\ ,}Pl\éI!_I'_0L_11_t < . IIIE GIIATZLOTTETOWII Gllllllllll, ""'-T'ii§.{i2.; niiiTliisiiTasiiiTiiii 'NIlfl0D~-—:ll;il-bh\-7Il- w can-Gila rial-m Vieo-rrealdent: J. l. Inna“. IJ l. inertial-y: ueni. ca. p. a. Alaolllull. D-ll-u illllll um managing Director: J. l. Burnett. FJ-a. lhfibun: suitor-a. l-‘nna Walker and Heat all A Burnett. ‘.N VJa. 10p Active 80m“) 7H. Siliiiinyegli MeiTory 1a Weaker ‘Hull me Weakest Ink.‘ ' M0 iijiioyshsbr. 5.1m _ . .___._ The Japanese As "Ally" Japan's readiness for treachery as far back as the last war, ivlien she was Britain's ally. ivas discused by “hillillllllbslflitl in one of his recent “Current Affairs" broadcasts from London. The lapanese had made elaborate preparations dur- ing 1914-1918 to fonient an anti-British revolt in India as soon as Germany should have won that war in Etirope. At the 1211i. Peace Conference in 1910. Steed said. a moment came when the lapariese delegation had to make plain its position about the future of the Shantung peninsula in China. Held in readiness should the lapanese attitude be recalcitrant and should they claim that their lov- alty to the Allied cause merited SDKiB-l COMKI‘ eration, were a number of documents. Included among them was a set of instructions which had been secretly sent in Chinese code, by the lapflfl" ese General Staff to its agents in India. These instructions had been intercepted-and decoded. IJJr-ig after the war, \Vickham Steed discus- sed the documents with a British officer who had been in charge of the British Intelligence Service at Singapore. This officer told Steed that his iob in i015 hzid been to organize a" efficient service of llllfiflllillitlll in the Pacific rCEiOn 811d the Far East. He was hampered by lack of funds, \Vhere he could spend only a few score pounds the Germans and laparicio Spent 3101-15‘ ands. Then by a stroke of good fortune a (iernian cheque, drziwn on a Dutch bank 8i Butavia for a considerable amount, fell into the officer's hands. lie turned the money to 200d account. In due course he heard from his agent in lapan that a certain professor of moral _DI'llI' osophv at 'l‘okyo University. a. verv etiitrient lapanese scholar, “ivould soon feel flu ifrflifitlbl‘? urge to study Indian Buddhism. and that it would be well if every facility 5011111 b6 Efflfflfld him, and if a sharp eve were kept on his activit- ies. . . . After a few months the learned lapfltl‘ ese \VlSllC(l to send a preliminary report of l1lS studies to Tnkyfi, He gave it personallv to the Captain of a. lapanese ship about to sail from Calcutta. . A photographic copy of that re- port remained in India. It contained a full list of all the instirrectionarv centres which the Dro- fessnr had organized. together with suggestions for code lllU>~Il2P< to be sent to themf’ Quite A Contrast President R. C. Vatighart of the Canadian National Railways has given the Railway Com- mitlee 0f the IlOlise of Commons some interest- ing statistics with respect tn the operations of the Hudson Bay Railway. which with its terminals. represents a capital outlay of more than $59.‘ 000.000. and which, .\‘Ir, Vaughan says. will never pay its war, The rep°ft of the Eéfleral manager of the Bay line. l. G. MBCI-fichlan- shoyved an operating deficit of $554.Q40'i0\' the fiscal year ion-is. wmnared with $47,872 the previous year. Mr. NfacLachlan said a (ICfICVII nf,$5oo,0oo was estimated on the current Veal’ 5 operations. Contrast this lavish waste of money with thfi wav the Province of Prince Edward Island has been stinted in the matter of transportation needs. and the Nlaritime Provinces in general for that matter. And then some autocrat like Mr, Howe gets up in Parliament every now and then and tells the Nlaritimes to stop their “yap- ping!" » Nova Sc0lia's Example As part of its industrial expansion DIO- gramme the Nova Scotia Government has ear- marked a million dollar capital fund for the es- tablishment of a bureau of research. The bureau is to be set up to investigate “newer and better