adian Prr offers a i flour anti’ reciproca; _ adlan rm itlea the would be \ Dominion Represen‘ will, it is of the F Imperial At the PAGE FOUR IIIE UIIARLOTTETUWI lillltltlilitll Chan I. IsLIIU. l Pnaldaae-W. II nuke“. o‘ LIMIlllaIsDaI-Ou ldltcr and laaaalll 9|""““"' I" luufi‘ Aaaoolata alums-Ira“ 3mm; Dally muses um ll-III nor 10w 1 use pa: year uh ban-u) mailed la ouch a“ Walker and ll. I. Canto I . ' sun's ataua wsnnssnay, ma! n. 1m SOME THINGS m connection with the mlberlfl Ilcononllc Conference, the Deli!!!‘ mant of ‘Prado and Commerce has prepared a statement of interestini facts about Canada for submission to the delegates. some items are missing which very well could have been included. Canada with an area of 3,690,043 square miles is the largest country within the empire and comprises 2'1 per cent of the empires total area of 13,491,997 square miles. Canada leads the world 1n the production of newsprint, nickel and asbestos; holds second place 1n the > it‘ ganldlln abun- as mint the" currencies still linked inelasticlll! to gold, la assisting the and will undoubtedly have an in- creaslngly favourable effect in stimulating Canadian sales in Scot- land. The direction which this 1n- creased trade may take is indicat- ed in the following extracts from m. Johnson's article: Cattle-The resumption of the Canadian cattle trade with Scotland m 1081 resulted in shipment-H 0! 5,904 head of store or stacker cattle and fats. Scotland ls the best mar- ket in the United Kingdom for store cattle for conditioning in the pas- ture. and the trade is likely to 810W production of gold. platinum metals and cobalt; third in the production of zinc and silver and fourth 1n the production of copper, wheat, auto- mobiles and lead. Canada leads the world in the ex- port of wheat. newsprint, nickel and asbéstos; holds third place lfi the export of wheat flour; fourth place in the export of automobiles and wood pulp and fifth place in the ex- port of rubber tires. She ranks high also in the export of a wide variety of other products. Canada stands seventh among the trading nations of the world. and only second to Great Britain among empire countries. Canada trades with over 100 dif- ferent countries of which over 32 are within the British Empire, Canada has provided approximate- ly one third of the total supply of world wheat entering into lntemat- tonal. trade during the last two months. Czanada stands second in per cap- ita consumption of developed hydro power. l unless the American market proves more profitable through a lowering of tariff barriers or for other reas- ons. Early 1n ghe season of 1932 the trade was held up through a lack of transportation facilities, but the Department of Trade and Com- merce eventually made the necu- ssry arrangements in co-operatlon with the shipping companies. ‘Iwo excellent shipments have reached Glasgow from Montreal during the present season, and on the whole good prices have been realised Hay-The low market prices in 193i prevented extensive imports of hay from Canada, especially as the Scottish crop was particularly good. Usually there is a constant demand for No. 2 timothy from Canada, as it is superior to anything grown 1n Britain. Prices, however, must not be too high, and only the best quali- ties should be shipped, otherwise it is compet‘ _ unsuccessfully with equally good Scottish hay. The large carry-over from the abundant Scottish crop of 1931 hangs over the NOTES BY TIIE WAY Thsaehasarrivedaneraofloa- era! artificial interference with ‘ " ' and the logi- cal step 1s to come to a worldwide agreement to transform that inter- ‘ into for ‘ ' benefit. Every economic or finan- clal question for any nation tends now to be e. concern to every other nation. Anybody, says the Brandon Sun, can sell even a dead horse in flush times. No effort is required to write orders with the tide flowing in But when business is dull and faces are long, that is the time to administer a tonic. When the money that makes the mare go begins to wobble, that is the time to use the spur. The qultter never built up big business. He never