' The rcsttlls arc sltowti itt the record of those “ . If the enquiry conducted by the war 6x- . R. C. A. F. left-over equipment it will have PAGE FOUR i’ ~ .THE CHARLOTI" ETOWN GUARDIAN , TIIE GIIIIILOTTETDIVN Gllllilillli Morning Dally (Founded in ilfl) 'Altboriacd n Second Claae Mail. Poet Dillon Department, Ottawn Th’ Guardian may be obtained at: Huh Tobacco Shop, Moucton, N. I. The News Shop. Monoton, N. B. George McLean Plctou, N. S. Walker's White Spot. li Salter Si... Halifax, NJ. Metropolitan News Agency, 1248 Peel 8L. Montreal Ullltod Cigar Stores, Chateau Laurie: Ottawa, Outs B. Aititen, Lord Eigin‘s Hotel. Ottawa. Ont. ' J. Fine, 354 Bay St.. Toronto Ont. l Wolfe's News Stand, Sudbury. Ont. Old South Ncu-s, Cor. Milk and Washington Bil. Boston Botailnfa News Agency Times Building, New York “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ irvciiiiitiir. AUGUST 21. me "Monty" Scores Again Add zuiotltcr \ictory to the long list of Field Marshal Yiscotittt llutttgotuerfs tri- umphs -— his Capture oi the hearts of the peo- ple of Charlottetown and Prince Edward Island generally by his gctiial tiersongtlity and the spirit in which he c2: ‘ed into yesterday's welcome in his ltuttor. \\'Il'a >UlilCllllllfl rather unex- pected. \\'c wt led to admire ".\lon~t_v" for his ntagiiiiicttt: abilities as a military strate- gist and lczttlet" of iticn. for his skill and daring in battle, his .<~,>:u"t;t:t tli-citilint- and utiyicldittg (.l€lCl'illlll1llll\i1jTlll lllu \irttics. lil Tact, requisite to a rictoriotts contmatttlcr. iut no photograph or dcscriptiotrltail doizt- justice to his winning smile, to the lirclr qiark-le iit his eye, the affa- bility of ltis tuattttrr, the c-ittrtesy expressed in everv word and {do-HUT- Tltottglt strlvllv limited by his schedule, which allowed no limc for loitering at any point, the Field .\lar.~lt:tl took every opportunity of making llfifsOllill contact with our people. This was particttlarlv appreciated by the crowds 0n Queen Square iii front of the Provincial Build- ing, wltcn he walkctl within arm's reach of them all, along both sides, pattsing to oblige every amateur photographer with a “close-up" and waving to little boys and girls in the friendli- est fashion. lle ltad just then come from rc- ceiving an official welcome in the Confedera- tion Chamber, and had seized that opportunity to say how pleased he was with the Guard of Honour, and the warmth of his Prince Ed- ward Island welcome. He \vas also evidently delighted by the fine tttrttout of veterans of both sexes at Victoria Park, where he talked personally to every one on parade, and seem- ed quite reluctant to leave. There is nothing remotely resembling the traditional “brass hat” about Viscount Mont- gomery. His modesty and genuineness are the traits that strike one first and foremost. From the moment of his arrival at the airport, his fhand waving in friendly greeting, he struck a note of complete informality. That's the way we like our hcrocs in this country. He seem- ed- almost apologetic about the ro\vs of ribbons on his chest, though it is more likely that he never even thinks of them. He was in Can- adian battle dress, and he had on his old black beret. It looked like the same one in which he chased Rommel out 0f North Africa, with the badges removed. Pct-hat)! it W115! Yesterday's whole programme functioned as smoothly as clockwork, a fact due in no small measure to the capable supervision of LL-Col. \V. \V. Rcidi, D. S. O. Helping The. Blind The annual report of the Canadian Insti- tute for the Blind has just been issued and might well be made the subject of study by those interested in working with handicapped persons other than the blind. ‘ For the past tlircc years the institute has done the ‘training and directed the rehabilita- tion work for those hliudcd in the war 0n be- half of the Department of Vcttratifi’ Affairs- wlto have bcctt reabsorbed into civil life to pur- lue useful and ltappv careers. A few figures about the achievements of a single ycat‘ are revealing. The number of reg- istered blind ca=<~s at the end of hiarclt was 13,- 884 for all Canada. 