CIIARLOTTETONN Bllllllllll SUBSCRIPTION RATIO “Mpeeyeu- (lnudvsmc) domiciled‘! $4.00 per year (In advance) mulled to I. I. Illllll u-wnervmiln advance) MOIIMIIIIII-l Members Audit Bureau of Circulation: rTlie Strongest Memory is Weaker flldll tlw_lVealc_est_lhk.” TUESDAY, OCTOBER l, Ill!- Business Upturn Indicated Statistics at the end of the first month _of war show a noticeable business upturn, as in- dicated both in prices and the physical volume of business, reports the Ottawa correspondent of the Montreal Star. Carloadings are increas- ing and this is reflected in railway. revenues. Heavy orders for equipment are being placed. Transcontinental rail traffic should necessarily benefit from the lessened movement by way of Panama. In the stock market, few “war babies" lave yet made their appearance but some survivals of the last war or industries which, meanwhile, have developed find fresh nourishment on pros- pective war orders. War industry generally lS being lined up. The \Var Supply Board 1s ap- praised of the names, locations and the poten- tial capacities of nearly 2,000 concerns, large or small, which each in its own line, is calculated to make an effective contribution to the war. Orders are being placed in numerous industries but their number promises t0 rapidly increase. If the Neutrality Act, now being debated at Washington, is changed, Canadian industry will have exceptional benefits, compared with other countries, jgmar materials, although there is no restriction on many basic supplies which already are flowing into the country. If the United States law is not changed, many American con- eerns are expected to cross the border, either to establish themselves here or to augment their existing subsidaries. ,Virulent Propaganda Now that Hitler realizes that Britain and France are not going to make a deal for peace on his terms over tllc dismembered state of Poland. that they are going to fight until Hitlerism is no _more, we can expect an increase in both the ' quantity and virulence of the Nazi propaganda The samples of this type of wordy war, so far presented over the air and in the German press, do not speak very highly of the intellig- ence of the originators. Their belief in the cre- dibility of their listeners and readers is little short of astonishing. It is also pathetic. It is one thing to present propaganda based on illegitimate conclusions drawn from incom- plete statistics. It is another to assert bare- fnccdlyi that Winston Churchill ordered a British submarine to torpedo the Athenia for the effect it would have on the United States; and to as- sert that Neville Chamberlain has been kidnap- ped politically by the war-mongers in his new cabinet. This latter type of propaganda, it is some com- fort, always has unhealthy repercussions either for its originators, or for those listening to it; like the German officers who heard the broad- east, early in the Polish ivar, that Warsaw had fallen and on the strength of the announcement roceeded to the city only to be captured by Tolish troops at the first barricade they came to! Goebbels and his crew of lush lairs may get sway with it for a while, but in the end they will come to well-deserved grief- The Apple Problem “on Scotia is the largest apple-growing pro- ylnce of Canada and most of its apples go to the British market. The growers, accordingly, were depressed by the thought that the great British market might be closed to their big crop. They put their case to the Government at Ot- tawa, which, in reply, announced a comprehen- sive policy designed to meet the separate regional needs of the industry, not alone in the Maritime Provinces, but in Quebec, Ontario and the rest of Canada. Nova Scotia being the province most affected by war conditions, as regards mar- keting fruit abroad, is to have 1,500,000 barrels of export varieties bought by the Dominion to be processed by canning and drying. If need be, this maybe expanded by an additional 250,000 barrels. In British Columbia's case the Gov- ernment will purchase 500,000 boxes of export varieties if