ac- quired a monument. He never writes his name on the page of history—nor on the financial page '—just on the "funny page!" A wrist bone dug up in China from a geological formation esti- mated to be 1,000,000 years old is exciting scientists. Examination of the bone produces the belief that its owner must have had a human hand enabling its possessor to live a life far higher than that of the lower animals. Of all the members of the body the hand is the most important in giving to the human race its distinction. Mankind is weak compared with many other creatures. They can lift more and movo more rapidly and for a long- er period, but they cannot approach the accomplishments of the eight fingers and the two thumbs. As hands were used by our first hu- man ancestors brains were deve- loped to keep pace with what the hands couldl do. So was civilization built upon this planet, hand and brain working together. Why ls the Rt. Hon. David Lloyd George called that, when his fath- er's surname was George and his brother boasts the name William George? Well, many people have wondered, and, as in most myster- ies, there is an explanation. His mother's family name was Lloyd, and Britain's wartime Premier B! [alum W. Bubmllb TREATING THE RIGID PERSONALITY , About the only difference be- tween some of us who are outside a mental institution and many of the patients inside is that we are able to get along with other people. We may not like some of their ways, and other people may dislike cer- tain things about us, but neverthe- less we give and take, do our part, and expect other people to do theirs. ‘ This is the reason that specialists in mental ailments, psychiatrists as they are called, do all ln their power to have these mental pat- ients become more sociable in their disposition, more willing to mix with other people. Dr. W. Muncie, Baltimore, refers to the ‘rigid’ personality encounter- ed in this kind of work. It is a. combination of many fac- tors, such as obstinacy, aggressive- ness, pride, and a rigid code of per- sonal ethics whereby they actually make themselves do or live up to, certain definite rules o1’ life. In a general way these are good or valuable qualities, but they are like a two edged sword, and many 0f the difficulties that beset the patient and render him difficult to live with, and make it difficult for him to live with others, are direct- ly due to these good or valuable qualities. Rigid personality habits thus often hinder the recovery of the patient. If an individual is obstinate, proud, aggressive, ‘lives a straight- forward llte, has his share of brain power, you can easily understand why he thinks his ideas, and his method of living must be correct ones and that the rest of the world ls simply ‘out of step’, and needs correction instead of him. As you know we all need a cer- tain amount of elasticity in our natures; we must admit that we are not always right, that the MORNING SOUNDS flow 1 do love the twenty thou- sand noises That, weave into our P9"? °1 m“ o'clock: Sparrows that shout above the crowing cock; The small stlll-mothered calves with lowing voices; Thrush-notes that ride with bril- liant lugsllns vol-W The steady thunder of the mill; the peck of gable starlinzfl. who mock some truant lad who whistles and rejoices. mountebanks But clear from all, right at the vefl’ core. Distinct from clock that ticks and fire that purr-i, What draws my hem "P l" a ‘M’ den tide ' To the break of ecstacfl-Ymll’ hand that stirs, Turning a, page and falling Still once more, 50ft as the sigh of one beautifled. -Gcofirey Johnson, in the Glas- glow (Scotland) Hflfflld- reasons. And there ls a special irony m the predicament of American prohlbltlonists, because electricity is nowhere more admired and 1°°ked up to than m the United States. It 15 undoubtedly true that electric-ti! is, like alcohol, dangerous and We“ fatal when taken 1n excessive (10565, as the American Government some- times intends that lt shall be, but the status of the moderate shocktak- El‘ is still unsettled. One thine at least is certain-that it will be very