Even the Laborites, in whose behalf he dissipated British capital rs. sources and partially paralyzed m. dustry, will have none of him. For our own part, we always wondered how Snowden "got away with it.” The financial crisis of August, 1931, which brought about the formation author, declared in an address that Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt's campaign for the Presidency has been "a contnuous exhibition of emazins and appalling economic ig- norance llnked to reckless political irresponsibility." But his long cur-- “THOUGHTS - OF ENGLAND" FROM O streams that slow And puns and deep through plains and playlands go, For ma your love and all your , kingcups store, _A.nd-dark militia of the aouthem shore, ‘ Old fragrant fflendk-PIBSQIVQ me the last lines Of that long saga that you sang me, pines, When, lonely boy, beneath the chosen tree I listened with my eyes upon the ma. Hearing you sing, O trees, Hearing you murmur, “There are older seas, 'I'hat beat on vaster sand, Where the wise snailflsh move their pearlytowers To carven rocks and sculptured promontariea"; Hearing you whisper, "Lands Where blaze the unimaginable flowers." But I will walk upon the wooded‘ hill Where stands a. grove, O pines, of sister pines. And when the downy twilight droops her wing And no sea. glimmers and no mountain shines, My heart shall listen still. —James Elroy Flecker. Is It Success? (Financial Post) Most first-hand observers of the Russian scene find so much activi- ty, so much that is new and vital, so much that impresses them by its sheer stupefying immensity that their imagination and their honest intellectual conception can hardly grasp it. In the brisk and earnest industry of the Russian scene there is the atmosphere of success. People are improving the shining hour with a. persevering hum: they are doing things that are not be~ lng done anywhere else 1n the world and doing them in newer ways. Russia today is a picture oi a sluggish and somnolent people aroused to restless working. But is mere action success? Com- munism‘ 1n Russia seems 1o be working because thereds so much to see. But eventually there will come the testing time when all that is blng accomplished and all that is planned must be measuered with age-old social and ec0n0m1O yardsticks. Only then will we know if Lenin and Stalin have served Russia well. Most people who went into West- ern Canada five years ago would have seen in the Canadian wheat pools the most important and suc- cessful experiment ever attempted in the history of the world's agri- cuitur. There was brisk enthusiasm. new velocity, eager vitality, persis- tent splendor to support the im- pression of tremendous success. But the wheatipools crumbled. be- cause they were built cn the foun- dations of false economics and in their wreckage were seen the dis- tress and suffering of the farmers. Most observers who looked upon the Canadian National Railways five years ago saw a throbbing ma- chine in motion under full steam, expanding. advancing, to become a scientific and popular wonder. sir Henry Thornton was the greatest railway chieftaln in the world, the Stalin of the rails who had but m dream to conquer. Today we know something of the cost at which this show of achevement was attain- ed. The bitter disappointment oi Canadian workers and other tax- payers reflects the failure of this attempt to reduce economic sanity with financial madness. ondss etaoln crniwyp shrdlu emf of a National Government, was in a large easure due to his own policies as Chancellor of the Ex- chequer. When he Joined with Ramsay MacDonald in the new ad- ministration it was on a cry that the value of the pound sterling must be sustained. But it was not ustained. It illustrates how great was the confidence of the British people‘ in ‘the “Tory" auxiliaries Bnowden now denounces, that. des- pite failure‘ of ondoi the primary aims of the National Government. it was nevertheless returned to pow- er by an enormous majority. -We duobt very much whether the ex- Chancellor contributed as much to this victory as the Labor leader. Mr. Lansbury, assumes,“ be- lief in hi: financial capacity had been exploded weeks previously. It wu public confidence in Baldwin and Chamberlain that gave Ram- say MacDonald his stupendous ma- jority. and the Prime Minister was wise enough to put his old associ- ate out of harm's way by elevating him to the House of Lords and re- lcgatfnfhim to the office of Lord Privy seal. _-—n_\ I W g - Dominion of Canada 4% Loan, 1932 ‘ Xpplication" forms and information gladlyrpfovided, and subscriptions accepted, at any branch of this. Bank. ‘lire of ‘ l NOVA SCOTIA LIOVEMBER 1, 1932 m The Bright Fan ' Judgment (Montreal Gazette) The wreck and total loss of the freight ship Bright Fan 1n Hudson Retail price -. -'l‘ry Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Sold Only In 50d Airtight Package:- 50c per lb. Strait on October 1st. when out- ward bound from Churchill, with 253,000 bushels of grain, is found by the Court of‘ Inquiry to have been due to the proven fact that n. pro- per lookout was not maintained on the ship. Mr. Justice Humphrey Melllsh, of the Nova. Scotia Su- preme Court, who conducted thc official inquiry as a. special com- m‘ ’ , ’ ‘ in his judgment —which 1s concurred in by Captain‘ 1 L. A, Demera, Dominion Wreck Commissioner, Ottawa. and Cap- tain W. F. Mitchell, supervising examiner of masters ‘and mates, Halifax, who sat as nautical asses- PLASTER HARDWALL Lowesr Woodworking PHONE Ml. sore-that a. good and proper look- out was not maintained on the Bright Fan and this was peclally" so for some time before the iceberg was seen. If such a lookout had been kept, the court was of the] opinion that the Bright Fan's col-- llsion with the iceberg might