rsajv-e-Auuubsfi _ “*‘-" blfldfiVq-Ztflremy-g f1 ~7- _- is "comm 1 E nmlllullluwl sulnllil C." M n y; (h advance) nailed in Canada all Illllll HIM! K‘ ions-s Dally lhulllnd mm can or no u: 0411000) 6'11"!“ [equal ‘.1’. Cheater S. Iol use. new znaulun BUTTER. The local Liberal organ has aband- sned the anonymous correspondent defence of the Australian and New zealand trade treaty and 11“ °°m° gut in the open edltorially- 11 11181105 that the agreement which B1110 D101- arential tariff rates to Canadian news, u-t and alDamobilcs in e8- ghange for reduced duty 011 111111" Ind meats from Australia has re- gulted beneficially to this country. “as we have sold Australia about four “m, s, great a quantity u! svods i“ Australia has sold to Canada since the treaty became effective to datei" and that the reduction‘ in the duty on Australian and New Zealand but- {q- "only becomes effective in Can- ada when the production falls below gpnsumfiiull." It is significant that in its defence the Patriot refers repeatedly to “Aus- tralinn" importations and its editor- ial is headed "Australian Buttelfi” What our farmers are concerned about is the wholesale importation of New Zealand butter into their mar- kets. It is beside the mark to tell them, in the face of the importation of 10,000,000 pounds of New Zealand butter into this country within the past few weeks, that our trade with Australia is four times as Great 115 Ailstralilrs trade with us. It is equal- ly futile to attempt to convince them. when New Zealand butter is under- goliing their own product on the lCharlottetown market, that the re- “duetion in duty on this importation becomes effective in Canada lwhcn the production falls below con- iumption." 1- The reduction in duty has become c-effective, and, according to the presi- .-dent of the Saskatchewan Co-opera- _tlve Creameries, whose statement was reported recently by the Cana- dian Press and remains unchalleng- ed, Canada has dropped from the po- sition of an- exporter of 25,000,000 "pounds of butter annually to that of an importer of an almost equal amountf-a condition due. among oth- or causes "to the trade treaty with Australia and New Zealand." This is exactly the contention of the Na- tional Dairy Council of Canada and of all the dairying organizations so ifar heard from, including our own. Our dairymen are convinced that the indiscriminate dumping into Canada pf cheap foreign butter is detrimen- tal to their industry, and no amount [of political goose-grease, however Vlsv-rnoldoee-d. B. Bunk “ffm,1—L|F\I'. 0.1. n. a Ila-Khulna, n. i. 0- Idim and Managua-J B Burnett. Anorlate Editor-l) l. Curls. 1 . ‘WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY c. 1929' exports of butter to Canada has bod in increasing the total of all com- modities is readily shown in statis- tics covering the past five years. In 1924 Canadian exports to New Zeal- and were valued at 813-743-079- W111" Canadian imports Notes BLHTTle Way Among the agreeable characteris- tics of many public men in Britain. says the London Times. 15 l 11811" 01 apt quotation from the Duets. It is recalled that not long ago a London press despatch quoted Premier Bald- win where he was gracing a point with lines from Shakespeare's Son- nets. In another speech in Parlia- rqent last session the Prime Minis- ter ‘ ’ to adapt "The eased Damolel" to his oratorical needs. Whether such instances portend a real revival of the old style of par- liamentary oratory it is dlflicult to say. Modern politicians are not us- ually credited with a very close ac- quaintance with good English verse. Experience has been that when they attempt to color their speeches with literary quotations, their range of sel- ctlon is not overwide. Their liter- ary allusions have a second-hand 13.1.... BorlomMD. DIGESTIVE Ill-ICES INFLUENCE ONE It is only naturalfor you to think. that irlsofafas digestion is concern- ed when the food is being acted upon in the stomach that other digestive Juices which am waiting in the small intestine for that food, would be sat,- isfied simply to wait there and not interfere with the stomach until it has emptied its contents into the As you know the. stomach simply churns up the food, gets it thoroughly broken up, soft- dian exports were valued at 811.866.- have increased four-fold. population of New Zealand is about one-seventh that of Canada. few years if the treaty is continued. our farmers may figure out for them- selves. o; whom a wealth of material could be taken with considerable advantage. l1 I» u c»- Z°..i'.