i H E G U A R D H .- . . In-nu in-sum It in I . ,,,,.,.'.l.f'ia.;.'i'.. by no human On: A "Cover: Pl-Inn IIIIII l&IQ Ln. Editor. ti-III Iain..- Genu-Il MIIIIQQ, up A, aux M. on-'o.n...f.l'f” i 2 li offiii-I It summunf W ":54 II Second Clul )lIll by til felt om ONIII. Ind i I. . .. c : rmrlumtown, Bunnu-Illa H i . - 'i.':i:'.n P,E.l. u.oo. ouin nvviiicu.-':.W par IIMII ' - f -m-T-a 4 0 'Thv strongest memory it wean. an the weakest Ink." , -' TUESDAY, FEBIUARY I.- If The Clean Monflii Each month has its own spacial inter- at and beauty. February, while it i. per- maps a little less dignified, historically, than either of its immediate neighbours, January and March. both of which have, association with pagan deities, is at least not burdened with the two-faced characteristla of the one or the iv-ii--like propensities of the am. er. Elyniologically, at any rate, it is dean and white. In our part of the world it is usually clean and while in a physical sense, too. The snow sees to that as it covers evei'yt'ning in sight with its pure mantle, Perhaps it may be different this year-onelstates has never big storm (1005 "01 make I hald winter any Chiang Kai-slick has any title to it. lfshed In 1906 and, since then, translatedl into many languages. Wnile i.s Ill80lOglCali sense has been disputed. no one has ever denied its beauty or refused to see in it a reflection of utmost sincerity and evidencel of abiding faith in the Master whom he con-l tinues to serve with constant devotion. "He comes to us as one unknown, with- out a name, as of old, by the lake side, He came to those who knew Him not. Hel, speaks to u the same word: Follow thoui me'! and sets us to the tasks which He hasl to fulfill for our time. To those who obey Him, whether they be wise or simple, He will reveal Himself in the toil, the conflicts, the sufferings which they shall pass through in His fellowship, and, as an ineffable mys-i tery, they shall learn in their own experi- ence who He is." Ownership Oi Formosa There are those who say that in defend- ing Formosa, which prpvidcs sanctuary for Chiang Kai-shek, the United States is in- tervening in a Chinese civil war. But, as the Ottawa Journal points out, Formosa does not belong to China, and the United said nor agreed that For- l'lltil't' tl:.in now swallow makes a summer- mosa has not been a part of China since l and lJ01'H'dlJS 110?. There is no telling be-r1895; not at any time within the pl'G.x'Pnll forehand what it will do. Before its "brief. tenure" has come to an end we may witness the drifts piling up thick and fast; on the other hand. this chore may be passed on to its silcccssor. No one should fall into complacency, weathenwise, until the Ides df Ivlarch have come and gone. There are, of course, both good points and bad ones about the kind of winter we have had thus far. Some- find it delight- ful; othcrs find it annoying. One obvious advantage for the middle-aged and older is the opportunity it affords them to rem- inisce about the severity of winters in the past-how the snow used to pile up to the tree-tops, how the rixers were frozen solid from November to April, sometimes to May. The story would have no flaw if those irritating chaps called meteorologists l 20th century. Formosa and the Pasca- dores came under Japaiii-so rule alicr they Sino-Japanese war, and they were captured from the Japanese by the L'.S., not China. Further, when Japan after her surrender in World War II renounced "all title" to Formosa, no other power clainied it. Thus if any people have any particular right or claim to Formosa they are Forinosa's abor- igines, of whom there are quite a tow. At; any rate Formosa not being li-gully Chinesef territory, it is nonsense to hold that the U3 5. in defending it is interfering in China's business. Especially when the U. S. is; withdrawing from inlei'fci'(-iii-c with the off-shore islands, which are Chinese legal territory. Actually the U. S. dccision to defend Formosa, to hold it against the Commu- would only stay outof the way. This. up-inists, p1'ima1'ily has nothing to do withl fJal'9IlU.Y. lhE.V 31'? Unable 10 d0- What iS.Chiang, who himself has no title to the! worse. they insist on reminding us that, al- island. though the Northern climate is mellowing, no great improvement will be noted for an- other three or four hundred years, and that, taking one winter with another, the weather hasn't changed since "the old days." Perhaps-one says it grudgingly-they are right. It may be that the change is in Ourselves and not in