l i » vii‘ mun ‘iilWll itiiiiiinimi .@,i.iiiAatii't‘i*i'-; -—\\. ( hrslrr s. bin-Lure. M. l‘. ' si-~ tur)—-l.leill. Lul. u. l1 \~~ut'i;|lv |Iliil|ir|\-—l“l'||nll Vlce-rrenldrnt-J. l. Burnett A. llm-lilnnun, IJ. b. 0. r um] Managing DlP¢fl0P-—J- It. llurm-lt Walker and ll. Ii. (‘urrlo Morning lmlly lfnumloil ltillh $5.00 nor _\'!ll' (iirullslnrr) ilallrcred» Reassuriug Statements I ‘i l Confidence in Canada's ability to emerge successfully from the general depresion of the Past vear is exp!“- pd by many leading authorities in the Montreal Gazette's and financial review for the year i930 lust received. The whole tenor 0f the review is one of courage. even K optimism. For example Sir Ffcnry morntan, in whose sound judgment ll will concur. says: "raking Omar lightly rather than with too dark a. significance, w? might, say; ‘The nioviiit: finger writes. and having writ. moves on.‘ "I wrote ‘depression’ for i930 and now we have every reason to hope it. traces the letters of rinothcr \\'Ul't‘|. . , Nothing can or more frolizh, a-ipivtiriirs. than optimism; ‘nut. cqualtv, nothing can be more deadly than pessimism. We tired a clear-sighted view of thin": and. trying to look at affairs squarely. I am convinced that the depression cannot‘. last. Neither depression nor l: m; lirt. We arc lwttcr 0R Titli- iPlliiFl‘ rif them. hut ic- have not yet learned hoiv to avoid them. However. the consolation is that they are not normal. and if we can- not, live tom; rn the heights. we raimrifi liv“ loiv: iii the tilinthis. TiaiiIuoi-s i iahjur". but I cannot h°lp feeling and saying that. we are noiv an the wa.\' 011K" commercial I The same eucourugiiig note is szrucl; n1." .\~Ir. W. Bcatty. prcsidentl Jl the Canadian Pacific Railway, who i predicts that, given a good crop. thcIi ivest Wltlllll antthci" year ivill have- it-"ivartl, :\' ncasurolalv prvgrrtccii vrofitabl» rcatl_iu:ii11"iit of its ir-iirtk with conditions that arc- Mr. Bcattyl r t‘ v i e iv of ‘ industry in‘ line new world ivhcat market nazdiiallv bcin! shaped, hus conclude: his l‘. f‘. R nclizliicr fur the prvt your: "The il-it-n of Canada's ncxt (fly “ars is lQihDllllPginflilOn the moat z: piriiii: thing I knoiv, imr ii i- tlv- iwarrr fiiliirr iircd tli. any tl"-'ii.-‘:"i'iil fll'llt"‘|1"‘i1tlUI1. .. ‘ r-t l\\ll“)l “ll”ll‘. 1"" ob: ri-irl l hair nu that t cy will become more tli: cuinuig ycai‘ v may bi‘ accompan- ciianzcs in UlFlHCSS " Canadian pcopir Cflll- illj." inrci. ’I‘hc coining '_' to l'i\‘l for hard ivnrk. ‘t are iimri ti) that. ll. i" ll abo call for the exercise of rcouomji in public, cornorciic and private ex- pevditwcs. Of late year‘; we hair in less accustomed to that, but it is a lcssmi we arc now learning. | A higher order of cfliciciiizy on thc i farm. in thc factory. in the office ' and cvcrvvrhorc clrsc that men and women work. would seem to he the first requisite of the move to esiab- i lish prosperity. l “Alrcad_v.‘ ivrites Hon H. H. Stcv- "ns, btilustei‘ oi’ Trade and Com- nerce, in his article in the Gazette review on Canadian business and in- dustry, "the depression has been go- lng on for some fifteen months and would appear to have fairly spent its force." Certain troll-known phenomJ en: usually found toward the close of major depressions and now in evi- dence in Canada, he writes, indicate the probability that there wiill be bet- ter times in I931, Among these indi- cations are the excess of savings de- posits over current loans in our char- tered banks, the recent tariff changes resulting in thc nstablishmcnt of brunch factories and the importation of capital, the incrcased demand for illfll power. the high standing d our national credit in London and New York, and our large total extern- nl investments, subject to easy with- drawal, as our own industrlevgrequirc additional capital. Mental Culture ' Strong emphasis upon the import- lnco, of general mental training in rchools and colleges. in addition to specialized education. was placed by Sir William Mulock. Chief Justice of Dntarlo and Chancclloi‘ of the Unt- vrrstty of 'r‘oronto. in n recent ad- . '=. Sir ivdlriii‘; 1'rf"i"!