not. have taken place. Icebergs are only one of the 10,-- midable risks of a ship's pasgagei through the Hudson Strait, and the i need for constant alertness to avoid ' these and all the other known ha- zards is sufficiently obvious to com- mand all navigators to sleepless watchfulneas. The experience of the Bright Fan constitutes a. oostly 195. son in this respect, but. the one be a. handicap to the Hudson Bay scaxoute. The lesson there 1g no doubt, will be well learned by all‘ for whom it stands, and though the M31131) and loss will almost surely 1191113’ the reduction in hull and cargo insurance that had been hop_ ed for, and was being strlven for, the disastrous eveut of October 1st need not be a. factor to determine l higher rates. The wreck of the Bright Fan, according to the 0mg- 1°11 1111111118. Wis in no way contri- buted to by any defect either in the equipment furnished for the safety °l 811119111118 in these waters or in the B1119’! Own. equipment. In the Judgment of the court of inquiry, it is declared that the equipment available was “distinctly helpful," The court could, indeed, have Bone further and justly attributed the fact that the entire crew did not perish with their ship to the vessel's radio equipment. It. wasi established in evidence that when 111° 3118M Fan struck the iceberg, 1 the ship's wireless operator lmmed- ‘ lately called the operator of the Government Icebreaker N. B. Mo. Lean, which, fortunately, was on 111M101 Only a. few miles away, and asked him to “stand by." After- 9M"! $1" Bfliht Fan's position, the operator closed his transmitter so that the sinking freighter mum continue to send out her slgnals' until she took her final plunge,‘ gathered his records and 1°; “d. 1°°1I 1118 niece with others in s life- boat. Meanwhilo, the lcebreaker was steaming t0 the position given in Sequence to the Bright's Ho's wire. less call of distress, and aha duLv [fumed W"! member of the ship- wrecked craw. This added "triumph of wireless" is one bright factor that can be associated with the Bright Fan's loss. But for the guiding ‘rpm, of radio, the first major mishap’ or 111° 31148011 Bl! route would un-i doubtedly have been l. calamity. ‘ The Trade In Woollens i (Monuinn 'I‘imea) 1 The Maritime Provinces, New Brunswick and Nova sootla, have I considerable interest in the wool- 1" Industry. notwithstanding‘ which some newspapers claim u“: Canada d-‘d not go for enough in reducing duties on imported goods of this class. In view of what was done at Ottawa and the criticism of the Canadian policy of 1'9\ll11ln¢ a measure of protection for the home industry the Canadian Woollen and Print Goods Manufacturers‘ Asso- ‘elation has issued Shlhwreck may not be permitted to statement: iiiziv srocii ' , MaclliliiALlF-‘ROWE BOARD PLASTER PRICES 00., Limited CHARLOTTETOWN r /. "It is difficult to believe that cabled press despatches purporting yards of by cloth sold by Great Britain in the manufacturers first eight months of 1931 to he! on the results of the economic oon- six best customers: In the ‘ to be reports of statements Yorkshire woollen ference can be accurate. first eight months of 1932 Canada. bought more woollen and worsted cloth from manufacturers in Great Britain than was bought by any ’other country inside or outside the is the best cus- re- Empire. Canada. tomer Yorkshire has and the suits of the economic conference‘ changes will be that Canada will be a better customer. In the the year 1931 for every four and a half yin-dz‘ of cloth sold in Canada by ‘Canadian mills, four yards were sold in Canada by mills in Great Britain, and one and a half yards were sold in L ’ by for» eign mills. Besides the actual re- ductYon in duties on goods from Greet Britain, the reductions in- creased the tariff protection manufacturers in Great Britain are granted in Canada as against. for- eign manufacturers to 14 1-4 per cent ad valorem and 1B 1-4 cents per lb. It would be surprising if the combination "of these two factors did not result in the manufactur- ers of cloth in Great Britain now actually selling more yards of cloth Mia's m: OIIITMENT Given Quick Belief in all cues of Internal and Exter- nal Piles. A safe and efficient remedy in the treatment of this wretched, torturing mg o“. time: stubborn disuse. It brings almost instant relief from the itching. ‘ ‘ , flinging sensation of piles andllapoaltivo cure. Thurs has been for years m effort to discover some local treatment by which Piles could be cured without re- sorting to an operation. Such a remedy his been found In our ointment. We positively guarantee can of dilealo If the the the dlroatlml an carried out GQIQTIDOCMIII- P1100500- THE 2 MAGS Mall Orders‘ Given Prompts A Millim- the followinglin Canada than are sold by 11" l Canadian mills. '_",I‘he following table shows tht woollen and worsted Yards Canada 6.826.401 China and Hong Kong 54575.net Arggntina 3.757.900 Irish Free State 3110400! Japan . 3422-5111 British South Africa 3.084.313 to notc thai Unit - ii "I; is hitereetlng during this period the States purchased only 1-5341 yards from Great Britain, New Zealand/ 2.300.700 and Austrnlil 371,800. um: stun!!! ‘" co‘ We have in stock and retell‘ ing regularly by cars COM of the best quality ANTHRACITE—- l Hard Nut. Readings FIE" | Anthracite for base burner- f wan. Anthracite En: 11* I double ’ for tumul- i Welsh Anthracite 1m nu II l Jacket heaters, ranlds I"?- ; Scotch AntLraclte an '1' highest quality double sore BITUMINOUS- Genuine om syduev 5" Springhlll Screened. lnverneu Screened. Albion 1m, Stove, COKE- Divminlon household Ce"- and rue‘ You cannot go wrolll ‘"1 b". any of the above WI!" u bfllllll OI COIL New law prim. Specill Car lotl. Prompt deliveries. T17 next order. W. ILBILLIS 8i 1711- PIIONE 173- niw ' will!’