our winter . Certain- -ly, a tlil'ec-loot snow bank looks bigger to a ton year old youngster than it does to a man of fifty; and it is the "big, big pictures" of youth that provideithe material for the dreams and rcflcctinns of maturity. In all likelihood the oldstcrs of 2000 AD. will be talking and writing about the terrible viintcrs of the early .305. l Genius In The Jungle Books of plioloinaplis, oncebumberedl among popular publications, 8.11 not pro-i duced in grvat numbers those days, for the simple rciison that they are not, as a rule, in much ilcmand. It can be safely predict- ed, hmwvcr, that one iwclitly published by Harlwr and I-lros. under the title "The World Of Alberlii Schweit'I.ei”' will find rcntly pui'cha.sci's in many parts of the world: it may cvcn rcacli the best-seller list. Moxlly pliotozriiphs by the dis- UIIEUWW1 liiW'0:.'1"dpliei' ljricu Anderson, cnvvrllig all llllilslls of tho famed mission- arys life in Africa, the book contains a bio- ginpliiciil sketch which, though brief, gives a good deal of information. It In by Mr. Etigiriic Exinan. manager of the-"publisher's 1'cli,'.:lous book (Jcparlniiiiit. 1)i'. Scllwcilzcr may or may not be the giwrati-st, humanilariiin of the century; but ccrlainly his place is not far from the top. Born in Alsace Jan. 14, 187.3, the son of a Vllllll,'l.' pllSl()I', ho sliowcd ability, amounting to gciiliis, in plillosopliy, llii-ology, and mu- Iic, at a very early age. whilg still in his twenties he had written scholarly works in the field of theology and been widely ac- clainicd for his niusical compogitlons. (To this day he remains one of Each: out- standing interpreters.) At the of thirty. having been Principal of I ,fl,1'ieologlcal Seminary for three of four yeaisl-he decid- ed that the time had come to fulfill his youthful dream of "devoting talent: to the direct service of humaniiy'.?'- To this and he went Into 'medical frIir&(;- and in 1913, having served his internjjlpyllo left for French Equatorial Africa wly,&,,p1tcI9t for occaslonul trip: abroad for and further study, he has been oveilllnen. di- voting his tulontg to the care otm moni,pclmluvu,i-glean known in X” .- lupl an Inuit Iiorvadng cllmh (, capacity for rel'lective thought." cost of :37. The . 1- name desk might have , York to Boston, I ill !or 3150- . . Hlolctiffer - Mulrdtli to Home concur- It is a measure of llllSlOI'fl de- fence and little flse. EDITORIAL NOTES American and Canadian cities are not the only ones that are growing. in 1021 Rome had a population of 700,000; oday it is close to 1,800,000. Even so, it still is some distance from its ancient. gioryApop-, ulation wise; for in the days of tile Caesarsl 2 million souls lived within its gates. O I C An educator dcsc1'il)cs the hldtllllnv teaciier as one "who is not a walking en-V Cyclopedia or a candidate for a quiz pro-1 gram, but wno is thoughtful, inquisitive, with the ability to induce in the siudc-nt a it sounds good, but is it fair or practicable to look for absoluie idealism in teachers whcn o h- er proiessional groups lay no claim to it? One of the most disturbing chaiigcs in the new Criminal Code wnicli goes inio ef- feci this year, is a provision depriving per- sons accuscd of being habiiual criminals of the right to be tried by jury and to appeal to a higher court against conviction. A group of Ontario lawyers recently asked the Government to amend the new code provis- ions, so as to restore traditional rights in such cases. Down in Carthage, Miss. (pop. 2.000) a 36 mile long railroad, which has served the town for 30 years, was to be abandoned on account of greatly reduced traffic. Did the townsmen accept the seemingly inevitable? Not they. Sixty-five of them, representing every economic group, pooled their resour- ces and bought it. The new owners are now busily engaged in drumming up business to protect their investment. At last report everything seemed to be going well. 0 A practical way of. stabilizing the dairy indusiry was suggested at the recent agri- cultural conference ln Ottawa by Hon. Colin H. Chisholm, minister of agriculture and marketing for Nova Scotia. If Canada with its population of 15,000,000 consumed as much fluid milk per caplta as does Swe- den, it would mean an increased consump- tion of over 1,000,000,000 pounds of milk or I creamery butter equivalent of over 46,000,000 pounds and there would be no surpluses in the dairy industry. i0 0 O 7, large metropolitan ti-es was given recently by former Gov- Tumor Dewey of New York. An office in