“m-SFBQQ“ .5. straw ‘ii i: l“ .0 . , . ’ llllllunlzttlwlt lllllltlln trinrrta.s.r.rtaa.":li"~' lt-lrirz‘ ——v— i. I . " I‘ Pnulk a. .1. n. a n- n immu- no noun» ‘i’ "Pa." u’ ‘u’ ' n. K._(J||rrle. A-ul-ulu Train’. . WEbNPETiSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1920 fsnlntrli‘ lxcmalsns The Pat-riot is merrily dancing around a_ remark made by ell-Premier Arsenault in connection with ‘the increased sessional indemnity and increased sal aries to government officials when the subject was brought up for discussion at the last session of the legislature. The Patriot is very careful in its select- ’ ion of extracts from Mr. Arsenaulfis speeches. ‘ i ‘Itisquite true that Mr. Arsenault stated that, if, as an inducement, he were offered $2,000 to accept the premiership, he would not take lt._It is also true, as the Patriot has forgotten to tell its readers, that Mr. Arsenault strenuously objected to any increase in salaries or sessional ind-emnit-ies, UN- TIL THE QUESTION WAS SUBMITTED TO THE PEOPLE THROUGH THE MEDIUM OF A GENER AL ELECTION. _ I ‘ _ t)“ )1,“- 19th in {ht} legislature lion .\. l:.. .\rscll.'lult lilott-tl, I seconded bv .\lr. ll. l). .\l\.'l-t‘flll, tht- following resolution to nu atticlidtllctlt to the Ttlsatitm .\ct: "\\'~'licrr:is the policy of the Lihclitl purl)", wliilc in oppos- ition. tltrtitlgh its rcprt-sctittttivt-s in this lltinst: zit lht- lust session tht-rcoi and through lllt‘ slit-cellos of Lihcrul (‘gtnditlillffi tltlrittt; tlu- t-lctttitlu zts wt-ll Ila through tin- Lillt-rzll press of tllc yirovittcu, trzls llllll with curt-till tnzllttlgrmt-lit of tht: public litittlircs tllt-rl- \\'.'ls suliicirilt rcvcnut- to doulllc the srllnrit-s of ‘tlu- l(‘.'lt‘llt'l'\ \\'lllllllll tnltlitiritlnl Iilfitilllfill. i ".~\ll<l tuhcrcztstlltf lczltlct-r of thtr govt-rllltlt-ut, whilst lfiltlltl‘ of the Opposition, on lln- floor oi tht: lrnilslutttrv. Lllililt‘ .'l ]|l’\)(l41l1ll\"l'lllt‘lll tltzll the pcoplt- of the proviorr would not justify any incrtzlst- in talxiltitlrl until it rt-ttltl lie-shown that nu tafiort luul lMTll put iortll to 14v! lll\’l'l';|\t' ' of subsidy on tlcroiult oi our (‘ljlilllfi for an t‘t|tli\‘£ll< lit [or the st-hrlrll lnnds of llll‘. wt-strm provilltttrs utld lllllvt (‘lllillh "Atltl-llrllttrtfilrl, sittrc coining into potvt-r no su~cll effort has ht-t-n lnndc by the present gottt-rnttlcut; "And ivhcrczis, notwithstanding their llrotvcd [rol- icy, the govcmnlt-tit in .~tiir.osiug great burdens by addit- ional and increased taxes oti the people of the protitltw: I in contradiction of the said announced policy; “The Committee therefore recommends tilit is . such additional and increased tzlxcs arc ht-ing inipnsctl in direct opposition of the Lihcrul party's ztvoivctl poll. y. the taxation tlct should not go into rift-ct UNTIL. H‘ HAS ltl-lClilVlill 'l‘llF. Al'PR(')\/.\l. OF Till-I lil. RCTORS GP TIIISiYWQOVINCE TllltUUtlll Tilllf. MEDlCM OFIA GPINERAL l*'.Ll'lC'l'lO.\l." , -On this general principle, namely, that before the policy upon which the Bell Government was elect ed, should be departed from, the people should be consulted through the medium of a general election, ex-Premier Arscnault based his remarks on the in- creased salaries and indemnities- He DID NOT ad- voca-te increased taxation; he DID NOT advocate in creased sessional indemnities or increased salaries; ' without first consulting tthe people. Mr. Bell and his candidates declared before the. election that there was no need of increased taxation and that officials were both too numerous and too highly paid; when elected they doubled the taxes, increased