'l‘he number 0f cases serv- 6d during thc year was 12,688, The W995 of service provided itirlttdcd. social service, 9,192; eye .5g|-vi(jg, 1,073; lllllllfi ifiiiClllflfl, 862} SHICS‘ room, 1,630; library 1,530; employment 1.296; concessions, 7.524; allowances, 2.121; general service, 5,400. In prevention ‘work the institute has been equally active as the following facts allow: Registered prevention cases to March 31 l85b 34,827; number of cases served during ‘the yea,’ 2,606, 11mg wcrg 1,361 who benefited from cye examinations; another 2,254 51'0"‘- glasses or artificial cycs. In addition to W" erations for fortv-scvcti cases, there were sev- enty-otic vidio reccivcd hospitalizationcr other . medical treatment. War Assets Waste penditures committee of the House of Com- mons as to the disposal of war assets does no more than‘ put a final end to and prevent a ' resunififioh of wasteful practices in regard to been well worth while. _ The evidence was that there were such ‘wasteful péactlccs in the destroying of equip- order that it could-be disposed of only used the pen name of Boris Sherashcvski. Mr. Brown gave evidence before the committee. But the whole field of accusation was not covered. Mr. Br0\vn was especially concerned with the destruction of batteries and the refusal m sell to individual buyers but only to junk deal- ers. R. C. A. F. evidence denied the charges and offered cost figures to show correctness in some of them. But the whole field was not covered and presumably the enquiry will be continued. The main point, says the Free Press, 1's that Mr. B_rown called attention to a condi- tion of wastefulness and the evidence showed that such wasteful practices had existed and the committee condemned them. On the other point made by Mr. Brown, that there was a refusal to sell to individual buyers, the com- mittee 'I'6C0lIllTi(‘il(l(’(l the spcedv- disposal of equipment by “salcs-at-tlte-sitc” and selection of materials to meet “short supply" conditions in civilian goods." - EDITORIAL NOTES _-s It was a great historic day yesterday in P.E.I. Monty ##1## Stnnmerside officially states there have been no cases of infantile paralysis within their borders. w =1- v a H.R.II. Prince Arthur, seventh child 0f Queen Victoria, visited (Ihztrlottetoivn this date I809; he ltttcr was raised to the pccrage as the Duke 0f Cottnztugltt, appointed Field Marshal, and later (iovcrttor-(ietteral of Canada. 1F Fl‘ ll‘ i Rev. Donald Ilowsoti, Presbyterian Min- ister, Fredericton, N.l’-., and latc army chap. lain, in the current issue of blttnrduvy Night appeals to Protestant Churches to return to auricular confessional to relieve the mental stif- ferings of the afflicted. Y! Ill i i‘ Sympathy goes out to Lord Montgomery in connection with the sad news he received in Halifax of the serious illness of his aged mother in Ireland. May she be spared to scc him on his return. e e m at Hon. Adclard Godbout, former Premier of Quebec declares he docs not believe the people of Quebec would vote to change their present allegiance if a vote were taken in that province to determine whether Canada was to be de- pendent upon Great Britain or France. lit ‘l! 1k 1K The Russia spy probe has required the gov- ernment to ask for a total of $187,000 to mcet expenses. One item is for $150,000 to provide for expenses iii connection with espionage pro- secutions, and an additional $37,000 for ex- penses in connection with the investigation. I it Total cost of the commodious and modern postal building which is planned for the City of Saint john will be $1,100,000. Of this the sum of $200,000 was voted in supplementary estimates tabled in the Hottse of Commons, and