duk, presumably his, was moved I distance d, I mile and I hull inf-Manhattan, It I min told him the" aim from New you-but miles. m min vii-mny the uaiimiiu ixuiltifia f&'IviIl(Kfrpm,l5..il ' A curious sldelilzht on the problem of no Htnfnc congestion in "W V Vi; . lime Out For S'i'ocid'akin OTTAWA REPORT Startling We may have a world of sur- plus food and no gadgets in the year 2,000 A.I)., In place of to- day's world of gadgets and no 0 . This is one of the startling pre- dictions made by competitors, for the prizes offered by the British ”Royal Society of Arts," for forc- casts of life on this earth at the end of the century. To Canadians. this is perhaps the must improbable- sounding of all the crystal-ball suggestions. for we have so many gadqels today that we could hard- ly face a day when we awoke in find thcm all gone. And we have so much surplus food today. that it is hard to believe that at this very moment there are hundreds of millions of human beings on this mrlli who are hiingry and who have neither well-sloc ;cd groi-e.c-rias nor money to satisfy that xilal need. The Royal Socity of Arts launch- ed this competition in connection with its bicentcnary celcbratloiis. Its purpose was to encourage im- aginative men and women to sub- mit cnnslructive ideas about our future. and to serve the useful purpose of directing attention to qnur future and its many but per- haps avoidable prohilem. I I Thc comoetilors lnclutlr-d school- bnys and houscwivcs. clcitgymcli and doctors. engineers and architects. I watchmaker. a bar- ber, I civil servant, I retired sol- dier, an evolutionary mystic. and a professor of classical archaeo- gy who now works as A bus con- ductor. Of course in Canada too we pay our bus conductors better than most of our teachers. and as we daily have the occasion to see the performance of the for- mer, we really cannot wonder that our children's education is a tragic incompetence. Among these misccllameous com- petitors. from countries scattered as far and wide as Britain and Australia, Nyasaland and New Zea- land. Borneo and Malta, South America and Italy, there were no Canadian entries reported. Moi-it entrants foresaw a dc- velopmcnl of present trends. and concentrated upon correcting ag- gravation of present problems. Traffic, war and overpopulation were rec-urren.t themes. 0 O Longer life expectancy and ,an increased blrthrate were seen as adding embarrassingly to our pop- ulation, so food supplies were dealt with at length. one sug- gestion was that potential moth- ers should be kept in cold stor- age. One interesting forecast was that food would be produced synthetic- View-Halloo (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Grand in the history of the Fifth Royal Inntskllllng Dragoon Guards. In case you are not up on these things, I drIgoon is a cavalry- man; Ind in the last three centur- len the Fifth lnnlsklllings in scar- let. green and Illver have charged across mlny I battlefield as though it were no more than I panda ground. The regiment. however. has not had I horse for almost 3) years. These dun its 700 men are Ita- wlth 45 Centurion tanks. But time should not be Allowed to change things that way believes It: com- mander, Col. Richard DeC. Vli- I on. so he ls urging his men to devote their spare time to fax hunting. Horne troops. youlknow. must not forget. hornet. But here's I bit of dime No matter how well it think: b anon I I '”?.'r to was I bit of mu- uh! Pre::liclio'ns Nicholson ally. A retired official of the Brit- lSll Coal Board suggested that I development of our present syn- thesis of vitamins would enable sugar and starches to be obtained 'iy artificial photo-synthesis, while .he four chemical elements mak- ing up the bulk of our food could be produced cheaply by means other than agricultural. Oxygen zind Hydrogen could be made by clc;-trolysis, nit .gcn could be cap- tured from the air, and carbon could be purified from the poison- niis carbon dioxide in our atmos- phcre. Tncse so-called "Synfuods would int only be cheap and plentiful. they would be health-giving and wholesome, and they would have a pleasant but unique taste. A few huge factories would make these new luiman foods out of inorganic Some strange results universal which are perhaps also forecast in a current comic strip. materials. would come from the adoption of Synfoods. The food barriers dividing cer- tain rt.