unsold by March 31. Ontario and Quebec growers will be pIqtected from possible dumping of supplies from Nova Scotia and Bri- tish Columhia- Ontario is pressing for better terms, and its appeal may be granted. All sorts of suggestions, says the Montreal Gazette, are bcitig made as to the disposal of the fruit in the home mzii-kct. One is that Canadian soldiers be scrvcd apples as part of their rations. The Govcrntncnt at Ottawa is to advertise ap- ples on an extensive sczilc, which should prove profitable. Altogether, there is ari average pro- duction of some 14.000000 bushels of apples in all the provinces. Surely Catiatlians can be in- duced to consume more of this domestic fruit, now that it is so cheap. There is a big . crop available and the export market is, for the present at least, greatly curtailed. Promise And Performance The insistence of the German High Command in claiming imaginary victories over British ships, despite the official (lcnials in the British House of Commons, need not surprise anybody who has been following lliller’s pitblic declarations since he came to ])()\\'Cl'- llere are some pins ziffiritizitions, uttered by the Fuehrer over a period of fivc years: “When has the German people ever broken its word ?"-Novcmlicr, 1934. “\Vars of tvvcngc are out of date. in the been sipstriot; today lie is s traitor, leading his ple in the valley of the shadow of death . . . obody in this Germany, nobody in this unified and disciplined State wants war. Moreover, n0- body here will ever take any steps to cause war." "MW. 1935' _ “Germany will never break the peace of Eu- rope. After three years I can regard the strug- gle for German equality as concluded today. We have no territorial demands to make in Eu- ropeP-March, i936. “The period of so-called surprises is now over Peace is our dearest treasure." — January, 1937- “Germany is an island of peace." — October, 1937- “Germany wants only peace. She does not want to add to the sorrows of other nations." —March, r938. "All we want is peace and our right to live, and for our people the chance to work.” — November, 1938. "Only the warmongers think there will be a war. I think there will be a long period of peace.”—_ianuary, r939. ' a EDITORIAL NOTES t-t Mr. Reginald Gray, Kingston, Ont., has the distinction of being the first person to appear on a charge of reckless driving of a motor boat. He smashed into a skiff in which two men were fishing in the St. Lawrence River. Frank Forks lost his fishing rod and watch, and so he and Harold Jamieson went to court about it. Gray, when he appeared, was ordered to replace the rod and watch, as well as pay a $10 fine. 4' Ill Ill II Ontario is getting after the disloyal. Edward G. Restell was sentenced to six months in re- formatory and fined $300 when he pleaded guilty in court in Toronto to a charge of tnaking state- ments likely to cause disaffection to His Ma- jesty. He was charged under the Canadian \Var Measures Act Magistrate E. J. Butler, in sen- tencing Restell said sedition “must be stamped out before it gets started." iii! Add to U.S.A.’s things to view with alarm the fact that only sixteen towns in seven States sent male quartets to Tulsa, Okla, where the “world championship" in masculine foursome harmon- izing recently was decided. What has happen- ed to all our male quartets, impromptu or other- wise? asks The Philadelphia Inquirer. Don't men sing any more, singly or together? Barber shops, even in the hinterlands, have gone ton- sorial-parlor, but if only seven States have quar- tets that can do tearful things to the Banks of the Wabash and keep zill sour notes away from Sweet Adeline, maybe this is what's wrong with the country. is i: n For years persons walking through Kensing- ton Gardens, London, have noticed on sunny days a smiling little old red-faced man sitting on one of the benches. He would feed the birds, read his paper and then doze off, until the even- ing dampness came and a friendly bobby would rouse him and tell him it W85 time to go home. He was an old age pensioner, named Thomas Herbert