Vi‘ i IIANTINIRBIALL _ SPECIAL res ea. - QOGII IIIII €llmll - . - e a SIG GIOGII IIIIIIII count . . - - lle l‘ Queues ' nun IIIILI line-entails Ieunjinu Imam COLDII . Ion» be ll Galena uuu aeovs mcu rosnwo i —FREE-—~ Our 3Z age illustrated emip- tive bulb catalogue. —-Scnd [or ll copy- llllil l. lllliitl 00. untrue Seed Merchants HAMILTON, ONT. IIVAIUUIID 0G5 OD fliaurv no no“ loos The newest style ln ladies shoes is the strapped pump with buckle. the leather is imitating ALLIGATOR SKIN in brown or grey effect. Elk soles. - Also grey buckskin as above .. $5.95 Black Kid $3.95 SEE OUR WINDOW Alley 8i Co. Ltd. Queen Street 4-,‘? . BINDER TWINE " Buy The Best “Silver Loaf" Brand ~ Guaranteed 550 feet to the pound and every Ball guar- anteed to give perfect satis- faction. 2 Carloads of this brand. We are P. l5. Island Agents for thc Brantford Cordage Co, Ltd., lIli-LkCfS oi the "Sil- ver Leaf" brand of Twine, and tlie largest era in the British Empire. G-ET Ollit PRICES if“! 1.1-. . By Defective Bight? Perhaps y.our eyse may be defective, although you are net aware of the faot. if you have difficulty In do- lngwhat other do easily, or if you have trouble In seeing what others see clearly, it is time to have your eyes exam- ined. ' Do not delay, for delay lo , dansoroue whore your eyes I are concerned. ' A, We will give you export ad- ‘llli eiiiliillurrtiwt lillliiiillili‘ on or...» Dalton. President. - n. it. t. ‘ureter. "as-seine ulter- a. n. sir-m. eon.- ua ruins». uernlu Halli tun-ace lean 04.00 ‘awe pea‘ you t-anui ll d"!!! - lell I) In ndvlnee. f5’ c1122..‘ ....¢"'s1u t. _U. a. a AUGUST 1s, 1922 WEDNESDAY, PREPARING FOR . ELECOTION Our Liberaih-f-riends are makliiB elaborate though complicated pie partitions for the coming bfvtelef“ ltiOns, One of the arguments ill" {forward in all soieniliity by the liPutriot is the desirability, of hav- ling the provincial government in line with the federal government. lPatrlot readers will recall the elo- iqucnt scorn with which the elu- isive Patriot tltwllt will. this diei- lwhou the Conservative party was ‘kin power in Ottawa. Then. in the ‘opinion of the Patriot, it was best manufactur- not to ire “in line." it has been [announced with a Ifreat flourish of trumpets that the work of stan- dardizing the rtlway west o! ‘lSuliirlle-rside has been begun. Just how much standardizing has becn done is ilol stated. uor is ‘it slated by whose authority. federal or pro ivincial. tile work is being (lune. n is known that the federal govern- ment dill not appropriate a dollar lor the work and the federal gov- crnnu-nt is not in the habit of be. ginning new work without voting! the money for it beforehand.‘ So ii. "my be assumed that the startli- arrllzilig oi the western sciction of the railway ls on a par with tbs ‘staking nut of rtrtain branch rall- Ilvays a few years ago on the evo sol’ an election. Some of the stakes info still there but the branch rail~ {IWHY hnl not materialized. The pre sent ballasting process in Prince ‘County has a suspicious odor and will not likely survive the present i bye-elections, i I ————-—<-o-¢--——- THE CAMPAIGN The bye-elections opened rather fnauspiclously for ‘brim-fly reported in our yesterdays iissue the West Prince Liberal As~ gsoclation had a stormy meeting Pt. the old stal-i {warts of the pony were in open: lfTlu-ary. ‘Some of » rebellion; Ihcrs‘ and who in days not ions] "it three men who, -lt was believed, lithe sitting Vflitéilllwfd: l were relilsed a hearing and gcne-' _ rally the fat was in the fire. Mnlsulhfvlflent: lA. C. Saunders. one of the most: ,entlluslastlc of the party mam-l I gone by had acquired the habit ofl cilallcnging all and sundry i0 mor-l the troubled waters but the oil fire under the friction of opposing opinions. Men names had been household‘ words cllught whose in previous Liberal campaigns :10- clared publicly that they were done with the Liberal party and it's false promises and lzl this frame of mind the electors went out lo await the polling day.