this will be spent on buying and clearing a site and in preparing plans. The remaining $900,000 will be spent on the building itself. The building will be “in the heart of the city's business section.” it It! *1! Grave concern has been caused among N.B. producers and shippers of seed potatoes by the announcement that the Special Products Board, Ottawa, had decided to discontinue its opera- tions in connection with the niarketings of cer- tified sced in South America, Central America and the West Indies. Failure of some o_f the shippers t0 co-operztte with the board is given as the cause of the action. The board had agreed to continue this year subject to the full co-op- eration of the shippers being secured. This was agreed to by all the shippers, but appar- ently some 0f the shippers had not stood by their bargain whctt the price had been set and this lack of co-operatioit was given as the rea- son for discontinuing operations. m i- x it In the last_ quarter of 1945 the ituitibcr of live births in the province was 557. the deaths. 230; the marriages, 233. For the whole 0f Canada, the live births dttring the fourth quar- m- of 1945 numbered 68,868 (preliminary fig- ures) giving an equivalent annual rate of 22.6 per 1,000 population as compared with 66,869 births and a rate of 22.2 for the fourth quarter of I944. There were 2,884 illegitimate birth forming 4.2 pcr ccnt of all live births as coni- pared with 2,686 0r 4.0 per cent. Stillbirths amounted to 1,557 or 22.6 per 1,000 live births as against 1.600 and a rate of 23-9- mall" m‘ tailed 28,542 with a rate of 9-4 P" 1i°°° WP‘ ulation as compared with 28,533 and a rate of 9.5. The natural increase for the ‘lhartcr was 40,26 giving a rate of 13.2 per 1.000 PQPUlP lion as against 38,‘2‘81‘an:i sfate of 12.7. Reprccussions of a private dinner held in Ottawa a week ago by Quebec Liberal _mem- bers are still being heard in capital circles. As a sequel to the dinner, says Th: Journal, Dr. Gaspard Fatiteux, Speaker of the Commons. had been unofficially approached and would soon be-officially offered the leadership of the .Liberal Party in Quebec. The report followed one published in Devoir, Montreal French- langoage daily, which aaid_that Adclarcl God- imut, present head of the Liberal Party l" Q11" bec, would likely resign this week because _of the "hostile reception" given him at the din- ner. Asked to comment on the Journal re- port, Dr. Fautcux said: "Slow m)’ appointment as Speaker, having 1o be imvartlel l! “Wm” meat in ma. The R. C. A. F. reply was that all this destruction gll political parties in the House of Common». I have taken no active part in partisan mat.- fers. As I do not attend any caucus meetings I am quite unaware of what hapvfllttl l"! Wgl‘ in 01mm during the dinner given by the _t. Hon. Mr. Louie S. Si. Iain-en: (justice Min- i=3; i '6 wgyom. m ._ fact at any oilttr Wllll": exception to press re e c “with.” ‘ ' {Votes Byi771e Way Alouguld la What t bore aiymtléh nrguiataaigghnazf ‘gas-a: that pass on e. e recs, e old-fashioned iumway horse- was positively restful, says The Edmon- ton Journal. Chocolate, polar . throughout the would is a. egucy from Mexico's ancient Aztecs. says Inter-Ant- erican. Their chocolate was 11 thick paste flavored with vanilla. Tue Spaniards acquired a taste for it. but when they imported cattle from Spain, they turned i‘. nto a beverage by adding milk. They also Hisparécized its name by pro- nouncing it chocolate (ciio-koh- LAH-teh.) which in turn was modified in other countries to fir. the locsl language The Victory Vase, recent gift to the Russian people to Gent-ralissi- mo Stalin is the largest object of its kind in existence, says Co'iier‘s. Ornsmented with $40,000 worth of gold and decorated with a portrait of Stalin and we.