‘.°.‘.§.t‘§".i‘.‘§“‘;? r from which they quote. They usual- 559- 1111119 1mP°Y1§ 11°“ m” “n” ly cite lines which have been used so country were valued at 08.262333. 0! many times that they are about as which butter represented 5431741793’ 0111571731111"! 33 11 W°m’°1115 8111115‘ In other words, Canada actually 911°” remrfL sold more to New Zealand in 1924 Will the old days of literary refine- than in 192s, while in that time New mm 1,, Dogma; gpgechgs m, ,9. its bitter taste in the mouilt Zealands exports to this country turn?‘ Thanks to Mr. Baldwin's ex- And the ample there is reason for hope. May we not see the day when our own par- 51111111 11114511119 11110 smmach- liamentary debates will be enlivened with quotations from Spenser and 1-110 5101111011? What New Zealandb butter trade swmbume, when the pages o; Han. with us will mean within the next sard and the legislative speeches re- ported in the local newspapers will hr EXPORTS AND IMPORTS. Exports and imports are appraised according to the market value of the a °°mm°d111’- when the 9x911"! ex‘ ing up a lengthy dissertation on his ceed the imports the balance of trade inability to lead a political party, to is supposed to be favorable, and vice bflllziilivlloilgbillrmfxelx £31130: will; cream, Jules Wm do the“. work on Prohibition Act, or to fulfil other 1W5“ Th pledges of his pro-election platform. n “a at n is l me ‘or manner of their production, and it could he not confess to ms rashnw does not always follow that when the 1n undertaking thggg mgtfgfg 'afl',ey exports exceed the imports the bal- the manner of Shakespeare's Wolsey: versa. Much depends upon the quality of the commodities and‘, the ancc is a favorable one. We may ex- port, say, $1,000,000 worth of commo- dities which required little prepara- tion, such as lumber and minerals. when we import $1,000,000 worth of finished product which required skill- 01'1- ed workmanship, the situation is en- tircly different. ' In the latter case the fabrication of the commodity gave employment to thousands of men and women. m thefol-mer case lnére"was* llttle or no fabrication, no skilled 181110115 511116113" 0100111011 0111111181811 Shakespeare and Milton, not to speak 1y. Bow much more readable would be what k u“, pom" Premier Saunders coming budget Th“ the way you chew m, mix speech, for instance, if he permitted himself heartfelt expression through oi digestion in stomach. "I have ventured on bladders, This many summers in a sea of 81017; But lul- beyond my depth." properly in another. . "I have no spur bill; only th 1 _ Vaulting ambition, which c'cl-- fl‘: “at: :“°,’“°"‘°”' ""51 a“ leaps "Se" o er o a ures methods of watch- And falls on the other side." The Premier's references toils-at now ~e* l‘ . - c v . ened, and changes proteids (meats and eggs) into peptones, in which form they can be absorbed into the blood. However there are times when you are aware that in some way bile hasyccme up from the in- ‘testina and‘ got into the stomach. and from the stomach you can get Research men are telling us that pancreatic juice also gets up from How does this affect digestion in Dr. S. A. Yesko tells us that if the pancreatic ducts are cut off so that no pancreatic Juice flows into istle with stolen brilliancies from intestine. and therefore cannot set up into the stomach, that the stom- lesser poets and poetasters from ach empties itself in a shorter time. Further, that the stomach seems to digest its proteids more thorough- your food in theamouthgwhich has alkali ui th 1i , mg - few well chosen quotations? Wind- 33m thenicilofiezn. Slesastllanwh gr gastric Juice, and this in turn af- fects the way bile and alkaline pan- the food when it enters the small these to flow upwards into stomach and "regulate" the manner and rate In other words there seems to be a regulating force working with the Like little wanton boys that swim various juices, “helping" one anoth- er during digestion, making up in one place for what was not done This is why you seem to be able to take such big chances in your To prick the sides of my intent, eating, the digestive juices come to ing over careless human beings. labor and but very little employment. Our balance of trade may look fav- conference with Prohibition leaders in Summerside having become. through repetition, somewhat prosy, could he The Poet's Corner aedulously applied. will