methods of_ processing and marketing the pro- ducts of the mines, fisheries, forests. farms. and other industries." It is to be headed by a com- petent scientist, staffed bv industrial experts and supported by interest earnings of thefund. Premier Macdonald and his Cabinet are set- . ting out on their re-election to office with the avowed aim of doubling farm production with- in the next ten Wars. jective will mean increased outlays on agricul- tural education, superivsion. experimentation and marketing. This should be of interact to our Own Pro- vincial Government and its reconstruction com- fnittces, and of course to our farmers and the taxpayers in general. Itxis time that somethinl! qioncrete was developingin the way of agricul- ‘inn-at rehabilitation in Prince Edward Island- The actions of the Macdonald Government in ‘ Nova Scotia will bear watching in this connec- tiph. ~ If they can double their productive capa- ei why not we? Are we paving enough atten- o agriculture? As the Opposition pointfld the last session of the Legislature. while Province is spending huge sums in other dir- opapand going behind to the tune of nearly rsfilllian dollars annually. the agriculture esti- t “mains at practically the same figure year shear, At one time it represented a maior m, The figure stands roughly at $7.<.- ‘ .:... in today about one-fortieth ()1 our ttitldial expenditure. Is that a fair pro- . v ’ ' province almost entirely dependent tilting, and which boasts of having a * er as well as a farmer Minister of SDI ' Newfoundland ccording to the New a a hopefless slum. na- g- Commission Govern- Ytiily itigwestorlng a seni- lltvv‘ ~l!\lf Slwillfl" tilt. Qh ‘Americana. withdraw To reach any such ob-_ from the _Aiicient Colony the prospects are not lJFlRl-ll- fl-Ommellting on this in Toronto Glob; “"4 M04. Mf- l. V. McAree says: "There is no such thing as a trained teacher. At the present time children go straight frbm school into teaching. with absolutely no train. mg. and frequently before they have reached’ matriculation standard. This gives a glimpse of what the ‘education of the average Newfound- lander must be and explains why the people were unable to make self-govermnent work. It per- haps explains, too, why to the average New- fouiidlauder the word politician is a. somewhat ZBHIRI Synonym for rascal, for which there is some iustification when he recalls the graft, speculation and misrule that existed when New- foundlanders were presumed competent to han- dle their own affairs. The war has done a good deal for the merchants in St. l0hn’s. and while the fisherman has had more to spend in recentl years than ever before .ie cost of living has in- creased to such an extent that he is little beflgf off. When this temporary prosperity ends, as it is about to end. he will have little td fall back upon. so swamped was he by the depression. —l':l)l IURIAL NU [ES- Tlie busiest men this week will not be the potato gatherers but the Victory Bond salesmen. I‘ * l- I Lauzon and Co. now in durance vile, no doubt must be cursing the day they learned to gamble, for it was their betting on horse-races here that led to their arrest, aftefa Canada-wide police hue-and-cry. 4 it I The 5th November marks the anniversary of three prominent events in history —— the dis- covery and prevention of the English gun-pow- der treason, the inauguraiton of the English rev- olutioii of 1688 by the landing of William III in Torbay, and the victory of the British over the Russians at Inkernian in the Crimea in 1854. as a: It‘ 3' Principal beneficiary of the estate left by Dr. Iohn Bond of Winnipeg, who died Aug. 22, 1945, is the British Government which will re- ceive $24,314. His will stipulates that the sum mentonetl is to be given to the British Govern- ment to be applied toward the cost of the war. I i i P.