‘ scenes which took five artists two years to paint, the vase is made oi’ pink porcelain and is nine feet in height. It does not seem much use for the Western democracies ‘o win the confidence zm-l understanding of Russia's diploma-Ls her “front men". We must storm that ivory control tower in the Kremlin be- fore Russia. can f-e truly conquer- ed by the logic of the late Wendel‘. Wiilkies famous phrase -~‘"oi-.~ world or no world." —Vancouver Province. Miss Pearl Watt. RN" welfare supervisor. one o! 30 or 35 iiilTS“S working tn various Government departments throughout the Capi- tal, told her Evenin: Citizen interviewer if sne (Miss Wart) sees a. sleep head nodding, over a desk and learns ther» is a. sound reason why the employee is tired, she takes him c‘: her into her room and after an hour's Lip the ivnrk 1s resumed with rzrttelwul vlgtsr and better work is therefore turvtr-d out. —Otta\\1 Citizen. _The discovery. in June. of now diamond deposits in the states of Pisul and Goisz adds news sources no Brazil's vast wealth of precious ard semi-precious stones The largest diamond deposit ever dis- covered in central Btrszii- accord- ing to the Ministry oi’ Fbreig-n Af- ‘fllIS——Il88 Just been brought to light near Boo Simao. in the fcuth- eastern section of the state of Golaz. This deposit is locttcd or. the island of Caplvsra wLlch ls formed by s delta of the Piiralbit river. This new source is s1 rich that one diamond mine is said to have taken out about. 200.001‘ cruze- iros or $10,000 worth oi’ stones in om week. while other workers have mode similar large qtinflas i1: the course of their work. —1*‘0rclgt1 Commerce Weekly. Photographs of Victory Day cele- brations in Australia show Gen- eral Sir Thomas Biamey review. ing the troops Vlhilg motmtcd 0n a white horse. Such pictures are re- freshing. Of course, the hcrse is outmoded in warfare. He is an s-r-ichronism. nut one that can well be totem-ted on ceremonial occas- ions. There is something particul- arly martial in the spectacle of’ a commander mounted on a (hair;- er. It brings a tit-rill that can mvcr come from seeing 1-. standing figure, anchored to u platform, taiztng n salute. Even in this age of jeeps 11nd tar-ks, let the horse nevi-r dis appear entirely from our mdliary Dilleflntry. ——'Nindsor Star. Prom all over the continent have come reports of the peoples grow- ing interest in music ant the arts. Orchestras have been teliinr; of the best. years they have ever had. and the some evidence has been presented by mitscums. ZIbmnes and the art galleries. People have been flocking to rught clasres in the universities and art tchoois, seeking understanding and skill for the greater enjoyment c,t cut‘- ural pursuits. It is a most heart- filitfiz trend. —'I‘m'cinto G‘. the and a . In Windsor a‘ curb-masher has been sentenced to seven days lr. 1-111 for aocostlng and insulting a young girl on inc street. The girl made a rnte oi the number of the car in which the young mun was riding, and handed it over to the police. who located the offender and brought ntm to Justice. In a case like this, a l-iii sentence is better than a fine Any young man who is so low as to insult a young lady on s street would prob- ably be prepared to pav a fine. 1,1 caught, but i: is a different thing eimwing that there is anv essen- tial decline tn mental powers up to 80 or B0.’ If the population. trend continues we are going to have a l er number qt olci wen-W They will ave to come up to their fuii stature of personality r-na to contribute what. they can to the canmonwealth of ideas.” » Mr. George Iaaaee. Minister or Labor. is sending frame of recruit- ing officers to Dire to persuade 10,000 young Irishman to vofunteer for work in British mines before the winter. Ihey will be given three months’ sttfaoe train before being given tmdergmuivi bu Mr. Bhinweli, Minister of Fuel. who initiated this drive to build up the objection to the mportathn of Irish workers provided they e members o! ‘he union no an enrploycd on the same conditions ac British workers. —Im1dnr. Ex- wen. This Pall children who l? to one public school wi find 25 mini re pianos — not tova, but Illitilttlblg musical instruments - waiting for m‘. music-hungry fllillfl. The! will owe this chance to an ex-Air i-hrcrs private. Hamid B. Rilodeo, who invented the orig- inal lap-lined piano from oclaps of smoked pianos m that his dloablitad fellows could Heroine their at f- ened hands 11d divarttheir m t1 with music walla in bed. The .