persuade them that it is not. They have the facts Jbefore them, and they can check them up in dollars and cents. New Zealand has specialized in fdairylng. They have every natural advantage of climate and pasturage: their industry is largely conducted "upon a co-operative basis; the most ‘up-to-datc mechanical aids are used; mo their export butter is subsidized ‘by the Government. The number of dairy cows in New Zealand in 1910 was 804.078, while in 1025 it had risen '10 1323.432. In the latter year 1s,- ‘861 milking plants were in operation. milking 705,000 cows each day, and 14,000 cream separators were in use 7 “on the farms. There were 156 but- Ttor, 207 cheese, and 89 dual (butter and cheese) factories. Over 76.000 persons were employed in the in- dustry. All this in a country with “a population of 1,271,064. Since 102s, although official figures are not ‘available, it is known that the out- "put has increased enormously, lie flargely to foreign exportation Ac- _, ma; to the Commercial Intelli- Journslof the Canadian De- j- Ifiktment of Trade and Commerce. ' '1 “Elba present year is expected to es- ‘tiplhh a record in the export of “If.” products from that country. to information supplied "new Dilllrhnent hr ulc As- k Oinldiau ‘Prado Commission- orable while m reams’ N‘ i‘ the w‘ not introduce the subject with an al- verse. Exporting unmanufactured 1.13pm m commodities is poor business, while importing the finished product, fin- ished by labor in a foreign country, is equally bad. To continue such trade Meunwhpe his 3011mm“, the Mjnjg_ is simply to make ourselves the ser- tor of Agriculture, could follow his vants of others and allow our couu- 1° try to go undeveloped. 'I'here has been much boasting recently about our favorable bal- ance of trade; but when the ac- count is carefully analyzed it will be found to have been very far from favorable. and instead it has been or:- the cause of unemployment which has driven our men and women out of the country. The real character of our balance of trade will very likely be the subject of considerable comment and criticism during the coming session of Parliament. RIENDS of the League of Nations throughout Canada will regretto hear that the Rt. Hon. Sir George E, Foster, dean of Canadian politics, has expressed n desire to retire from the presidency of the League of Na- tions Society in Canada. Sir George though far past the mark when most men expect to be active in any way, in h” ‘wen unspm-mmy of h]; ego" accustomed imbibing of classical lit- wag-y» budget without tho onui visibly d:- picted on his features lest session, if he could but mutter. sotto voce: "For all nu. tedious talk is but (S118 would not luvs them say from prohibition champions, -in the per- gm, 5501153 pQgTER-g WORK sons of Hon. B. W. LePage and Hon. Dr. McNeill, display their acquaint- ance with classical literature, by quoting Milton: A situation la conceivable in which, TRANSITION " eeds Above heroic, though in secret F done, And unrecorded left." bring rider's meanderings through the days “ Spring. vain boast street to street Of subtle shifts conviction to Th“ she u, made a barren one by evade." Beam’ "I do believe him, though I know he new complete. . . "What pilot so expert but needs must wreck, Embarked with such a steers- mate at the helm?" her breath.) How gracefully l-ulgm cul- political °1d the years gold ter's cold; "I! i111 1-110 V0114 In these she will be soon forgetting Should in a pet of temperance was feed on pulse, ' Drink the clear stream and noth- m ma“ ‘he Wm be won "mung ing wear but frieze. Th’ All-giver would as unthanked, °11° would be unpraised." leaf and sun. a poetic frenzy brought on by un- She will be comforted in many ways, ‘The sleepless hands of memory will Love's greatest magic to her. and the Will be repeating all a lover says To one in whom he has discovered Thai: hers is shadow and a grief Rather to have them wonder on the Or some such consoling couplet as: sweet Composuro of her eyes. her lips, She will find consolation with the And cool and cleanly fashion of Partly in wind and rain, and in the And green of June, partly in Win- Whose words have only changed to -Bert Cooksley. and great ability to the stimulating of League interest in this country. He has travelled back and forth, across the' land in recent years, preaching the gospel of the League and pleading the cause of world Sir George Foster. throughout an unusually long political career, has