bootlegglng of] electric current. So easily transmissible ls it that it will be easy, by means of a lttle extra book-keeping on the part of the el- ectrlcity companies, for gilt-its t0 be given their first refreshing shock 1n their own home or office before starting for the party, thus savinK the hostess from the disagreeable necessity o! warming them into con- vivlallty in Phblic. Meanwhile the difficult to control or‘ prevent the, m ViewofthaWflMIBQQVF" slon and the need for national 0005' » ‘only, the following mu brouaht 0v! tional interest: alluding to the difference betww ~ the assets on the debts of. 1w" authorities and f-bble of the nit-Infill au Blown Away "There is no asset for the Nat- ional Debt. It has all x0110. Ill W” blown away, and there is 1105111118 which remain-B. but in the 0B6 0! local debt there is somethllll W show for it. It is money WWW" 1°’ capital expenditure-for eXPlmd-lptll" to a. great extent of a remulltrltlve charactcr. 4 “The floss debt of the local ailm- oritles 1h rhguna aha wblu l4 z1,1sa,ooo,ooo, 8nd $440,000.00!) 0f that is for trading concerns which bring 1n a profit, and $082,000,000 ll for housing, which brings in a ‘re- turn. Therefore, two thirds 01 t!!! capital indebtedness of the 10081 authorities 1s of a remunerltive type- "May I say this, Of course, a great deal of it is invested in elec- trlcal undertaking-Ages. and thins! like that. Why, when a public utility company borrows money for build- ing, or the extension of electrical plant, is it called capital, and when a local authority does -a similar ‘mm; why is it called a debt? i "There is this difference 1n these ‘two transactions to the advantage ‘of the local authority, that in the {case of a public utility authority, ex- cept in the case of debentures, that lchpltul is not repaid; it is a stand- iing charge upon the industry; W‘ in the case of a local authority con- ‘dltions are always laid down for the eventual redemllvon .01 the 118119 ‘. ' A Geddcs Committee Com ' "It was said that we needed a11- other Geddes committee-- W011. I 0° not think the results fcthmGeddes Committee were very much to boast‘ of or to. give much encouragement to ‘an expectation that 1f another God- 'des Committee were‘ appointed it ' would help us Very Jllllch 111' u" ‘difficulties 1h which we are placed. "' “Tilat Geddes Committee recom- ~ Then And Now | in the Peers’ debate IN 0! 11°99‘ - debt, Lord Snowden wla the A M1 , l‘i\lllllll|" inn/m //, ,,,/ ¢//_,','.. m l/II Hlu f/fnl s v v.1 l ‘H: ,., |,,| lfml ' . All] l‘ .' uruaau 11A ins-won r. n. r. . taiwthslillllmsslveness which be lcngatqhispoatryasawholqtom gntire poetic mood, which holds l, solution a fine personal character Tits way of looking at a poet's won u not oountenanoed by those who,’ under the sway of imagism and m dan vital, desire brlskness in detail and some impersonal thrcb of net lll'Q_ in the whole. Nevertheless, m; firm, sweehand laborious living c1 the man lqnareucw. devoted u» m, aims of poetry and free from tlu cult-spirit, goes on like a. stream through the whole territory oi bu eminent of this us» of that or cf the other aide ~41!" I11 Ill?‘ ma, m4 labored successfully. W “sues expenditure on armaments. "Iurnlflk to the Department-l?“- tained m Ciassu IV and v oftlw Civil primates, there you have. a my different atery- In $119 1"‘ “m; years from 1923 to 103i. there hui been a rise of 210,000,000 in ULaasIV, and there has been 01140 .1 114,000,000 m health and nwsieh services. mt u to say. that 11W. ‘other on education, health I-lld pensions there has been an 1110"!