-Iigioiis would entirely dis- appear. So would our farmers. for 10,000 workers in Syhfood plants would feed the entire nation. The immense overpopulation would be matched by supplies of food, but the world would become shot! of many- things such as metal. Pm- duction facilities would be unable to keep up with the great increase in demand. Presumably Canada would became one huge city from coast-to-coast. and our Trans-Can- ada Highway (if the lalzgard prov- inces have finished it by the year 2.000 A. D.) would just be our friendly but long Main Street. The metal shortage would bring I gadget shortage. But with ev- eryone ln the worlil being well-fed and healthy on Synfnods. the world would be a happy place. Prehistoric Indians of the Ameri- can Southwesi offer an example to today's discordant world of how man once solved I co-exisl.- ence problcin -- successfully. More tlrin 900 years ago two coiitrasting cultures met head-on within the confining walls of a remarkable communal dwelling, Pueblo Bonito, in what is now northwestern New Mexico. As dif- ferent as were their ways of life. the two peoples, about 1.000 in all, lived peacefully together for I century. The story of Pueblo Bonito is detailed in I new book. "The Ma- tcrial Culture of Pueblo Bonito." written by Neil M. Judd. associate in anthropology at the United States National Museum of the Smithsonian Institution and lead- er of a series nf National Geog- raphic Society expedltions to tha- site. O O O In 1920 the Society initiated I nrogram nf archeological research into the remains of the vanished Indian culture in Chaco Canyon National Monument. Mr. Jddd con- ducted preliminary surveys of the vast abandoned "apartment. house" of Pueblo Bonito there. Extensive excavations follovied from 1921 through 1927. Today the ruins stand I: I broken pile of terraced home! dug from under thousands of tons of earth, stone and sand. A maze of rooms revealed the record of the past in earthenware vessels, agri- cultural tools. ornaments and cere- monial paraphernalia, some dis- playing zreat beauty of form and rlet-oration. No written material was found. 000 Pueblo Bonito originated in the ninth or early tenth century as I cluster of rudely built y houses. Newcomers. presumably from the north, joined the older farm settlers near the mld-elev- enth century. These immigrants were cultur- ally more advanced. They took over management of the commu- iiusr mvs . , Tile Yukon Territory had I pt-Ik populntlon of 27,000 In the gold rush day: of 1801. llofrlgoratlon . ; Bepulu To All unke- APPLIANCES ' saws a smnvios iiotonsc . Rewludhguudlepdn x . .1. Successful Co-existence National Geographic Society nily without dcslroyiiiz the old in- hibitants. They possessed progres- sive archilcctual ideas and com- pleicly surrounded the first village in their initial building prnszrani. Twice thereafter they unhcsitating- ly razed their own and neighboring houses to make way for new structures. They made the pueblo nearly impregnable and added third and fourth stories to sum!- dwellings. 0 "Differences between the two peoples a"e evident in many ways," Mr. Judd says. "The one group was old-fashioned, unchanging; the other, alert and progressive. Each had its preferences in archi- tecture; each had its favored shapes for kitchen utensils. "Old Bonltian houses were built of sandstone slabs as wide as the wall was thick. Quantities of mud were required to bed the slabs evenly. In contrast, late Bonitian architecture consists of I core of rubble and adobe faced on both sides by neatly laid stonework." The original settlers stayed long- er It Pueblo Bonito, When the farm snll deteriorated the elev- enth-cenlury immigrants. used to I higher standard of living. left for greener pastures. What fin- ally became of them. or of the Ae4f7' WEDDING ANNIVERSARY 'TlIIt little flame you kindled long ago - when love and loyalty Joined hand I NOTESBY The trouble b that governments Ipparanlly Ire not sufficiently Iwutu of Canada's significant post- war expanalon. Although they recogniu it is taking placu. they Ieem to ink faith in the future. with hand. . h d Yet CInIdII would: of resources .3” 35:11:? 3:3, ""' do '" Ind ltI min; population Ihould mean that intelligent planning can ensure I tremendous growth In production and prosperity. To inIintIln the wee of develop- ment, however. the Ikllled ser- vice of I plentiful supply of unl- verslty graduate: in euentlal. Measures like I national system of acliolarshlpl In therefore ur- gently required. -Nanalmo Free Pi-cu. Where all may warm themselves who understand. " Your cllliillillren and your children's c l on move Iwithln. kthe lovely circle of its lg t.; 'And we with hearts to see. thIt seeing. love. gathered thitherwnrdl in Are ” shared delight. widening reach. And has no rim to its circumfer- ence. tlce. The objective of the heck- lei-, naturally. lI to Isk I question or burl I challenge c.