‘ It is up to the Tones Government tonight to decide whether we shall go forward as a Prov- ince or put another nail in our coffin. All the great cities, all the progressive growing cities. are centres of congeries of smaller communities. London, New York, Montreal, Toronto would be as nothing were they not fed and enhanced by the outlying communities which make them their shopping and industrial centre. Let Charlotte- town go and do likewise, beginning at-the Ai-rport settlement. 1i l! 1i Will we be able to "cash in" 0n the Island's growing popularity at Ottawa? That is the ques- tion, and it will require a tinited pull or push not only of our own representatives, but of the Maritime block and, friends of the Island in other parts of Canada as well. to get the Gov- ernment and government bureaucrats to give us a measure of fair play as regards transportation and many subsidiary (iucstions. n at ... a I Railways prospering these days. Canadian Pacific Railway Company has given notice it will redeem all of its 4 1-2 per cent Collateral Trust Gold Bonds of 1960 as at lanuary ’, 1946, at 102. This is a two-pay issue and $25,000,000 were outstanding as at December 31, 1944, out of a total funded debt at that time of $105,883,- 000. It is understood that the funds for this purpose were obtained through the sale at New York privately of an issue 2 per cent onc-to-ten- year equipment trust certificates, being similar to the procedure adopted in lune. 1944, when the company redeemed $27,400,000 in 5's due 1954. I 1' Q ‘I How many women electrical engineers have we in our midst? In these ultra modern times every housewife shouldJiave a working kiiowl- edge of electricity. The first women's electrical exhibition which opened in London recently shows the wartime achievements of Britain's wo- men elcctrical engineers. One item in a wide range of new electrical equipment and devices for homes, schools, health and public services is a. new cooker n-iade of transparent plastics which enables the housewife to watch the progress of her various dishes while they are cooking. Other advantages are super-speed heats. flexible sim- mer controls and automatic‘ oven regulators. 1i ll‘ U‘ Hon. Vincent Massey, High Commissioner for Canada in the United Kingdom. and Mrs. Massey, Gen. Sir Ilastings Ismay, (Ll-L, K.C.B., D.S.O.. chief of staff to Prime Minister Attlee. and Lady Isniay, and many other noted people were among those who sailed in the liner Queen Elizabeth from Halifax on Wednesday, Civil- ian passengers numbered 37S. one of the largest _gr0ups of civilians to sail from Canada. since the end of the war. Others of note among the pass- engers included Philip Noel Baker. Parliament- ary Secretary to the British Minister of Trans- port, Dr. Benjamin Gregory. Primate of the Methodist Church in England. Mrs. I). S.- Arch- dale, Canadian representative of the Children's Overseas Reception Board, well known here; Ln-Col, D. E. Maclntyre, head of the Canadian Legion, and directors of many large British com- parties. “We never doubted that we and our Allies would win the war (says Mr. Wiokham Steed. former Editor of The Timer, over BBC). So it was easy for me to say, week by week. h w things were going, and to tell you iii the Fiii s- lands that we were rtbt dowiihcarted. I had only to tell the truth as I saw it all around me. But the way our people behaved made one proud to be it's all over and we have to get babk to the ways of peace. This may be harder than it was to _keep cheerful during the war. It’: easy to be brave in time of danger. It isn't so euv to out up with discomfort when the danger la past. Still we shall do that too. Food may be. scarce. clothes may be shabbvrtaxes may take away half lof what we cam. We shall grumble while-we set g ‘about making England, and the Commonwealth and Empire. better places to live in than they ever were. P-ut t... have learned that we are all CHAR!" an Englishman, iust as it ought to make you e proud to be citizens of the British Empire. Now p lmembers of one great faintly who mult go o helping each other." ' ' ‘ OFPTQW" ..FUABD "i Notes By 77w Way ' The [PIN of permanent nan- missions 1n the Royal