Powers, who earlier had been a travel- ler in many lands. lie told the friendly police- man that he had expectations of a fortune, but gave n0 (lfltails- One day the seat was vacant, never to be re-occupied by him as he had died in hospital. And the fortune was no myth, for three days after his death, solicitors announced that news of it had arrived from relatives in Aus- tralia; $445,000 had been left him by his late father's second wife, who was over ninety years of age. is is is in Those who consider it is essential to centre all power and authority at Ottawa in this time of storm and stress should study whatis being done in the Motherland. The London Spectator says: “We are witnessing a process of decentralisation for which this country is peculiarly fitted, With the appointment of Regional and Deputy Re- gional Commissioners for civil defence any one part of the country will now have the means of carrying on its own organization if communica- tions should beconie difficult. Duties of an im- portant kind are now laid upon local authorities, each of which must act upon its own initiative in measures essential to safety and social welfare, Every district now has also its volunteer com- mittees working on the reception of evacuated persons and all sorts of emergency services the need of which reveal itself from day to day. In the enthusiastic voluntary activity that is going on in every town and village we see that dem- ocracy, so far from being endangered by ivar, or a handicap, is an inexhaustible source of strength ; the local inhabitants have the initiative and self- reliance to organize themselves, whether for in- dependent action or action in aid of the official authorities." s- o is u Heroes have their zero hours. For instance, while Frederick Robert Outhwaite, 41-year-old engineer, hung his head and wrigglcd in embar- rassment in the police court at Eltham, near London, the other day, his counsel related this story. Outhwaite on Aug. II, f9t8, was a lieutenant in command of a coastal motor boat whichmwith five others, was searching foramiss- ing British submarine. The boats passed through a mine field into enemy waters and then from a German base came six seaplanes. The motor boats engaged them, machine guns againstima- chine guns, but the planes had the upper hand. Two were brought down but more came, until thirty had dived to attack the British. For near- ly five hours the fight went on. One by one the boats were put out of action. Outhwaite's boat caught fire and. abandoning ship, the lieutenant and his men were picked up by another boat. German destroyers appeared and chased the res- cue ship, but a Dutch warship took the men on board, and for the remainder of the war Outh- waite was in a Dutch internment camp. A tele- 2mm V) his father. R. l.. Outhwziite. Liberal M.P- at the llouse of Commons. brought to England news of the tits-it's safety. The hcro of this ad- venture, from which lie was decorated with the Distinguished Service Cross, had appeared in court to plead guilty to a charge of driving a car while undcr the influence of drink. The magistrate dismissed the case on payment of £20 old days a deliberate maker of war may have COSLSs ) n .‘- to with bull-like body and stubby lqs. wh-loh feeds at bottom of northern lakes. The creature has been named a mernioocs, but. ft may be onl a mere moose with s depraved tie for underwater weeds, s subimeroose. - Montreal Gazette. The civilization of Western Eu- rope wonders whether a new bar- barism wlll sweep out of the East. Men remember Davld’s description: “The heathen raged, the kingdoms were moved." Many who thought France and Britain were engag- lng 1n a struggle to end Hltle-rlsm 110w see a struggle for survival against. "C- unazLm." -- Chris- tian Science Monitor. The average Canadian ls quite prepared to pay a fair ptloe for the products of the farm. He knows that. the prosperity of the entire country is closely linked with the amount the farmer gets for his goods. If someone could devise a plan that would control prices on fazm products-for domestic