-Ilculuted to derail the argument of I poll- tical opponent. This II, of course. good as far as it goes but an apt retort by I quick-wilted Ipeake quite often wins sympathy and applause from In Iudience. Still. the heckler. for the sake of an expected party advantage. takes the chance of the speaker scor- ing with I qulck come-back- and, in that event, should take the consequence in good part. Heckllng has never been the fine art. in Canada flint it has long been in the United Kingdom. or even in the United States. Per- haps by dint of the large ele- ment of caution: Scotl and courte- ous French in our population, the practice grew up of listening to the apeaker's Irguments. and re- fraining from comment till the speaker win out of hearing. Nor- mally, Canadian audiences listen In courteous if somewh A bored silence. That in, if they actually come out and listen. -Nanalmo Free Press. -Rosemary Cobham in the Christian Science Monitor. Contradictions In Coal (Windsor Star) Britainfs experience must make strange reading in areas of East.- ern and Western Canada which, like her. are rlcli In coal. She is forsiiking steam power for diesel- ization and electrification of rall- ways. and is happy about it. The Canadian areas mentioned are da- pressed by I similar trend. . In Britain's use. it illustrates the ” I few decades can make. In the Thirties the real "black areas” of Britain were the coal areas, where production was in the doldrums. When war brought a renewed demand for coal, production dragged. Discour- aged, many men had quit the mines, and not even nationalization and improved conditions could Perhaps becIuIe deep down In bring them back. Coal remuins in his mind he iI inclined to agree Silo" SuPDb'- with Shaw that the professions are But there is at least I partial ex- planation for Britain's better pool- tion in this new transportation age. A portion of her coal output in being changed into ”whlte coal." as electrical motive power. In our greater distancest diesellzatiun is I conspiracy against the lulty. the layman takes I llvaly pleu- ure In th: occasional uncovering of I loopholu in the monolithic seeming ramparts of the Law; thua. while nobody would be partl- . cularly happy at the thought. of claiming most of the old steam mm; young mm, (mm -1-Mung power field for itself. muquendmg as . gmup up. Yet the outlook for coal in I gun frog" moron,” and getting 5359 for mllway WW" may be away with it, there is still I cer- blacked 91" only '9mP0r8r"Y- The ulii delight in the discovery um. coal-burning turbine. still under- by . leg” ovouilm it 1., in point gmniz tests. theoretically is as sup- of fact. pergecuy proper for u erinr to the diesel as that enizme Engmh emu” to W", . Cu, is to the old steam. locomotive. It adiu uniform. 0," "ch civilian. could be a great stimulus to coal- . resident of Mappuley. Nam”, mining - but by that time will so ham. was hauled mm mu" ,9, many men have deserted ourlCa- nadian mineflelds that I required f,,e:.tll.3i'n:nm.e cgfggsmotoluntgwgug will be difficult to maintain? "JOURNAL" FOB WASHINGTON l NEW YORK (AP)-The Wall Street Journal today announced plans for publishing in Washing- ton. D.C.. starting in the late spring. Washington will be the fifth city in which the Wall Street journal has I publishing plant. Currently. editions with the same basic news content are printed in Chicago. Dallas, San F. f and New York. The Age Old Story from thrcrutlon of the world are clearly seen. being under- stood by the things that Ire made. even his eternal power In! 601!- head. CLEAN CLOTHES WEAR LONGER For Your Dry Cleaning Needs RITE-WAY CLEANERS Dial 7387 i Old Bonltlanii. remains I mystery. PROFESSIO N il”c7i'liFs.- BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS. Etc. Bell, Matheson & Foster 1.50 Richmond St. J. Elmer Blanchard, B.A. I65 Queen St. Phone 4232 M. A. Fanncr, Q.C., LL.B. link of Commerce Bldg. Gaudet & Haszard link of Commerce Bldg. Allison M. Glllls, LL.B. no Richmond st. nm on A. Walthen Gaudet, LL.B. Pllllllpl Bldg. 111 Gruflan St. Palmer & Easlum Bank of Non Scolln Bldg. Mutheson. Peaks 5 Nicholson 11: Gianna sine! J. A. in Currlo am; -mt ?Q:nI If. G. E. MIcMll'uI.'B.A.. v in Iuciimoiu I4. mu nu. Mufliee &i'.l'rIlnor' ' in Queen at. I& ,CHARTERED.ACCOUNTgANTs, .' . Chas. R. Mcqiuiia. B.A. 156 Richmond 8!. Dill 8011 OPTOMETRISTS G. F. Hutclieson & Sol r. G. 1lU'rcml:soN. 3.0. 