always commanded the ado“ tion of £11050 W110 0111110015" 11111110111 83°"- virtuolu, there shall be no more even if they cannot always agree with the opinions his public services, however, perhlpl been more outstanding than tilltregiotersdbythe veteran 3"‘ "°"“"""“"“°‘1‘"'°" erature, all the Government mem- bers would be struck with an irresis- tible impulse to bobble their speeches in verse: one “praising the lean and sallow abstinence," mother "obtrusi- ing false rules pranked in ressolfs garb." a third "vaunting aloud. but racked with deep despair," a fourth giving utterance, with upturned eye, to "things unattemptod yet in prose or rhyme." Meanwhile, from the pro- slio gallery would come the query: “Dost thou think, because thou m cakes and ale?" and from the coun- Qg gu try generally the Byronic refrain: "Oh for a forty-person wwer rc chant thy pnuajlynoerili" Ibi- The Land We Love IV IIAPI IIIIII Q. What. is Canada's purchasing A. The purchasing power of the Canadian people. according to an estimate of the Financial Post, totals . 06.840.278.006. an increase of nearly half a billion dollars in a year. This estimate of productive revenue is the greatest ever recorded, despite prevailing lower values. Practically Archibald Lamplnan 1sc1-1s99 (NATHANIEL s almsou, rs. s. IN rm: usw ouraoox) Thirtyyearsagothislebruln‘ slight handsome man who, although he had not yet attained his thirty- ellht years, had, in the small space of life allotted to him. produced such splendid work in the realm of pure literature that he is spoken of to-day as Canada's greatcstpoet. ‘That title in itself is no slight honor in a country where such masters of poetry as Rob- erts, Carmen, Scott, Drummonvd and MacDonald have arisen. and it is a title that bespeaks amply the courage of the man who never swerved in his passionate devotion to the highest and most thankless causes. For it must. be admitted that courage of a peculiarly dogged quality is necessary to see beyond the popular and petty standards of success, beyond the ac- cepted literateur’; idea of g. atness. into a realm of spiritual achievement where few are fitted to understand and fewer still to follow. And it must. be admitted also that after full con- sideration is ‘ made of Car- men's lyric mastery, and of Robert's classic austerity, Lampman is the greatest poet that. Canada has yet produced. His is the supremacy of the inspired and true literary artist. l-le possescsed that higher sense of critic- ism and artistic taste which forbade any conscious revelation of second- rate art. Perhaps Lampman was greater on account of the fact that he allied himself with no literary group, and was overawed by no stronger literary personality in his owll vicinity. I-le was a poet by his own right, and by this divine gift of genius. I think that if there had been no other human beings on the planet, and no such thing as literature evcr existed, Lampman would have hewn his verses into smooth boulders, and would have still bccn a great poet, for his fire was that inward, unsleeping glow in the heart of genius that wills great art to be born, and makes a poet», a true poet, who writes because he must, and not because he chooses. 11 When Arthur Stringer, the distin- guished Canadian poet and novelist. left his American home in Mountain Lakes, New Jersey, and returned to his native land in order to encourage Canadian Book Week by speaking al- most twice daily for over a week on behalf of Canadian literature, he mentioned in Toronto, at the great mass-meeting in Convocation Hail. the fact that the Canadian Authors‘ Asociation was considering the erec- tion of a nlunument to Archibald Lilmllman in his natal village. When he spoke in London before the Canad- ian Club Mr. stringer was even more lucid and direct in his announce-merit. Some one, a member of either the London or Toronto brlmcn of the C. A A, had conceived the splendid idea of erecting to Archibald Lampman a fitting memorial column, or cairn, in the little village of Morpeth in Kent County, where the poet's father, the Rev. Archibald Lampman became rec- tor of 'I‘rinity Church in 1858, married Susan Gesner in May, 1880, and where the poet was gorn on the seventeenth . of November, 1861. The first six years of the poet's life were spent here, and then a change of residence was made to Perrytown. near Port Hope. After a few months there was a removal to Gore's Land- ing, a town on Rice Lake, where they remained for