I _ ' v» i - .f r-,~~~,.- » <~ . »` f f , PAGE SIX __ _.___ ____ .. ..____...._._ é - 1 _se THE CHARLO'l‘TE‘DOWN GUA|lili.\.N , , , ,___ ._ _ - U _ h . _ - mt. his \\\§\ - lac. zsc. ‘(; , [ll 2 Eve. 'I A 8.45 - zsc, lzc. c Hoof f 6|o_s_oN ’”f.:.f’f'e THERE’S thrill piled upon thrill in this lightning - swift pic- ture of thugs, China- town u n d e r world, hreakneek riding. and the great outdoors. How Hoot rifles. fights. shoots. loves! See it for a fast' action feast. “M YS TER Y TROOPER ” . Another Thrilling Chapter A N D C O M E D Y / \ -.-i C »\ L: [T1- Q/I` i\v\ TUDAY i\ Ottawa Active In Fart/iering Foreign Trade 0'I'I`AWA, September '30,-Behind names of a flour mill in Calgary, a hosiery establishment in London, a toy company in Toronto, li con- densed milk firm of British Colum- bia, two Canadian melt p.1cl;ir.g companies, u rubber nianniabturer of Guelph, a Quebec firm v.'l;icii makes building iiiatcrial, a, Tarolilo chocolate firm, a large \’.i'\coii\'e': company, dealing in fresh frozen the beyond of Canadlrs foreign sea food, o. Vailcouvcr biscuit con- _;_ trade, concealed in the cold facts 'cern, and a hardware xliar.uiac‘.ui‘cr and figures periodically publi:-iif:-i by of St. Catherines. Throug.i the cl- the Department of Ti'1d~: and Com- i forts of the trade coiiiiliit;-'tiller a nierce, are some liearteiling tales of Qucebc maliufacturer of ilbie boaifi the courageous and persistent ef- has gained entry into the Sitirn forts of the Governmeiit’s coir.ni_\r- market. cial emlssaries in rcnrn: parts of It is the fashion no'.vali.1ys to ex- thls ea:-th to spread the gospel of tol the value of personal contact, Made in Canada goods. Whether and in business it is regarded ns the trade balance in any given imperative, but 'naintellalice of per- month is favorable or nnfavcrable, sonal contact ln thc iilterests cf whether the dollar is at fl discount Canadian business is it iniuc za.; or at li. premium, it ls worth rc- in il tropical country where the memberlng that Canadian trade means of transportation are not ilie ‘ commissioners, whether in Shalig- best. A paragraph iii the conlniis- hai, Java, Buenos Aires, Cape '1`own,.sioner's report tells of u silo;-t tour Tokio or Dio de Janeiro, are out in of East Java. unfamiliar and many times, dis- tressing climatic conditions seeking new purchasers for the things this country would sell. A commercial traveller is sclrion: sent beyond the confines 'if the D0- minlon by his firm. He goes from town to town, from city to city, by. railway train, by bus or by aulomo-I bile, booking new orders, investigat- ing complaints about goocis already sold, sometimes acting as a collect-l ing agent. When it comes to look- ing for orders in :o'inl.rics be§.'orld| the seas and from people who speaks another language, business firms arc :not disposed to incur the expense] of what in some cas--s might l:e nothing more than an idle anal pro- fitable excursion, and it is here that the Canadian: trade cciiiniissioner :enters upon the scene. He is at the disposal of all Canadian firms, and,| _while he does not actually sell goods and book orders, yet in find- ing and furnishing agents, in pro- viding the "contacts," hc goes a considerable distance in secui'lrig` foreign purchasers of Canadian; goods. i .His duties are multitudinous, his patience seems inexhaustlble, his :resourcefulness is apparently bound- less. Even in normal times there are many factors to be »‘.:alt with, many obstacles to be surmounted. There is the fluctation of foreign exchange, there is the assiduous, competition of other countries in other countries in the market he is trlying to cultivate, there are the lfrequent, and disrupting altematiorls in the tariffs of that 1oi‘cif;n colin-' try and of his own, and, finally, thei peculiarities of requirement on the part of the foreign buyer. All these make a formidable combination and they demand of the tradc commis- sioner the rare qualities of tact, cic- termlnntlon and resourccllilriess. , ' Work Illustrated .