Indian Navy and the Indian Army yin in fut;- ure be restricted to Indiana and w other persons domipfl , in Didla who are subjocta of Maj- est or of a Prince or a in In . The recruitment of offic- fll‘! m the Royal Indian Al: lbreo Is already subject to this pastrie- Wn- A5 l temporary expedient, however. and 1n order to 11n- eri" in“ regul o er y to European officers o! the m; xlndlan Navy Reserves. Thla enable the Royal Indian Navy to obtain offlcers of intermediate seri- fority wit. war agar-fence, a cate- K°W to 1.11 whl a sufficient number of Indian officers 15 nor. at present available. -»- Indian In- formation Service. A llllle courtesy, please! The courteous motorist ls better shun the mere law-abiding motorist, He 110i only keeps the law. but he 6055M"! thfi Piihte and the feel- 1118: of others. The courteous motorist does not make left turns from wherever he happens to be; he proceeds cautiously to the middle of the road waits for the green light, looks before and be- hind, and approaches the cross- walks with care for pedestrians caught 1n the change of the slg- ml. The courteous motorist dues not speed up, blast hls horn and wlilz around a right tum because the signal 1s green. The People on the crosswalk: may be inconsid- efflie; 686m. they m}? be children or aged or blind. gh speed at an intersection always ls danger- ous. The courteous motorist does not; sound a horn except as u safety measure, Honklng horns to express haste, nervousness and ir- ritation never 1s courteous, If there were more courteous motor- ists there would be a lower traf- fic death rate. —- Guelph Mercury. In Dre-war days Japan prn- duced seven eighth of the world's commercial silk. Thir constlmted its chlef export Industry and was one of the key props of its peace- time economy. Now. however, as the country adjusts itself to com- plete defeat, lt must look to a future 1n which this particular business — once offering a means of ltvelthood to great numbers of Japanese - will largely disappear. As pointed out. by a Department 01 Commerce economist, Japan may continue to have a large domestic market for silk, but the American sales outlet will be drastically cut down. Before the war, we bought up almost ninety per cent of the country's total exports of the com- modity, but from now 0n we are likely to buy not more than twenty m: cent and possibly as little n5 per cent. It. 1s not the war, however, that has been the prim My cause of the undermining of this once-great export business in Japan. Even 1f the Japanese had never launched their crlmlnal ag- gression, this situation would a1- most certalnl have confronted them now. T e reason for 1t, 1s the development of the synthetic rayon and nylon, particularly the latter. The silk-worm, 1n short has been made obsolete, n large measure by technology, and an important are; ,of pre-war em- ployment 1n Japan thus has been greatly contracted. By intensified cultivation of the land and the posslblecevelopment of new 1n- dustrles, the Japanese 1n f-he years ahead may be able to support. themselves 1n their small home Islands, but clearly they will have s? easy time of fta-Washlngton ar. Tmpgln‘ ll allll an Important occupalon 1n Canada, as an ex- hibit 1n the Royal Ontario Mus- eum reminds urban dwellers. Right now the trappers are preparing for their active season and 1n, the backwoods stores are ordering tra and ammunition, and flour. aal, tea other 517243105. Some trappers will return from their trap lines for a Christmas visit, but others will not oome back to the settlement with their catch until after the Spring breakup. Bales of furs will be sent from the local to the large centres. Much of t, along with pelts from the fur farms, will help to swell our export trade. ..When the Hon. Pierre B, Mign- pult retired from the Bench at an age which statutorily commands a Jurist’; resignation from the Bu- greme Cfirt of Canada, and was ly reminded by a friend that the full and useful llfe that. he had lived merltede period of rc- pose, he aftnbly replied: “I feel lf I were content merely to klll time, that time very soon would kill meP-Montreal Gazette. in as "house assistants", and they WlII be trained for their lob 1n special centres. Formation of a company b0 provide the training centres was‘ announced in Iandon to more than 100 housewife supporters of the Women's Adjustment Board Com The scheme, run from a large London house, will include an employment bur- oau where ‘omeatlc elp can bl.