:.-'-~rau‘-s..-..=- f l A / . ,lL'.!b.».i1\i'_.A. <IJVAMLLSINKA m ‘§Za':i. ‘ "rri c A ‘ CNARTIAN ' THE CHARLOTTETUWN GUARDIAN u |,_W Ch In B. Iclmro, ll. P. Ylcn-Prelldciw-J B. llurnrl! w“ u ' 8::r¢tuy—l.leul. (SDI. u. A. llltKlllnon, n. S. 0. ‘ l-Jilltor and iillnl:ing.Dlro\-tor—~l. It. lluryneig Anocinu Edison-Frank Walker and D. B. Currlo “n; dad H81) lfl-Ofl pa OII’ (l ldranee) rlellr red. ‘hang 93.23,‘: advance) mulled l:i,Cunadnnund United Staten. * TH!J_RSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1931 m Farmers’ Week There is also the problem of na- ~~ tional defense, both external and ln- 0: special interest to our agrlcul- ternal. The defense of India against tural readers is the series of impor- invasion could be successfully under- ta-nt meetings which willfibe’ held in taken by a united India. But a. divid- the Prince otailtvalyes Collegghall. icd India would be helpless against starting Tuesday next with the an- the foes of her riorthwcst frontier. nual meeting c! th! Prince 33mm! The fliflln problem. of defense lies in 1531""?ljhifymelfiwlissoéliliiqnv-Ffiml- ‘the fact that the Indian Army is so m‘ Week has bewzneme imitation Yiocal lniits recruiting. Half of its i1‘- this Province. Mid “Si! 91mm“! ‘I numbers come from one province, thc thlscvea; L; 112128 ti? mgailiiélaez: Bunjab; Bengal, with 47,000,000 peo- BVE" ‘F a r w" .' m‘ ' Y‘ i .ple, is one of several rovliices that m?“ Viuawi- Fmmlditmrbtb ‘he an‘ ‘contribute nothing t: the Indian nual business sessions of the various ‘Army. n is asking too much o; hm livestock and agricultural associa- mm nature m expect om m. two Pr,» &' °ummdlw “an” mm ivinces to bear the burden o1 defend- otlier provinces will deliver ad- mg the whole 0,, India and of k6,,” firiejion Migimifigfsbfgdfigflhtl" ing internal order amid its vrarrlng _ __ _ . ‘ '“ - ' 7 sections,- without abusing this position perimentafFariii, Ottziwa, w;ll speak b I " n _ . t , ‘orlpoivei. e ore .42 Ayah- rnen‘ l »- a 3 s conven on m . Again, there is the problem of fin- Tuesday evening. Mr. Rothwcll is -_ w; _- a anclal and economic reconstruction. prominent as a. livestock man and v The total revenue of the central and Public speakeriflaad ‘hi5 address; l should be of mhéh“ yalue to our‘ ‘ ~ -» , , Xarmersh In nddmonwipzrfiwn: ';.,1fi_ Q58’) 000,000, A an absurdly trivial kell, former Ifivcstock.‘ Commissioner fibfiif fllrfice for the needs of 330" for Cmladaéapa 1mm o‘, thmcanacb 000.000 People. Advanced Nationalists ian Livestot-i; goflpayauger A_'__Jcm_ iivculcl rccluce ths. sum to halfAby “on, Wm be W950", at uh “my lzilioiisliing the income from excise. Breeders‘ meeting on \vEtil"iC.iL-l.t§ ev- Lin‘: a“ t“ m“ the land tax’ whuc emu‘. Jan‘ 2m other speakers e» at tlie sums time (lciiifiiidlng a mod- pected are lvir. R. L. Charlioiiinmi, zfi" °d“°‘m°“‘"‘1 flrstqam Qugbgg. Wm, L; connfljgpd “m, mm roads. and cvcn money for civil avia- gtemqoriesian 93181151,)“ ,.,,_,,-;\' and ‘lil ll. llnw zirc ilwmo i7l'i|)l'\.‘\’<‘lllC!"ii‘i to Mr. R. M, Eliut. g1 511g Mqyjmu, 4m vii": ‘oil w: a Lotul tiL-Lztiioii from binrkctipg Board, '.-:!l Fflllftffl“, including tariffs. cf $2.50 The annual meeting 01 H1»;- 5). “[1111 1o. liccci‘: Agéllilefi any inirri-iise in tax- Farmers‘ Institutes has licci: 1m .t- lion t-Lfllltk; the appalling poverty of poned this year until July, in unm- - suuiilrysidr. The great hulk of in coincide with the animal meeting inc Illfllilll population is rural; the b! the Womerfs Institutes. Tho mverage farm contains only five cul- other akflcultural meetings, however, itivated acres, and so fast as the dig- inciudlng those oi the (Jo-operative sing of a new canal or the introduc- EBI and Poultry ‘Association, llic lip-n of a incieases the 375m: b35959" ‘ind WWW Bwvi- jamouiit or the value of the product, II, will take place, as usual, during Ewe lliipfllfiliflfl r1150 pu5hes up, and hrmeifiweek- Illa; l-ii..l<-i.:ri:y subdivision of each Wm‘ m“ Wcmthm‘ “w” i‘ m1‘ .jl.lllil zunoii; iii the sons of a family wtiwflpu“ a’ 1am’ “V~""‘3~'41~'° “l lholds down ‘the standard of living. “u °' tm" impimfll" B=1i11¢1'1nse."rhiity dOlkifS is given as a libcral next week. This i5 35 i‘? slmilld be In estimate for the Indian cultivators a‘ provm” m which me agmimun“ aniiuul income. 