!‘ u A?\ .- F r‘,- a. rr- .-. , be -. ~ , v-q-umusi-osazmncounuuunsop i _ ' ‘ .-_._. $_%Qf ~ g-v-fx-r-q-m - l a»: _ A._-_..,_.__:._.,...,.___ 5"E.'--'5'5.,Is~&f" “q. I . ,. F in; - la '10 Fh nc rel It llli ' ‘or I 1c: Cll Fri af ' ti lrc _ we ch-I Pfli __ Mi‘ PI? ‘n, _,,_,,.,.,.........o, ~n~u >4) s... - .- n- .--" _.. .. -.-. - also: 4.1.5.1: um qunuasnn! CRJIz-gg: _ It - ,1,‘ i-wwnqniwwmw PAGEjlQQB rile cilinlonlsrowii cuiiTmAii geliilent-“Z (‘lwuler s. sin-Lure, ALP. S - Tcfury-Jilrut-Cnl. D. ‘lfzlnlllf null Managing Director-J. B. 55"!“ Asuncion Editors-Frank Walker Ind D, K. Currie $5.00 per you (In udvunec) delivered. oiled In Canada and United lulu, Morning lmlly (founded 1881) SLMI per year (In lulvunce) m THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1932 Vloo-Prelldcnc—J, B, Burnett A, Iulilnnon, D. S. 0. SIR GILBERT PARKER An author deal‘ to the heart of rvcry caimdianschoolbcy has pass- id away iii the i>Cl1~0ll of Sir Gil- icrt Parker, WllUrC (loath, at the lge of sixty-nine. occurred this reek in London. Who docs not re- iail the thrill ivzth Wllifh he first lead tlicsc h-Ilffillg 1.110s based on French Canadian lii-iory-such tales is "When Valmond Came to Pon- tiac," "The 'l‘r:iil of the Sword," "An idwzitiircr of the North," and “The Scars of I\l‘ght_v,"—stories IflflYi-{Qd by fine and iramlai-c Q\Ia:lu.cS which s:ill rank with the best adventure literature in the lanziiazc. Other novels follow- ed, wizh othcr sctt ngs but always lvifli the thread of adventure run- niiirz brightly through them: "'I.'he Rattle of the Szrclic." "The Right u! \Vll'_\'," “Donovan Pasha," “The Ladder of Swords," and “Northern Lights," to name but a few. Parker was a prolific writer, but his earlier work was picbiibly his best. Born at Camdcn Elnst, Addngton, the descriptive Ontario, Sir Gilbert Parker was bducated at. Ottawa and at Trinity University, Toronto. [n 1886 he went to Aus- tralia and pracziscd journalism. He also travelled extensively in the Pacific, and ‘subsequently in north- ern Canada, where he derived much material for his romantic stories. A staunch Imperialist and early advocate of Imperial Preference, he distinguished himcclf in politics as well as in literature. His career has been compared, in this respect, to that of Sheridarrs. Like. Sheridan, Parker entered the British Parlia- ment, and gained recognition 5y n15 i-‘gorcus imperiallstic policies. T-le was created 21 knight in 1902, be- zamc a barollet in l915and a year htcr was made a member of the .. "y Council. It is related that sir Gilbert =hoived a group of his early storTei to Archibald Forbes, famous war mrrcspondent, seeking his assistance in having them published. Forbes f ld-hlm they were "the finest col- lection of titles" he had ever seen. The young author then tore up the manuscript and began writing the series known as "Pierre and His People." ‘Illese, Sir Gilbert often declared, started him on his way to nlccess. THE VIMY MEMORIAL Answering criticism of alleged Umecessary delay in completing the Canadian war memorial at Vimy Ridge, Mr. H. C. Osborne, iocretary of the Canadian Battle- fields Memorials Commission has an informative letter in a recent issue of-the Toronto Globe, explaining why this memorial has taken so long to ' complete. The body of the structure, Mr. Osborne writes, will certainly be finished before the end of this month. “Ihcrc will remain, however, before the memorial can be sa’d to be finally completed, a. very con- siderable amount of sculpture carv- ing to be donc. The memorial in- cludes iwenty sculptured figures of heroic size. Of those on the lower levels, one, representing the spirit of Canada, is finished, and is an object of great majesty and beauty: and the other figures and groups on the lcwnr levels are well advanced. 