` An illustration pf thc inhl of work being done in far coinefs of the earth for Canadian iricincss ls furnished at Batavia, in Jim, inad- quarters of the Trade Cominilslon- er, whose territory embr>\c-es thc Dutch East Indies, liritisli Mnluya and Siam. While even ;.i n good year Canada`s sales iii this i=.-gioll do not represent any lnrgc iercent- age of exports to the Orient, yet the diversity of thc work and the re- sults accomplishcd oy the commis- sioner present a fairly informing fieture of a trade campaign in a re- inute area. Samples or trial shipments are tlxc first requisite in securing new business, and it is worth noting that in the last report of th: Trane Commissioner nt Batavia, G. R. li;-nsman, sciit to the Dcpaitnient sonal contact -vith the firms in that area. In tryl'.i;; to cstrlbiirli agencies in Soeramiu we are unc’ri‘ tion and mall service and the lack of interest displayed bg: local lm- porters. It is only by coilsiaiii: trav- There ls a certain capriciousness. here on June 30 last his list of new business influenced included the I/ I ALL SEEING EYl;lS are Charlie Chan S! Moon mad lovers and lurking killers in a bai- lling :topic mystery. WARNER OLAND SALLY EILIRS r lol! N995' ____-_- ci-1A'iz'1.1f: CHAN says l-.`i'cn Wisest Man Sonletimesbfgs takes Bumblebee for 31005' U Abc BOBBY JONES and COMEDY SPECIAL vo TES TONIGHT Lower Floor 25 V01” Balcony 15 V01” ED“i ARD Children CAPITOL ci-"dren 1° V°l== WAR MONDA Y .,» ‘_ ."\» 'V i> J U.. ,_ lcon You "This was very nece's;<;\ry," he , _ says, “in order' no iiiaintniri our per- i A N D T H E * fu- -2.2¢ *YJ 4° very much the suziic liaricicap -as fl H %~'5L: person living lzi f».Iontre.l txyiiigfo , .-`é.._-*»_--___,. ._~_.___;_.._ _-_._, _ ,_ .. _,_A _ ,. been woeguuy inadequate and m_ About the only chance B minute! 0 S an p v Y sell to a firm located ni Toronto. In Y ' `“ ' ' " ' ' " " efficient in modem i;lmg5_ of finance had. to cut expenditures temperance societies to promote to- l0 Votes 15 Votes » ` / .» ,,- .. I ~ y,,,~ ,-5, i' I Control Of `Expena7ztares _OIIIY hllll ' ’ c Aim Of Bennett’s Plans _,,____ n *ga* ` , _ - - -~-~-~»-»s>e.:ec,e.-=c_,,_s_l\;=-.-=.-;e.»-- In Force October First* _, - il yew,-mp in the control ot. Federal 8 being worked out by Rt. Hon. RB. Bennett, acting Minister of Fl- pervlsion and auditing will come into operation probably on October . 1 says the Financial Post. F Appointment of ll Comptroller of the Treasury. the official destined to be the ccl',.'al figure in the new for the job of Comptroller is the' _ , q|_-MWA, 5¢p¢, so-Far-reaching 'pu-llhmcnt, but would be unable to, 'do more than register g oompllilll- overnmerit expenditures are now 'Mearltlme so much 1€¥3l!lUV° Wi 'ter would have flowed under the Pull! All Bod Debt! will be applied. Pending the ap- _cus socclllcd lmdlnlic. but would . polntment, the accountants of the actually Spend $1,100,000- The 4°' ~+ _bridge, that Parliament would not I huucc, una thc new system cf su- huvu time to turn back md revrl- *__ _ niand the minister. _`___ _ -L/, ' _ ___ iii » . \ A ect! balanced blcnda- ‘ir 'rin :ner-siicndlnz of sl>iir°i>fll\' f " ....., .-. 0...... ..-.. ,........., i sealed l_n _air-tight aluminum system of financial control, may ,depurinieut milzht be Brallted $1»‘ Cm tn- ae l»\I` be delayed, but the system proper 000,000 by Parliament under vnrl- me Charge Against Appropriation _ Nevertheles, the reforms au- Etme, was about $15,000,000, Y°"“‘ ‘“ “" "’ ’“‘““'“°°' ihorizcc by siuluic lust session wiilgcbilhg the degree to which Rvlllllllcc ln H" "S S|0l'y- be achieved at once, and withinlimproper methods had bee” PWC' Finance Department will carry on pnrtment would pay by cheque Prohibitionists ` 1,000,000 f uinia il d stand the work. Delay in selecting a manifhe other