“ in nine years of 084.00°-°°°-" Elk i‘ Years’ After-d work, and gives it a recurrent fresh. nus of Poetic appeal lacking 1n many mun or a more originstive genius. ‘ ' And surely his work has a certain shad y loveliness quite its own-as of a stream in a flat unfertile re. gicn, shading its way with foliage, and never stagnant, having a cur- rent always toward the sea. His melanchloy, I think, 1s mainly that of poetry herself in a locale where the flow of verse can not yet be beautifully strong . . . He cultivat- ed the homel, romance of New England's saiilnk ships and country- aldcs and birds of passage, and could catch the quaint humors of her re llgionists and sea-captains: eve while iterpreting for her, exquisitely the moods oi’ old artists and old lovely cities beyond the sea. No other poet has a style at once so homely and so cultivated. No othe‘ style has the peculiar quiet gleaming of his whenever it touches a shadow. His verse is the mild rain that some- times goes over an austere New England landscape in autumn, o the south wind looking for spring and turning into swaying mists along the hard coast. Regarded thus 1n it: whole ‘mood, his style is not a for- eign importation. Its gentle sombre- ness is -the natural outcome of a true poetic spirit growing in th neighborhood, and having in the background a constant sense or th "r read the other day an extract written by Macaulay to the Edin- burgh Revlemfourtecn y”?! “W? the war with the Hench" 881d 101d Gainford in the House of lords. “Here we are fourteen years 01W‘ the crest War m mm». He 01W Mme present moment 1s one of great distress _ . . A. war compared with which all other wars sink into mgigniflcance; taxation. such as the most heavily-taxed nwnle 01 101111" timu could not have 00110011751? t debt larger than all the P1131"! debts that ever existed in the world add- ed together. . " ‘Our rulers will best promote the improvement of the nation by strict- ly confining themselves to their own legitimate duties. by leaving/capital to find its most 11101115100 000ml commodities their fair price, indust- ry and intelligence their natural re- ward, idleness and folly their nat- punishment, by mamtsmins "peace, by defending Pl'°l°°l'tY - - - and by “observing strict economy in every department of the State.’ "Maryland of those words 809ml {hiss-applicable to the piece!“ 11°!‘ ‘itlon. “It took a few years after the ‘hungry T011188‘ before the country recovered." Certain Shadowy loveliness The Renaissance tradition of char- acter in beauty, of moral conduct \ harmonious with D0et1c purpose. 1M suffered even more heavily in New than in old Imgland. Longfellow grew up in a community which liked its verse sentimental. when not mor- lovers of good sherry will laugh. For mflldcd economies-to the-extent o! a long time now they have had to'$85-5°°»°°°' and m“ w”'ar‘ “u” bear with the insolence of the cock- "he" We h“ 5 Bud?“ "l 515200300" tail as it ousted their old niche °°° “W11 i"! 1m“? “"1"” by fronzknvgg proud place at the veryivvar-time expenditure. It was a un- head of the procession of f00d and 101w opportunity for making drastic drink at a, social meal. New andiuuts i" ‘mama “Pendmir” ma wonderful names and a. fashlonablelet the wvemmwt “t m9 d” d“ coldness and the mystery of thorn“ “ilcepb cuts °7 535500-00“ bu‘ cocktail shaker-all these things accepted will’ 554-9-00-000-“1” 5t helped to {nuke Shem-y 100k homely such a time as I have Just described Bfld tame beside the exotic new- —Wh11= the Drew“ c°v°mmml comers. To all conservative rcmon- have ‘muted ecmmmle! °1 £79900" strances. by sherry men the answer 00°- market, and trade is stagnant. The weather at present promise; a crop of good quality this year, but aver- age in quantity. ' Cheese-It is recognised that the best cheese imported into Scotland ls Canadian cheddar, and this is a very old trade. In times past Canada held first place, not only in quality as she am to-day, but as a source of supply. That position has passed, at least tempvrlly. owing to chose to be called “Lloyd George" without the hyphen. If lze had put in the hyphen there would have been no trouble for everybody un- derstands why some people call, themselves "Smith-Jones" or “Bug? glesworth-Hopklnson," and the like. Incidentally, the William George mentioned above disagrees with his better-known brother on“ more things than family name. He recently came out with a scathing attack on the British Broadcasting Corporation, termlng it a "language Canada's fisheries are among the most extensive in the world. Canada is recognized by the Ilesgue of Nations as one of the eight leading manufacutring nations of the world. Canada has the largest forest re- sources in the Empire. Canada's chief eastern port of Montreal is the ‘largest inland port of the world. a considi Free Sta clared h‘ close to They cit months year imp had lncr for the year. W‘; Free St! of bacon, Ireland , other fellow knows more about some things than we do, and that there may be very sensible or logical reasons for other peoples’ behav- ior. , ' .. Unfortunately these ‘rigid’ per- sonalitiemlack this quality of elas- ticity, or seeing the other fellows’ View ‘Dilihthand they are thus dif- .