0n the other hand the carving of other figures at higher levels in- volves a problem of some difficulty. and as chore is a limit to the space‘ in which the carvers can work, it is riot expected that all the carving can be completed before the latter part of i934. It 1s not n. fuir criticism, Mr. Oc- borne says, to silggcst that Canada is behind othcr Dominions in the construction of Will‘ memorials, or that there has been any official in- dfflrrrnce. Indci-d the contrary is are in existence bntilcficld sites tiic ca’ c. Tllrrc "vcrl Cirlrliikin vrziriliu siuiahl." memorials and two a shim-y w; o; “My p" dent M Prcmcrlnl plaques, (me at St. Na- ma; m; cone“ work m”. be c”. zaire and the other at Mons. In fled on Th, “mum u ‘ he“; 1°" “"0 mid-i have brm wh- one for the professors and lecturers and lihcd with maple to mg,“ mg ‘hwy; b‘ ‘ppfxl.wd‘ anaemia-unwan- add‘ ttruczed WW9.- £U!;.9§.§§9‘El. site at H111 62 in 8618111111. i5 0V" a. mile long, and the other, leading to the Vimy site, is over two miles long. The lust-mentioned road in- volved the clearing out and cover- ing over of twenty dug-outs, some of which were forty Mi imp- Ii B true that other Dornlnions have erected memorials. The most im- portant of these, that cf South Africa, is a fine masonry structure surmounted by one group of bronze figures. Another, that of New- foundland, consists of a sinlle bronze figure of a caribou. New Zealanc! has erected several mem- ci-lals, but these are of simple char- acter, obelisk form. In cdrlsidering the time required to complete, none of these is comparable with the Vimy Memorial. Australia h“ a fine site at Vllliers-Bretonneux, but that Dominion has considered it inadvisable to begin its memvfifllil-‘i yet. It has been recognized that the Vimy Memorial will be an example of the standard which Canadians hold in a matter of this kihd- If 1i is, as it ls expected to be, an object of jusitfiable pride, the matter 0f Q little time more or less taken in its construction will be unimport- ant. If 1t is faulty in any prevent- able way, the members 0f the Commission and others engaged cannot excuse themselves by saying it might have peed bettei‘ i! they had had a. little longer to complete the work. The Canadian public may be assured that nothing is being left unturned in realiu in stone Mr- Ailward’; magnificent conception. and thus to place on Vimy Ridge. which will be forever associated with the name of Canada, a memorial that will b, not only worthy of the events which took place there, and Canada's whole effort in Hie Great artistic taste. PROVINCIAL FlIVjlNCES A booklet just issued by the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics dea‘s with the revenues and expenditures of the differed‘: provinccs for the years i930 and 1931. The provinces combined had total revenues in 1931 of $119,143,480, as against $188.- 154910 in 1N0, l. falling off of al- most. exactly nine million dollars, or about five per cent. ‘more were smaller revenues in all ‘the prov- lnces except Nova Sootia and Prince Edward Island. Th, revenues of Nova Scotla totalled. $8,104,602, against $7,682,066, the increase wholly due to larger receipts from mines and mining royalties and the new item as a result of the adoption of the act providing for the sale of liquor under Government control. The increase in the revenues of Prince Edward Island is but a few hundred dollars, the totals being $1,149,570 lnlmt $1,146,149. 'I1he revenues of New Brunswick reach- ed $5,900,914 last year, against $6,- 583,726 the previous year, the fall- ing of! being almost entirely in smaller receipts from forest; and lands. On the expenditures side Quebec is the only province in which the outlay expenditures d'd not exceed the income. (m the per capita basis Quebec also had the best showing. the total per bead being $l4.21,| against $15M in Nova Scotia and Ontario, $16.51 in Hince Edward Island, $16.56 in New Brunswick. $19.75 in Saskatchewan, $20.70 in Manitoba, 824,63 in Alberta and $40.23 in British Columlfu. The av- erage per head of expenditures for all the provinces was $18.13 in 1930 and $18.41 last year. 5011011141. lvifilrs The teaching staff of 8t. John's NOTES BY TIIE WAY .Not long ago when a BJlish heath master said the modern schoolboy was "cowardly, untruthful vain and " “ "‘ Dr. James E- W95!