' ;_. . ' A _<ooo}inucs_ircal resell, '- Curriculum,‘ M .. Changes in p-rnicuium recommend- ed ; "l include * ‘ optional agricultural coursespelementai-y lianies, ele- mentary Ibookltlelfllng. School fairs arid-Schptil are encouraged. ‘The repblj’ Turtlier recommends the appolhlilnantipfjd teat book com- pmtee tof courses of study, roots provide for selection of. text books and "necessary changes.‘ ivhlritiilevnrapoctoi-a or Schools" would ~ be changed to "Supervisors of schools"; with high uuulliloatiorn d. lwmfl- V -" More ‘attention would be given to teacher training, and more instruc- tion in agriculture introduced. While redoinilinglthe, value of a technical school, it oould not berecommehdcd immediately owing to the financial condition ‘of tbeprovlnce. The Commissioners expressed their ' ' that critiolsmaof krince of Wales-College regarding alleged fail- ure is unfounded and uninformed. and suggested that an ‘eflort be made/to provide for an endowment fund t0 meet the expenses of additional courses. _ ‘I'll! school lge for beginners, the rc- port recommended, should ‘be raised to the end of -the sixth year, and at- tendance regulation more strictly en- forced. Transportation should be pro- vided for the schools. School libraries were recommended. l Ifliciency Important Pd telchersl salaries, the Conunls- loners pore in general, but not full agreement with the plans of~ the Teachers’ Federation. in addition to thc- class o! license, and length of service, ofliciency, should be taken iiitojaccount. ‘Asidultimate schedule of salaries was recommended based on the class of teacher, length of service, and. clpflity, the amouilt of increase at] the end, of each qualifying period to} depend on an efficiency report based! onva grading to be decided by the Board. t aaaaav scans ‘Minimum salaries under the plan Wiilildbe: . At the end of six years: . fMen. first class, a000, women 0700. g jMen, second class, 6725, women We .‘ ' At the end of ten years the salaries "@984 .bt= , . lifcn, first class, 01000, women $040. Men, second class, a805, ‘women, i105.‘ ~ - - ‘ At; the‘ end of fifteen years: -. Men, nrst class, $1100, women sons. Men, -second class, $800, women stws. . " - \ l- ‘rhoabove salaries do not take into account any additional supplements raised by the districts. t ' fllescheris salaries’ at present are paid entirely by class. Under the] commlsidna plan third class teachers’ would be granted only the initial ln-l crease of ten per cent. “ ‘ JIIIOJW EXTRA REVENUE , , - . NECESSARY rt is‘ estimated that additional yoarlyieiiparlditure for educational and public health would_ amount at the outset to sl00,000.~An‘ increased miel-al iubsldy would provide the revenue in whole or in part,,b_ut ifsuoh increase were not forthcoming it would be necessary for the poopleto provide this amount if the plan met with approval. ' ' The‘ commotion fella-urn rlr ‘thi _ neoeassryravemiewasralaedbytag. ation ratlisrthan intros“ subpidy, the cost‘ should be distributed evenly over the province. l _- " , a it wasrecommended that thrill-and Tax now amounting to 880,000 . or tloomo boaboiished radius" ‘ ‘t paid for education from thegeneral revenue would‘ tlien-be-sl00,000. ‘ "it would be necessary-to raise the lico- éilllry revenue to make up for this reduction and so additional siaooo to tlittoo to pay increases in salaries and for health PIlIDOllc-i. The tax free public would be asked‘ to make-lip this amount, ; ,‘_, only one tax, wffoliy for education and public health. . it was recommended that‘ the Board of Education in conjunction with the ‘Teachers’ Federation under- take at onoe the formulating. of a plan to provide pensions'_for teache DOING S ___~ _. (Continued from ‘not .1» on tlhe hearts and minds of peo- ple of Canada the saloredneas of the matrimonial tis' and tbs permanent- stability of Canadian homes." Mr. Woodawcrth wntandeitLthat it was not an amendmentfist all, but the, Minister of Justice heldthst itnwas and quoted from Bourlnot. The speaker ruled