‘t‘\C§ tn this I "rll quotation. He pycv-ii»; -"_l-.:‘~cloi.c'ii~1iit-i c1‘ hr-all ' - to daily . our‘ t3""i1 ‘in i- ilv rill‘- 1"" 0l"'| ;i_‘| Iii’. In hi.‘ gm" . . the ii'_'!l~"r pl’: c; i..*, c.;..'i as new from rum»; shim iii-r war tin mhum-n) mulled m (‘unualn IIIN| Fmtvil Staten. WiEDNESDAY, JANUARY-l 1931 ‘ i4, .'ii.lil0I\‘tl iii thc Edinburgh d‘ l dVlillijrl, z-a p suffering, from extending human sympathy to those in distress. from tripndsilipg tastes for art, and lit- erature. Every one engaged in the struggle of life stands in danger of his hfc proving a itiilizie. How may that danger 0e guarded against and minimized? I venture the opinion that. next, to religion, fl taste acquired in youth. when thc mind is impressionable. for gencritl reading. mental culture, wholesome literature, is the most nefpful satc- guard, and to that end education should naic regard to thc who}: spnn of human life." Early to Bed Ecfgrc the ivrir. cirly to bed was lite rulc hcrc. today l’. is the cxlfill‘ Lion. Similarly in thc old country the habit has grown until people of light and leading haic called n halt. The" liiiiruiii; i-f Clytlfkilllllf‘. M P" licir to thc Dukc of Hamilton, is no bclicioi‘ in latc hours. Ht‘ has rcecut- ly joined an Edinburgh early-to-bcd club. one of the rules (if which insists that iuirinbcrs iniri hc in hcd bv tcu o'clock three nights a wcck- Lrird Malcolm Douglas-Hamilton, Loni chdcsitlaii-‘s flying brother, who wrict. has aLuo Joined this organization. Is zhc-rc not room for such an or- iganlzatimi here? Will the mtlvemcflll spi cad? Beyond Earl/v Ni-iir rt the ntanitolil triumph:- of . thr New York Herold Tribune, makes qu.tc the appeal of the achievement which has noir been ‘reported lacfcire the Amierican Assoc- lttllfill tor thc Advancement, of l . Svi-‘nijc. I\ ',\lv.i‘iiii,;i'.'iiili of the earths‘ ruifrice, taken h.“ Captain A. W. Stev- rn-s of thc United states Army, has brcu laid ihoivini; ilircvtlv fir thc first tum.‘ ill bcfnrv thc zissoctatiou, Lhr, h Ltcry of man that ivr arc liv— ing upon a curved surface. In real- ity, of course. the triumph is rather itiiv. of yihologiapliy ahan of aviation; ' Czintain Stevens altitude f8 not Stat- cd. but presumably he went no ‘nigh- cr than many other aviators have zone. I-lc could not scc the curvature m‘ the mirth. and cvcii the camera could "srr" it only by use of the in- iislblc part cf the spectrum. But to lay miiwds it means that we have suc- cccrlerl 2:1 escaping far enough from that thin film of creation in which we are imprisoned to enable us to look back again at the earth and scc its shape. Editorial Notes London Truth keeps up its attacks upon the new Canadian I-ligh Com- missioner. A Toronto exchange re- calls that forty years ago the same trustworthy journal pronounced Can- ada to be a fraud and the Canadian Pacific RBHWRY a swindle. "'I‘ruth“ should change its name to a more appropriate title. Germany has fared butter than England and France in retaining her great figures in the war. I-lindenburg and Ludcndorf still being in the land of the living. With the death of Field Marshal Joffre only Marshal Petain, the defender of Verdun. remains in France. while of Britain's great men in the war. Kitchener, Roberta and Haig have passed to their reward. A plan outlined by President T. B. Macaulay of the Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada for I the cure of the existing business depression, has attract- ed keen interest ‘in American finan- cial