- chlef Scout executive of the BOY Scouts of America, denied the state- ment most emphatically. Now Dr. John Grier Hibben, who retired re- cently as president of PrlIiCBY-O" University, asserts that. the college students of today are better men than their fathers were on leavinz college. Modern youth frcqilenm’ finds delight in shocking the eld- ers. It likes to be irresponsible, irritating and confusing. That is its traditional ' attitude. still, some- how.'it manages to keep those who know it best among its most loyal defenders. n.1,»... w. Bu». ma. REGULAR AND IRREGULAR DOCTORS On one hand We have a man who has attended public or grnmniar school, high or preparatory school,- two tc four years at getting a trained mind, who then studies medicine for six years acquiring I. iknowledge of physics and chemis- try; anatomy-the study of the body-tissues and organs; physio- logy-the study of the workings of Americans like to take a "poke" i the body; pathology—the study of at the Britsh telephone system l the “sick" body; therapeutics 0r the which they think is not so efficient’ application of treatment to [the as their own, but there are tlmesisick body; surgery, the use of the when they have to "hand lt" to the km" VJ Prtwem‘ death? hyliene Brmsth The “Telexo syswm as n ,5- and sanitation. He 1s graduated as ._ - 18. 191i; (Toronto Mall Press of the Dominion‘ _ Extols Ottawa Conference and moire) _ We have been watching the edit- orial comments on the Imperial Conference in Canadian newspap- ers from‘ the Atlantic to the Paci- fic and have been impressed by their almost unaninous enthusi- asm over what was accomplished at omiwa. Only abbot half a do- zen extreme Liberal newspapers of an outworn school have had a word to say in criticism of the, Conference and most of these-are‘ tlmorous about belittling the An- glo-Canadiail and other agree- ments for fear of offending the business and farming interests in their own communities. . i The sydney Post. published in Cape Breton, proclaims the cori- ferenee an epoch-making event ih Empire development on the ground that l; has deepened old trade channels and created new ones. Stu observes that the 01th!‘ ‘ . ' H1O . g and has u, f l . , be h PUBLIC‘ FORUM p» it is W I This column In emu for tho m” M“mu- W!‘ lpy so" 5 dlmunlon by corruncudentn mfllts-iflkflallyg when ‘th Til ; nf question: of Interest. The 0- .i o‘ u‘ I ~ - e3’ shim ‘ 1 " does , OLars 1,, the .. not nocurrlly sadism the Ohyllaygf “ma, Ixywnclunon ‘Dur- .l ' Q "I - y ‘yr ‘M0 e lugs. _ i ml}? w‘ ‘bah-hf. liner-rte [Went M‘ ririperal Conference is surely I M" ther in gnu cup of the Rt. Hon. R- B. Bennett, who will go down in history not only as a great Cana- dian statesman but as a 8"“ 1m‘ "perlil statesman. The rondori nee Press hi5 said: "The as: 9111911" will not bring a new heaven and u new earth overnight. It is. however. a great beginning. The 1311191" 15 now on the uproad. The WhOIB spirit of the conference is one 0f hope. It should bring new confi- dence to a. troubled world- Th9 sentiment of the cohferelwe W" promoton of mutual trade, not all- tagcnlam to the rest of the world. The British Empire has set an ex- ample to the nations." The Fort William ‘Times-Jour- nal concludes a. long leader with these sentences: “'While the dele- e , l tlhllncc to pay the“, taxesfvgywit u y. Farmer, ‘work in m, Sin-I read a few days ago g let- when the day “of Ilecifcnlglxe; ‘iii i ter from a taxpayer to the Editor of Y0}! will have the best roads mm" the Patriot. This gentleman, wnoiliisubry pl} the Province. m pretends to travel all the roads of‘ ' " i’ “ 1am, Sir, em the Province, has never ween the" ANOTHER rennin“ highways in a more terrible condi-' ' tion. I wonder if this gentleman: has been blind for the past four ' years and has, had his eyesight aud- denly restored. 