the amendment was in order, and the debate proceeded. i Rldicules idea . After MdMillnn had hi! 58y. Dr. Young, Saskatoon. ridiculed the_ idea that the reference of divorce applic- ations would malls divorce easier. He was sick and tiredof the ‘whole bus- iness, he said. whereupon, Mr. Pithurs, i Parrysound, got up and quoted a lot of divorce records for certain years tp show that other provinces. with the exception of Prince Edward lslandrwhere divorce courts exist, had, sccordingio pop- ulation, many more» divorces than Ontario. which" had t0 depend upon the Senate for the "relief ofthe suffering men and women who‘ want- ed to get clear of each other." Opposes lltll on Moralfirodrida Messrs Silottml and Garland, two Ontario Cr _ men, who voted _a- gsinst the bill bofore, oppooedlt now on moral grounds. Amcsiglieaa who contributed to Jhfdebatemvas the Hon. J. E. Sinclair, Queens whoalso strongly opposed. the pressure,» and lie quoted thaexample of Prince Ed- ward Island, in the matter-lo! divorce as an illustration of how. righteous- ness eiialteda nationnlt had only one‘ divorce in all its hiiswryufle hail not concluded his remariis when the hour was up. The bill will be: heard ‘from again soon, no doubt. Australian Trade Agreement The Australian trade agreement then came up foi-‘discusslorl. The principal speaker irffavor of the a- mendment to the alriendment-in‘ re- spect of negotiating a. treaty with New Zeeiand ‘directfiinstcad 0f ab- ruptly csneellingthe order in Coun- cil, making tho Australian-treaty‘ ap- -ply to that l‘ . opposed the raising of the duty on butteron the grounds that it would raise the price of butter in winter wltll- very“ little if any advantese to prfucers of milk. l-le concluded “by saying that hd could notsupport the amendment because in his view it ‘was tantamount in “throwing dirt" in the flee of a sister dominion. but he would. sup- port the Government in any endeavor ..\. \ - Jill‘?! The flavor of H.'&,N. Bl k a ~ " a Twist is cured in--y _l_l_’ll.. a have the time o our" a . life trying _. _ out. ,Askfor,lt.andv r ». 1C to ch "P!" vMv»-*'~‘»AI‘I‘II ..-.-».- 4.. . l‘ . to negotiable treaty. direct with New Upondivtliflnklho amend- as; defeated by as to afi. "with the serrate» °.1..3b9“!='.!""'°.9l"."¥“' uias, the remainder of the evening Wis spent in dllifllllllll the effect of votlel 111s Hon. 1t. ,3. ‘Bennett; contanding- thaPthe ‘Government, by_ defeating the ‘almepdmsnt, had “vot. ed ‘lack of confidence in itself," be- cauaal/the Government's motion or-- ilupply.‘ no. he said, with consider- ablelroriy, was an unusual and un- heard of My oi‘ anticipating the verdict of the people. Robert Gardin- e-r._-(Acadia,) had ‘the floor when the hollseqssijouraerlr. . , , a ‘ ,/ ‘(dalmatian ltrees) a , March 10.—v'I‘he‘chiefs of the British ‘and. United States naval _ delegations decided today that's-u ef- fort must be made to bring the mach and Italians to‘ actual con- tact with each other if the Franco ztsllarrparlty deadlock ts tn be v_ blrok Jrbadeclsionwasreacliedat e \_ l _ atmvbich Premier Mac- Donald l-lld Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexan- deg, _First 10rd of Admiralty were guests of United States scErotal-y Stimson st United States headquart- LONDON, Mar. lit-Italy's only re- piygto the pressure brought upon her naval delegation to recede frol-l-i her demand for parity with France, has been a; reiteration of her position and a. refusal to retreat even at a cost of preventing a five power agreement on armament. " "The Italians insist that n. Brland ‘and other parties to the Washington Conference of 1022, accorded them equality st that time. They see no reason for abandoning their ratio to- dayihccordingly it appeared today the deadlock which has occupledlthe conference for a week was no nearer solution than ever, there are two pos- sible solutions in the opinion of ob- servers. Flrst- a founpower treaty excluding _ and isolating Italy and secondly, a.three _power agreement omitting, both‘ Italy and France until they find some basis for adhering to the pact. ‘ . . Provinces Should _ ' ' Work For. l ' .. a ' ‘MutuaLBenefit .