circles and is cordially approved by the Wall Street Journal. stated briefly, Mr. Macaulay/s suggestion is to culargr, thc purchasing power of the people. to misc commodity prices. and to stimulate the bond market, by 1hr simple process of having the cur- rency of the Unltctl States, which xiow to all practical intents detrr- mines the value of other currencies and rspcclally those of Canada, in- i-cascd to the cxtcnt, of tcvcral hil- "lull i-liiiiars. And the mcnn! ho sug- gm": i» this end in tho purchase by Ute Federal Reserve Bank of the llriltcti States if $300,000,000 of GOV- criuuciit lzoizill. ' ‘ ' Notes by the Way, Alllltiod unit lllil been mt. upcni our modern primary school system‘ by an examination recently held in‘ Ottawa of children leaving the prlm- ‘ iu-y school for entrance into the col- . lcgiaie. The pupils were examined lnl reading, writing and spclllns- 349 pupils of the first form had n. spec- ial test, out of which 66 emerged with thc rank of good, 10'! as fair, 91 | -——— as p001‘, and 85 as bad. An Ottawa! You are reading from time to time exchange commenting on this resultf about tonsils, about their danger to says; lihe general health. You read also "One is bound to wonder whether about. the mistake that parents arc the primary schools nrc making the] making in having their childrcivs bczi, possible use of their opportuni-I tonsils removed because after all the tics and responsibilities: whether in , tonsils are really put there to over- thc modern educational scheme un- i come the harmful organisms. due emphasis is placed on ivhat. somc| What should be done? call the frills of learning while thc; As mentioned before, healthy ton- csscutials are neglected, left to be =sils. even large tonsils, should not acquired in another place, if at all. be disturbed, unless they are inter- At any ratc thcrc is revealed an in- faring seriously with breathing or tercsting field for study and inquiry." , hearing. Infected tonsils, tonsils so ‘full of infection that they are not ‘really doing their work of filtering out poisons should be removed if ‘ml-V succeed ‘f Russia‘ duwcstic trciitincnt fails to restore them to a "five-year" experiment succeeds. Inlnomuu condition thc meantime, thc rest of the world; Bu, what “bomb fldenlrlfi.‘ Lin)“. "mnml m“ “m H“ rxpcrmwm‘. “vim ‘ iitilc growths of diir-riue in the lmck money. goods or expert assistance. If of the “use and thréa,“ Bolshcvism fails it will fail through, Just as the tomns have ha,“ in_ its °wn mhcrem almwssia“ weak’ vcstigaiicd so also have these adenoid ncss. ' < growths and the public health scr- u is pcflecuy m" u?“ h‘ m“ j vices of various countries arc now "arts o‘ the “vofld natwma] rcmhk , giving their reports of thc-ac investi- mmwy ':°"°“';in‘5 a; brewing or i? l gallons, The reports from some of “mm: ° "M" n‘ em" V" W‘ these large European cities is most Most of the“ a“? mmjmcly mat‘ i interesting. In Milan 55.000 pupils mm“ "o gave orlglfnatednlrk cx";_'l“‘cl\i'c|'n czinniinctl and l3 pcr CCllL had pmpugm‘ a’ (“Tn ‘Wm usala‘ 1c‘3(l('lllllf.l" iii Nriplcs 25.000 were cx- proletarlat in other countries is nobammedoand n per com had. ade_ greatly attracted by the picture of, “aids the Rusmm W°rker of tmduy‘ a; And yct the number that required d°wntr°dden creature’ n” better on.‘ surgical treatment was only 2'; pcr with no more freedom. than was, Cent ‘cmbypc! by mo‘ moujlk ‘mder the‘ In Naples thc question of whcthci" “Zm- ' , Iiidcnoids made the Children back- Th” Mfld may" with profit‘ 11' ward in school was fullv investigated. cal! that Bolshcvizin L= indigenous to‘ what did it Show? Emma Eleni!