l;___;_l;co;l) overntm the A new bunch of me finance de_ partment. under control of a comp S ek Chan In 1, 1 el, My-_ B tt’ t . The unpaid buh would ' e hwgvergbadzd xlib work anilmxv-S Itxlign llzarpald out of the new av- tmuepceneml' °° be °pl’°1°"°d' , . - ll mt, becn iible to give as much at- tproprlation, without anyone being wl set__T|1;_;_1¢d8er account fall; M S. Llquor wuecu as he desired to do fc the ,much fbc wiser. .lt cnc end of the °'l’l’“’l’ “ “l’l”°"°d bl' " administration end of the Flnanceisecond year the accumulation 0! mem' when B d9DBl’¢m8ht desires ____ ne ruuchi Further u sultablclphpuld bills would bc larger. and W ”l*\‘° 5° °’¢P°“‘”l“'° c8°l11“ . Pa! __ thé job is nat read” avauiso on one of the mst thmgs.M,_ any of its accounts, the particulars (Canadian Press, GOOD FOR TONIGHT ONLY “E” lar Bennet, Wm mt M; bupipenbclr. aid upon assuming wufrbi will be forwarded to the comp- mono, N. s., sept. za.-'rhc gov. B' e' ' - troller-General who will deduct the ernment of Nova Scotia is to be ask- rledly in making his appointment, of the finance department wah: amounts of tie expenditure from ed at the next session at the _ezmlm _ ' ; - _ _ i ld “ ‘ so that some delay is mwlwble gather mini; gms: stizclral supply the total appropriation, and author ture to amend the Govemment _ . fi pw v 'c " 1 t irc the issuing of a. cheque. More~ Control Act to provide for the clos- " P D Rdmm’ GN' In Fore' l;§i;n§uEI;:r;:: Eigirmgt tg; over, no commitment for an ex-I ing of all government liquor atorel ' ' mdk pendltllre in the future may be “within the territorial llnm" oi these made until the assent of the Comp- counties that may give in 9. plebis troller has been received, and ln cite amalority vote aaglnst govern- this case, also the amount' involved ment sale. A resolution to this er- l found change f0r'tised. ’ _ “ “W "°°"" ° P" - lthe better should be allparent Sli There was yet another 3l°l`ll\8 Wm be deducted imm the mal ‘ect W” Passed °tth;°’n;;";1afnEet - ‘ - o a c Fo the first tlm in the weakness in the old system The “pp"°l”`i““°”‘ In this WW- depart ln! 01 the N°"°' 5° er' 1 a _ 811611 Steal Our lleart ` *ottawa* r e d lllelll-ll Will be compelled £0 UVB vice Council and Temperance Alli- Y h t ffl t, G t, ih _Tre ui- non _ :llisstf:ire}ils°'lllkteecl;3;1l? Zxdii;-Iaigdegzulainistere of picnic could within their means, the old proc- anlie held here yesterday. The coun- . ' if L ' . ~ ibuslness will be assured. ,They would know how much money tlqgg.-t e Ctbwnms :E016 f It may come as a surprise to Parliament had voted, and how_‘h°W1“3 Plfcl-‘lilly the position in the use 0fllllll0l'- _ I tures, more. than' $400,000,000 per economy policies to meet situations 0 - » with her sublime pathos ' d, . ,,, 1,, ,h ,,,,,,,,,,,,, me, of llcc cl cv='r-expanding will cease. cii placed on record its belief that , thi l i ;illesb¢;":;,iiti¢:uin<§dr bifnldg Ixsudrea glittr tlieafinanfilai position-of the It Wm 5° “°l 0111!/ DOSSlble but government sale oi liquor had led tl d magic artistry in h h audit of all goyvernlflentin-easul-y was at any given moment. quite “SY f°" the Fillllllvtl Milli-St' to increased consump on an an t °r°“g | cf fc cblclll a slalcmcnb every day increase lu the evils resulting from business men, but the fact is that much revenue had been received, "Bard t° expendiwres and °°m The ¢°““°U mted with "3"°°'t i mllmclll-1 A pcllcy of economy will sulisfucnbh" the resolution adopted Of ller queenly Career. ithere has' never been a thorough but could -form no estimate of how ,_ n | h of what had been voted had be enforceable upon short notice. by the Canadian Lcglonmthelrre- supervision of governmen expe - muc alan-cs, nur an efficient audit. Tbuiuciuuiiy been spent. thc cwicut cl T*"’"’°” lnlnl-'lim Wlll be curbed- cent cohvcnflcu held ut Nmgm The t i¢ tuna i is true notwuhstandmg the huge future commnmem._s_ In these cu.. value