their own salaries and made them a first charge on the revenue 0f the province, a revenue increased in direct oppos- ition to their avowed policy. This difference between the attitudes of the res pective leaders may be too subtle for the political eye of the Patriot to discern at present. It has, how- ever, been discerned by the people throughout the province and they have almost unanimously expres- sed their indignation and disappointment over the manner in which Mr. Bell and his satelites have deceiv cdthem. When the Patriot's ingenuity rises to a point at which it can make it appear to its readers that wrong is right and that falsehood .and decept- ion are admirable qualities in POlllZiCiZIIS, it may be able to persuade its readers that the political career of Mr. Bell and his followers is the safe and sane pol- icy for this province. Tlll‘) GLEN “TLLIAM M IEIVITNG In a recent issue of the Patriot there appeared what glitz-ported to be a report of a meeting held at Glen il lam, Kings County. The Patriot's report was so transparently false and misleading that no at tetnion was paid to it- Today we publish the report “ of the Secretary, Mr. A. R. McDonald, also the resol- ution demanding the resignation of 1th.; setting mem bet-s, Messrs Butler and Sutherland together with thctnames of tfhose concurring in it; the names of men who helped to elect the tlwo members and who are naturally disappointed with the manner in which the ‘ignored their pre-election promises and follow- ed’ course-diamctrically opposed to the policy upon ch they were elected. . The atihetnptof the Patriot to mislead its read- ers through a misguided correspondent, in a report whlchborel falsehood and deception in-i-ts every sen- tence, ‘cannot-be condoned, or excused. Apart from the insult to the good people of Glen William whom the; report so foully misrepresented, the attempt to mtfilead its readers elsewhere by a palpably false re- _ ‘ _. ., places tlteiPat/riot in the position, that even if A ittccident or design." it should tell the truth it wuuld "not- be‘ believed . The Wide store peopleiof Glen William has been d to that of-the many elsewhere, throughout the p _ vince In coiidemnatlogt of themBell‘ Government t» l militant -. t kind of genius that Will curry out nu mo...“ slim ll nouns». l- l CRIME AGAINST -THE PROVINUZ; Sin-From our hearts we deplore the sulferlng which wlll fall upon; present and future residents of our fulr province as u restllt of the - cent‘ i (losing of the Dultuu Suulitorluml i i While every civilized uatlon 1s wag w lug u combat against the "White, Plague". the Bell Government ref fused to mulutuilt the lllfilllllllOlLi which we had received us a tree glft and whit-ll was the only place‘ lu the province, where u tuberculin" | j: C: COUPON BON DB Bearers or Registered BB 10 . Principal 1n Denomination of 81,000. or through our Partial P expense. patient could receive proper treat ment. As u result of thls policy of (also economy the lives 0t’ many present vtctlms wlll bu. shortened, tllrottghi lliclt or efliclent treatment. ll‘, asi ill the United States we lilid a Sun atorltlm “there u. patient might on- tt-r untl puy lit-cording to his means ‘ ltntlvirhcre no one is denied ill trhtlncc to regain health, mun)‘ young liVOs would he saved. llvl this mount-l also tho ht-ulth ot‘ [hr-l 130 Great George l l New flffering 0i tin 0t l llalillx Bonds in sntt l T HF} lssuc ls m‘ $525,000. slit nel- cent Bonds, dun Janu- lry 1st, 1981 lute-rest paynblo Jltntutry lst nul July 1st atllalltax, hloutrcnl, Toronto. Winnipeg nnd Vancouver. PRICE-i-llfiilfifi per cent nndi-lnterest; to yield IPA». D9!