--- . rur- nlany of their-j most vital lnlar: salons oitlbour the"people of Canada aledepfiident upon provincial auton- oluy. Up ‘~44: a. very high level of political authority each province is “in her-own house. Were all tile provinces ‘well adminlstred wiirlin this range of jurisdiction says the Toronto Mail and lhnpire. the country would feel the benefit quits a.s_niuch as it would fool the benefit of equally good adsnisiisitr-ailon by tho federal Government.‘ The‘ provinces should vie one another in efforts to get tllebest for their people out of their cons: ' "l competence. ‘ , Butkvying ‘with _orie another ought to be supplemented ‘by col-operating with one another. .We are glad to see that their Governments are not too proud to come iogetlher in con- fermceo‘. the obiect. of which n to harmonize laws“ 5116510116198, and ill); hold rights; in behalf o_f_ tho popul ailonsjovwhom they are severally responsible. The fact that the prov- inces are - oarryingon. so to speak. in separate compartments docs not mutton _. the 'pn;sibllity ‘of them workingrtogether on a common basis of action in respect tothe mat-terse! moat moment to the people. Ofltlflv lglnallly was w Io into ooliinsvittae of‘ tory. (Canadian Press) here on Monday night. to get past onoe to score. of the second period. little rough play was indulged in. ’ iSpeoial to the Guardian) . repeatedly stopped.»- dropped within ilvr. inches of tire red linefiDooggie Kuhn and Murdock oc- casslonaly bored in for the Bearcats though it was tried by practically ev- ery player on the Bearcats team in the first half of the period. Cats Strong ‘The locals did not have the advan- abls tobreak through the» others de- fence. Speerigave the Montreal squad a slight" advantage however, and 11rd period ended with‘ botil playing ‘airtight dogged 20 minutes. penalties - none. At the start of the second period "our '_CHARLO'l"l‘-ETOWi§l cottons Boarcats Are l MONTREAL. March il-Montreal Amateur Athletic Associations Hen- ldr hockey squad will play the Ham- ilton Tigers for the eastern final of the Allan Cup as a result of the l to 0 defeat the Wheelers administered to the Truro Bearcats. here tonight. The Montreal squad took the round 3-0, having defeated the Cats 2 to 0 The game was marked only by the hardichecking of the Maritime wild and the more finished hockey of the Montreal Wheelers, which enabled them to. win. Most of the play cent- ‘cred in the centre ice section and al- though both defences were practically air tight the Montreaiaro managed Johhny Gallagher, hefty _Wl'ice1er defence man, was themarr to get the goal scoring-on a lone effort near the end The game was fairly cleari- with a dozen ipenaltiea handed out although The ‘game opened fast with neither team gttingmuch of an advantage. The .Winged Wheelers of Montreal tried hard to ‘break through the Biaakshirt defence, but they were rydson canle, A. Gallagher. 14.30 penalties, Mann. 1 . ‘\ Defeated Maritime Champions = -,Force‘ Montreal" Team‘ T0 They if Limit. to Annex A ‘1 to Nil Vic- . Marin went off for bodylng Byrdson aatho latter was about to shoot, and the Cats had a hard time to holdthe locals off while hc was away.‘ On his return Haynes was penalised for tripping him. ‘ft was here that the wheelers showed their superiority-by carrying the play into the Cat's ter- ritory. Mann came beck into the play. before either teams had scored. Teams Tired Both teams appeared tired and whenwilson was benched for dump- ing Pete Mill as the latter came down to score, the M. A. A. A. squad were contented to rag the puck until he returned. Johhny ‘Gallagh- er at last opened the scoring lb count ths Wheelers third goal without their opponents having tallied once. Gil- laghcr took the puck at his own blue line and skated up the left boards to drill a hot one past Skeet Kuhn from twenty feet out. The puck went into the far corner of the net without giving the goalie o. chance to save. Ernie Roche and Pete Mill well chased for a. personal feud. and with each team playing a man short the Wheelers still had the advantage. They returned just as the bell rang. Summary; second period; l. M. A. - whodn '05 hours-and B4 within inches of scoring. as his shot‘ Haynes. Wilfiim. E. Rflfihl. M111.