seven years, until 1872. In the opinion of Mr. Archibald O. Lampman, the poet's only son,,now resident in ‘lioronto, the memorial should be placed at Gore's Landing where many of Lampmarrs poems were first imagined, and where the future poet spent the impressionable years of seven to thirteen. I-lere he caught rheumatic fever in a damp rectory, and was suflerer from it for four years. In 1870 he entered the school of l". W. Barron, a Cambridge classical scholar and strict disciplin- arian. To Arcibald Iompman Gore's Landing was, with its lovely flower- beds, deep bass pools, gleaming lake. and shimmering rice-fields, a place of childish glamor and inspiration, like wcl-dswcl-urs l-lawluilcld. rm noiluu of the Reverend A. lnflflpmlfl failed irrlfld, and the family moved again to Cobourg. ‘Ihero weredean and dif- ficult years, but the poet's devoted mother, to whom he pays fitting tri- bute in his dedication of "Lyrics of north." determined um nel- m"; education should be continued. In I870 he entered Trinity collage. Toronto. am no became known and liksdhynisfeiiowstvldenisasalflitle ovoryDepal-tnlent, especially indust- mregisteredamarkedinsreaemlri- thhColumbiahladealltlilPlovi-fili- tilealfulcnallltmouioboooms-m- I in it» w unite basins 1mm. UM g ammo-v v z. ~11» import- wateemnn m iconnection ma the m: armors-reluctantly.‘ ' magnu- was!» lIIIIllGfl-Ilih an], polltiu would g“ more than via. m: followed closely s; "Oailril .010 mm of wwds 1a wetland ‘sol- gp} ~ 1 q, there died in the city of Ottawa, a 1 Or hope upon somemimicked flight to usmaddi‘ ““'\dsu’l1unr¢-_— . , ‘ ’/'7,/, ‘ f . a 7/////;7/4/.; - __ ' j ‘<_\\\\\> \~f’_i ~\\* " .:H~11:\\_\__: 1i {mu a, 191p Annual‘ Statement (CONDENSED) Year ending December 31st, 1928 - | m] ' Q 8 BOJQJWMI §.TIE..$'EZ°’E..Z“ I 541-461 Mo» ,' 2 I S 26.674.930.38 ‘ m’ l . . l 101.261.626.93 mama-a _- , .. 103.101.515.31 Gmgg Surplus Earned 2 Provision for Future P1011" to policyholder, . 5 0.808391% Unassigned Profits and q _ Contingflill? RWW’ ' Assets over One Hundred Million Dollars 0' 4.I54,lll.62 547 Million Dollars sheltering the homes of this cominent and bringing peace of mind to over a Quarter of a Million Pollcyholdors iI-‘e lHEAD orrlcs-wlunlvoor HYNDMAN £9? CO. LTD. Provincial Managers hopes of Canada than to-day, how- 1n body, commerce. little dust- Bong passes not away." better speak forvthose years than has Wilson MacDonald in his question to the studentsof the new ‘Iirinity Col- lege. that stair ~ arosweet, ~ ed 44;, . . Wholtoooed suchquiat lyrics from the lir wboilovod the phrasing of thus an- sleuth-coo; That washed Ihinfl his sleep like - inldndiell?‘ 1 - . ,' m jlrauuary. 18100, through the gcoc officers of 11m wu giv ever lusty be our present coriwflll sustains tho artist in travail: the ail- prevading knowledge that he is the "captains and ‘mnquem leave a creator of beauty. And in the world's best goods, Lampman was very a flcll man and asserts it. And it was then at old Trinity Col- “why go y; c511 the p031; lonely?" less. in the early eishtiw. that our Because he dreams in lonely places? smart national sinsvr was besin- l-le is not desolate, but only hills his quest for beauty. Who wuid Sees, where yo cannot, hidden nic- "30151051111191! "11 °1W1°°15WP 110111 In 1884 his first verses appeared in the Week then edited in Toronto by That will not. l1" 11D memories that Roberts, and later verses were accept- married Miss Playter, of l 81'0" Ipronto in i881. A daughter was born Oilr-delthless sohollr. 5117. yet debou. ency in rhyme. In 1880 there came in- “film interprets the clerkship as a to them in 1892, and in 1894 a son, to Lampmans hands the first volume blessing w Lgmpnun], Peyhaps he 1S of a youthful Canadian poet, a year fight in so doing, for at any rate, the verses 0i infinite teildelllei-i 0116,8110! his senior. This was "Orion and “mi; was probably as ligllt as the rc- in "White Pansiesz" Other Poems,” by Charles G. D.R.ob- mum-awn, l: possible, and left eris, then headmaster of a New Lampman ample time for his own “Soil asslumber was my baby, Brunswick college at twenty. Lamp- thuughm and we pursuit o; his ideal Beaming bright and sweet; man, in a letter to Roberts, tells oi Bu. let us Nmembel. this; we," 9,5 Daintiel- than bloom or jewel, how he sat up until dawn lwurlus was his achievement in Canadian let- Were his hands and feet- over the fine classical lines of a young mm how mflnnely great” he might and the splendid