of these reiomis are Falls in which they oo ll s t dl ta me nforcemem °f quite 0bV10llS- Frflm the purely adv against lotteries and gambling. lume of governmen xpen - cums nces, e vo e mlnlstratlve point of few the cost Appreciation was expressed for the Gs ~ year. The system of financial con~ as they arose was lmpractlcable. f the C°mPt1’°u¢1'. “Hd his 8851-sv work being done by A. T. Iagan. ,,,,',L noi in operation in 1930 was bl- About bu b lvflulstei- of Finance “"5 Wm b° m°’° than °l‘S°l bl' Dlvlslfml Clllel 01 the °“=l°l1\ll' most the some as in 1880 although could do was to write notes to his the ‘Wing in demrtmental ““dit` Excise Preventive 5*"/\°°» in WP' the goverment in recent years colleagues urging them to stop Tifsl-rD'1_::§d_l_"E¢!__§0°H0mieSv:lI1lC:un-_ pressing smuggling. A recommexé; _ had been spending as much money spending money, to argue with ° 7 W ensue E 3' W0" WHS Pused *hw ’°P\'°°e” WARNER BAXTER _ nm ns used w b S M .them __somuy_ or to preach vigor, clear gain for the taxpayers. tions be made to the authorities at in one mo e pe pe UM, Mm-k,| ii., ,,, year, The supervision and ously at wbmeg meeting.; _ Apu --Z--= Ottawa to “provide adeuimts equiv- audltlng have not kept pace with there was, about these methods, ai - ment" to combat Sl1'lll8811D8~ OTHER F-_ dv 'I 'L the expansion of publi busin m I tlllty which drove some of our , ° Thi? °°““°“ °l“Ph“51z°dbY ¥¢°°1“' SHORT Ilauncuin if/ibgury A system which no dolibt worked tllnance ministers 'into retirement No General strlke U0" the l19¢°”"Y °f °dll°°'~’°°“ T-‘LKIE5 satisfactory forty years ago has -broken in health, nervous wrecks ° ° W°¥`k 5" the 9h“’°h°5» sum,” `------ Ulltll Illqlllfy By h bi cl ubilc schools and b elling and keeping up l`::.= personal 5 _I ~) contact with these firiiis that we fl l can ever hope to get lclli business." ' ' ~ I - too, in some of tile tropical and. `, sub-tropical countries ilitit is ire-l _` f quently baffling to those trying to stimulate a neiv marlzct. “In order _ to prove that a coinmodity is mar- (Canadian Press) ketable or not niurizetable in this LUNENBURG, N. S., Sgph, 30_. territory,” says the commissioner, While the Gloucester schooner "it is not only iie:':..<.ui'y to investl- Gertrude L. Thebaud gets into her gate each couli‘.i‘y coming under racing paces in a series of trials this jurisdiction but different sec- ofl Gloucester with the Elsie, Lun- tlons of the same country. For in- onburgs Bluenose, champion of the stance, the sardilics of a certain North Atlantic, will match tucks packing firm in the Maritime Pro- with the Alsatian on p, measured vinces have been sold in the Dutch course off Lunenburg in order to East Indies in coiisidcrabic qunn- tune up for her Halifax series, com titles for the last four years, but it inencing on October 17, in which is almost lnipossible to sell these Tllcbaud challenges for the inter- same sardines in the city of Ba- nat onal trophy. tavia. It has been found that their Tlie_Alsatian, with Captain Angus chief sale is in those districts where Walters aboard, distanced thc pick the natives grow export crops, such of the Lunenburg fleet by about as rubber, tea. and spices." ‘five miles over a twenty-eight mile lt would require much space even fcourse at the recent fisheries ex- to enumerate tlie services which the 'hibit1on. Captain Walters will be trade commissioners render to Can- ‘aboard his regular command, the adiail business firms. Short of :ic-:Blueiios:, for the trial races and tually selling their goods for them the iiitcriiatloiial contest. The Blue- lt would be simpler to state what nose is now off thc Marine slip and those trade cnilssaiics arc not doing. is being commissioned for the North They are to bc found in every part Atlantic classic. of the world, and fzlitlifiiinl-ss of The Elsie, Thebaud’s trial horse. their service deserves high pralscilvas defeated for the