'I‘axa.tioii, conse- industry plays fsuch an imlxmam quently, must b: light. The principal fginnecfgigesnie ktarwers ‘realize A burden is the land tax, a traditional formed about tscir Eszilzgssfuafifd ‘f; iimpost dating from ancient Hind‘: better method of acquiring’ Lmnmu- lclnys and cl.:l._;,,ted by the Moslcm i C'Jlll-'llt.‘l"_.."5 11m ruler claims u. share date information could he tlrvlsvtt , . than the system m- anmm Y“, [it i<f lir- in‘ 11x. a: the ultimate owner . cf ii; ll], 11W‘: though the excessive gethcr meetings for the rccwlhii oi } business reports, the frcc ziisruc m. . _ of mutual problems, and Lil‘) ]i.."l'.l)_1; (“Vilma o! addresses by speciallws i“ mt ‘Jlilcblli... to one half of the entirc particular “mu Vrop, a si..th was more usually taken, and the commuted cash levy of the ‘British Government averages only 50 cents per acre, o1- pcrhaps a thirtieth u» Lt 312i. PCW CFOP of disorder sometimes The Problem in I...1ic Press despatchcs indicate coiisidcr- m" or the yield‘ able dissatisfaction among the cx- Imteracy is perhaps me greamsy‘ treme Nationalists of India. with re- [Immcr to Drogrcss and Se“ govern- gard to the measure of self govern- ment granted zt the Round Table ,0! “mes and 2 per cent of females .wcre literate at the census of I021. jThough some advance will be regis- ‘tei-ea in the cciisus to be taken this? Conference. This, of course, was to in expected. Nationalism, to the Gandhi element, takes the form of an intense hatred or everything British‘ year, the proportion of illlterates is Unrestricted self government, the im- Sm] enormously great mediate withdrawal of British forces The framing or a’ Se“ governing and British mand. Fortunately for India, wiser counsels prevailed among the Indian delegates It London, whose majority opinion is summed up in the Sankey report which will fbrm the basis of a new governmental policy for India. The new constitution, while granting a larger measure oi’ self government than India has hitherto enjoyed. pro- i vldee for the retention of Br tish while same; o! the banking houses control over fvreisn affairs and na- of the United States fell by theway- tional defense during the trimsitzon- '51,“, in 1930, mere wag not g single ll period. and for certah safeguards ‘Canfidhn brink failure during the to insure the financial cre:i.t oi the yggr, ring," cgmments the New country. York TLmes, "calls attention to the‘ constituton adapted to the needs of influence, is their de-' so impovcilshed and backward a po- pulatlon and also embracing the semi- lildqltllfhflt Indian States will not be an easy task. Without British guid- ance and control, it might indeed lprove to ho a hopeless one. Can add’: Banks i‘ ~i.‘.; made an the cultivator in llllCllii. In all India only 14 per cent Notes by the Way Speaking recently before the Con- stltutional Club at London, Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, British Conserva- tive leader, renounced Cobdenlam and proclaimed the doctrine of tarifl protection in the strongest terms yet employed by any public man in the Unlted~fiingdom_ i Declaring that every thinking man/in the country had comei to realize the need of a ‘radical change in the British fiscal lsystem, he added that there was a great swing of public opinion in fav- or of the new policy of protection advocated by the Conservative party. “Nothing is more remarkable," he [sails], “than the way in which this jlast year or 16 months men who have not hitherto takedmuch part _ in politics, men who have been wed- [ded to the old Cobdenite system- lbankers, merchant bankers, the ec- f onomlsts-all of them are going right away from“ the old fiscal system of this country and they are Joining with us in demanding a. change in that fiscal system as something which must be given effect to before you can begin to make a single step towards progress. i Canada is no longer a. great terri- tory stretching from ocean to ocean and from the 40th parallel to the Pole, with a ribbon of population along the southern fringe and a mys- terious and silent North reaching into those vast regions Arctic-ward. ‘ on: 011p >15 vi Quilts m. \ ‘- Q1 amzLW. Big-jun. M.D PAINFUL FEET MOSTLY DUE T0 RHEUMATISM Napoleon's Doctor (me _London Times.) It is notorious that Napoleon had a poor opinion of doctors. But he jmacle a few exceptions toihis gen- jcral rule. One of them was Iarrey, ‘his great army surgeon, whom, in .hls will, he described as perhaps