‘ in the Third District also it ro- quiretl considerable persuasion lli induce a candidate to take up tile cudgela. An assembly candidate ’was nominated at the first con- vention bui. the Council candida- ture was decline.‘ with thanks by had a reasonable chance to make a good showing, At a second coll- ventlnli on night Mr. Simpson Crozier undertook the job rather than have it go by de- fault. Messrs Adrian Arsetiault and Thomas MoNutt apparently have a clear road flheao in tho Third District. _ The regrettable illness of ‘Mr fumes A. McNeill placed up. Con- servatives mantle on the should- ers of Mr. J. E. Wyatt, K. (H. all ‘Monday old parliamentarian of unquestion ed ability. Mr. Wyatt is an Speaker with a parliamentary ro- cord which should, and we have no doubt will. ensure his election and ensure for the Fifth District BX- ‘ our the causes of discontent ‘and campalgnlthus going to ti“, very ostentatiously held out the olive branch to the Progressives. He told the Progressives frankly that they were not to blame for going out and forming a third party. lt was altogether the fault of the Conservatives. Under suc- cessive Conservative administra- tions. he declared. [third parties had sprung up, He also dcciarecl that the necessity for third par: tiesvvanishes under Lib-irll rule the Minister. "is sure to breed discon- "Torylsm." declared ‘Prime tent and discontent alwaysgivcs birth to a new and ultra radical organization." Mr. King's this case. like many of his former con- conclusion in clusions.‘ are neither logical nor There have been third parties under different administra lions in _ Canada (‘OITQCL and llo doubt there always will he. Never be- fore. however. has a third party assumed the proportions of the present Progressive party and tho reason is not far to sock. Tho pre- "Pnl Pfosrcssives are almost ex- cilisively Liberals; they lost faith in their Liberal leaders anti, rat- her than ally themselves wltl. the (lnnservatlves. formed themselves into a third party. first as United Fflrmers and later as Progres- sives. "The west had been largely Dlheral: it is very largely Pmtlressive. if these Liberals mm had any faith in their Liberal leaders would they have deserted them and formed another party? Premier King, as t1 sop m I115 mm, IIUW “a . Notes Bi Tlie X. OQQQ‘ w» fiOQOk Premier Bell with ‘Commission- ers Crosby and Lea, but with the iAttorney General notably absent, have been ittiteuding their party conventions for the illumination of bye-election candidates western and eastern sections . longed a“ lowed his return and tllc mutual lt is apparent that the feuds between leading meeting the electors Vin the colli- liig contests as a house divided against itself- a house which cannot stand. At the Murray Riv- er convention, tho Premier refer- red to the lure-elections in ‘terms cvery one of which was condem- nation of himself and of his Gov- ernment. l-le told the delegates that Itlie bye-elections were neces- sary; that each district is entitled to its fllil representation and its iuli weight in ‘the Asscnlhlv, that the statute ls inoperative and that by-clet-tlious are a matter of lice- ‘tsslty and not of choice. What he elections were not held! But every delegate know the reason, as all the country knows it. it was because of the bluluicr- ing mud incapacity oi tile govern- ment in the first place and their lawless decision afterward ‘to de- fy the lnw of necessity anti the lulpcrativn statute of which ‘flit? Prrnlicr had spoken null to deny '10 the