1t. appears that way to me, because I am certain if he could have seen the deplor- able condition of the roads when the present government came into power, ha would not venture to criticize awgovemment that is do- ing its utmost to put the roads of our province in decent shape, and at the sometime do this work as economically as , “le. Further- BBTPEI ROADS ABE HIRE '4 1-.- m? Lollsflgillswslvrpp '= . o- i - i . . ,. Bin-I will appreciate 1t m, ‘J much lflyou - will ‘send mg m, names _of one or two parties m, WWld-‘be in’ a. position to fl-lnllfl transportation of lobsters, and m, sibly dtlier sea foods,’ from yo“. section to this port. - We are in a-posltion to buy lob rters‘ and pay cash for them upg; delivery here-and we, in tum. m, § transport them »from Machlaspoy ' to the Boston and New York mark -. sage is instantaneously reproduced! with this other “docmrn who has War, but. also a fine expression of R‘ called, has been installed for use‘ in the London area, and already hundreds of applications have been received for it. Within two months it. will be extended to the leading cities of Great Britain. “Telex" l5 a system of typeivrltng by an at- tachment to the ordinary ceiephcnv- When you want to send a. letter to’ a business firm, or a friend, Y0" call up the other number in the ordinary ixay, identify each other iby word of mouth, throw a switch at each end, and then type your message on a keyboard. The mes- at the other end, just as fast as it‘ can be typed. The cos; of the dc-, vice is $250 a yrear including all‘ servicing required. In this field Britain leads the world. It was no slight upon Aiderdice. Chatterjee, Havenga, O'Kelly and Coates to say that the Imperial Economic Conference at Ottawa was dominated by the three busy B's-Baldwin, Bennett and Bruce. Upon the shoulders of these three Empire statesmen rested the main burden of the job of finding the workable formula. for Empire trade development. To their names should be added thaiwof another industrious B—Beatty, of the C. P. Let nobody assume because there is the prospect of a prefer- ence in the British market that any old thing will do. Canada can compete in quality and steadily en- large the quantity, but no slipshod method will serve. The British is an exacting market. It can af- ford to be, and only by meeting its reasonable demands may Canada get the full and steadily growing benefit made possible by agree- ments made at the Impt-riai Can- ference. As g result of what has been accomplished at Ottawa, there should be a gradual return to bet- ter conditions. Certainly Canada should feel the impetus of the pre- ferences that have been granted here in the markets of the United Kingdom by [he removal of regu- lations that have interfered with Canadian trade in cattle and p0- tatoes, and by the elimination of unfair Russian competition, while Great Britain and the Dcminlons will also receive the benefit of the important concesions. With John Bull's family pulling together. the llknpire boat should go forward to new triumphs. The Star 0f Windsor, Ontario, says: There have been few Prime Ministers of’ Canada who have been such prodigious workers as Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett. Few pm- ple know the long hours he puts in at his office, and to those who do know, it is a constant source of concern. He has, however, one sav- ing grace. He makes» it an unalter- able rule that he will do no work on Sundays, This is less a conces- sion go the moralities than to Mr. Bennett's ideas of regular living. He believes that every man should have a full 24 hours of leisure out of each week. if he. is to do good work. Even during the stress and strain of the Imperial Economic conference, he adhered to tb's rule. refusing to do any work on the Sabbath. A young Tennessee lawyer, fresh from a long term of ‘ ‘ ‘we stu- Collefl. of the University of Man- itoba, whose funds havaibeen