‘ l That children with RCICIIOldB of '~‘ "" medium severiiyi were one to two We need says an exchange a dras- , l n i years behind in the primary grades, m: shaifemp in our “at on“ l“ onland with severe adenoids they were . piweedizigs directed first . two and three years behind. ll l . . tl . l'ld‘ t. le f th~ b k- they tlo not deserve and will usclwff; J o t ac against us as Canadians, and sec-i - " . , Th l f th d d‘ h frail’ ‘°d5b'“f‘g“1'lgmmfth”g’ldh“““ylrcsiiitedregiifiigflitflter tin: iilntlh: T I . tlijuzan Y] o a ‘c; good f‘ an“; ivproveincnt; mentally of yioungstcrs. ficliqn‘: “Jongreocofida nlildafimilflirlrezfl: i‘ Thclr improvement, in fiCIlOOI has i" t '. ' . 4 . w? “Ed zhe ‘uppon or the new_ j been most pronounced. Prom being H ‘considered stupid, they have become comers to this country who are well , in many Cases normal disnp-osed to the 800d order and hm‘: Parents then should think over . . ,,i illness of the Dominion o‘ Carma’ this matter of adenoids, remember- iwlfaln fifspmzzz :2‘: s: 5:‘: ing that. small masses of adenoid tis- 0 < ‘V ' ‘ ' ‘sue arc not likely to lac doing "any ing to enter it, and are entering 1t|‘harll1 but that l“ e ‘muses can though antagonistic to our national! ‘ g “good Order and happiness, whoiintcrferc with proper breathing, spoil will till-IE the lead in this great work? l m? m” M the Wm‘ “d ’."“'F° the ‘Child nervous. It, is gratifying to ‘ know that this matter of aiieiiiiitis is being so thoroughly investigated and ,the‘ treatment, surgical or non sur- mm id _i?uurs Q. i Q1/1135?!“ Berle". M-D t’ wmrr amour ADENOIDS Russia's foreign propaganda urn l» flan-uh u- -.. ..... .. The outside world will never un- derstand the British attitude inwards thlivhlielz‘ Hitler is inflamlng young steal’ put upon a sound has“ Germany with his anti-Semitic out-, bursts; while America is banning the; Jew from exclusive clubs and evenl certain hotels; while Austria, Rum- ania and Russia are joining in the‘ world movement against the Jew- Australla chases Sir Isaac Isaacs l8 its first home-appointed Governor- General. WHEN THE GULLS COME 1N l d i111 Such a choice is a tribute to the whe“ imilangsmgiome n’ an e man and to the Empire as a. whole s a o ' i d U . l) ll- and proves once. more that the Fresh b“) yuzjngsmd’ an u‘ e splendid qualities Of the Jewish peo- “° ' l , hie find tiieii- tiniest; outlet iii their 5"“ “liggii ‘w’ m 5°" '0'" s adopted British citizenship. To follow over the flashing deep; For the legion of Canadians who know London there ls a piquant bit of news in the cable deaputch re- porting that: Whitehall, that historic thoroughfare which connects Char- ing Cross with Parliament street, is to be largely rebuilt. at a cost of some ten million dollars, and iwcord- ing to plans which will permit the rebuilding of several historic houses and thc cultivation of public gardens. Whitnhall, in the fifteenth and six- teenth centuries. was the chief res- idence of the Court in London. It takes its name from the palace built. there by Henry VIII. and sub- Whcn the gulls come in frflm the fields of space, Vagrants out of a Dal-HESS D1806. Waits of the wind that dip and veer In the gleaming sun where thc land lies near- Long they have wandered far and free. Bedouin birds of thc desert sen: God only marked their devious flight. God only followed them day and night- Sallor o‘ mine, when thc gulls come . in. “°““°“"y ‘mmmi by ‘m’ ‘ m" And iiii». ShBJIOW sings to the bell- prdiwe was contemplated by James buoys d,“ I. of England. son of Mary Queen of h ,' m 0d 1 _, Scots, but only the banqueting hall wok at y Sh!’ and y g a m“ w” enema‘ the architect be!“ the There's a gale in the heart of thc celebrated Inigo Jones, who, when golden sky his talent for drawing was dlscover- __ Helen Men," Egcrmm m Carmella" ed, was an apprentice carpenter in London. It was from a window of this banqueting hall, completed in 1622, that Charles I. stepped out on Poets. In themselves things are neither great nor small, and when We say the to the scaffold and there, on the out Universe is vast; we speak purely from side of Whitehall, was beheaded ,a human standpoint. 