‘ - but could not/manage to get more than an odd shot at Kerr. The wheel- ers defense proved impregnabie, al- tage. however. as the Cats defense was also strong. Most of. the hockey was played at centre ice and the goal ten- ders had little to. do. 111s teams changed to ‘their alternate forward lines, but still there was little to chose between either; sextettc. It was a case of neither forward line being Kuhn was bothered more than Kerr. teams hockey which had characterised the whole Summary: First period, no score, ‘Second’ Period, Montreal l, Tniro 0 Des Roche and Murdock went off for roughing and this Wheelers kept up the offensive. 'I‘l'ie Cats had little of the play although Doggie Kuhn, Glennie, and Mann made occassion- al saliies towards the Montreal nets. Art Roche beat. Killifl, who wasgterl feet out of his net to save, but the referee ruled the puck dead and dis- allowed the goal. inst '" ie at‘ - The Milritimers made one last des- perate attempt to score, but itoniy resulted in the Wheelers tightening up on the defence. Few Cat lattaoks managed to break the local line and tho shots that got through, Kerr had little difficulty in stopping. Pete Mill was again benched for roughing, but it made little difference to the Wheel- ers. l-le was followed by Brydson. who tried to clip Malm over the head. and a minute later Huggans got a penalty. with five men to the wheelers three the Cats put every- tiling in one last effort, but could do nothing and tho bell rang leav- ing the local squad the victors. Summary; third period, no score, penalties, D. Roche, Murdock, Mill, Brydaon, Huggins, Glennie. ‘Z40 llll cilliliilll New- . _W9r1d M a" Claimed‘ By Swim- . IHGIK, nuance amiss. March20.—W'ilat was‘ éldimed to be a world's record for ‘distance ahdlwrlnanency in wat- er- was established gymterday by the Argentine ‘swimmer, Pedroa Caridottl, minutes swam doiwn the ‘River Salado, trib- utary of the Parana, 300 kilometers (about 240 miles.) That distance sep- aralies Guys andiSants re. Csndotti plunged into the water Saturday at 10.50 a. m. arid arrived at Santa lib at 4.40 a. m. Monday. ‘LUOOA, Italy. March 20.-—’1‘he It- alian heavyweight boxer, Roberti. today declared himself dissatisfied wiur the outcome of his Sunday night fight‘ with Larry Gains. Canadian pom battler. He ‘had been ill at tho time, he said. and fought dc- apltie the fact that he had a high ism- persture. ' ~Roberti had ciial-lfllscd the Canad- ian to a returnibout during the first two weeks in April. He explained his decision, saying ho had been forced to fightiunder‘ penalty of distill!!!- lcation. The’ doctor of the Boxing Federation, he said, had declared him rgenuiriely sicleman. t l lli s Pilil lllillllniilil . (Canadian rreas) , .g.amn.frolv. Ohli..-Mai'. la-stel-i ng‘ tlqgllqw York Central A. 0.. Cleveland. britethe Canadian red- ord of 71-5 seconds for the 60 yard dashat the 91st Highlanders Ath- letioAesociation-lndoor meet here tonight. Lieigh Miller, sprinting mar- vel from the- Maritimes who, sports the, colors of the Hamilton Olympic Ciub.