electors ‘their constitutional riglii of representation. He of- fers neither rhyme nor reason for this outrage upon the rights of ‘tile people. He makes lin e-xcustnl he professes no penitence. and‘ \“'t lll fare of an unprecedelltodi violation of public right he asks. er supporters. declared that “Libel r-‘Ilisnl. ll true w itself, will seckl endeavour to remove them and l1 ‘the Liberals in Prince County, Asyomove the divisions that exist be-i ‘tween forces that united." It is‘ cheap argument to lay all m9 "mlfllliws ills at the door of. the previous government but llltgi particular ill, if ill it be will not flown iii thll; war. ‘Flu; facts arc the Progressive truc- lt is a notorious fact which party jg vgy-y large“. Liberal and proves the leaders and members (m. the shnple reason that they of the Bell goveriilneilt to be "P!" llofnilh or confidence in their liilriy or their leaders. Mr. King, II-illfrfllly. is calling them back in tai political comibat. poured oll onilh“ mld- Tl"! many of them will ‘eventually return to their first. love we have no doubt; that ma‘... of them have already united the", 191W! With the Conservative party is true and that more will 105° {s 8110911)’ true. And the sooner the return t0 eltherior both thirties is affected the better it will be for Canada. There lg no room in lwWlcs for m"? Hallie-l; proof ol this was abundantly furnished during tho lust session of the House or Com. nlons. Nothllnz was the session Canadian donc during except compromise; the Dre-election policies of the the iLiberai party were thrown to tho vtinds and a mongrel administration as (jflfflell out which pleased neither the lsiberal nor the Progressive wing. two wings of SWIMMING . To be a good swimmer is not necessarily a guarantee of lili- munlly from drowning. Many good swimmers hove been drowned, in fact. ll may he admitted that over- confidonca ln ono‘s swimming abl- lity has been the cause of many a drowning accident. Tho fact rel-- mslna, however, that the man or woman who can swim has a great many more chances of escape from n boating or canoeing accid- ent thantheonewho is unable t0 swim. Not only is swimming a do- slrahle accomplishment in the effective representation. -->—-£Q}-————-— > LIBEIALO AND PROGRESQIVIVB Premier King‘. in e spot-ch re- cently delivered at Insiiiihgtoo. matter of self prsservatloitybut it oflcn enables one to rendor offici- out help in case of accident to ot- bore. This lies bgon demonstrat- ed so often‘ tllsihlllt DOQQIMIIO els- . - ' t I lt is further noteworthy m," and melnlen west or east has made any flour“! or the trouble Wm seek [oU-llI/PIWRI‘ to the grave charge. re-I these wronged electors to support. his trainditlate.‘ ‘ I that! lnel-ther the Premier nor his (‘om-l lmlssioners, nor any of his hench- penletl hundreds of times lilrthe, press and Oil the platform that] pie. This gravl-st of all charges. refitted but unanswered. By" roltied By tens of thousands the electors ll is. known ‘lo be fuitiiless and unworthy of plilblic trust. The‘ people of tnwn and country were grossly deceived by lhcfle men. it would be worse than folly to trust tilcm now. The deceivers. to cover up the fraud by which they gained a vit- tory at the polls three years Ago tell us of roads they built anti are building. lf these ‘were all that. ‘they are claimed to be could tllPy atone for the deception they practised upon the ‘people. or the Iby paths and crooked roads lb)‘ which thcy climbed to lpowcr? Did 4_@i7*— borniion. Every boy and girl who can find access to the sea should lt-arn io swim and not only to help rescue the lo tile unskilled is a most dangerous undertaking. The drowning usually grasp their swim but to drowning which wouldlbe rescuer and disable him with that both