international and the ultimate value of their pro- , trophy by Blucnose in 1921. Blue- motion work is impossible to com- nose and Alsatian will begin their inllte, series next week. Ilusses Rout Irish Roads John Keats Museurn Opened Competition from busses and The new hall in Hampstead, Eng- trucks has forced tlirec railway sys- Ihlid, built to hold the relics of John tems in County Cork, Irish Fice Keats, the poet, has just been for- Stntc, to cease operations, according inrllly opened. and is attracting to reports from Cork. They are tlic many visitors. It is adjacent to Cork and Muskcrry Llsht Railway, Wentworth Place. the house in the Cork and Mccrccm Railway. which Keats lived for two years and and thc Cork, Blackrock and Pas- where he wrote his immortal poetry. sage Light Railway. Hundreds of /li, mpg he lodged with p local past. rullwnymen will bc thrown out of mph, but - moved to Wentworth employment. The railways wer-,- in- Place at the invitation of Charles dependent of the Great fioiitm-iii Brown, the occupier, with whom he and -Wcslcrn Railway. but ici-lu also went on il tour lu scotland, to tnken over under the amalg'.liii.iti.ni bc torm0l'lt£d. he Wrote to his bro- plan passed in the Frcc Sizlzv ihcr, by gadfliefo and the bagplpes. Chamber of Deputies. The Macrnom Among the Blhlblti lll the 1657/91' D8 Railway was one of the best paviiie wrote to Fanny Browne, to whom he propositions for Ii-ish slockliolilf-i~.~, ! was gp devoutly attached, after the and for years imlu a fiivliiemi .-ii 6 I symptoms of illness that made their D01” Ccnl. but nitcr amrllgani.-:inn ma.r.‘lage improbable. “Do not live," the stock dropped to ll sixih oi ie: he pleaded, "ss ti I was not existing. former price. Dc mg, “mn me," Of Motor Vessel 1 (Canadian Press) I-IALIFAX, N. S., Sept., 30-No definite word had reached here to- day as to the origin or purpose of an s.O.S., that came out of the air on shortwave yesterday aftemoon and was picked up at Belle Isle and Long Island, "S. 0. S. 34 miles northwest of Sable Island,” the dots and dashes said. “Drifting south- west." The message purported to come from the vessel Rex, but as no craft, of that name could be found on registry list on this Side Of the water, the conclusion was that the motor vessel Rex II, of Digby, N.S.. which sailed from Lunenburg for St. Pierre on Sunday night with B crew of ten. was asking for aid. This theory was somewhat bolst- ered today by non-arrival of the Rex II at St. Pierre. C. H. Hostermlm, lo:al agent _of the Marine Department, said tn- nfght. that he had received no word from the vesse1's owners, the Rex Shipping Company, of Digby, nor from her Lunenburg agents. Ship- ping, however, had been asked to keep a sharp lookout. I-Ie pointed out that p motor vessel might have had engine trouble, since rectified. and that the weather was fine, but was puzzled by the fact that the dlsabbled craft, li' the wireless mes- sage was authentic, had not been Sl8lll€d- The position given, he said. would place her near the path of several ships. ,i The message was received ph low -‘wave by ia wireless operator gg( duty, whereas anything lower mm 300 meters was contrary m ship. Pill!! Hclfulatlons. The Government Steamer Lady Laurier Ls now in port here, ready for instant de- parture for the position given in the S- 0- S-. mcvlczhg bulb.