the finest man he had ever known; another was Corvlsart, his chief per- soncl physician Corvlsart undoubt- edly owed his popularity with the Empcrorto the sceptical turn of his mind. He was, like Napoleon himself, an cmplricist, a close and careful ob- server who had a greait dislike of drawing conclusions until the evi- dence was of such a nature that a con ilusion became inevitable. This trait adds interest to the modest vol- ume published recently in Paris un- der the title “Aphorismes do Mede- cine Clinique par le Baron Corvlsart," a. collection of observations and reflections that has lain unpublished for more than a century. "Medicine," says Corvisart in the first o-f his ap- horlsms, "is not the art of curing diseases; it is the art o.’ treating them, with the hope cf curing them, and of soothing and satisfying sick people." ‘ The distinction was of the great- cst importance to the most illustrious Court physician of his time, for, as he well understood, to soothe and content such patients as Napoleon and Josephine was, usually, to make them well. Corvlsart achieved that object on every occasion. His method It is unfortunate that so many people just as soon as their feet be- come painful think that they have fallen arches and immediately go to the drug store and purchase a. pair of arch supports. Nor can they be blamed for trying to get relief, be- cause as a matter of fact the feet are about as necessary in earning a. living as is the head. Arch supports are the very last resort and should only be used when your arches are down and so rigid that they cannot be helped by tem- porary supports or exercise. What causes painful feet? Drs. R. E. l-lumphi-les and G. H. Taylor of the New Jersey Orthopedic Dispensary have been studying foot conditions for a number of years and have recently given the results found in 1000 cases. The most common cause of pain- ful feet is arthritis, or rheumatism as it was formerly called, which is an inflammation of the joints between the various bones of the feet. Of the The North is coming nearer to the centres of population, thanks to the radio, and the airplane. And in its own sure way, civilization is creep- ing northward. It was not so long ago that it took a year for a letter to get from the mouth of the Mackenzie river to Ottawa and a. reply to get back. Now it can be clone quite eas- ily under a fortnight. Telegrams, wonders of wonder, may now be sent to the Capitol and an answer re- rcivcd within iii-u hours. is hinted at in perhaps his wisest re- flection. "The doctor ought to be on his guard against the itch to explain everything. He ought to know that Nature hidden in moilt of her works is especially so in diseases. He should content himself with being the ob- server of Nature and not seek to be her confidant," This modest pro- posal is not likely to appeal to the modern mind. It did not always alp- peal to Napoleon, who used to de- uiaiicl that Natures secrets should be i000 cases 768 had arthritis and 592 of these had pains in other joints also. 340 patients hadistomach and intestinal trouble. What docs this mean? That every patient with painful feet should have a thorough examin- ation of the entire body before any supports or real orthopedic treat- ment is given. Just as infected teeth and‘ tonsils and the poisons that go down to the large intestine from these points can 1 The fact that Canada- with fen country in the world is not a revela- = tion by any moans. It is one of the anomalies of international trade and suggests that Uncle Sam is not play- ivng fair, either with cahada or Great Britain. It suggests also that Can- ada and the mother country should look a little more carefully after their, own interests. This Dominion should be able to extend its tradc with South American countries as \vcll as the West Indies. In the December number of The Navy, Professor A. Bostoc Hill, M.Sc., M.D., furnishes an article showing the great advance in construction, of port facilities at Singapore, and concluding with a plea that the nec- essary sum be found for its comple- tion. He points out that Malaya and some oftlie Domlnions have contri- butcd to the cost and uses this as an argument to influence the British people so that they may bring pru- sui-e on the (iuvcrnment. Few persons, says Professor Hill, realize that Sing- apore ls a most important British port