oon- sumption, leaving only the surplus t0 be sacrificed to world low prices. he would make a definite contribu- tlon to prosperity of the Dominion. -Cornwall Standard-Freeholder. Herr Hitler wlll take from us many things. He will glvc us much m return. He will give us unity to prosecute a war to a suc- cessful end; he will arm us clay by day with the comrndeshilp of a Just and common cause. He wlll harden us with the wlll to endure all that 11a before us; 1n the oer- that we shall wln through to a new order made wholesome by the extermination of an lnwleranle creed. — London Sunday Dispatch. The British mercantile marine ls being asked to do more with fewer ships than were flying the British flag at. the beginning of the last. war. There can be no doubt. about the urgent need of more ships. It. would surely be leaning rather too heavily on the excuse of consulta- tion, to wait until the overworked British authorities could get around to considering the advice to give to Canada on this subject. A straightforward Canadian decision to take steps to build and operate a Canadian fleet. of ships for trans- port, purposes—m by Cana- dlan seamen—would be one effec- tive Canadian answer to the ruth- less torpedolng of the Athenla. — Ottawa Citizen. What use the Government. will make of Maj-Gen. MoNaughwas unquestioned ability is I10‘- W‘ clear. Many ‘maple here would favor him for command of the Canadian armiy now belns enlisted which wlll be the nucleus of the Canadian expeditionary force. 0th- ers, however, contend that. this would be a at, waste of ability. Mal-Gen. cNauglzbon, during the world war. revolutionized one of the most important phases of artillery action. He devised a highly technical but. uncannlly ac- curate system for “spvtblll? 91191113’ guns. 1-le did this o measurlnfl the speed of the soun , transmitted undezgi-ound. from tiwo points. "1115 obtaining a cross bear“)! "ma! lnfalllbly betrayed the position of the enemy gun. — Financial Pout. In the first week of their comi- try’; participation ln the war. Can- adians had two very different ple- tures presented tc them. One was of ‘Phoronton Mustard, rlncllml 01' the Toronto Normal Bciibol. Kit/ll‘)! up his place ln a lifeboat to a wo- man and wsvins road-bye to his wlfe from the deck of the Athenla. Another picture ls not so inspir- ing. Wlth an abundance of food theme has been a boarders to secure s 2:31:11? f" b?" yond their normal n . with m9 effect that. s. temporfl-TY and 10ml shortage tn some commodities has been created. The boarders have not cared that others might not get. even their normal supply, or that. fruit. might mt on the market for want 0f 808M’ l0 FY9915?" "'- Pdces have been-raised without let or hindrance. Too many have let unintelligent selflshness~ rule. — Toronto Telegram. In his opening barrage against repeal of the arms embargo, Sen- ator Boruh uses words with the recklessness of a um nwmssndii minister. The statement that re- l wlll "enable this Government iiiiafurnlsh arms to one side and to withhold them from the other" ls a direct and flagrant perversion of the facts. It wlll, of course, en- able this Government" to do no- thing of the kind: it. will enable private manufacturers to fumlsh arrm to the Allies (If the latter come and get the-m with their own shins), but. wlll ln no way involve either the Government or the country ln "withholding" arms from any one. Any withholding would still have to be done by Franco- Brlt-lsh naval power. over which we have no control. But ls not. this situation. the Senator asks. "in fwfi intervention ln the present Europ- ean wsr? With repealof the em- bargo would we not. be. “by every scramble by mon honesty. partles to a European oorn-fllct?" The simplest and most accurate answer ls: No. There ls no rule of international law which would make us ‘parties’ to the conflict; there ls neither com- mon sense nor common honesty ln pretending that we would be parties to lt. and there would be no Intervention in fact, - New lfork Herald _ ______ rule of international law. by every MOMOW dictate of common