-f_lcult~ msesfor the psychiatrist. The aim in trying to bring about a cure is to ‘socialize’ the patient. introducing new'or other points for pioneer labor or America, so long and so often fruitless, and frultfu mainly 1n material ‘things-G. R Elliott, in "The Cycle of Mode - Poetry." Contrasting his experiences on Blritlsh railways, Robert L. Reed. a British locomotive driver, W3.‘ guest engineer in the cab of the em Montreal-Ottawa Canadian Nation- cheapet Canada's Pacific Ports are from one to four days closer to Japan than are any other port on this continent. Canada comes second 1n total u" bulk of the trade being held by New Zealand. ‘Ihere is always a Premium on Canadian cheese, but production for export in recent his consideration, than the ones he has been using, or with which he has been justifying. himself and his actions. dumper." “Like an eternal distill- ery, it is distilling English, Eng- lish, English all the time. We de- mand broadcasts in Welsh?’ That will show you how William feels came that cocktails had more "kick" and now, on its own chosen ground, the cocktail yields to something still ‘ For the superior "kick" of electric current is not to be de- i PCGI’ um m: I "The Departments with which I have been connected are two Service gligtic, and could not much courage the real nobility of art. In gwgdjn‘ 11191-311311], Longfellowh "m" w" thfiw“ mud‘ up“ semi‘ vonlan" and other trains of the "t" "d “MY- Y“ h‘ “nmmmy London, Midland and Scottish Rall- al train leaving Bonaventure sta- tion recently. Mr. Reed for over twenty years has driven the "De- m“ m’ " ‘ma’ m ‘ti’ m“ wmfldiway. He is on a holiday trip be elevated without ceasing to be mo" Canada and on ms My Punc- Ememm "m!" the “m” m“ back wll travel in the locomotive eilmllmc" - “m”! *1" 8"“ ‘m’ cab on the fastest 11in of its length nied by nay man. Cocktails, as be- DePll-"mm" m" Mmhflw m‘! ing designed m pfoducg a changed the War Office)“ and twdDepart- mentality as quickly as pogqible, are merits of the Civil service (the Board |not ends in themselves and well de- 0! Education and the Ministry of years has fallen off in the Domin- ion owink to the demand for milk and cream in markets nearer home. about it. On the other hand. “Mr. Lloyd George" sorely vexee William by broadcasting exclusively in Eng- fish. Electric Cocktails (London Times) It is by now a hoary saying that mile!!! of steam railways among the countries of the world, Canada stands fourth among - _. * \' MwwQQ-vaav-wn-‘a. fii ufl-IQQZ-mn-m- » fox industry, and that Canada has . laed that Prince Edward Island de. < export ‘of certified seed potatoes in But the indications are that produc- tion will increase. Button-During the put year Canadian butter has been again on the British arket in small quanti- ties after some years’ absence. The Q1191"? is excellent. Ind with the mom-sins production in the Do- minion. elpwta to Scotland should lllfifél-lo if Canadian shippers can furnish continuous supplies. ’i‘he size of the market is indicated by m, mt that 1b mo tho tom 1m. ports were valued at 047,000,000. Scotland imports about one-eight of that amount. ' Elm-There 1a some market in Scotland for Canadian stored eggs in the autumn, provided they can be put down at a moderate price. It W014! Ply the Canadian farmer wall if he would devots a little more at- it’ w alumina m: w this country. Bacon and i-iama-Jrha trade in Scotland in bacon has been chiefly confined. as usual, to Danish and other continental bacon, and Cana- dian has been practically off the mullet for yam- Imv prices have made the business unmnunerativa fiwalvnin: trade in Canadian asri- to Canadian shippers. m ml there cultural products in Scotland, which were a few ar-rivsli o1 0.1mm“; dmrbtlees will be fully dismisses at ham; s; gun", m“ ‘u, "u, the mama: lboncimlo con- satisfaction, and which can always luanee at Ottawa, are qutlined in command a small pimium, Th; colmtrles in the number of motor vehicles in use and comes second if! 1W!