lost in the sensational muladminlstraticn’ case which is now exercising the province, have voluntarily accepted dy, and without the advantage of specal training, defeated splendid swimmers whose preparation for the contest began early in the summer, and whose physical con- dition was as nearly perfect as it could be made by expert, handling. Was this a. triumph of mind over matter? The man of trained lnblta of thought, amblifoiu for success in his profession, is enabled to subdue |,¢'(I T. ‘bfilfi-l-U .not had the training that would a physician and is called “doctor? On the other hand we have a man who has not passed all the grades of the public or grammar school, no high school, university, or medi- cal college training, attends or may" not. attend some special school of treatment for a. short time, and he is called or at least callfhimself "doctor." Is it any wonder that the phy- sician who by years of study and the application of this study has equipped himself to treat human ailments and give advice on pre- ventive medicine loses patience make his treatment safe or help- ful. The regular doctor cannot" understand how intelligent people can consult one of these "lrregular“ doctors. However Dr. Dietrich Klemptner, Chicago, suggests that research workers in colleges should study these other non-medical forms of healing and treatment and flnd out how much, if any, good there is in them. There is some good in them or there is not. If there is any good in them, that good, however small, should not be swept aside, but should be brought to light, and made use of by the medical pro- fession. If the medical students were taught what these irregular forms of healing consisted of, then they couldouletly pod with full know- ledge of the facts teiltheir patients about them and the patients could use their own judgment as to whe- ther or not to consult these "irregu- lnrs." When the regular physician gets so annoyed about these lrregulars that he uses very harsh language in denouncing them, it may as some one has well said, seef like "sour grapes." _ The best plan would be to find out what the irregular physician is using in treatment. 1f it is good it should be used, and if not its use- lessness or harmfulness can be readily pointed out to the patienti if the regular physician has pro- perly investigated the matter. You from Glvenchy, since no years can harden The beautiful dead, when holy m1. light reaches The sleeping cedar and the copper beeches, Return to walk again in wgdhgm garden We, growing old, grow‘ stranger m the college, Symbol of youth, where we were young together, But you, beyond the reach of time and weather, Of youth in death forever keep the knowledge. - We hoard our youth, we hoard our youth, and fear it, But you, who freely gave what we have boarded, Are with the final goal of youth rewarded- The road to travel and the trav- eller's spirit. And therefore, when for us the stars go down, Your star is steady over oxford Town. —Unknown. The ideal make up for such a cam. petition, of course, is the old one of the sound mind in the sound body, Those contenders who became ut- terly exhausted physically, whoge The Windsor. N. 8.. TTibimc SBYS gates have gone home in full as- that "the" Illipvrifll Ewfwmiv Con‘ surance that their work has been ference has been an unqllflhfifid’ crowned with success, the 5PM?’ 91 8114:0955" iii iim ii has opened the Ottawa. must- be maintained and door for ivide °XPBT1510n of Empire kept alive through the years in or- trade. which will bring a full meil- der that the fullest measure of sure or bcncfit to Nova scotia. The- good may 50cm; 79,0 m; Empire Halifax Herald holds out great and (,0 the world at large." ‘Phat is hopes of ilic advaniagcs which very true. The final results of the will acciuc to the eastern Mari- cqnfgmnce depend upon the man- time provznces. The Saint Jcim, N. ner in which the agreements resch- B.. Tflietrraph-Joumal and the ed are carried out. we