sense and com- , ff I get, down too flne of water in my tissues. I have spoken custom now common in many fuc- torles of supplying l6 grain tablets of table salt to their workers dur- the hot. weather. The worker es a wblet of salt with each lass of water. Salt holds 70 times f welgiht of water ln the tissues and so acidosis with its chief symptoms — tiredness and mental wanderings - ls prevented. Dr's. K. M. Bowman and S. Kelser. New York, tn Archives of Neurology and I-bychilohv. Chicago, tell of their success by the use of table salt "ay mouth or by injec- tion into the veins in decreasing the death rate of excited and dis- tuiibed patients with mental dls- ease. Patients with organic and func- tional disturbances and alcoholic delirium were treated. This treat.- ment with salt also shortened the period of excitement. Fever due to too much water having been lost by the body was prevented or suc- cessfully treated by this method. Fluids ‘were given ln large ouantltles and the patients were given l5 grains (l-4 teaspoonful) of table salt. every four hours to helb the tissues hold the fluids. Fluids were given ln the form of orange juloe with a tsblespoonful of sugar to each glassful. In s. series of 92 cases of alcoholic delirium treated during the slx months previous to use of the salt. l6 died, whereas ln a period of 8 months with the salt. treatment, of 3'1 cases only 3 died. Of twenty-two patients with dehydration - lack of water in tissues — due to dementia preoox (pe day dreaming), manic depression. and dementia paralvtlca not receiving the salt treatment. 8 died. whereas tn s. series of 14 cases giiralvlng the salt treatment, none e . Von Fritsclfs Death (Moncton Transcript) Many commentators are taking part ln an unofficial post mortem upon the death of Colonel-General Werner Von Fritsch who, accord- ing to the German official state- ment, wias killed ln action. Despite the state and military funeral which Hitler ordered and his floral tribute of laurel and chrysanthe- mum. many doubts have been rais- ed that the former Commander-In- Chlef of the German army, who had little liking for the Nazi re- gilme, a feeling which was recipro- cated, was kllled ln the assault on Warsaw. It ls no reflection on the gen- erals when soldiers remark that generals dle ln bed, for generals are supposed ho direct. campaigns from well l» the rear. The death of a Colonel-General, whose ability ln strategy was so well r zed that he was called back in spite of Nazi dlsfavor. is sufficient in itself to cause comment. G. Ward Price. of The London Dally Mall, voiced widely-held sus- picions that von hit-sch fell on the fourteenth day of the siege when "a handful of determined soldiers and civilians were to defend the ruins of their capital." These suspicions were not lessen- ed when, a day or so later, there came, unexpectedly, a. new version of the story. The Warsaw radio station announced that German prisoners taken by the Polish Lanc- ers a sortie had testified that. Von Frtlsch had been treacherous- ly assassinated by the Gestapo. The rlsoners said that he was not. kllle "leading an artillery unit on patrol" as officially announced, be- cause they had seen hlm for the last time, on the evening before he was supposed to be killed in action. entering a car at Grodzlsk, twenty miles from Warsaw and being drrlven ln s. southwesterly direction away from the from. The prisoners told of meat lndlsz- natlon among the German officers, for von Frltsch was the ldol of the army. If theme had been dissatis- faction in the army, von FrlLseh would have been the logical choice to head s revolt. ‘due to lack Russia And Religion (Ottawa Journal) ~ Blr Evelyn Wrench. a former ed1- tor of the London spectator, and well known ln Canada, has just paid a vlslt. to Moscow aft/er an absence ears. Wrltln his lrnpres- e Spectator, e says of the new people he found: "ralks about religion are taboo. Each day we addressed some quest- ion concerning religion to our guides; the repl was nearly always the same: "We now nothing about. the Church.’ Our guides, lug members of the Communist Party were naturally atheists. We asked one of them 1f she knew whether any of heir contem rarfes went to ch ; shs said: ' o, there may be 50MB. but I don't know of any.’ "A eritly only old people st.- tend e services. We saw some twenty churches but. only them was still used for religious aer- vlces. The other; were used either as museums ss tenement billdfngs or were falling to pieces. ‘s flve hundred caurehes have been pulled down. This lqulda- tlon of Otirlstlanlty la one of the lble results of the Revo- te what it. must terms of human lble" 5 y. From weeks H80 cams a remarkable book. “National Social- ism and the Roman Catholic Church," by Dr. Nathaniel Mick- lem Principal of Mansfield Colle e, (Informs-nu the press s few beifore of the, s Protestant. Dr. - 3 probably some of the councillors. What ls the status of those elected by other (than a qualified list of voters. (5) Next. year ls election year. If practically every citizen in alleged arrears, poll, p y or personal, as served with notices, ls dis- qallfleld, then who can lawfully elect a new Council? Wlll there be any left? (8) Under authority of what Statute, or Act of Inoorporattlm has this Adjustment Board been appointed, and what is extent of their jurisdiction. Has this been determined bv the Order ln Coun- ell appointing them. wlll it be luff. to them to outline the limits with- ln which they propose to act? ('1) Is it. their lntentlon to act wholly within the limitations prescribed by "Statutes or Limita- tlons" Federal and Provincial, and by the several sections of.our Act of Incorporation? ’ (8) Section (2) of tihe "Board’ announcement savsz-"To refer to the regular City Tax Appeal Board for confirmation or reduction in valuation any assessment levied a- tzalnst any taxpayer WM m6)’ h!" been dissuaded from timely appeal by anv action of any ofiflclal as by way of any reduction in good faith." Does this lmplv “retroactive” operation? Under the Act. of In- corporation no “Apoeal Board" ls given jurisdiction over any As- sessment, or tax levv. outside of the current year of their appoint.- ment. Wlll each years valuation be referred back to the particular Ap- neal Board having jurisdiction over the assessmrvts of the year in question And wherein has any of such Boards nower to revise, re- assess 0r otherwise interfere with levies outside of their respective jurisdictions. There are numerous other ques- tions of detail upon which we should have definite pronounce- ment-. Courts wlll always restrain limitless interferences. especially likely to involve n. “multiplicity” of actions at ls-w. This danger may ‘be avoided by publicly defining the intentions of this novel ad- justment: system so that litigants may know where they are at. and as to whether hundreds of taxuav- ers may be culled upon to emrfnv lawyers to onnose and contest will- o-the-wlsn claims which a clear and concise outline of projective may avert. The personel of the new Board are men of good judgment and I asume will conscientiously perform their difficult duties to the best of their abilities, yet the oubllc. very manv of whom have not a reimote knowledge of what. default they are charred with, should be pro- perly advised. I am, Sir, Etc, LEX. lem wrote his book as part of the research work of the Royal Insti- tute of International Affairs. _ He flllIOl/ES Hitler as having sald 1n Ber- lin 19361 "Providence has caused me to be a Catholic, and I know, therefore, how to handel this Church. If she wll not accommodate herself to us. I wlll let loose upon her a propa- ganda that wlll exceed her powers of hearing and sight. l wlll set in motion against her the press, the wlrelem and the fllm. I bring back to llfe the forgotten atrocities of her history, and I will show the people how the person really lives and ls debauched. I know how to handle these fellows. They shall bend or break -—- but. slnoe they are no fools they wlll bend their heads.” "If she wlll not accommodate her- self to us." The Church, refusing Gassy Stomach; Relieved Every peron who ls troubled