‘ “Pits ownership, or approx- imately one to ever-y eight persons. Canada is only exceeded by one country 1n the proportion of tele- hcnes in use and the number of lalls. It could and should, have been mentioned, that Prince Edward Is- land was the pioneer in the silver the lflffcst number bred foxes. It also could have been enlphas- cf domestic veloped the seed potato industry and that Canada has the largest the Empire if not in the world. Likewise it could have been meri- tlonelg that Canada has more areas certified free from bovine tubercul- osis than any other country in the llmplre; and that Prince Edward mans is the only Province wholly n-eertified. ' EXPORTS T0 SCOTLAND Home striking oppcrtunltiu for - an article in the cur-rem, issue ofitrade from Canada in these pro- Ocmmercial‘ Intelligence Journal by 1dr. G. B. Johnson, Cant-d‘ Trade Commissioner at Glasgow. Canada's export trade to Scotland, m. Johnson writes. u already a large one in many lines and, despite the depression, ha; been mgmwn. rd surprisingly and in some com- modftlee has even increased. The new British tariffs, asrsicd in some 4""! ll b91118 resumed in some '°‘"""- "14 W111 mbauy increase. Canned mm and Vent-ables,- Bince the middle or last year there hll been a remarkable increase In the sale of canned fruits and vege- tables from Canada. especially “n. 09¢ IP01! and pearl. The demand has far outstripped m, "my, f. r n ,4 - 111*". ~ . a wgw. n, , Icmidh" I9"?! and packers BI per cent for the same b! the depreciation of thg y‘; _ When In office, Chancellor Bru- ening saw the possibilities of the Hltlerits campaign, and in the in- terest of public order and national safety had issued a presidential decree forbidding the wearing of uniforms by private "armies", and the holding of public demonstra- tions by brcwn-shirts and all such organizations. This decree had the effect of arresting the rioting and the cities were peaceful for a time. With the victory of von Pa- pen and his followers at the polls, the Hitlerltes had good friends at court and one of the first acts of the "generals and Junkers" admin- istration was to remove the ban on the wearing of uniforms and on semi-military parades. Immediate- ly there were outbreaks, and so serious did they become that So- cialist leaders demanded a confer- ence with the view of finding means to prevent further disorder. Von Papen and his advisers refus- ed, declaring they would find "oth- er means" of preserving the peace. Since then the rioting has been repented on a larger scale than be- for-e, which indicates that the ‘Go- vernment is either unable or un- willing to take measures to die- courage the l-litleritee. ..i.._ now on a great increase in the pack of these Products rbl- the numb market. Wheat-Canada glfpplleg s: pro. sent about 63 per cent of thewheat imported into Scotland Dom all countries. Canadian Western hard Inrlna wheatis esselltialto theclass o! flourrequirsc by the bakers, who Ill BOOUBM! ltlll employ $119 m" method of baking, and produce bread rich in protein. m the first fflllfter of i931 Canada's share of thetraderosetosapqmtnom berod last sooner or later all human troubles will be solved by electricity, and itl was high time that electricity help- ed in the gracious business of hos- pitality. Many a. hostess has of late shifted the burden of entertaining from dinners to llmches, and then from lunches_ to cocktails at six 0'- clcck or thereabouts, only to flind such hardened and insatlate gulp- ers among her guests that any ec- onomy has vanished 1n the first half hour. It is to such, the hosts and