~-l‘lashed to the tape it winner in the men's 60 yard dash. Miller was never seriously threatened and won eased up. He failed by one fifth second toequal the Canadian record. Wet lllibber 1s, Walsh. sensational girl sprinter . Cause. The Abegweit Benefit programme was carried out successfully at the Ar- ena Rink last evening. The running off of the events was somewhat handi capped by the soft "slushy condition of the ice. The attendance was hard‘- iy I compliment to the Abcgwelta who played so brilliantly this winter. The Aces took a gloriously foillh and humorous game of hockey from the Kings by a. score of 3-2. ‘ Saunders for the Aoesacored the first counterflI-lowever before the first period had ended, Squareliriggs put the Kings one ahead by acor- lng two ‘neat goals on individual plays. ' ‘ In tile seohnd period Saunders -who- was playing his usual headyYgamc tied the score. Nicholson-in tho‘ last frame 111,9. brilliant soiodash‘ beat McEwcn oin a hard shotfclosein. After this score until-tho game teo/lnYplay was fdrgottaiifllliid many spills resulted, much ' musemerltaofthe spectra" " v Acorn draw.two..pe_rl,a‘lilies'§_ or,‘ il- legal checkmL-aniLPrOwso us. the same offense. The latterthrough hard and Well timed-checks SlVSd many dangerous '. _ Fbllowing were the lirtelipa ~ L. o. c. now-uric. last night on mar-ensue Ailey! the Abbies met and defeated the Uresocnts by a good maiority. w.‘ McDonald of the Abbie: took all honors to himself 1n rolling high single of Bdlpina, also high total for m pins. , ' ABBIES yummy". composed of Reels-Ari japlt,’ Joe Reardon, Art Warfiirtloe Kings Tid Mczwén. “v Defence a Roy Prowse '4 o Acorn R. Bevasla Giiiia Squarebriggs Dolron Toby McMillan‘ 'I‘he puck M around the rink.‘- ‘much interest?- [Following is the result: ,_ 1_. lltbbort Saunders is 3L5, onds. ; l 2. Iva-n Nicholson, is‘ 4-5. s. Walter rawlor i7 4-5. 'J-_ "Iherelay racebetween West, "and Queen square was " fol-inel- teem comprised off" Coin-Keith Acorn, Ralph _.l Gordon Eewart. The Queen" r- tr W McTague. ‘ I '_ in thelmatchracc bctweenthqdend- irig point winners in the Westmgw and Queen Square Ioe near-port, of Queen Square beet 13.2w- anlfltcgerald of West Keno, ‘owl; uwjiflrfri _Tlle following is the sclrcdlilfbf oil-ls Basketball League gomesvifbo played on Wednesday and Bani-idly‘ at tho Y. lvl. c. A: , Sat, March 22~P. S. S. va."P.“i'!. C. Wed.. Marci-i zs-P w. mvalrlnsi ncss Girls. ’=»."i9"*- ' Sat, March 20—Business GirfBWs. I’. S. B. _ _ Wed., April s-r. w. c. vs i girls, s*-...,.-.»_ . Sat, April 5-P. S. S. vs. Ptfif/C. Wed" April 9—-Business Girls vsnP. - B. S. . Bat, April l2—~P. S S. vs. PM‘. O.’ , Wed, April ill-Business Gil z vs P. S. S. ales-p - Sat, April i0--P. W. C. vsslitténess Girls. ' ‘ Note-Referees for this leagu: are P. McConnell J. Chandler H. Harley 168 163 151 Total 301i. CBESOENTS A. Joy 164 184 194 P. Doyle ............ 193 1'72 162 J. Mclnnis ......--.. 142 206 194 15b I12 210 131 1'10 156 Thqugh rubber ‘L5 difficult M f“i'. even with a razor-edited tool, it cutsl good thing to know when maklna tire repairs, but it, is better to remember‘ when driving on wet roadways. In wetl weather, car tracks should be avoided, not‘ only tn avoid a skid, but the‘ corners of the tracks are frequently quite sharp and may cut the tires] when they are not wet. When it is‘ provinces was a state of affairs that had been aggravated by an outbreak elf-speculation. A similar agreement to co-operate was reached recently by the Governments of the three prairie pmvlnces. ‘rheee provinces decided that it was their duty to cools the lew departments in the several provincial laws age-inst fradulent dealings, and that to prevent a ruinous collapse of wheat priceaii-l Canada, e. public service of the high- est value has been rendered, not to one section or another of the country but to the people of Canada as a whole. I -y to cross the tracks. it should, ‘always be done as nearly at right,‘ angles as possible. to avoid any-slid- ing action. ' I ' \ ‘Deflatlng An 1.5T»... To deflate an“ inner tube without a‘ Total 2645. Tonight at 8.15 the RDVGII-IIECCY tho Victorian and a good game ‘is' expected by the fans. "y" BOWLING Last night St. Paul's: lost to 8t. Peters by default. ill. Vessoy rolled both the high single and three string scores of 243 and 603 pins. 1n the second match of the even- ing Centfal Christian defeated the Baptists by 142 pins. J. Forsythe of the Baptists rolled the high single of 2'11, while M. Stewart, of Central Christian had the high three of 640 pins. Following are the scores and line-I ups:- Dick Fiillter, Waiter Gossand Ale! Mathesan. , First game Saturday lllQht-BinlT.