- proved ll-pouml called am. in made d war-s ue manpower has consulted the min- m; ere‘ leaders. They say they have ac ju A Great Waste Inst week national re titration died a belated and ualamented death. With its panning the came to an end one o! the molt inexcusable and III-till"! 02 country's peacetime Its worth to the nations wartime effort was at no time demonstrably more than a fraction of its cost. A: an instrument for the betterment o! good order and the public wei- fare in the days of peace. ita value was little, if any, more than more. Yet in cost to the talfilverr of Canada was several hundred thousand dollars a year-lust sm- the direction of Hon. J. G. Gardin- er who, at that time, held the portfolio of Minister of National Wnr Services, as well as that of Minister of Agriculture. Its avow- mutton. A5 p, matter of fact, no use whatever hurl been made o! it at that, date, Not yet completed was the building in Ottawa in which hundreds of clerks, hired especial- scheme uciill then was absolutely collapse of Germany. But, at, last, it is done. flnie, kztput. No longer must a Canadian citizen curry with hl-m at eli times the human equivalent of a 50R tag which did not even indicate, and far less prove, hi»: nationality. And no longer will the Iii-cen- Them"""‘"=‘|5nd .o;""""""'_"""'= t A Famous Settleshlp I I love the The litt 1 love old farms that nod nah": The moon a horn of plenty titPPm-‘l lfilgtlriridtilrsnlian vlltiliynirlferoidftcgg. your T° ‘Pm l“ gold “m” m” ‘ky’ rived at |lene-on-the-ClY¢l° 9° National Registration was in- be link"! "P- ' susurated in Auullll. i940. under A ch“ wan“ ma?!“ lgfibnuonng Um“ ll" Gum mhnah w" Pl nickname give w 31mm‘! MIX" Taylor, Brampton Ont. by British movie-makers producirr; Hill" at the Dennam Studios. small part in the film. was r-centty beat them as lodgers of livestock at the Chstteris fgriculiural Show. t A IITEIITIIII ..'¥..'.'.2'.’ ‘.1fi°?l’li“"" Comes To It's End h “I'd” dime Imt in mags o e ran - 1014-10 able Iron Duke In to be atiut. The droadlnou ht which carried lard Jellieoaa i at the battle ot Jutland in til -— cheated the wrecker: in Ill) when she was one of five British battlb] ships to be discarded under tho international treaty of that year. old o! home. 1e “c,” w m“ fl '5 lflt‘ The heavy sheaves that draw their d, . . milk u“ n“ fvnl'f'.'ige:,fllg,.lfifd.."°gsp'd'mm: _ llloil fxzitiitq llluktwop "V" ll" ‘m’ 7mm‘ a ' a gunnery training vessel. Bar l’ Y 1 191115 . . . aide armor was removed, four o! her 10 big guns taken away. and her speed lowered by ‘reducing her boiler uwer. Now die has pl‘- In a hot evening of July. Whose mossy lid an at, 1:" grape of moisture hanlln! r Like fir-y chandeliers of let. completed in January of i910 the Iron Duke clan headed Brlfalufi list of’ battleahi I. Dreadnought: of 21,30 tons. wth 12-inch armor at the waterline, they canted 10 13- Mnrch it was officially announced ed purpose “.35 “m “cw-uh, m, 5-inch gun: and l2 0-inch lune. human resources of the nation so Labor is sweet when from title 3d They cost. limit 319-099-939 "Pl?"