hostesses of small means, that good tidings are now on their way across the Atlantic, where electricity has just stepped in to put right what Wall Street has put wrong. The guest of the future. says a member of the American Radio Commission, will not be offered a cocktail to pick him up and galvanize him into suf- ficient brightness to make him worth his invitation, but will be of- fered instead an electric tube to hold. He needs only caress its warm and shiny surface for a few seconds and he will derive a glow such as no cocktails give and, thus fortified to play the guest, he can hand back the tube for the use of the next new- comer. The invention has the extra advantage that it can be administ- ered to a guest through his chair without his ‘ owledge. The trouble about cocktails is that, while some guests take too many, others, who an centres of sticky fcrnlality, threatening the whole success of the gathering cannot be induced to take enough. ‘that: aim: principles baffle force anything past their lips. nut electricity, with genial invigorating ctmentcanbelaidcntothemim- Pmeptibl! if they are led to the right chair. ' problem in morals seems likely to ' for those who regard all artificial stimulants as unworthy of mankind. The more severe exponents 0f this school, who extend their‘ cu. favor to tea and coffee and keep their smile for cocoa, will have to theirholtfilliwhodolnotfiyh" serve to yield to whatever does their work more easily and economically. But sherry, which is drunk for 1t- self, need never fear being asked to share its kingdom with the most el- aborate and formidable electric cock tails of the future etoxcv tails of the future, not even if they offer the concentrated hydro-elec- trlc potency of Niagara Fells. i-i________ Widow (buying a parrot): "Does this one talk?’ Dealer: "Unfortunately, madame, ‘he does not. But when anybody speaks to him he looks as if he understands perfectly." Widow: "I'll take him. He will remind me of my late husband." Health,” ma the m1 of‘ Onslow in the House fo Lords. ' When I went to the Admiralty as Civil Lord in 1921, tile Naval es- timates amounted to 590,000,000. In 1031-1 take last year because I think it affords 0. better comparison as this year's Estimatu have hem." rather drastically cutélfilid that’ the expenditure was $9,000,000, a reduction of 261,000,000 in those ten years. _ "When I went to the War Office in mo, the mirnates were s44,soo,-' ‘ 000. Last year they were £40,000,000, a reduction of £4, .000. Those flg- ures are interesting because ‘. they show that successive Governments- it does not matter whether a Gov- f assume y: cars ——__& \ We are showing an ‘excel- lent assortment of Bathing Caps in a variety a! colon and designs. : The swimming aeaaonfli at r but and your old cap 1| likely ; in pool condition and will need replacing. _ Q . Oall. in andlook ovaeonr , stock. We feel certain you I can make a pleasing selec- flea. s vvvvvvvv 1v P D > 'Prteearange from 15000 ll-ll. - 1 4 15.1. rosrs " . cam-an. paves-roan D ,0» Cold swam; Esau.- cast a sour look at the electric light a switch when electricity 1g was a; ‘P ‘Wlthoream oi Ice Cream. 0r. |.. s. avails of London, Eng. NMMI ray-idea was hu- "flfllll! and obtained per- manent enraa “ JQYKY- Iflnmlb" m“ t“ 1"“ t° in the world, that of the Canadian “m? m"! 5mm“ mum" pmduced National, Toronto to Montreal, 334 i319 33nd “Y” mipy" mt mt‘ miles, which is made 1n 360 min- utes. ‘The visiting locomotive driv- as the Miltonic vein of Wordsworth m, w“ Mmnhhed at m8 mmens, ‘mm déu- Wm‘ a ‘m mmpumwsim and power of Canadian loco- Wmce- motives compared with those 0i m "mo"! Beluiemm- "h" m‘ British . ‘lwaya although. of dlilm- Th‘ @349" Mum'- Mlchulcourae, the latter are perfectly 8d‘ Angelo, mngfellow is bearer of a “m, h, runway condmons 1,, m; high poetic t: ‘ition which at least om count“, he‘ will IIOt debauch. Bllt l-ll Plrtlfl- .' ular passages he could not often at- n, hug,“ “bu, hlinarlfa. fig; sis-neatly the 1X5 "fiipflfthifiliyip scraperfthejelse, of tllqgoplfltvviflilW“ 'swap a, fewjcentsfor, . when! .1031, ‘ask! for- ~