with gas In the stomach and bowels should get s bottle cf Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture and sec how quickly It wlll re- llevo all distressing symptoms Sharp pslns in the abdomen or about the heart are often due entirely to gas pressure. Dr. Evans Stomach Mixture taken at mesl time not (ml! _ nrsvents all bsd effecta from us. but It romotes the func- tlcnsl mtlv tv of the stomach. ‘ rslsts digestion and improves i the appetite. l m. Evans Stomach minim ls suld only at the Two Mat-s ‘t. 85o per bottle. Get Your Bottle Today. BATHING CAPS We have just received s nevi supply of Bathing Csns snd Bench Bin In the very lstr t styles snd color. ' Prices from 25c to ll-(ltt. SPECIALS DODDS KIDNEY PILLS 39c per. box , PABLUM 45c per box VINOLIA cAsrite son l0 CAKES 2s. The 2 MACS i I 119 Great George Street U OCTOBER 3, 1939 iq i frssli gfitysr Alvsy: ltlthlii llmi M. ma. wsw-m zfiiFi-a of themselves and their dependents. The Great-West Life is the champion of Thrift. and Guardian of thousands '01.’ Canadian Homes. Consult a Great-West Life mam-no obligation. HYNDMAN & G0. LIMITED Provincial Managers Offices: Charlottetown, Summerslde, Montague THAT’S ~WHAT YOU GET WHEN YOU ADVERTISE IN THE CNANLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN FREE l Through the facilities 0f the Modern Ad Service Bureau, Advertisers in this paper are provided with free CUTS, ILLUSTRATIONS. ART- WORK. SIMPLY PHONE 132. W. Our Copy Writers Will Call On You. The Charlottetown Guardian BOTH BARRELS l First Sec- ondly the flavor lasts. It. hlts the spot every There is a double kick in our Tobacco. and foremost lt has outstanding flavor. time. HICKEYS BLACK TWIST 10c Per Fig "EAST POINT T0 NORTH CAPE” IIICKEY and NICHOLSON TOBACCO C0., LTD., Charlottetown mama. ma"; Mum- nrinm, the tum ancient u a an ""“"""“""""""' . fmpq-tgmg, 311m‘ m. - YIII IIDIAI PIOHI IIIIITII pos stun orsBlltm-lsglntbswest. A _ 1 ._4 lnuausin:_, u» slds ‘tiitiéhigbfuihfliniiiurrfiffi’ mronsumon wsivrm I ' |i“'ii'..l.'1.§i.'""s.‘.‘.'-“ al.1111121, c mutilation no . --_ ' e economlcbutofmorsl Bin-Incl! theTaxAdt- I . resoiuceaTbelatwri-ieuottobe lvdouissllhflwloinllllit mentBos-rdifdnounoed. WebuiisQ sAnNwldsTAai-E oonaldcredllzht.filt-lermopos- "" '_‘L‘ sumefmmthlstlmtttbooouncll- EQLJip/‘AENT llblv can H1108 in the fi measure mamas.“ urs- rnngxléel Wig“ wag‘? "I . or - TUBBID PATIIINTS wms h?“ "l" ' lngouttholnducesn that. 1531,5351}; Itlspertlnenttothelssuc for M. canshcnlhthe llaof ' , __._ oltlzemtnknow tthmgoflho Tn but the overwhcmo msjorl y of Whflg gummy.‘ . hm" mm“ actual sltiutlon ofwrliaulra. w “fibril ml‘: g dlgnuou nawmgfrmg‘ es want s world that ls champion wrestler, 27o University (1) H" 9W1‘! 0M lPPflflflI 0!! at ncth the camplllm of supprel- 8 in seek not merely comm, not. dominated force and chou “do”, 1 h," the Asses-smut roll as ln arrears ton, confiscation and persecution of mostoflturope Th wu- B . much 9a sndterrotnsnd elr Inbound “hgmlmdu ‘omlwm. froml91ito'dstcbeenmtlfledofuulooseds@gst_t. 11km Chris , wonvrlstctobeefwflvm-Nswwunsmnmsuumiosinmwshmw’ — Y0“! Thrive '1 w 1o , mic but. um. he usually ma) 21303‘ paw“ “W- 11W}: -———— b“; » . x syerc, are Headline: "nan s» Ilrcs css h“ m‘ "Tm M” m‘ arrears. Have all mill notified? bout the fol owing evening. That g I U. S. Steamer Full of Whitey." 13, he {Qed up 1o pom”, during (3) What ls the hotel of notices This "atrocity" may convince many m 34 l}, serv '1' ollo n citizens of the Repullaltc tflpt. ttihey s; m, x mum not w m fllt-fgdl-Iow many of those nowmlu ueu acalxistsserous uaon. MW,‘ - e" mearswere hood e —TOl'glli0 out» and . tifli-a? 1bffxauiu mo‘? h’ ' quzxiisti voters im ‘in Llfo Insurance stands out. as Canada's greatest i tact tfh um lying ti how nwnv dlsqii. “m” “ ‘he P" M“ m,“ wwlng°out_ 1",," m, “TQ m m, than vo .10: yneui-beis of the ctr-operative ent/erprize-a true democracy in have m,“ m mpgmm; mom’ gleam t-Zpluelflna the! bout. I ‘gel?’ gymlficmfn A112: which more than one-third of the population of “° °" “Mk - Canada have united for the mutual protection