Keatslan stanzas have becfi l1 a myOpic government “Would that in the flower-grown produce by a fertile imagination. Ill had realized his true and unique little , the heat of the moment he wrote to wort); and given llim a literary pcn- Grave they 01118 50 (16911. Roberts, telling him how “0rion" had 51°“ that he might, cumvam his 3.1, I might rest beside him, dreamless,‘ awakened in him the wild and then 1n Secumy from the struggle m. ex- Smile no more, nor weep." seeminsly-lmllwible dream of a ru- istence. But it was no‘. to be: not yet tional Canadian literature. In the has Canada attained that blmsful m- Between the years 1884-1888 wele light of this dream, then, "Orion" as- tenecma] realm when, the mm ‘is written the fine poems published in sumes the place of the "Lyrical Bal- worthy of his hire. Lampman remain- 13311 111 "51110118 i119 111111513’ T110 801115 lards" in being the first work of note ed a postal clerk, confined to the me. of this collection are the splendid that W118 t0 r1118 111 the coming C811" chanical performance of a spiritual 581111911190 01 111/0 5011115115. “T116 F1095." adian romantic movement of the last drudggfy m retuyn for me civic em. those idylls of nature, "Heat" and century, when a group of youthful phyws brie; but unfailing putamfl “Morning on the Lievre," and mally poets began to buildaname for them- To his great glory he remained m lovely lyrics, such as, "Three Flower selves in literature. The movement Ottawa m. 51mm‘ years “mu he d,“ Petals." The second half of the voi- centres about Ottawa, where Lamp- 1n 1599, and in those 5mm", years 1111119 contains twenty-nine sonnets, in- man and Duncan Campbell 50°" doubt that nu position ever llfi0rd0il1 found mutual inspiration in an ide.ll mm a gumpse o; Qttayvg "sugary" 50111161.: friendship in Fredericton, where those pgyhgps may was just, as wglyjo: Iflmuu-i cousins. Roberts and Bliss neither parties svculd have undor- "F01 P911501 live is like a lair srwl German, studied the classics, and stomL Lampman was at ma" a shy, plant, ‘ penetrated deep into the sublime for- medmmve 5011mm,’ too honest He, m That fades not with its blossoms. 0515 01 New 31111151111014. 11-1111 010W 111' become a literary hack, and too great spiration from the Tantramar and the P“ salt marshes. In Toronto, the youtll- emu-y Mmarkebeersn m New York and want, ful Isazella Valancy Crawford eked He“ m5 mmd to the highest hidden Though fancy with its first mad out a miserable existence, lightened He was not a complex mnn in nature only for a few months before herearly m. talent He had but one great gm; Sweet is the flower, whose radiant death in 1887: in Montreal the bluii "That one talent which is death 1c ' Yuufls Irish Wleillullll-upelfliur and hide.” He could not write animal medical student, William Henry stoma 1n 11m prose as could Roberts; Drummond, began to write those stir. he never yeamevd M. a place m "my- ring and wonderful ballards of the My Bohemm no; mum he gram; 1; 9,; l French-Canadian habiiwt. whiéh did Cal-man; 11c 11nd not a, profession! made him the Burns OI Canadian lit- “ke Dmmmond‘ no; the excuuve ab- "$111"? “i1 911111195 M011‘. 1-110 8°11" ility of Duncan Campbell Scott, lie tleman-soidier, fresh from the Nortll- was bu; one thmg; a true poem bom we“ 39119111911» was 11111131118 1110 1m‘ without income into a world when! mense power and beauty of the un- mgm-mmm bellows at the poo, and °P°11°d we“ W 113m “m1 "The 1'1"‘ whiscpers to riches, and being an ar- Bison," and was writing the patriots m; who“ genius might best ripen u, drammdc mem- *°°“m5°h-" In 111°" silence and quietude, he remained in days 1h?“ “are much 1111511191‘ V°1°°5 1'0 Ottawa, weary of necessity, but witll 51*“ 1°‘ the “PM” “"1 the 511131“? that strange slumbering contentment‘ whose death in infancy inspired those were" eluding "Perfect Love," with its fine _ but lives on, artist to know llow m join the lit- “"1 8011116 lovers shall not come w dream be gone; Continued on page 5 -.___._. C. M. Lampson Q Co.. ammo. 04 Queen Street Million. B. c. s, Illllllll Public Auction Sales or Raw Furs 5111110111! ball will be furnish- ed without charge by applying 10 R- T. Holman, Ltd, Bum- menide, i’. B. I. Represented by Alfred Fraser. Inc. zu mo. Avenue New York. N. I. his heart, that peculariar glow which I i Just Arrived AUSTRALIAN °“'" BUTTER? l0. w ‘ Only a Consignment of NORWEGIAN PURE COD ' by Scribnerb and the Century. He \"-‘ ‘_\\,.A, llolllls l I