- ivnsiifed- bimiiairiudiliiiyflfigiii’ or The flgiuea recently made pub- lic about the damage caused Engliah bufldlngii by the bombs of the enemy emphasize still fur- ther that for England the war was n O l PUBLIC ‘roizun I nu nine h us: lie tho Narmada: N!!! $2.9M... Efllaaillu loan larly ollaraa 50f onrralpondaa run POTATO MAI-Kl‘! Sin-Just amwoek I80 a w fir; of Robinson i not u u» ovlllw . u , e . callnd bsblesmik. ‘malt 1i Canada 1a ‘Ikxonto. 07 h“! a number of wholesale nausea 1n nprth-em Quebec and Ontario, many branches 1n the States, their head office 1n "Minneapolis Over the plot‘. I have shipped them between I000 explained that I had only shipped one car of tablestock tbla reason. I was not interested 1n doing buri- ness without a profit. I gave him the manna o1 tho principal ahtppors from one and of the Island l0 the OthI. I told htrn tn take his oar and no at. he could do, and 1f he failed, to come back and see ma. He was back on Wednesday. I told hlm I would invite some of my friends in to have lunch with mo from outside Charlottetown, we would sell him twenty-five can in twenty-five seconds, or fifty cars 1n fifty seconds if he tzd,flicrri' that, we would Bet them dill li- the earliest possible date refrig- epatord were available. Thursday I was enjoying lunch with 111m at the hotel w an a very important phone came for him, He was instructed to so tn Maine as early as possible. "Clarke would ‘make arrangements." He asked about the automobile. “Sell 1t; to Clarke. its will buy at; a reasonable price." I boug t the car. Through a. friend of mine I got u priority and put on tho plane from hero to Through axiother friend of directly to Iiklne. Since arriv- ed his firm five bmiaha- r N- quirementa nan-than a and Ontario from Maine. tulato wngra Lawn on listening to a propodt and attempting m put 1t in forev- During our numerous phone con- versntlons I the unlus the American potatoes were allowed. to come into Canada, 1n a. legal way, New Brunswick (and I use NB. as an lllustrptilon only). could ship Maine otatoea tagged as New Brunsw k'a. Why not, 1f they were needed, do 1t 1n a. proper way? I this 1a going tn clean up the lack market. 1n bableatock po- ta toes. Let, me do a little reviewing. Back 1n Augux 1928 I had a con- tract for tablestiock. The farmer was paid $1.26 a bushel. I want to tell you “how this order became poa- atblo Col, Elli P011 all! t0 my said. and to! mo um ho 1m given an option for ao many days to the manager of the Harris A - batolr 00.. also the maul!!!‘ c! the PEI. Potato Growers, and he was giving me the auno privilege. on twenty-five can o! fool, tablet-flock, my opttriin fall pment e. I would make a at. $1.00 per bu I decided that trip. Qn my return he naked me 1f I had sold his twenty-five oars. If I nqd, 1t was all right, ‘but he thought the thins l a 110-210 better. 1 told him, "Yes. I him mid the twenty-five ca‘ and an- other twenty with them. but your rice 1s gaining to be 81M w 1110 iirmer. at news have-you from the other boys?" The reply was "they haven't contacted ma.” I started at the Monk-Bland Co.at'l‘lknlah,leamedowl ta 0'Leary. I spent, a little longer than usual at Wellington because I. bought thirty slx oars there. then I drove to Freetown, t» Car- leton, and then I took a day or two off. A few days later than that I went east. I waa firm 1n Mop- an old established fugue that they had been very busy, they hadn't been 1n touch with the produce business, but. 1f I was able-with ust a. few years‘ experience in sellng potatoes, to buy at. $1.25 the were B1111 filli- they would got 1.50. I drove down to lower Monique. I was more successful there I bought five cars. Oh, ‘I had plenty places in P. E. Island that I call- ed upon Including an established firm 1n Sour-ts, who just told me to run along, that they were glad to have the latest. news from the potato market, but they would not sell at $1.25. ‘That. order was the Tourtellot order. What some of the boys did not know was that. I was sellln them strictly on corn- w Ni the money in Char- 1.3 Bummeralde, th per bushel. . 