- ma; [hgy mgy be mobl] , _ Comes the pine time" 0 e They were eclipsed by t a Quest‘ in the defence of this country and corn. h‘ m‘ b Elizabeth: of 31.100 d Q1021". a Y h, . towards the successful prolecutzon (How Still-l‘ “umu” n cl-Yl 8 eight 16-inch guns up -n¢ ' . . of ‘he war}- Lifting the little newly-born). guns. Today Britain: largest bot- i} sat months later, during which tlesiiiP ll the ""18"" 415W , interval Coventry, Birmingham, Oh he! these farmer folk to see tons, and laid to be a 868350.000 and even London had been ‘oomb- The uty 0f lhtl-l‘ qlllfll WBYB- llllP- ed with savage intenllty, we re- Where Peace hanze ehirlnt: ben- The Iron Duke is not the only - i marked that Jimmy Gardinerhad 11ers o'er veteran 01' Jlllllfld ti? I0 l0 1 been strhngeiy silent about how m mictny oi’ country dove Ihlti-lcrlnwl thll velr- I ‘ __ Js uee, fiiiiiiliii =- wsis “ ilttsil; it..~i.-..~-.-.=~ bu.“ tzxstzmtssssrhatttuaz? 2.11.‘: ‘gangsta: aw: iLiitiifi"ila.iil”i-t'iliiifi. ‘iii. ,,, m . 5:211‘: stint: air."- ‘a. '25:: m... as... f... 2s _ l§§.."i8l‘"££°l."litmsalil °s“.“°“~‘:‘“’ 8w“ use “'11s 1mm; made of u... inlw- (c?) - “Islttie Canada" is the gzfxlvltanlgfbefitfielbmmidto that beautifies instantly. landing, and joined the eastern fleet, in the war against the Jap- ancse. But the future of even modern battleships is in doubt. The atomic bomb has changed the picture of “tiungry Maxie, who has been cast for a fizéx 7acf0r, ly for the purpose, were to under- dm f y; R1153 take the gigantic job of segregats wax??? miflmn m" mums naval warfare as it has changed H - lug. collating and classifying the m 3mm, Is“. d m m,“_ the picture OI lflnd W611i". Tl"! - mililc-ns of cards on which were e H, m pg“. ..§."°k “a Bikini experiment showed what ;; recorded the "human resources" em w‘ e ‘ s ‘ac out l Single A-bvml! C!!! d0. The Ill}! -~ of Canada. In short. the vhole company‘ is that atomic energy involves such ‘ INTUjilTloNiTMU_MP"s teirrlfic forces that the nations of Ma“ orders Given Prompt ON unadulterated window-dressing. __ the WOIld 08H n0 l0!!!" Wly “DWI It has been very little more ever (c?) _ me lgnLkéryQgvlimgowcd armies or nnvies, but must; rely on __ Attention since, and especially a0 llnce the to a ‘em o’ Land Army ems who P9599 lflfileld- z ti. F. liuteheson & Still LARGEST CIT! Buenos Ali-es 1S the largest city For Foot Ailments not in minmower unemployment hours particularly but in lo“. goods of which everyone is in nut-d. Am- erican analysts have figured it all out. Lost steel pZ0dhCil0Xl frctn No- vember. 1946 to the present was translated into lust prcducis, and it was shown that. all this wt-s lost to the American nubile: 8,030,000 automobiies. 20,000,000 refrigerators. 10,000,000 locomotives. 20,000.000 washing machines. 5,000,000 kitchen ranges. Even that was far from the whole story. Because it would mean that the things for which all those ducts would be eXCYIBBSBd it 1h 1-25 were rannal, would not b: produ- ced, and the wages for prirnuctng them would we lost. ‘Ihifpuralyztng effects on com- merce, reaching out into the b‘; and small stores" trv-raporation. restaurants, and all the other fields of business, needed no elabvrating. It was all clear enough. From the strike-ridden neigh- boring city. Hamilton, comes i-intost n voice of despair, and certainly s voice of warning by The Hamilton Spectator. That naner surveyid the situation in this way. "men though it came 11017.’: to u: in this city ln a few days Pow one strike can choke the channels of our inter-related industry: slow one wheel after another hold back ccivc-d plan add to the taxpayer's CONSULT helm, m, Nun“; burdm Kiddies have to pay q tax H J A BRU“IN up of one cent on a glass of pop on ' ‘ ' ' oP-TOMETRISTS - account of such governmental ro- Oflhopedic ‘ . “trait .%.”..§llt:’..38“.s_." it: “simian- i» ti» m- |I f I " | t; d Ollill ‘glegi-sttiauttlon was costing ting of glasses for the r0 at s "w" a“ a “my Y “" ' correction of ocular de- ' Wm... -~= m» -=»-- M a...» NW- W» HIGGINS cnanmnurowu. no.1 53 Grafton Street Cllflrlflffll Aflmllllalll- (s1. Catharines Standard) 144 Rlfllllflfllill sl- Whaodid the s/ceei and coal l Chu-hnumwn _ strikes 1n the United States mean, T“. 