and that the city has nearly half a million inhabitants. The har- bor is magriificent and there are flne docks and public buildings. Singa- pore and Pcnung are islands, the former being the chief of the Straits Settlements. The island is 27 miles by 14 and is situated of! the southern extremity of the Malay Peninsula, separated from Johore by the Johore Strait. This strait has been bridged by what is known as the Causeway, which Dr. Hill describes as a magni- ficent engineering structure carrying both the road and railway, which makes it possible to come from the mainland to Singapore without changing carriage. Last week in the Court of Sessions in Montreal, three members of a notorious hold-up gang were con- vlcted on a charge of having com- mitted a violent assault on a citizen '73 years of age, after they had rob- bed him. Because of their brutal conduct-evidence being given to the effect that the beating the victim received “may take nve years from the span of his |ife"'—the presiding magistrate adjudged that, in addi- tion to penitentiary sentences, the ‘older offender, and he is only 28 years of age, should receive seven strokes from the lash, and the two younger members of the gang flve strokes each. million people is a bettci- customer! . . . I t h t lied lo of tho United States than any othcri F“ n f” w a ‘s ca co mc dragged from her bosom. But Cor- vlsarl. wcnt on liis way undisturbcrl, and no crisis was complete without him. t As n i)il_\‘.‘~i(‘i£lll Corvlsiirt was lioih shrewd in his juclginciils and. success .ful in his methods. He prescribed hot baths for Napolean as a. way of resting the body and at the same time stimulating the mind. In this case the patient derived so much satisfaction from the remedy cause arthritis or inflammation of a’ knee, elbow, shoulder or hip, so also can they cause this condition in the irrigation, is simply the washing out of the large intestine and this form of treatment is proving most eflcctivc in arthritis in any part of the body. As you can't get about properly without support of the feet the use of adhesive tape, one inch in width can be used to strap up the arches while you are undergoing treatment of the arthritis. About three strips of adhesive are used each very slightly overlapping the other from a point Just below and a little in front of outer ankle bone, then brought under the foot (the arch) to inner side then up and fastened to outer side of the leg about 6 or 8 inches above the outer ankle bone. These can be changed every five or six days until the arthritis is cleared up. As entloned above if your arches are right down and rigld—not pliable -then it is time to get arch sup- ports that suit your particular feet. he never departed. All the most 1m‘ portant decisions were deferred until the Emperor had immersed in hot water. As time went on, too, the {baths were taken with greater ire- quency and higher temperatures, un- til the physician himself had to ex- postulate. Corvlsarfs remedy did not find favor with most other doc- tors; but then most of the doctors were jealous of him. He seems to have preferred natural methods of treatment to medicines, and urges the advantages of a change of air and of scene with great enthusiasm. The frequent excursions of im- portant poople—notably of Josephine —to spas during the first decade of the nineteenth century were large- ly due to his influence. On the other hand, he wrote: "Doubt the value of a drug to which many vlrtuzs arent: trlbutcd, especially if these ' Hill 60 (Edmonton Journal) It is to be hoped that the recent report that Belgian authorities are planning to open up tunnels under are o; u, 09905;“ omrwtergfVlsue Hill 60, near Ypres, ls without foundr ideal of a panacea, w“ always m. ation. It is almost incredible that ; pugmmt to this Carey“; m1nd_ “Dis”. the Belgian Government would per- lsesy he wrote’ rldo not resemble om m“ Such an 955°" t° Wm mm 5 another, no. not even those which are tourist resort a spot sacred in British o; the Same WWI" and he added me EYES. f0!‘ 0B0 0f U16 BT80 31151511 W" reflection that, in Nature, "no two cemeteries is located on this historic ’ 1eave5 of a, plant are exactly alike.