‘ E offer these set tmlties for immediate cash purchase, lence of investors 0t modest income. We wlll ltccetlt orders telegraphed 0t‘ 18111111011911 at 0.1- Macllltosll 8t, Company 171 to 173 Hollll Street, Halifflx Members o! the Montreal Stock Exchange Performing an Investment Service Exclusively l. lttlwtiltll PATON Representative in Prince Edward Island STOCK lteclstered as to Prlncl-plil and Interest. Intel-cm payable by Cheque to owner Cei-tltlc- lites issued for amounts or ~l00 upward. aymelit Plan for the conven- SL, Charlottetown patients associates would be sutu- gtlurtlctl and tho further SDFOQII m‘ the ("$0356 (qwckmp pvt-soul victims 0t‘ this drczld dis - "muss-lulu and fumm Us wn" “s ‘Hull (lovorutucut tor lluvlui; utlonl- , ml such u hoztrtltlss null short sight- ‘to ¢~--~~» ~b-Q§Q~vv-v< .- - o tell pollcy us tho t-loslnl; ol‘ the Still Daily Selections Guardian Readt-rs ..., ,.,_ ,, Pnvnluhod by W. I_ Luann. vQ-Q-QQQOO-OOO-OOQOQQQ 000004 FINISH IT. , 1 uni, all", tilt: 0 N E. FOX AND FUR PRICES Slr,~~lu your niornlllg lsstit: ol‘ ,~ l) t I I - '- A Momlnom ma“ once Sum, Lt-ccuillct Jltb, hliotltc nu ultltlc "F011 Fur Prices’ signed by UIlL‘ “Genltls is everywhere-mitt the - who styles himself "a foxman." t lt‘ the gentleman who wlote the snow m June}, larllcle wlll kindly sign his liume “e was no, merely phrasemflkwltnd address 1 will be pleltsctl to ‘m; The warm is “flared with LJLQVUSS with him elthcr tlirottgll ‘the mmmshpd thlngs_unnuisrled plans’ t Public Forum or on the iuhllt- llul unflmshm umugms. “nflmsnmlfitirm tho qucstlon at Lssuo. tasks, unfinished characters. I ma‘ 5"‘ flu." Almost every one has lmzigln- “LGHESTER s‘ MCLURE litlon. 1t Ls the gift of tho many,‘ not the few. Bu! to curry out she's plan, to mtlko rclilltell 0t‘ tlrvnntn ls _ tLoutlotill-illyprnssfl an ltlea to its flnlsh ls as rare as Under existing conditions this is “"6" "l" 11W ll"! blame “D011 llll! _ ...-._'_-t_...-..-_:-._—.=-=—;r.~_=a, vwzvu ihorc lire lutn guilty ot‘ this .~ elllllgb‘ iuslltulltctl ngliinst. lilPlll hy tho liihteluil rout-turn: own tot tho llllllllfl rest properly upon their shoulders and relic-w» ti,“ llllfltirfltlfi m’ thousands tit‘ llt l rat-rent t-ltlzc-us t'r.lnl_ thl- vontcntp tlblt- susplt-tltln whit-h that [Jtlpt-l" 1.»; .'ll‘t'llltil'4l ngttlnsl tl-I-ltl. The [new | ph- ol‘ lhl»: pruvlntw- would need, t-l lw rts tllshtturntt us tht- Bell (loveru- ' motifs record, to bu capable of tllvr-o cnorlrtZtit-s, alitl we wlnnot cont-l-ivc the possibility ol‘ lholr rout-hing so degrading u lovt-l. To pullllsh ,tliu facts. authenticated f-tltrougll the courtesy of lion, W. M. 1.0a" wlll bring the uiatter to a tlientl‘, and OUR (‘llltbhFlNtll-I TO THE PATRIOT‘ IS TO l'l"l‘, til’ Oll SHUT 11.1‘ l'l‘S l.'.\'l-‘0l‘.\'Il- RD SIANDEJWS. ' l b Ln lts blending and dlllilfifllllirh, and ltylnpatthies for the poor tnnu ‘ luXNl, hotter-ding to the Patriot, oui ol‘ countenance by ihosw tax ‘in-' tlictinl: Torles, ll gives n long a power bestowed only on for- tnne‘s fiivorltlcs. g It is an excellent habit to flnLsh tblnlzs. It’ a book ls worth read- ing it Ls worth relitllng to tho end. ll‘ u thlnlz is worth saying it is worth bringing {o n logical lind rammaticul conclusion. A lot of us are mentally tintitlgx. Every life must. have some ct-u- tral uutl dominating motive. llihe- ther or not ll is consciously chosen. there is some one purpose that lis- stluies-lol-rlslilp over tlle others and controls the action. Motives may lluttle for place, the higher against the lower, but one or the other gradually nbtulus the sup- remacy. HEDDY