53 Grafton St. DIII I822 J. A. Cnrruthen, 13.0. 128 Kent st. DIII Ill Byron J. Grant, 0.D. 120 Kent 84. Bill un H. J. Mlboll. 3.0. M A P. I. I. J. . I 3.0. 8 Ti”i.”'d.... .. corner In , office 0188: Inn on CHIROPRACTOR ARCHITECT (I. laid: Hindi 3. Ant. 1l.I.ii.1.c.. Iain-unite. h.:.i. - mu MIT rain of production, as in Britain. For the Invisible things of him- A.!'. Ilrcraftunan. Tho clinic was withdruwn when the prosecu- tor told the court that "lnqulrlu of the Royal Canadian Alr Force Iuthoritles in London showed that in 193 It the lmperlll Confer- ence it was resolved that the domlnloiu were to be Iutio- nomous con-imunltlu. In 190! the Statute of Westminster gave ef- fect to that resolution. and an amendment to the Army Act, 1932. brought lt Into line with the stat- PIS0 4. The Guardian l l mlnlom forces were no longer Har MI1:iity'a forces within iiie moaning of the Act of 1894." Ap. patently the R.C.A.F. has taken the Iuuestlon thIt lt ll not pay; 0' 391' MIJBGIYI forces In I slur, TM i-rouecutor l1II.felt compel. led to make I further Itatemeni; "They In Her Majesty's dumiii. ion forces, but they are not Her Majesty": forces within the mean. in: of the Uniform: Act, 11134." -Hamllton .Spectatoi-, CInIdI'I force: today 3,, Semi! Youths who. having sampled civilian life with its ease freedom. comfort. and relative! safety, hIvI deliberately chosen I sterner wIy. However , much 'And so the love you cherish each Buckling in II Inclent Ind Ic- condition: of service have im- for each ceptad British pastime in con- PNVBG. there still, remain the Becomes the center of I blessing, nectlon with election ' , reslmentntlon. discipline and on. whence and Canadians and Americans 035M131, dshlpy inseparable A iadiance spreads with ever luv; tacitly gpptovgd me pg'.c- from mlllfalry training. The as. pirlng recruit. knows thi I ll well II be known that! mquiii: Navy. Army or Air Force be will find comradeshlp, good food recreItionI1 facilities and tin; chanc for travel, adventure and advancement, He II also swam that If trouble comes he will be in it It the rink of life and limb. Every Canadian who fought in, over or around Korea made this choice when he walked into the recruiting office or entered I ser- vice collegc long before Korea be. came I battleground. -Brant. ford Expositor. Putwur lnflIIlou ought to havu taught Itatesmen that the need- iest classes living on fixed in. come: from the state or their own DIR IIVHIII suffer nnneceasa iiy for the annual prolpority, Gov. u-nmenu benefit in inflationary periods bIcIuso when dollIrii lose value government. debt become: leu burdensome. More tax dol- lIrI roll in and if necessary gav- ernments can protect themselves by hiking tax ntu. They should give more thoughtto helpless vic- tims of fixed incomes. That's why we say even thou who have bought government Iunultlu should be considered In needing relief Just II much In those on allowanou. This in one problem which Ionu economists believe that govornmantl can no longer ovcrlook.-Vancouvor Sun. We not: that 40 communities h another part of Canada In band- ing togotlur II I Iupcr-industrial drive. They are pi-IctlcIlly cir- culuizliig tho world. writing to Britain. this United States. Aus- tralia and just Ibout Ivorywlien. cltlu tho merits of the genurnl Iron in which they In locntod Ind bidding Ill Ind sundry to uomuand utup industrial houn- keeping. They point out, among other thing, that "flu whole of Canada II on the march. Ind be- fore many yours 0:: country's population will be doubled." Thur mnybo gold in "them that hllla" but one bu no obance of finding It unleu In sou after R. The um: with I olty.orICllIn1- but of Commerce. You've got to tumouthohntndkuoplton. Prouun-constant, unremitting though, of oourn, with courtesy touod in for uood men- uro, ll wlilt bring: business or nsults lI any direction.-Nan uta. It thereby followed that do- Ilmo Free Prgu. AND 00. Since i ouloeu cnannornrowu - HYNDMAN INSURANCE 2 LIMITED 1873. IUIIIIIIIIJII - uownaul brood-new ollzlonzy-win HIOI. A 'plocwuhloolI0...I Illofwo Iovovid...-odouyonllo budget . . . Curb-gnln Iii. IIHOI lnlnh .. . bum duvet polio... not-panel Noel podouds Modem. "Mi-saving, noltly bull-Mn Landau new diet group lnnrpudu II on Ingonlou fauna of duly you've not Vtlnlul . . - Iluu any A new 'lllll)l'(li in flllllitl rrflicicncl . .l ncw furniture lirnup that has cvizrvthingz