‘ between P. S. S. vs. P. W. 0...... .- (Patriot please copy) How They Stood‘ o‘ (Canadian section) J51 l n. s. rial-ft P. w. 1.. v Montreal ....44 2a 16 sat-racer ¥ ‘i ottawa .....4l 2i 1s a i38"lil’ii0 § ‘:1 Csnadiens .44 2i 14 9 1st i-lflo ’ roropio .....4s 1r 2o s lis 12o 4o .- Americans H43 l4 24 ' 5 110’ 33S" d3 (American Section) and Quebec came to an understand- to the aid of the wheat pool by Now that they have broken tho 10¢ lass oftlme, select a small cotter pin, P. w. L. D. F ‘A- P. mg‘ mulalrltain ‘o common front for guaranteeing the loans for which the in this matter- of wkios counsel to and cut of! about one eight oi aril ST- PETERS Boston .....4-4 as s 1 m as '15 thelrwitlerpowcrrlghts. Th0 cotifer- pool was’ hidepted to the banks. gather. the ol-ovlnw ousht not in inch from one legiffhefi. bend lilo; R~ Jilhm" - 1°!’ "9 m Chicaso ~43 101B 5 11.811.10.15 enrchellffliwmnw recently for the ‘rhatsituatiorl also arose out of a have any bnckwardneis about ldfipt- longer leg at right angles in the direc-i-l Film 139 153 145 Rangers ....43 1'1 16 l0 135.14.“ of amimiiatingthe provincial venture in market speculation. The ingtlie same course when other pm- tlodof the shorter lea. Then. sprefld; E‘ was” 173 l" 243 Detroit -~---43 13 35 5 113 "31-'81 lswsioilirolootine-ths public ale-inst west will stand by its whcat-‘holdlnz blew-i of e two common to them the leailvcrt- To 1M- vms the 1w? ‘* “ma” "3 m "Mimi!" ~43 5 35 3 9° "*1" rraaiiicrii ‘dealings orallluniis will be illrmm- No rivals Province will“ hi" ‘i’ b" “"1” “W “l” “m” “M” "l" W" l“ i“ m" “t” "1"" """" “° m’ 3°‘ i?“ , fnlltiurofkéod to the whole of Ciin- have rendered this service. l-iad the merits we have referred lo were for-enough w Owl the valve who“ 1'°"“"”°‘9- “We "m" 1'4.°"°-°°° “m5 0 1°" j$l_'dulfg‘ pgfruitful as if' the re-‘ Government of Saskatchewan. the brought about notwithstanding that the pressure on the legs is released. BAPTIST J- est land is Canada have beeil lll- I v form: liad wrought overlain principal wheat-growing province, the provincial Governments are hot they will spread apart. retaining the A. Ff- Mfiwflllncli - 111 131 1B8 trolled by air in the last l2 m‘ lths. ,. ' iiuthority.“ Uniformity of a wise undertaken to guarantee the loans of all of the one nifty complexion. crkifivbln irllitlhelvatlge stelm whiletholfl- Zzrfxlgtgfléi" “altar”. 3:0": '2” ; ' ‘ . , . mania x..m. ‘g provincial law for the preventionand tile banks to the Saskatchewan What we like to see is that the pro lien 19S Wi °<l v W W "P!" _ f! l f‘ F I v p ‘rt ‘of fraudulent dealings wheat-holders alone, that would not vlncea recognize that thQY hF-VQ m! ' ‘ j -—-—-—--g—-- —- — 13:32:” ' l“ municipal ban’ ‘ ' l: ‘u. . q ~ .; ., .' _ . v » h’ _‘ n; of col-mm,“ 1 rqpon- or other speculators who are Working - 00 - - - - - ___._..___ .......... _. ._._. wlugdbbgnnyéz lgvgmwhllvcc u?“ wzulld in" mlwahuediiobaw preofiirlfilarf. Ed laxity“ arid that by exchanging against the interest of the citizens. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN B. Lin! -. ----- l" m» =1“ ‘P! ' 1'“ w" h ‘haul: 3i: Government had also ideas they can raise the standard of By oo-operation, the limvlflces M" J~ Siewm- 157 175 1m T°""l_271°' ‘“ "“ °°“9m~."9“ld F”. ;“gm:;:b° vum M: w, in,” m, bmch m .11 tho legislation pertaining to some highly establish a second lino of security for M. Stewart iss m 224 BOWLING TONIGHT" 4 _ A in‘ ‘mixer-liars: °of.Cailada. ‘I110 cat‘; ‘cited that for protecting power important matters, and can join for- the public of Canada. a line parallei- W. Smith - 199 1"’? 141 7~°° t0 5-30. “Y‘S" life-H's 3 < ' . . . . . . . - ’. ~ i; doom-s ing thlV-olf federal authority. R. H. MacNeill . 205 222 102 8J0 to 10.00, "Mined Lehman's-anvil ,_ occasion for mu’ coming together-of‘ rights, that for standardizing theses BBB-ll“?- elther fl-adulen i .'_ till ED THEM" islc-rouwl’ tvvarrTH M cM-i IN ENT- g‘. $01. q’ —By ifgorge McManus M our"