-hilclfy of the message is established or if the vessel's owners requested a search. A new serie.; of air-mail stamps will be issued in books of 12 by the British Post Office. The small books will also contain 12‘pages of in- formation regarding the many way; of using British air services (D , ESYPK. Perall. South Africa. and ln- s. . C our casc. hcwcvcr. ii is cvcii iiicrc was once a. year when the cstlmatca Dépllty M lnlstef W1 Bbsnllenfe- dldicult because of slow trunsporta~ . Fault Lies With Law were' being prepared. Apart from Th” MWSW7 °f P“b1l° Health 1' - ° thi the vm-(om minister, had a --- to be respectfully requested to em- . . s, 3 Q H W N E R S Stl” N O Ord’ The fuuir, lf uhy, has not iuln free hum. obviously, the business lC°“°‘ll“ Frm) Phlcllc lhc lmP°rla“<== °l °H°l-\l- winh the Auditor-General cr hlslof government, ilkc every other SYDNEY. N- S-. Bcpl 29 1-“lc cchol education from A public stuff of auditors. but with thc luw. busmcsb, if lt is tb be carried cu vcstcrdcy Hllcmccn, the =llBl1'l°l-°1' health Dclnl cf vlcw- Uhiii the amendments cf lsal, me efficiently ihuit be susceptible cl ew*-lie °l the United Mlnc W°fl<- ‘ A Protest was made against du- Consolidated Revenue and Auditiqulck changes in financial policy. 011. hwded 'JY Pl‘°5ldF1\t D- W- MW' l¥ll5Sll1 01 °fflC€fS 01 me °\lll°m5° Act has been almost 9. barrier to when revenues shrink, it minister P15011. Nlllleslrd the various local, excise servlceonchargcs by tndlvtd- efficicnt business control, hedging of finance should bc able, it is fclz, Wilco! 01 the dlstrlct to lzuore any uul members of parliament. cl lc- ihc Auditor-ocnerul about with ic eliminate hch-clueciiul cxpeudl- cull 101' H Several llflllc emllcilnll llve ilcllllcal parllzanship. without icch-lcilcfui and limitations bf pow- tures ui chcc and :hui uvoid large lrcm the Flcrcncc I»°°°l» Wllefc 98° evidence belns produced ln the er. And as for supervision of ex- deficits with conseqquent increases mmm have been idle ten GBYS. "ll11- House of Commons. penditures prior to their being ln- of taxation or public debt. U1 “WY BFG Il°llfl¢d Of ll\l0h by 016| The 'Council went on record ll curred, there really has been none. . d1Slil’l¢t 0lfl°¢l‘S~" The Cl!‘0lllBl', favoring action by the Provincial The Canadian Consolidated Reve was Expeluivu System 8181166 by the President, states that Govemment at the earliest possible nue phd Audit Ag; was ` modelled the Deputy Millllltel' °f Mme5» (N°l"' date to remedy the "intolerable con- cn thc British statute of lass, and 'rhc cost cf the cla system, de- m°hM=°K°Ml¢>-Wl1l°°mc l° Clive? dltl<>nS" in the lclls- It was urscd enacted ci ottawa in lan. 'rhcrc -spite lu inefficiency was very Bl’°'=°“ *° llllfelllllllle *he me-"W° lhct prisoners should bc under were few important changes from great. Each department maintained W°“1d H0* like." ll! Sf-HWS, “U0 have strict discipline and have steady that cate lp lean, ulthcugh the if bepuruic stuff of accountants and lnvthlns Placed in the wav cl an ,work volume of government business in- bookkeepers. The duplication of lllveltlgatlon and are therefore re- ia. creased twelve times over. laccounting services was as wide- Qlleilllls the local lmi0nS t0 l8ll°l'¢ 1‘ TUG lllel-h°l`l i’0l10W¢d Under this spread as it was costly, any notice ln regard to a general Luella, who is spending 9. holiday old statute was unique in its in- Under the 1931 statute, reforms Strike in lhls district llllliil mill' are 011?-he 15lB~¥ll`l- efficicucy and cmllhes. All cx- both ln the control of expenditures notified of such by the district cf- - Dcndlturcc. cf course. must be voted before they are made, bud lu the flccrc-" by Parliament. but once these ap- subsequent auditing of government proprlations were voted, each de- ‘business have been made. For the T;-ygn And Viginity Dbrtmehf Hlllllled to the Treasury. through the Auditor-General, for nancial affairs of the government M155 013, T0,-,mb5_ of charlotte. a. letter of credit. It was the busl-, have been placed upon an efficient ‘ (own, has been spéndlng B week in MSS Of the Auditor - General, to business basis. For those reforms ~n~y°h_ me sues; of My-5_ Spurgeon Sec llwl an appropriation had been thc chilic credit is clue nf. Hou. R. clark., Passed and then to recommend the B. Bennett. ln amending the sta- _ 8l'llllilll8 of the letter of credit. tute, of course, he met with no M,-5_ Anhm- H0waf,1;_wes;T,-y°n_ Once this letter was received, the opposition