1f it were sud- after he had been tried in Weut- ldenly reduced to the dimensions of n minister Hall, found guilty of trea- lhazelnut, all things keeping their re- son and condemned as "the man i iatlve proportions. we should know Charles Stuart" by a high court of nothing of the change- Anatole justice nominated by the, remnant of France. the House o! Commons known as the . Rump. ‘I111: n: in 1649, the execu- tion taking plaice on the 30th of Jan- uary in that year. liars in the uime period, and are on- mged in construction and mainten- ance programmes that will cover , ---_ , many more months. The railways arc The American railway: are report-Inmat- rmplovcm o! labor rind their ed to have spent 01000000000 on tm- presmt. activities show their faith In movement! in i980, and ln the con- i the future of thc country. They are nection ft may be mentioned thatlinstttutionn that serve the public to tllilyit rm: puaatorreroivu GUARDIAN Machines and Men Is hhe mechanization of lndiut 1. rizricultur-e, and ormimerce displac- ing main-poorer? This challenge, heard before. is uppermost now ii ‘rte-bate on unemployment. Whether IYribor-saving machinery actually Fineans fewer Jobs is debatable. Yet {it is ivoi-t-h while to consider the ‘following information. carefully com- lflied, believed to be authoritative: ln Saskirtnheivan there are 41.104 [Tami tractors: practically one for ':"c:'_i' iihvee farms. In additivn t0 line tractci" {were is rhe combine iiiarvcster. In 1926 there were 148 Pcvmbincs i». Saskatchewan: in 1927. "a2; in i._ii. 2.610; iiiwi, in 102s, 2,279. iEn-ili of these machines will, at a I orscrvative cvtimate. displace from four to six men. Figures for Manitoba rind Alberta are not. available. but it is safe to say ‘ilizt there has beei a comparative increase in iihc use of these machines c1: the farms in tillCSE provinces. One powr-r shovel today can ex- tLlVlllC as much dirt on a city street as it required 200 unskilled laborers to dicvcl 30 years ago. 'l‘i".' w yiczirs R3‘) all glass ii-rire made I.~_v glass blowers. one inarhlui; miikr". m many its did i600 cf these skilled‘ mcn then. ‘I712 ' bottle-making machine increased Jihc output per m-an front 45 to 950 bot- les per hour. Ten- years ago av automatic mii- chinn for thc making oil electric light. bulbs was ‘invented which pro- tubes ‘Foday duced 73.000 in 24 hours: formerly r-nc man CJllld make 57 in a day. Rccciit. impi'oi'cir..~ttzs so increase this ])'-'(‘flll(‘,ll\‘ll,l' (Jin-t 0202i nlaohina (iils::1a:s= 2000 workers. The strip mining oi’ coal has pro- :iu':cd a priivci- shovel that lifts a wn at a tiinc, dump, lit; in cars and rc- turiis for a second bite in three- quaitcrs of a mi 'utc. A dough-mixer and one man do lire ivork of 2O bakers (inc Eirl ivith a. rib cultuig Ic-loth lPgl 1113011211." die; the \\.‘Ol‘k of 25 cutters; with a button-hole niauhlnc that of 50. The lusting ina-chi r,- enables one nan to do fine “work of h‘: shoc- mnkeiis; machines now do 90 pcr- cent of thc ivork of making a ‘shoe. The cat-tin machine docs the ivork of 10 hand wrappers. One operator n z an open hearth charging illlaiiillllii does t-hc work of 40 iirirkcrs. With a t-igiiriiiaking machine om map does the work of 15. A pig-casting machine iivlth seven c-"peirators tcck the place of 60 uicrkcrs. _ _ 'I‘\vr,i ninn do ihc ivoi-k of eight. helped btv an autumn/ti ker. An automatic court-yet" enables 12 men to do thc work of 150. ‘The Boston aid Malilc Railway has llLilflllCtl a iuechiiiiloal (levice by which one or tihrcp man will switch as many ears as 400 previously set about the yard. The diotiiiphonc makes