believe that Charlottctorvn Guardian call upon every unit of the Empire will live their DPODII‘ t0 hi‘ 11D and domg i" up to the agreements, to which it order to reap the p"ofiis made pos- signed its name, 1n the spirit as siblc by 11w agreements in the letter, arid that the treaties Cflmiiig i0 Qhhifif), m0“ f! the will thus become far-reaching in city paper-s have already We" their benevolent effects. quoted iii iv-iim annrvcifiiioii 05' ‘Travelling farther west we find what was accomplished in four the wmmpeg nee Press rafljgf‘ weeks’ time at Parliament Hill. Illl h-uculent and “my in “s attitude’ the words --of the St. Cather’iie‘s towards the results obtained by Standard, “ihc'c is universal sat- the conference, though those te- isfaction and confidence tha; Prev suns are in ‘use measure w)“; the mler Bennett achieved a grrat F,“ Press has been dflnanding success in the face of tremendous m). a generation ofmorfi The Wm. difficulties. There has been noth- mpeg qflbune forecasts a sham ing like it in the history of Cana- trade mm,“ ‘hroughout the ‘mu. da and time will show the benefits pm as a result o; the Ottawa dc. derived from disinterested states- liberation and u predicts a flesh mimshlil" The Gm D3113’ 399mm" i-e-establlshment of stable econo- wmmerits with aPPmv-a] "m" the mic conditions in Canada to’ be magnificent experiment that will ‘ followed by an mum, o, mush my now be nlade as to how units of_ American 05pm“ to’; the develop.‘ the British Empire can be mutual- men,’ o, our natural resource; In 13' héipiul- The Kitchen" mmrd the .WOldS‘0f the Brandon Sun. Mi‘- ihlnks that Pmmm‘ Benlwu do‘ Neville Chamberlain saw the Em- serves the thanks of Canada andmlre Mach the goal sh-wen m"; by the Empire f" ivhfli W“! 3c°°m',his father, Joseph Chamberlain, so plished in so short ‘a. time at the many yen-s 38¢ It "e15 m" mg!" Federal capital. Thc'Bowmanville conference Wm be productive o’, Statesman quotes with approval good result, w canadarand the‘ Hon. T. L. Kennedy's stfliPment 95 rest of the Empire. ' to the very extensive advantages; The comment o; the gals“). Whifih will WW V) m" falmers °f,I-lera1d is that the farmers of Ontario from the Anglo-Canadian western Canada m", have 800d aiilflmmil- - reason to hope for betterment in T" ‘he "MW °f U“ Chai-mm‘ their economic condition at an ear-' News- ‘he Sign“! °T m“ "B"? 1y date. In another article the same ment has rendered the" prospects for Canada's farmers brighter than they have been in many years. In the words of the Simcne Rcformei‘, the signing of the trade pacts at Ottawa will be liailcd as the dawn of a. brighter day in the commer- cial relations of Canada and Great Britain. It. acids that the Ottawa conference has made history by consolidating ihc Empire as one economic unit and ensuring the cultivation of Empire trade chan- nels to the fullest possible limit. In the language of the Nleaford Mirror, "the Empire is moving on. newspaper has observed that the. conference laid the foundation of. economic unity for the British Empire, more tangible and practi-‘ cal than any heretofore conceived. The Vancouver Province expesses sober satisfaction over what was done at Ottawa. "The conference has done something feaslble and substantial towards larger andi freer Empire trade. The nations of the Empire as between themselves have lowered some of the trade barriers which had grown up’ be- tween them. It ought w be possible The greatest thing is the unani- m“ to Se“ ~ luau, Demon o! mous desire of its leaders and its goods in the Empire m" ye“, people that it. shall continue in than this yeafl. / unity and prrgrcss." The Smiths Falls News-Record believes that prosperity will return through the new developmrni. of Empire soli- darity, which was in evidence, at Ottawa. The Welland-Port Col- bornc Tribune remarks that the market for Canada's products has been greatly enlarged and that the benefits to accrue will be deter- mined largcly by the