“ battlefield. The cable from London |The aphgflsm whwb. 10110“ might, states that an Englishman has ac- have been wristefi by Ngpuegn him. quired title to the area of whichfiiill Se“; w q" WW ‘i; wqw‘ u; 60 forms a part and has offered it to ggqd gafm, 111d never ‘hmgg my the war graves commission for pre- diiiiiculty about admitting his lg- servatlon. It is to be hoped the nqmnce," . commission will see fit to accept the responsibility. Few spots on the western front were better known to Canadian sol- diers than this same l-llll 00, lying south of Zlliebeke and east of the St. Elol craters. When the First Div- ision landed in France in I915, they A heard of Hill 60 as a hot spot, one ; ' that was almost perpetually underl s P E a I A L s bombardment. In the Second Battle instance the reconstructed trench and tunnel systems on Vimy ridge. It surely is not necessary to desecrate the graves of our men. oi’ Ypres it played its bloody part. i Through 1916, 1017 and the early part of '10, it continued _to take its toll of human life as the contending forces fought to secure or hold it. Many Canadians gave their lives in its defence, along with their brothers from the British lalca 1r the other ucmlnio It is iridrcd sacred ground to us. and if at al’. possible must be held invlolate. Thousands Milk of Magnesia ........ 4!c' Beef, 'ron and Wino ‘I90 CDASQ’! Linseed and Turpen- tine, large size 61c Vlnol ..................-.. llc that‘ he adopted it as a habit from which| virimur . i Mr. Baldwin's Private Fortune! (Exchange) l The decline in tho value of British : industrial sec " has reduced the private fortune of Rt. Hon. Stanleyl Baldwin u» less than a twentieth of what it was when he first became Prime Minister in 1923. Mr. Bald- win's entire capital is in the iron trade, in which his ancesto s were engaged as far back as the time of Charles the Second. when he took office eight years ago, his shares in the iron industry could have been sold for fifteen dollars apiece, where- as todawtheir market value is less than 40. cents apiece, and to quot/e Mr. Baldwin's own words, "no cat- aclysm on earth can bring them back to more than a fraction of their former value." “1t may have been bad business on my part," said Mr. Baldwin when discussing the iron industry a few days ago. "Many modern business men would say I ought to have real- lzed at the top of the market. But when you have an old name in a business against which nothing, has ever been said and when you know that the public come into that busi- ness on the strength of that name, it is an impossibility to throw your shares on the market when you know that, in all human probability, the loss will fall on them, not on you." Hard-headed inpney-getters will rcQard this as extravagant ldealmm, but it is the splendid kind of ideal- ism which is at the basis of Eng- land's national character, and has made her name honored inall parts of the world. Nearly 12 years ago when Mr. Baldwin was Financial secretary to the Treasury, he flnony- mously presented $600,000, I. fifth of his entire estate, to the Government for the reduction of the national debt. It was not till long after that the donor's name became know-n, When he resigned the Premiership in the early summer of 1929, Mr. Bald- win's worldly possessions were hp- proximately 5 per cent of 'what they had been when he became. Prime Minister in i923. It is easy to un- clerstand the strength of the grip this able, unassuming, patriotic Exiglish. man has on the party he leads and the people he serves. The spell of his power is sterling character. A ' THE TEAM!‘ SHIP A tramp ship from the fog-bound northern sea, ' Blinding a course through sleet and angry foam, Swung into berth beside the shiver- ins quay. That winter's dawn to bring my lover home. The dock-hands stirred and cursed themselves awake, Mocking the grimy tramp, all bent and torn By murderous wave and fierce ice- pointed flake . . . And yet to me, whose prayers were "“ ‘ for that morn, ' More beautiful than purple Tyrlan. ships," ~ Spain,‘ -When he caressed and comforted my lips, . llll i‘! REQUISITE Tm- nrcvmlivflgflbrllea i. i Or golden galleons coining home to Seemed the’ "poor hulk that iave inc , \ . _ , ..