are drowned. the result ln this soil-girl pTDVFlPr‘ cf ours swimming ls an art in which mliny of our young people are experts. Possibly ‘too little attention is; paid to the art and many go in bathing stroke. They should all lellrrfu. who cannot swim n swim and there are few places ll: which it can no more easily or safely learned tn-ln at our many summer resorts. Besides being a life saver from drowning. stylin- mlng is one of the most healthful iexercises in which one can tiff-- gage. it exercises lungs and musc- les. quickness of action and alert- ness of mind and ‘body. in s country like-ours more cm- phasls should be placed on swim mlligvas an athletic exercise and‘ swimmingcontcsis would make a Yfllllillildflflfl entertaining addition‘ to ourother athletic sports. ‘l-il‘lllllillliilllis ill llHiSlilllHl lNll [XEII in its of the Province. The absence of tile tramerof the Tax Act from ‘thcso meetings serves -to recall his inro- nce during lite upen- ilbg “leeks of the past sasicn, the - a “WI-my scenes dun“; the M“; small committee. carefully selected succession of caucuses that ifol- l9 pram-app, 11111931‘, 1 commit- recrlminatlonc which were salient features of these tsecret concl-lves old members of the Bell Cabinet have not. been ‘lealcd and that tho government is llid not tcll them was why the ‘bye is i ft has been said that there is ‘Wlidom in a multitude of counsel- lors. Where there are large. widci spread and varied interest to he dealt with, and where the mullet»:- lore are competent men. familiar with the details of the matters un- der consideration. the old saying is still doubtless true. But modern experience has pro-"- ed. over anti ovcr again, that ill matters of ordinary busiilcss tee. of Due good active man. traili- 6d in the work to be done. la not infrequently found to be sufficient to bring a business, however dif- ficult and important, to a success- ful issue. more satisfactorily than a committee of a dozen or a hlill- tired. As to the public ‘business of this smallest of the pfflVlllPPS of Can- iltlfl——lllt‘l‘l* is nothing lntricatc or difficult about it. The education of the young. the conviction of law- breakers. tile provision of good road-s. the safc-keepiilg of persons mentally defective or insane, the expenditure of less than $500,000 per yeurfltliesa are lls chief du- ties-—ailll all these are carried on upon lOil£~ifl0ll and woll-untlerstooii principlcs and methods. it is trilc that. iroili time to time, improvements alld changer in administration. may be nxpctli- tgit anti ilcccssary, and that pro- posals lo ill: se- ends arc to be cull» sldortvd Bill many ll ibusilloss firm in (Tana-la has greater problems to solve, and a lurgcl‘ voiuulo of l)ll.‘ll- ucss to lrausacL-zllld the business tr at-tcll sittlsfeitllorily and sllccessiuily, by the ovcrslgllt anti Ilahor oi‘ onc or two leading llicn, ulul a half‘ dozen clerks. Granted that public platters rc- qulrc a grcatt-l" amount. of thought and tiist-ussitnl than those of a lvell-conllulcted private firm, there is, l colltcllii. no good and sulfici- ent reason for a Leglslattlre of thirty ult-nlllcrs. and an executive of nine, with a small army of of- ficials to consider and discuss and carry oil tllc public business ofillis province Propcrtloliaicly lo ‘terri- torial area tho elected rcprcsoulzi- lives of Prince Edward island arc| far more iiulucrolls than those of any lulu-i‘ province ill Canada; PFOlIOIIIlOIlEiLPIy to ptrplllllllllll the nullnbol‘ is larger; pruprlrtiotlatcly to the importance and magnitude. lllll BllllNBll larger; proportionately to amount ot the provincial revenue and the sums to be annually voted, it is also larger. , Nor will it be contended that the public affairs of t-his province are more efficiently or more satisfact- orily conducted than those of the other ‘provinces. Higher taxes are continuously imnofled; 11ml llwrflls no marked improvement in the conduct of public business. The tlcht of the provinee-tlltqlé-‘illftfl. l)!’ the amount of the interest pay- ment—has increased and aiill in- crcases. Education in the com- mon schools is not yet so wc-i zltliiptod to the needs and inter- ests of an agricultural province as it ought to be. it will be admitted that improvements and economies mlght—lli the interests of the pro- vincc and its taxpayers-—be adopted and introtlueetl into every depart- ment of tlhe public service. A change ‘in provincial conditions is evidently needed. / To eflect this needed change, of- fiulently and satisfactorily, the first step is. l submit, a reduction of the Legislature to one-hulf its pre- sent size. By this first stop. $6.000 a year would at once be saved lLV tho province; and this amount. whether applied to the payment of interests on the provincial debtor economically expended in the pulr lic service, would be the begin-fling of a better administration of pro- vincial tlffairs. A heavier rcspi-i- sibility would be laid upon one rc- preseiltatlve than upon two, and upon four or flve executive council- lors lllnp upon nine There would consequently be ext-related by turli member anti ciich councillor g ab?!‘ care iii the adoption of poiic - greater economy itl aulluiliistrlltit-nl. Mort-over. the elr-ctors would pro- bably cxertrisc grcatcr care ill the selection of candidates for clcetioll to tiic lmgisltiturc. They wn-tiltl not be so likely to choose u lawyer oi‘ doctor, Oi‘ nlcrcllalli, to tltreitic questions appcrttiiiiing to improve- ments itl the condition of agricul- ture or the fisheries, and lllcy would, ilt all events, he iliorc likely to bc careful to (elect. mcn of genu- ine illl~f‘tlllll(l albillty llll(l public spirit. This question of a reduction oi’ the Legislature and of the personnel oi‘ the government cannot of course, be tlm-ided until there is a Ktiilufill‘ election But it may wcll lic ullc 0f the questions l0 he considered |by the Legislature. the number is tclitit-iliilthc. course oftiic coming bye-election eoiitcsts. - of thc topics to oiigage some at.- r-a-fi fl- l Canada will require showing a ‘eynope at our Branches. . T H E S T A M P T A Every Canadian manufacturer, pmducer, ‘agriculturist, corporation or individual having business relations with a‘ banking‘ formed regarding Canada's new stamp, ‘taxes, effective from August 1st, 1922.‘; i Handy indestructible celluloid cards easy table of tax rates can be had free Union Bank oi Canada .r.'. xi .. to be completely A in- v is of the law and an Telegraphs and Telephones, laid the first stone of the great plant that was to be at Saints Asslse. A description of its plant as drawn up by the Centre Rudioeieetrlque Coillpaily states that its trausoeeil- nicscrvice is to be curried on by a, station callable of radiating all antenna current varying from 250 to 1,000 kilowatts. ilccordlnli to the range or tile difficulties wllic.i tile communication in ques- tion presents. 'l‘liei'e is also a mul- tiple receiving central lierlllltling duplex traffic and a central office supervising the vllriuus stations und for tile eoliveiliclll-u 0i the laiblic. This proposition of ll cciltrill of- fice is particularly interesting to American radio experts for it. is an idea developed exclusively iii the United States and which the Euro- pellil nations have been slow iii all; opting. lt is tile fact that this lli‘W coillpzllly has zitloplcd it, that makes it possible for New York anti ~ Paris lo be ill direct communica- tion with eilcn other. liltilcrttl, the French radio stations, transmitting and receiving, ilave been plat-ell nliics ilpart. 