it, ptssible fc: two typlsts to do the work of i i i i We gm nuts! u iiiii~ it)‘: -- I the Canadian railways have likc- ' the full measure of their grout INI- iiiizc s-tcnogrep-Ziers. A cheqiic-vvriti": miichtn: tha‘. ilwes thc ivork of six clerks is in titLiIJCSSIUl use. It. writ-cs a Clllqllf! iVCYy minute, The magnetic crane ‘iivo uien replaces 1'28. Twelve men. operating a crane take tihe place of 37 in pouring mol- ten. metals. An automatic butter wrapping and card printing machine will wrap in quarter portions and bu‘. cartons on more than six tons of butter in eight; hours. In modern steel making eight men turn ou-t 100 tons where formerly they turned out 5 1-2 tons. A big cxcaviting machine is now ut work that will lift, 15 tons of eartih at a time and carry it a city block 01- even lift it, to the height of a 10- storey biiiiuiiigwiiiith llO other help thivi two hands to pull levers. Tlhe making of bODRs is now drmc by miizhlncs. In on: blnrl:ry' 60.000 arr bound. boxer! and nhippr-d in o:c day. T110 dial telephone reduces operating force in one-third. It is estimated that under old hand methods it would require 1,000,000 mcn w make 10,000 Ford cars in the time now required. and iihcy would (‘cs1 $10,000 ell/Oh. While the above by no means com- plot/es tihe list of labor-displacing mituhlnery it will give a fair idea of the tirerid of mcvlem industry. agri- culture and commence. O O O opera-trod by chc However. there is another sl-de to the question, this; ‘Iihat. somebody _i -- llilllll“; lmusi; be nuikti; all these labor-sav- [ing machines" They are mmde in Q New C. N. R. Board muuaav 1. 1m 1 ‘L - --:§_‘I facklriciihilndlbds Ind tiioimmu of of factories. all Giving employment. More than that, they we iron. steel, copper, nickel. paint; make for de- reloclnent of mineral and other in- dustrlu, give iobc in other trades. The Provincial Bank of Canada Condensed Statement, Nov. 29, 1930 ASSETS Cash and diietioiii Biiiiiiss 1,051,540.46 Government, Municipal- and other high grade tiFinarelal Post) l The new Canadian National Rall- rays board of directors is some im- rmvemm, m, the Mme, om Thm Secunties.... . . . . . . . . .. 13.360,008.13 ‘are morei business mien and fewer Call Loans. . . . . .1. . . . . . . . 6,698,725.22 _ lzianentitles. Having been most crftl- #—'*-__-“ 5:31 in tihc past of the method of Immediately available Assets $ 27,110,273.8l "fleimll! "he dlrwwm“ °l the Can- 5 Loans & Discounts, . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. 21,601,607.65 wdlex‘. National Railways and of the _ - Igflterfll calibre of men chosen m Bank Premises, Real Estate & Mortgages. 3,112,474.72 = OtherAsscts . . . . 657,671.92 this important executive work and ‘advisory work, The Ft knciial Post rian not but be gratified that 8011b" progress has been made in raisin; tihe standard of the board. Among those selected are some business s;_s2.4s2.o2s.1o LIABILITIES lmll. or rum ability and o»! Capital. ...;';‘.'TT.. . . . . . . .$ 4.0fo,000.00 perlerice who will contribute e-agc _ _ advice to Sir Henry "Thornton and ' Ijlugd ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Liggmlg“; his operating assaoiat-es and who] - n w‘ e r0 5' ' ‘ ' ‘s 5963,1816,’ may also iild thc railway in creating "CW bus-aims. Deposits, (Current, Savings, Co" cspondent No announcement, hag boat made i, Banks, etc.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42.l33,63l.87 0" 0m‘ fllndlllflflltally imiwrtiflni ' Notes in circulation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4,169,270.00 mm‘ “ " m“ ‘s ““‘°"‘°’ “"5” ‘m’ ouiei Liabilities...“ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 165,943.54 pointcmcnts are to be regarded as permanent c: merely as political ap- lifyifliinlfillt-S for the duration of the Conservative regime. Continuity in Canadian Notional Railwnys policy ‘fan only be had if thcboard of dl- ' "W ' ' " ' " rectors is to be a continuing board i0 ii-hich will be added. from time to time, business men of undcubtcd importance who con be induced t0 I join the directorate, so that it can be. steadily st-rewgthened until a di- rectorate approaching that of tihc Canadian Pacific. Railway in ivcight and i" fluriencc-is achieved. No one expect-ed Mr. Bennett and Sir Henry Thornton to achieve this objective over night. but it can never be TPIIIlPVFd if the dire-aims are m be regarded as subject to the rise and fall of party fortunes. A sci-o 1g C. N. R. board will be assurance for hhe public that affairs of the railway will be managed wilt-h due regard not, only for rwiyice rind economy but for the financial strain neccssarily imposed upon thc natio- nal treasury by public ownership of l." A New Genuine Con. Iron Range of improved design. One that you will find lo be a visible express. ion of the good taste that you show 1n your home and all of its appointments. 0n Display at:- thc railways - system. Sir I-Lenry _ iaataliiriyoly “wfclxk hiljoafigflrs-as c me e o‘ I I23 ‘Queen Street pm,“ 751 “THE FRIENDLY, HABDWQEI QTQRE" personal dictator of thc National Railways. Wltih a stranger board the public will b 11C1ll18d to feel ‘that costly duplication of railway services and oont-inucusly- increasing capital cvpcndituros ' will be, avoided. mmraxommm Needless Litigation E0 Q W I46 Richmond SL. ‘l IMontrcal Gamttci c . In the time of Charles 11., or about bharlnttietnwn f thc middle of the sevcntccth century, ' D _ _ _ ‘i’ a l" W“ timed "ems church i"- Flre, Life, Accident, Sickness tcndancc compulsory iri England. 11ml law, it is said, still appears on " ‘ f the statute beaks. and somebody in and Plate Glass lnsurance j D'.l.lll\!l'lC5LCl', according to yesterday's ' ralzln dcspntchcs, has conceived tlic droll idra of prosecuting a nod churchgolng citizen. not to makc him an "awful example“ of citizen ship, but in order to reveal the “aw~ ful example“ of an archaic law. The victim is to be chosen indiscrimina- tely, and it may be believed that. the at Lowest Rate proaecubm. w,“ have an ca“, choice Statute of Limitations may be suffering ‘from hysterical liti- in the Elm-mp; to “demonstrate the be RUNS-mill)’ lllfifldvtl ‘Md Suosity. and m a desire to dcmoiw alleged absurdity“ of ancient laws. m“ twentieth "mil"? Plflhi trate tl~c alleged absurdity of ancient of the individual to personal liberty allowed to prevail over n scvcnteeth It is a ivcllmarkcd feature of the English Constitution that no man is punishable. or can be lawfully made Ccntury “tamer flwug" l" be a “m” to suffer m body o, goods, except for inal law. Somebody in England must a distinct breach cf the law estab- . fished in the ordinary legal manner - before the ordinary courts of the land. If, in the instance, the par- ticular IRW invoked is "an ass," the administrators of the law do not fall within that class. ‘The spirit of the laws may succeed only in manifrstinl the alxurdlty of his own drmoiu- trution. ___,_ _, _-A it, ti... "Insist on our Black -Twiat,-— it has a wit, , gill; “%/Q CUT SALE 0F DRUGS “Me .5160 Scott's Emulsion Fellows Syrup 81.29 ‘ ii-imlua Yeast. 08c lf-"litt" taslic" H Nujol..............8lc&69c on cl’ Philips Milk Magnesia ... 45c aats a g Plnklinms Veg. (Jump. .. . 08c Ore-OI Cough Mixture Abbey’! Salk . . . . .. 48c In 55c n; “nu, Sal Hepatic: ‘ 59c y, Sloan's Llnlrnent . 20o i\\\"_ Vick‘: Vlpo Rub . 45c Plncx . . . . . . . . . . . . Plnauifs Dental Cream Plneltrlne Tooth Pate zlii Chase's Nerve Food . . . . .. 49c Chase's Kidney Ind Liver Pills Baby’; Own .. A. B. 8 d: C. . Anplrln . . . . Dodd-l Kidney riiir .... .. m m ‘lite Two Macs‘ Chase's Ointment 140 Gnu (been Street t