in the muu who surrenders his will and llfe to the lordship of Jesus Christ. My fate ls lli Thy hands. My God. l wish lt tberc: My heartmy lifemiy health. l lt-urc Entirely to Thy rare. My fate ls in Thy builds. Whatever lt Dlfly ho, Pleasant or pulnttll. llrlght or tlurlt. As host may scum to Thee. My fate ht in Thy htllllls; Why should l-tlmlht or Fear? My Father's Heart wlll uovcr cnuso llls child a nootllcst-l tr-ar. f so nit . which they can show it is other way and the sooner chapter upon the glorlcs illld cx-t ccllcncles of the Bell Government Through the "courtesy M’ Hm Poll TllX a tax, in its opinion so W. M. Lea‘ Provincial Treasurer." snprmnefy. m,“ “my popular that. tht- Putrtot claims to have lnsltlc m"; the p-onmrmtjqg party ympos- ltnowledgc of lucomca and Farm at it‘ “me mom}, lniglfl, not 11,10,- Lflfld HBRPSBIIWMH Dreslcfibed i by thrown tliemoverlnthelrdlstress," the laws ot' the province. Putbl-lcly u is egmnmem n“. qovemlnen; 0r. it has made declarations lu its m, “i118 us’ m prmuce a fevanuq columns, hast-d as it claims on this n;- 550 090 p,” year;- tvhose Dock. ztt-tuzil knowledge, which seriously m; mo‘. lo be [gtpped u, Clean up reflects “two the tetmwtlfln OI‘ this titty thousand? P-lainly and huslntzss lncn and leading citizens “hove a“. ‘he pom. ma“ why, We“. lllltl \\‘\1l‘lilfli; "W" i=1 llli-‘v’ lllwvillff- the declarations of members of the ll tlvlilfl-‘Yklfldt Jlilrscs thiv the)‘ Government when the Act was tttul the lute government hove been tit-tore the House? That thot-e were lu collusion to defraud the pt-o- tm-ge nuyubplc, of ‘t-m-ydug men y“ vlnce of its lust revenues. And it 5m, pl-Dvmce who m,“ N0 TAX. bases this clalui upon information Aytmg [N-(IQMBS Am; yvggllgflfy alleged to ‘be taken from the re- LIABLE TQ TAXATIQN, and w cords throtuzli the "courtesy" ol ma; gm“, who had a, r1311; w 43y _ "m1- \V. M -LPtl"- We IKHOW 0f tor some of the benefits lhuy were FLWP-Yfll Llbt-‘Yflls- BUT FEW 1F lrct-iviug untl compel them to con-I ANY (‘t).\‘Sl£1tV.*\'l‘1VES_ whose 1n» [tibute ‘(j"]‘(j up-ltecp of the couu-i coules, its the Patriot asserts "ave-rage from $10000 to $20,000. But few or litany t.he Government orgntVs state-lieu! lentis to generate public susplctlon against tirlicticnl- ly all wealthy luell lu the plovlnce and tlnlt suspicion should be allay: w]. - .\u:l the host. wily to alloy ll. will ho for tho Patriot to publish ln l'llll tlelaltl till tlltls information uwlllfill it ullegvn lt is ln possession and in a demand for its resignation and there is no honorable way for the government to take but to resign. The Patriot and any other official friends the overnment may still have, cannot honestly or truth- ully support it and any efforts at misrepresenting a meet-log, as the Patriot did in connection with. the Glen’ William and other meeings, only sinks itself and its party lower, if possible, than they are at pre- I_f_ there are any honest men mixed up with the Bell uoverillncntr-and some of them war-é they asttociated them-sch es with it~-the only way in before by resigning There is no they do it the better for themselves and the province. Incompetence alone is bad enougn but falsehood and misrepresentation add ed to incompetence is a combination that the provin- ce cannot tolerate ilvithout serious consequenccs- The province knows little of what the government is (lplllg except through the Liberal press, and the Pat.