either in Parliament or bps returned after spending wp department lodged it in the bank out of lt, but until he wok Mid weeks holiday in Quebec, where she °f "5 ¢h°l°2 lllld Pl'°°¢2ded to spend of the finance department no one had a very enjoyable time. li. without let or hindrance. Very. seems to have had the patient'/e and _ frequently monies were switched persistence necessary to put. over My-_ and Mm Qu, w9,dd¢11_ Miss “b°“t' "mu" 5 d°l"“m°'nl- and B ¢hll~l\8¢ 0! lllllh f°l"l‘¢9»°lllll¢ lm- Jennie and Master Major of North it was inevitable that the total de- portanoe. Tryon, were recently visitors to the Pllftmenl-“l Cllidli- Weuld be over- The 1931 amendments fall into ,wcncm ¢p,plgpi_ spent. The switching of monies, two sections. Inregnrd to the audit- _ 4; C3186. 1! Bn lnproper thing to ing of government accounts the Mr. and Mrs. Leslie MacDonald, . meant that Parliamentfs only change is chip, (hp Auditor- of North 'ry-yuh, are 1-ecegvmg the °°Hlr°1 °vcr eiclicndllurcs. as with- cichci-ui is now freed of ull umm- c°ng,-bupuhon, of ¢,,e,,.‘ hm G, in u department, was more rlebu- tions and la empowered by statute friends on the arrival of n bouncing 1°” th" "5" Pafulllllcllt mllht ,to mllke ll complete check up on baby boy. Blve I dcphrtment $1,000,000 dlvid- any or all departments or govern- _ ed in a. certain way under 20 ap- ment activities. Ha ill no longer Miss Jo Muttart, of Capo Tn,- flrst time in our history, the fi- His many friends regret that Mr. Job Inman, of Augustine Cove, had the misfortune of breaking his leg last week. While hauling potatoes from the flciu, he"iééiiicufb.ily :cu off the wagon, and the wheel pass- ed over his leg. However, Mr. In- man is doing as well as can be ex- pected, and it is hoped that he may speedily recover. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Dawson, of Augustine Cove, acompanled by Mrs Bruce Campbell and two children, were visitors to Tryon on Monday. Mr. James Matheson, of Tryon was a recent visitor to his homo in A serious fire took place at North Tryon on Friday of last week, when the garage containing his ou, hh plgllouse and 9. portion of the hen- hcillc. owned by Mr. Max Lcfumcy was burned to the ground. It 1| proprlottona. llbir example, the min- _given anything to do with expendl- verse, has returned home, um, thought the fire originated from 1 ister might have desired $200,000 ture; before they gf, incurred' h, ,pending 5 plenum week me we” short circuit in the car.-D. for item A. and 8400.000 for item is not the channel through which of Miss Addie Unllbeok, Tryon. credits are advanced to various do-‘ B. But Parliament might have rc- fvucdwglvchlmmbrcfb sioo.-_ ri lc. _ “n P” me" Mr! Bursoyne. of the westem 000 for the first time, although. Bftllfflhl the second. Yet, in due It is in regard to control of ex pendltuiiell, however, that the mon mm. the department would pct iimpci-lun. chungcc huvc bmi mms, fu letter of oicdlt for ;1,000,000. and the money would be spent pretty much u the minister pleu- ed.HocouldcutdownltemB, and mmm item A, although Por- lllmcnt had determined otherwise. Ona you later the Auditor-Gem an mum discover this floutlng of The old letters of credit have been aballsllcli. Departments, hereafter, are not to have control of their bulk votes, are not to be able to lWll°l\ lPl1l’°lIrl\tlom around u they please. 'And the dozen or more accounting stuffs will _simply ,eral mllht be uutborlmdrtp make- be gbollohed. part of the Inland hu been vlbltlng , Malloy. Mr. Aulttn Tbombs, of Tryon, has had the éxtarlor of his beautiful _residence painted. .ln Tryon, the guest of Mrs. Albert; lub M|nud'| ll glrnly, || ponctnroo ,._._.,, .....'.::.i...'°°...:..‘~ f 1 Nhyouonyourtootl |1|NAno'5 Rev. and llrl. J. L. Lund, of Try- |`0n. have returned borne. altar visit- lnz relatives and friends in N. B., Mcomponted by their daughter, Min |.lNlMEN'li i , - 1 ,__ Inkerman. -