'l'lil-re was no connec- Atiailtie Wireless ' New iirilperaiioili A new era in communication be- twccn Europe and America began ,,_ _ _ , _. _l|»’1.-.-‘-. .;-,-...: Ought to beflmv gamed plum and power ‘Myosttrday, dCCOltllnL, to radio en, leis‘ tit sclviu. lllLtilta t titiuentil m” b row] npcelvm m (ioqgin,.,.,-_.,l when ‘he b“; when.“ sinuous impetus to colllmorcta by wlrc- ' ‘V g i y g e p ilion of the Centre llitdlfllllflfilFlfltltfiless 3cm“ m" stands itorlay as it has 51m,“ rm-tllc Paris at Sainle Assise. Flulnccflwllll “l” "w-"Kurilllil" "l “'0 "cw! “"99 Wars pa,“ not nun-M u" ‘opened officially. This lllallt silidtculullillw- m" Fluid‘ Uiivurnllii-"li sil-‘lo bc the most powcrilli radio inyms was“ l" “wilful Li“ r011") H" cut-e and by implication it is ad- Plurulle. nuts New Yolk and iktrislhwillwv “ml iillviliu illliiilli“! is‘ U) "g4" [mu-l tout-h w“). ca...“ 0H,,“- yorllalke the place oi (loverullleiiiui atl- tlle first time in the history‘ oi the! world. Pressing it key at the Front-hi company’; central control station’ at 79 Boulevard llaussnlnnn, Paris) an operator flung a tint and tlitSJi message 3,000 miles and more! ilireugll the air to 64 Broad Strcctf tlic Centrabcontrol 0i? tile ltatlio they tell the people in 1919 that they intended to expend a ‘half million dollars in road- Ibulllllng? llad they ally mandate ‘from the people for this vast outlay‘? Was‘ it wise or timely, al a time when‘ labor was at its highest cost and when they said the finances of tile Province were "in a deplor- able condition," to undertake sol costly a work? l l ‘Sonic pieces of mall have bot-n improved, Ibut at ciiurlutlus cost; other parts are worse than be fore; hundreds of miles of cross. roads and bye-toads have bccfl neglected, bttlalirla they were out-i strip the '“lulproved" projects. Ought not tho people lo have ‘iioirn consulted limftlre lilo enor-l mously costly ‘and revolutionary; ‘work ‘was lindcrlzikcn? And how' did it happen lllilf. so malty rel-l: iitivcs of thr- Prcnlier and ills coifi leagues were among tho contrrir-I tors’! We lire told also that tilt-re‘- are fewer vacant schools ‘than ‘there were in war time, The some, is true in every province nl Cilfl~| ads. Wily should that rcdoulld to ‘ihc credit of provincial nlllllflltifa and their supporters here, who have ‘broken every promise they "tilde to ‘the pPflple und violated every trust reposcd ill them? This is the Issue between the electors and the Bell Government: Shall wit! trusfthe men who do- ccivod us, taxed us as never lbcrore. and who raided the tax moneys by wbolosalo fnig their own pockets? Shall we support for parish; Bltlfa the men Wl’! have brought contempt and dis- tlrnro upon the party nntl upon the Province? Shall wr- approve of ihelrcontlliund nml hitter qual- rcls, their neglect n1 public duty. their waste of public money? surely Ilt is Incredible that can be done by honest and Intel- ligent loan and women! the answer was shot Ilnstantzlneoualy. this ration of a company 9, 1921, M. Deechamps, of Posts, and quickly as one llligilt telephone frolll Manhattan to Brooklyn. And back lllllltjtill I France's initiative As described by- radio experts! AllllllllC Occillrl lliinlstratiull. France, it is silitl, has been loo lliucll occupied with, to her, inure illiportlilii iilatters than inlpruviiig llel‘ radio facilities. 'l‘lle French people, zllrcaily sorely bur- dened ‘by taxes due to the war. could nut be induced to spcutl the llllliiuns necessary to keep up lilt- rBSUtYUli that had to g0 hand-in- ilzilld with lilo dcvelopuielll ol wireless. Gireau Elliile. lllauaging director of the Central itulllul-lctl- trlque, was the French expert on communications at the tiisarilla- nlont conference in Washington. Willie ‘here he visited a number of Aillerlcail wireless stallions, in- cluding tho one at Riverhead, and what lie saw he has put into opera- tloll ill the new collipany. Apparatus in Use Tile trilnsulittlng station of inc French plant is situated on the plains oi‘ Salute Assise, forty kilo- metres ‘southeast ol‘ Paris. 