4 The following year I had an- other biblestock contract, about pne hundred and thirty cars. The prfce was eighty cents. My friend, Ool. Full, took advice from mem- bers whom he was then associated l” with, and he took a trip to Maine. He passed up the eighty cents. Wu have often laughed about. 1t, since. He sold that fall at thirty-five cents. Now I say to the P. It. Island farmer do not take advice from those who are not. lpoelalfalng ln the potato business. Do not inks advice from those who look to the Proylnclpl Government. and the Federal Government for advice 1n earns for- offloafcr number of you! ' and 1500 care of tableatook, but I . in/imrmr/imii. ‘Ibaycanlarlblnoutuudarcbanoaaapfmadaiaa andpuchiminhospitak Noqifaoazmens He will needJopg medical cl!!- wllfll II ll well again, i... will need training t.» a amid» anglmany otherthinga. So we must rake over, until he is apbnewmn. That is one of the jobs you: Victory 1A8 dollar: mun do. It’: a lob that cannot wan. ‘ gvcfvwtnw mum) lllllllllllll IIIIIIIS 0E safely 1" \ \ DUI‘ study the ll only a node It party has ada and ."’-1¥.'.:". writln The C dlvlduala aonn 0t. E EI- B :3 and of industry seed than the provfoua yea auntie: Mountains, Sakai , and are really right. uiiato the 11w never y'w1l an not looking for eonttnu market. and a vlae the beat attention from editors." nother ancient peat has turned upuwlth a modern grandll- e that I could buy potatoes without paying more than tka ca . more have ham a. lot of changes at on“; in the potato us cu Lwould think u P. l. land grew this year, an acreage of approxi- itnualtéliy seventy per cent more cer- l’. luch ae Katahdtru year uld go 1n next: r cent. cer- sland. This we want. II" V a k guarantees. cl advise our farmers to U.B.A. crop report. There n_ imaginary line between United States. If 1f 0123'“ don't 11nd their lthe a through tariffs, come under-ground. at the ceiling but I ed black I am. 5g. 01s.. FRANK . CLARKE. pestering/The Editors (Ottawa Journal appears the So ) clnl Credit an official organ 1n Can- lt has been complaining that the party's su porters are not lending enou h "etters editor" to duly and weekly newv to the recommend contlriuoua on the following aubjectii ‘keep 1t lhort‘ to get C. F. party tried that. time-employed n man to write etteru to be signed by other 1n- but the newspapers on to 1 l n bullet-a newl- W r pa ‘r. ofge’: liavo to be large- an are. The "lettera” column to which readers may contribute serves uleful pur one 1n newspaper: but that uaefu ear 1f or anlzied aatempta 1 ‘ucgeiiodle to abuae tli 1 a a an a e r v- P. E. Island was about. forty cents t1 p dlu cou d by Individu- eu would aoon y made just — "Canadian Editor- la Enterprllel". More brl ht lads erauade certain t t ey have aufflcl- 1M4. While here he took-an active pantntheltfeofttiiacltyarida hoot of friends w111- be pleased by 111a well-earned promotion. The p9 lo of the Maritime Pro- yfnces wll be proud o: the m. vancement won by these men 1n the world of banking-proud that W!’ “Imperative small auction of the Dominion turns out ao many‘ men with the character, ability, vision and i-ritezlt to climb tn the top of the blfl g ladder. Priiflilililiiilal ttiirils ' I .. llall lllgglns Char-lull Manual-car 144 Ilpbfnobl S1,. _ ; Charlottetown Tel. 5U‘ , P.O. Box 6G --_--__.._ .l.l. IIIEQIIGIILBJI. hogan}. no. , aaiuulai. aoucrroa cualllmpnonac \ vo~\ __, M. ALBAN FARMhR p a. u. t-'-. Mont! 1'0 LOAN IABBIBTII; siitroirolr. arc. - GIIAILOTTETOWN Canadian Bank at Commerce niugl ALEX WQMATHIESOb-I Oflloa: IO Grdat Gllltgg siren annoy. to Loan » Collection ILIIIBTII, HOLICITOB. ETC} H. F. McPhee B.A. K.C. Norapy m. BARBIBTER. souorroa lllcy Bulldill: ' l" linletown 111513173. W "rumson Baglagm-Ebzlloltora, ‘a, L, Ill-LA". ' D. L. MATIIIEBON. LLB" ll-C. ' 150- Mahmoud . gt, Charlottetown, PJJ. vdZJQm/zwi. Unlike tlia clever dreamer: of to- av Who spin their gouemer to steel and back . To sllkenkdreaml; not an lm/gnlor-g Their rgiimt bralnl 1611...: "m, better w To turn a wh ‘i we ee or reach a higher Not consldlciuily, not wisely, not W Pa With no great fnniuy of rise of man He aet null westward on the track- aa main. No 11015313121: for atubborness, no P Emil. no visionary say; For promise of a gold reward, H nave, he lP-Illgyrtlrl pioneer 1n all men's delwrflle Ilmbler on a fateful PALMER, 9 HASLAM a. I. mi pair. B.A.. ma. IAI IITIR. ITO. lllll of Nova lentil Chamber: Charlottetown. P. l2. I. - MONEY 1'0 LOAN Hamel! r P. 0. a" t1 Richard- B. Johnston ‘..‘§.°"l" bk‘ . 0f .. 11.. Prince pain-i iii-mi” fiuueawr tn < Lalo llflilrIll-Jphnatoni lo 1M0‘ suite W. _ $111k Strut avast sxiiiiiiizn ‘ AND cusses FITTED J. 8. Taylor OPTOMETRIST Con: I 9P ‘Tlllluuglllflllflll one l 111930 Allllllnlmanta sea, I-lnwlttlng father of a world to be. —Sergeant Harold A lebeum, l jibe New York HeraI Tribune.“ " Frederic A. Large l: one llaaldonoa I018 ewa ra to ublfcxfty ‘l3?’ their n’t of p tlnnthropic effort 1t or ‘any can afford. Maritimers Forge Ahead Relieved avg: perm: 1who la troubled Ill 1n the ainmlcb‘ "M" t a imp of ‘m Ivalra £maoh Mixture and 1e’ . 11b f th 3.281; blowout: all o8 In kiwi-shill? amide i»? m- lk..'lfi‘..”.‘°.l'l2.'.l‘.°i£, ‘i.‘"...‘§‘°a....’l -—- . lit-flu"- "w-m m3‘- IIM b? m9 l-"fiwlfh. W l!" but I em quite aura that the Uni i515! JIIIII TIIOIIIIII 101ml!) y, I "u" " n‘: w" We" PM" d’ flyslllfll- It lted suites with about sixty mllllon -- ‘i’ ' l! m"! W"! W" d"? “i” m“ bushels surplus over last year and There will be with intact 1n m u" "mm- mvwle of the Envlhh people W“ Clilllidl TE 0d to be six millions this wt of Canada in the an- ,“ "' "" "WWW"- "I"! ti" 9"!" ‘Klimt Whkh u" l'°'°°5 short, (wh ch I doubt very much), noimoumnt that. Mr. J.A. McLeod Pa’. “"m"m' “f” °f "l! l-“fiwlm "N hufhd- N° Ottawa fully realuu now that. liq‘ been elected chairman of the l‘ P" um‘- lm it is elm’ thlt the View’! v1 their schemes 1n the have m“ hoard of in. Bank a Nova await. Imclnnd Wu a nmwl vlctorw- absolute failures. frmuis black in» m. ma. put-m a him ‘i - llontrell 5mm. mar at. had been some t S» u- prudent, that ur. mum -—— the farmer, rather than to he s1 Crockett nu been named Qjgcuflyg 7'" $15M" 4°57"! "u" culator, I might have maid. let 1t vilowpgulqqrt Qflfl my; , ' - ' .§?l“§...i‘$§l.i‘° bymtrfé Dfiifftmiili ilfiitjfflfln}, "$13M? f" mggg- 1111mm . im- m» RESTQ “In . uwardlrli‘: ‘of ma Pang‘: 2151:5112 I ‘ 3 . » BIO O - aoniiealng that. cannot much 1on1; ‘ w” 3".“ h" ‘slit. “"1 1a ‘1’..""..?.i§‘.““".‘3 u . . - plain that. o thewfiepirtzuogt i ‘ °$.."'.“i‘”l.“'ril’.°'f“°' iflifit‘ mini "“'-‘ "hi." ill"? N I PO 1 h . mun 11¢ the a theatre III b ., for slit month: on they earn Imam % P?§""‘i M" ‘are. "fill I ' B .. Greiiadixera 0f ti‘): flung on; one 1m id” mun -- 1m at: fi, "m," m"- thori u to ; _ * .. l’... siflt" art ‘- ‘m I U“ t t thing Tao“ a to he a" . m“ Wnql"! plmaat heyoifl - Wild » t. ; .~...:. Fur Fuot llliiionts "W's-r- m» Phillipa Iufldhir. iii Grafton st GIIIBOPIIIIIST "M" ""' P- o- - i" Qulqguul» ' _ "IAIIQPITITQWN. P- l. l. u. J. A. BROWN, m1 ' Outhnpedic McLeod 9 Bentley . - -. QM" __ w. a. nanny. a. o Cggaflrownfifi; '3' l‘ "l"!!! l- 0- ' I -' and ‘ i Law I inc-mm sum Ga“, may “ass.- v-v. Lharles R. NlcQuaid I. A. Ili-rl r; liilliiltor. - I . Ila. lllfil. Illiilfllll ' ‘Mcoooo-o-oo-‘oooo-oe- ____..-.-.._... .. ii. ll. iioiiii: a co. Chartered Accountants '1 ‘ cam-mu» {impala I ‘A 4A vubiii? fsiéiiogi-spher t. It. "In" ire l x . 4 u» i- l. l