efforts which Canadan producers put into the task of preparing their goods and rendering thcm acccptablc to con- sumers. This is an aspect of the_ situation which is dwelt upon byi many newspapers. As Hon. Robert Weir, Hon. G. Howard Ferguson The Vancouver S61 says that‘ if the new tariff board about to be apponted sets to workwlth the idea of building trade, a perman- ent relationship will be established of infinite value to the country. The Victoria Colonist notes that Mr. Bennett has seen his, fondest hopes brought within realization. "He has, in fact, laid the founda- t‘on of a new or; of economic so- nn. L. B. EVANS of London, Eng. i4; and I-lon. T. L. Kennedy have pointed out, if Canada wishes to Noted Phmdm an,“ obtain a. secure hold upon the "magnum m4 “ab” permanent cum of Stomach Conditions such an Indigen- llon. DYINPIII. Sour Stom- lch, Heartburn, Gastric DI:- tress and many other afl- menfa peculiar to the atom- acb with a pencrlptlon which" we have procured and roll under the name of Bum Slmnuch Mixture. We alone luvs the lolc "tilts on this prescription and since ceiling it h“: rc- eelvcd numerous testimonials from satisfied purchasers. Don't fool with your llam- nch. Serious conditions no "hi! In nrlu if, You lllow yourself to loplo into u granule state of gastric tnvn- _ markets of the United Kingdom, now open to it, it must build up and maintain a constant stream of high quality goods. The Pictcn Gazette declares that very definite and concrete results have been achieved. The Goderich lilo KID N EY "V win i‘ l >" "Willi Tuiiiir“ bodies failed w respond to the 15511 of the mind, had no lltemaflve other than to quit. It is those who were able to continue to the end to whom cpeculaton applies u to the pi-omptingl of his what it wu um enabled them w‘ m". flA “got a Bottle lolly. Price’ ilook forward with confidence dhat conference - gradual a‘. first. because of this conference for Ca-l f morc, I would like to advise this- tax-payer that if the Liberal Gov- ernment bought machinery thatfs lidarity Within the Empire. In dO- " fng so he has displayed that wider statesmanship for which there is an imperative call at this time in world affairs." ‘ _ Ifvthe newspapers of the Domin- ion reflect popular opinlgn through- out the country as they generally do, it may fairly be said that 90 per cent. of the people of Canada are Pleased with the results of the Ottawa conference and that they to the beneflb which will flow ri-oiri but, in an ever increasing volume of satisfastory results. eta in large motor trucks carryin, I six to eight tons each. ’ ‘with nssurancesuiat 1 will m», _ much appreciate any assistance yo, ~ can give me in this respect, i ' 1 am. Sir, etc. ' _ LEON o. cares E Machiasport, Maine. . Sept. 5, 1932;‘ ~ (Lobster men should get in con ‘ tact directs-Ed. G.) - Tasmanianbeans, three to iiv, feet long and weighing l0 to 1: pounds, are being cultivated in Bel- 7 mont, Mass, by Coy Orsett. Th, i bean, when sliced and cooked . tastes like veal steak. In Tasmlin- , la, Orseit said, the plant blossom during the day, but in Massacit usetts it reaches full bloom at mid- i night. ' _ ‘ I Suits. worsteds, good style. ‘We only have one, line pattern, but th $18.50. COME See our fine assor MEN'S - Retail price \ “The Haberdashery” "i * "Special Values "in Yfldlllilg Mélfs Suits $15, 16.50, $18.50 For College Opening we are giving some special values in Young Men's The Suits‘ we ioffer are high grade beautifully tailored and to select from at-$15.00, $16.50 and f Boy's Sweaters.‘ Special . . . . .. $1.25 Youths Sweater. Special at . .. $1.50 I Henderson 8t (iudmiore ~ l or two in any one ere is over 50‘Suits TODAY tfnent. WEAR i n. Brahmin Orange‘ Pek 0e Tea ’ 50c per lb. l , Sold mm n. m4 Airtight Packlgel. i HICIQ NIC THR- 2 MAGS 4\.ffl/ Illl Muck Ilook up_ at‘ thissky scraper, thusize of the good. twist you. Swap ajevirf cents» for. when you‘. BISlCrJhXE-Z ~- . I V " uou. _ ".I‘W[,f?q?.,i"- v.“ _-