589 P“. Box u l PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER Mo: DID YOU KNOW? bookkeeping. M188 HELEN GIDDIN aelenhone 10M ltvenln P. 0. ‘$.01 Gil. IN Queen ItIIOI Statistics reveal that during six years of war, road casualties at home were nearly twice Canadian overseas casual- ties. LET US PUT A STOP T0 THIS NEED- LESS DRAIN ON OUR POPULATION. Q 00o i "Offfilland Company l l l l l t i-lave your cars thoroughly checked and approved by WIN"! lmiltll" a competent mechanic and banish ankieiy and worry with adequate Insurance Cover. IIYNIIMAN 8t 60., LIMITED Insurance Since 1872 Intern Truss Building Charlottetown H. R. DOANE l CO. ALLISON P. McLEAN - District Manager at Sununcraida Ch-auzgmtccszlmnn“ CYRUS A. n. straw - District tuna-m- n Motaguo “m, “mus M°AVINN ‘l - Special Bcpreleniatlvel n Charlottetown cam. n. aunts: ~. 5°‘ “l ti! landolpn I. Manning. home-buildlnz: depress the whole commercial estahlislunent lyr-iit on the earrings of all citizens-there was an even more dramactc pre- sentstion at Ottawa of the effect: of o. relatively small strike tit Arn- herstburg, Ont. "Lack oi’ soda nah which is nor- mally produced at the plant, n‘.- rendy has caused layoffs in the glass industry and wmlid cripple it if the dispute lasted much longer. Out of operation too. would be such huge emphyere of Canadian wage earners as Not-ands Mines, International Nickel, Eldorado Gold Mines, Brompton Pu‘p and operation the schedule is as follows: Leave Wood Islands Leaves Caribou McLeod Q Bentley W. I- BINTLEI. l0. l. A. BINTLII. l0- Bar-inter: and Attoroeye-al Law l“ Prince Street Wood lslantis-liarihou Service With the Prince Nova and Charles A. Dunning now in 7 a.m. 9 tun. '11 a.n1. 1 pm. 3 p.n1. 5 p.111. 9 a.n1. 11 a.n1. I p.111. 3 p.111. Operating Daily including Sundays. 7 a.m. 5 p.111. Charles R. McQuaid an. moment is almost pitiful; tuc same foes for services. If they stuff oil: f production is not mauled up, then current purchasing pot-er. no nutter what. its form. will drive up prices, and no government. dic- t-a-te will he able tn hold them in check. Then a spiral will develop that cannot be caught." It time that Canada has won.- derful resources but this country could never absorb an onrv of in- ti-itimi. Strike afici- strike can not be taken in stride either, an"! when all the lose le totalled from Cape Breton to the mines and forests of aren't-ta...» “at.” B e aomt 11g that an ordinafi billion dollar hud- get of Ilsiey would not cover. The after-effects as well an much rate mu: now t wit‘. have after some months mueiom tan vmmiilii. which ammung everywhere. INVINTOI IAIJID In the first mum?! the manual refined to allow an irwenlor to put-t. ‘it i" IMF?!‘ , l mtlmll mines it. would thmwnlu! out of oim-ifiqvéit lg’ Dialog - E other eitii‘ tiir nan . L I Either-h a iihlr lnlieaaiftlafti to get behind bars for a uuvck. - papen find-on B,“ Mm“. and _ Chatham News. Swgung am‘; when a ‘e DAYLIGIIT SAVING TIME Iurmm,’ Saudi’. i: thg-gggi-rg; d;- mg- 1a dwin- i; n. ilnlfé"’svliié'.°si.'.ildsi.fii' ‘if. turns. Same as ma. to n re" v warn... says mil. m... n t... 2223.5“ ,,,°,‘}3{?°‘§,i,,,°°,‘,°,',',‘,‘“‘,,,,?,1‘£}£ NORTHUMBERLAND rnutuns txrn. ""'~c,_,,,,,,,,,,,,,““‘"“ °*l°"l Iwlkttfi 0! Pflrshvlest‘. raged industrial machines sided R E MUTCH President. Plum; rm Entzl-md. "Experiments show that e ready u. feed nn: of m. htittgricsi. ' ' ' , , , , , "N. °§=“m"§-“-“lé’-ii%°‘li"eit°u’? caustic ..*:::.."::..2: ~ t; K a 1.1. " ' ' ' ' m" are”, “no evmn” h“ “merged t QUKJQEQ y an eyno BELL 8t MATHIESON Ianhton. loiieftoll. ae- a. a. oat-L. u. o. 1. I:TIIEBON¢ 8-0- “QIIIQ l-l IDANI on cllrv 111w FA"! raoraanas COLLECTIONS I80 llehqcnd . no.1. l: all’; x». / . ~""".‘i§'.i'.°..t .. It. -"'=f-.I.'.--.........- Dll. A B. SMITH DINTIII qnfloullraat generation-I". hlapbeae Si. auixvi, mnntnsou common- I"- . . oumlll" mars." o»- l Ollie . ‘ IGAN. B-A = I no -. u, 1 inn“ cannon-or. i rah - A w, cu quanta 1