'l‘llc apparatus consists oi‘ two high fre- quency altcrniltors oi‘ 500 kilo- watts in the antenna. elicit drivcn by two direct current motors ui 450 kilowatts. 'l‘licso groups can lays and llllslakcs. No bziillicrs "vvvvvw Daily Seieclios (insulin iiealleis ‘from the W. I. Loosen collection Q- i THE GREAT UNWHIMPERING. A little band of stern-eyed mcn is nllirchili-g oil with heads l~tl'l high, brokcu swords, struck low. With pride that feii before .21 foe, Willi neither tear nor sigh. With with hope ‘plwy are tlic beaten; they tllc wliippctl Of life's great throng, tlio rank and file Willi clutched at victory and lost; Who grimly fought, but paid the cost," Yet see their daulillcss smile. 'l'l,l!lli. is till‘ grasp upon the hill; lilotitiy each filer, yet. they swing. till float... no ‘trumpets soillui. But to the licigilts their course is .bou ll ll — Tile conquered conquering. llon,ol' any sort bctwccn lllcm. nothing like ll central office. ZVics- ‘flit-y know thc ililttie fit its worst; w'L'c' sages that were to be scnt iroili Th0)’ 11'0"- ‘lell-‘av-S ‘mhillmwed ' ‘. ‘ . sill-s: Corporation of Aillerieil, its easily Pims i0 New ‘m-k‘ “r ll“ “r“'“‘ But thclr immortal souls took had lo be relllyctl soiilctiiucs by flame motorcycle, with the resulting llé- Anti llinlln for tllom a Victor's- name- "'i‘ho Great llltwllllnpcrillg." In \'ll\V of l'i‘l‘l‘lil ntlvancl- ill filo tum til lliJl - lll'lll\\' is llii- listlnill of llfII.l.l.\(-I t as shown iii tliv I . slulullulls; l\l(lNTltI'll\ 'l'()|1( INTU I71 NI. umrn St. Toronto "4"" London Yum‘? Ikllllilllllll ‘ a Saturday ends away down. has disappeared. function together or separately, either ilffecting a single transillls- Sl(lll with a power varying iroili 250 to 1,000 kilowatts in thc antenna or affecting two sluiultzlnctllis tftill5llll5SiOllS.Wlth power perlnlt- ting cach between 250 and 50o kilo~ watts in the antenna. The receiv- ing stlltltlii ails been crccteti at Vlllilcrcsnes, ilalfwlly between Paris und Solute Assists. It consists of six receiving units silpplled yitll the most up-lo date apparatus. Nor- mally the messages are received directly at tho Control flurcau, Paris, by means 0|" special lilgli- speed machinery. Tho Central Bur- eau, the hub of control and co-or- fllflllllfJfi of the network of this vust. organization, is located in lluuss- mann Street ill the centre of Piiris. lt is connected by direct wires with the general telegraphic administra- tion of the Government und also wit.i Saints Asslso anti Villacres- lies. Government Gives Aid Tile French Government. reilli- zing. tllcse hilndicittls, begun nearly two years ago aiding iii the orgitlil- titnt would Suits trike over wireless and on January L- — l $42,716, J GHN STGN AWWAILD, slot it is illtcri-l-ltiilg [u ill-to. ti-d (rlnss Vuluc of lirl- lii-si-rvc list Alllillul sltllt‘lltt'.llli—- 027.00 l. STUCK l-ixmlarlols STUCK EXCHANGE. , Dluntrenl. tit. Joli n‘!- Iln I lfll x fihcrhroolse Nlltl. twirl-ct \‘\'ll'e Connections- ifiast Week of thfi SMOKE SALE this big sale 0f Men’s Wear and t0 make this week the best one we are cutting prices Plenty of goods left t0 choose from. None damaged and the smoke smell ONE THIRD OFF ONE QUARTER OFF Shirts Overcoats Trousers Gloves Raincoats suspenders ‘ Underwear collars i Felt Hats Suit Cases Sweaters Hub Bags Neckwear Trunks I Gaps, etc. Shop Today and Save Money '- OPEN EVERY EVEN NG D. A. BRUCE 158. Queen St.‘ <. l.