- riot‘s report of the Glen William meeting is a fair sample of the reliability of that source of informat- ion. Our so called “Ship of State” is rapidly drifting on the rocks and there is only one way of "averting a calamity; that is, to take off the captain and crew and put honest men on board. y t Ill)‘. they were to be taxed to the extent of one days labor ill the form o! a Poll Tax. And tho $57 £1 tllly laborer bus to "pay just h~ unit-ii Pol] Tux us his 510.000 .1 yt- tr t-tuployvt" ycli ll‘ he lti :1 ttrippio nn.l nllnosi a beggar upon tho strut-ts lt is pity up or go tn jllll. .'\ll tl tho Plttrlot prttu-s about the Torlvs taxing the poor lnnn. tho Vl'l'_V t-ltlss whom the [loll Governlncnl ll-l grlndlng the vt-ry souls out. of wlth their ltpeclully tlcvlsctl ptlfif-lllilll taxation contrlv- l ulicvs. And wickedly lt. boasts that i ibis one ulx the special u; upon tho working intln, “WILL AMOUNT | 'l‘0 M01118 NLAN Xllb TIFE LAND 'r.\x REGETWID ltv rim con-l SldltVlVFlVlG (l0VEltNMJ<}NT." i Just. tlllnlt o! ll, this tax upon the worker tun] p00!‘ uian alone. ex‘ cvlvlitll: tho whole comlllnctl Land Tux o! the (JonscrvuIlvtia. And ln l tho N111: 0t‘ this lhoy have tho uii- l tiltcrablel gull and lmnudonce to‘ ohm-go (iODRFFVtLHVPS with tlixlng the poor. u But it goes further, and after charging Conservatives with TAX- l l-NG THE POOR MAN TO RE- LIEVE THE lllflf. declares, "The only purpose ot’ the Poll Tax lt TO RELIEVE THE FARM LANDS OF" THE PROVINCE. AND 111110 SMALL lNl OMES " and "the lm- posing of the poll tlttx ls u rr-llet to the fllflllttl‘ .\S “Tllil. AS 'l‘() ‘HIE SAtLAlRIEll MAN." lhu-e ugulh lt boosts of Ito-taxing the poor 4min torellevo the rlcn. pursuing lllo vlclotm court-in wlilcll ll tnsely an] uinllcltnuily charged ligalnat. the Conservatives. And the bitter part or the truaedy la tn tho tact. that it DID NOT RELIEVE THE FARM ER (IR THE SNLAILIED MAN Oil‘ I NYFS PASSED ONE RED CENT 0F‘ TAXATION RAD GOVIEIJLNMENTS. “DECEMBER g9,- Patons Big Fur. salt. a Now Here 310109 Prices a Youhave been Waiting For t Buy ller a Fur Coat For the Wintery Weather t0 Come 1 Seal Coat,iSabl~e"collar and cuffs was $256.00 now $231.00. ' 1 Seal Coat, Grey Opposum collar and cuffs was . $445.00 now $321.00. 1 Seal Coat, Sable collar and cuffs was $257.00 now $232.00. l 1 Seal Coat, glain was $222.75 now $178.70. 1 Seal Coat- able collar and cuffs was $33000 now $264.00. ' " 1 Seal Coat, plain was $313.50 now $250.80. 2 Rat Coats self collar alid cuffs was $313.50 now $250.80.‘ t2 Rat Coats self collar and cuffs was $313.50 now $200.00. Muffs Muffs Muffs Sable Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .‘. . .. . $91.25 ‘now $73.00 ltzlcoon Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$ti4.50 now $51.60 Brown Lynx Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$44.50 now $23510) Sable Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$93.00 now $74.40 Racoon Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$64-50 now $51.60 Nlanclittrian Wolf Mull . . . . . . . . . . . ..$12.00 now $9.60 lack Fox Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . .' . . . . . . $59.75 now $47.80 Red Fox Mull . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $87.50 now $70.00 Black Seal Muti‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ..$40.00 now $20.00 Red Fox Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $29.75 now $23.80 Racoon Mufl‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31.50 now $25.20 Sable Mutl- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .y.$98.00 now $75.40 Neck Pieces and Throws Sable Ncclt Piece $110.25 only_2 pieces left now . $88.20 Beaver Neck Piece ' . ...$67.25 now $53.80 Racoon Neck Piece . . . . . .. . $30-00 now $24.09 Brown Wolf Neck Piéce . . . . . . . . . . $66.00 tiow $52.00 Beaver Cape . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . $100.00 now $80.00 'l‘lluple Wolf Neck Piec . . . . . . . . $25.00 now 20.00 (lrey Mltnchtlrizln Wolf . . . . . .7 . . . . . $24.35 now $19.50 Natural Wolf Muff . . . . . . ......$24.00 now $19.20 Rat Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $46.20 now $36.96 Natural Wolf Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $25.00 now $20.00 Sable Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .’.$85.00 now $68.00 Racoon Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $42.50 now $34.00 Racoon Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . $31.50 now $24.00 Black Wolf . . . . . . ............ ... $59.00 now $47.20 Manturtan Black Wolf Muff . . . .. . $19.75 now $15.80 lVIapt-nrlan Black Wolf Muff . . . . . . . $12.75 now $10.20 Red Fox Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$72-50 now $58.00 Sable Mull? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$85.00 now $68.00 Beaver Muff . . . . . . . . . . .~ . . . . . . . . ..$72.50 now $58.00 Red Fox Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$74.25 now $59.40 Australian Red Fox Neck Piece . . $40.50 now $32.40 Manchurian Wolf Neck Piece ..$21.00 now $16-80 Mole Skin Neck Piece $60.00, large size, now . . $48.00 Manchurian Dog Neck Piece . . . . . . . $14.50 now $11.60 Manchurian Wolf Neck ‘Piece . . . . ..$24.00 now $19.20 Manchurian Dog Neck Piece . . . . . . . $10.25 now $8.20 Manchurian Dog Neck Piece . . . . . $18-50 now $14.80 Mink Neck Piece .9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$15.75 now $12.60 gllgcéto Manturian Wolf Neck Piece .18.75, 2 pieces, Beaver Throw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$132.00 now $105.00 $2641Oglat Coat self collar and cuffs, was $330.00, now 2 Australian Beaver Coats was $306.75 now $245.00 v l. Pony Coat self collar and cuffs, was $206.25, now $165.00. 1 Pony Coat, Beaver collar an cl s, ls . 8.75 now $2531.00. d ‘if w‘ $28 1 ony Coat Racoon o ~ , . now $264.00. c llar and cuffs was $380 00 ~ 1 Pony Coal, Grey O sum collar and cuffs, was $280.50: now $224.40. pm ’ 1 Marmot Coat. self collar and cuffs, was $272.25 now $217.80. 1 Marmot Coat, Beaver collar and cuffs, was $330.00 now $23000. Patons Ltd BY run LIBE- alone no u ullllldkhlly 004'“ __.___-% ____. no“ 1920 . A ‘*0 . tlfm“ I.‘ i mt- m mtnltoii to on. $50000 Poll 'l‘ilxeli collected, principally from the working and poor 111011 1t has lncrellscd by an enormous pi-r-t-Jcnt- ago the taxation on FAITH] Luntht, salaries and everything ltl ttlght "tltnglblc and lntanglhlc." lyld don't. under nnyconsltleatlolt lot us overlook tho fact. THAT (‘ON- SHRVATIVES WERE NOT GIVEN TO PASSING TAX ‘ACTS ANlD rluvr tit-pupal‘ ‘.4141. tmh TAX- ES OOIJIWED BY THIE LATE GOVERNMENT ' WERE UNDER Another 0t‘ tht- Putt-let's lllmlllur Rcllvlllfs ls tn challenge um (hum. ‘ llln to state its policy, or to advise tutenlut for meeting conditions which now exists. ll ls not the ll-lrt 0t‘ the opposition press to go ivnllou-lng Into slough ponds t0 rvtltfllt‘ those who deliberately not lllPlllllfllVbl bogged. The Conserva- tlvn Governmontxvont to the people umn u. well defined policy; which. ll elected. they were overland to gllrrv m. rm any. would have lhelr ntntt. "tron-d. Llbcflli‘, Liberals, but the Bell also!‘ W- went. m the popping”? Ly", and program 11905,! . l ' w L elool.¢-tl_ lind my“. . ltiuntlau 01.020 900039 m u" t to cffect- "fifth." ‘m, m art ' ways Inflow“!!! t” 3km‘ taunt nvflvrwl ‘WWW “w; P001119! "Qmiwt m“ mun til-let to cut 0mm istpondlfi" burden o ilizooitiiitlutlti m: w“ w“ "tn-aunt 29"" j_ .ll.lI-_