~' . M .i l“ ‘was-ix ft t‘. lot; haiunnv 22,1931 A m 0% Beef Scsoragth in a little Whipping Post And Pilioij/ Among the measures presented tol the Lcglslzfiure of Penncylvaiiin this, winter, it is reported. will be a izlll" making whipping part of the punhh- merit for crimes that ccnstituze the first steps in bandltry. Judge Lic- Dade, of the Delaware County Court has asked that such a. bill Lsintro- duccd. lie is quoted as saying that “the lash applied publicly on-thc backs of a dozen bandits would do more to rid Pennsylvania of bandit- ry than a thousand prison senten- ces." It is recalled to mind -that the that. in the Unit/eds‘ ates, Delaware refuses to root up the ‘filllpplllg post. It is in be nctzd that the proposal in Pennsylvania is twcfold. Not only, is there to be o. revival of wliipplngl as a. punishment, but the pciialty is: to be inflicted in public. Thor: are‘ many willing enough that the lash Shall be tried as a means of dis- iii»; aging banditry who will b ‘l: ‘ sccond proposal. The 7. L. l _ both so cruel and so cowardly that‘ lash plays its part in corrcctionall. methods of England and Canada, and '. ‘M? .0 it: lccked upon as too s“. but the ldcu of mail-Lug the w)“ ping of a criminal the occasion 1°,- o. public holiday is {Epugnant m u“ modern sense of decency. 1y, ma,“ tto much of the time when the m. ulnce thronged to the hanging, m,’ the gallows was a centre of merry. making. It is reminiscent of the s0- cilgi ordéfin which it was the m. rogativeicf the public to throw mal- cdoroua ‘iirssilcs at the ivretch in m, pillory. "' : no punishment which is effective is " roncvccortc. m Hazardfs? (SBHI mily In red, hiiiieilr; If you uranf a rcaliy ‘Pfhigfefisllkflazi Tea r" __.'.. . "Brahmin pnclciiuea) QJZOIGWJJQQESiQOflQDBICIDUUUUfiW "insist on our Black Tyvist—it_has a better taste. it lasts a longer the skin that militarily lijfl softening ‘mnlliilif whlc%' in], : the llllQd and porous col . u ll quickly lblorbed without :- lny trace of stickiness and re- freshes and restores the [kin lo lb natural softness. i," i‘! i‘ It keep: the hand: smooth Z-. end lovely - u a delightful bale for powder and rouge- 3 .-. an excellent After-Shave ... clubs used for burns and __ There is this to be said for those i"! "will W“! I006 results and u rJ " >14. rs-iihe iui-atu-ihn - my.’ u". ' 11 ; ‘ilgelatsh, to; (L) L ' ‘ ‘boron Jioilfi?“ local" '1 .1’ 11 t Actlanil u the Parts. Co., Ltd. iiworiimziypewriten it I mes. = t.” 5 Nova Sootla Represbntiitlveilillii. Slmplon. ' ‘a ".‘”“i'.‘§l'fi§l.”.‘t""‘1‘?"°"- i‘! 3.75." 312$" ..'.I'.I"'..§Z h w! kcerllll the hair In Place. w! M‘ “"0"”? "filtration - ' i‘ iiiixgbwi 50m, 0| m, mmcume, whim 11¢ iexoeuem banking system whlch p". who are opposed to the whipping of will continue to make it a place of In m. l b, 1 n u“ gm, _ Us I 2, hm“ t I., even hardened criminals. Their ad-‘rcverent call during pilgrimage: to em ‘Orzfldf. fr“; new be Indira Va n our n g n8 cmm w ' vocacy is not, as a rule, prompted by ,the old battlefields, but this is vastly m any sentiment of pity for the violenlrdlfferent from turning it into a show 94- A m"! Wwmm “"3" l‘ ‘h’ offender. Their plea, generally, is place. There are enough such al- . Hindu-MOUNT! 90051011 W111"! hi! proved again in i030 that it accom- that such punishment lii inefficient ready to acoomodatc the tourists, for gnatly increased with the introduc- plighgg you‘; benefit, whmh a" ma! ‘ ‘ as it is M‘ ' ' to have tlon of even I Plrtlal mensu t of self true objectives of banking: to create; ' bmmmng '3'“ °n m‘ “my m‘ dlvldual rather than not as a deter- Eno‘; Fruit Salts ......... llo Andrew's Liver Salts u... 58o lronlzed Yeiut 08c o i a '4»? FOX iuiiciitillallfiziiiioiii L, and it adds: I "The Canadian banking system ha“ Pmnnm,‘ coupon“ filo wily llulllcd ma the price only I80. I'm "nun-nun".-u...- Monitor, shows that unemployment ilguru may be misleading. Out of an a limited quantity freshly, ground Green Bone. Place 3 We have installed aBone Grinder and can silPlilY 5 f1 lovemment. There are now posts of distinction and emolument to be con- tgglpd for, posit-ions of power and re- a free. sound, easily convertible cur-iron‘ Qmmmd chum" nmnum rcncy; w “ma” l“ "Eh 5 W" i“ w that corporal punishment for certain diltrlblli-r mom! over the entire offences. which include criminal acts unemployment tabulation of 0.000, a considerable proportion . of those looking work merely wanted a change WATCH OUII WINDOW FOB OTHER SPECIAL! ==-‘ g-g E. A. FQSTER Central Driagctore ill country; thus equalizing interest rates; to provide for legitimate bor- rowing rcgardloss of the slrcrs of the limes, and to secure the money of the _ deposltors,"__ rpcniiblilty. Each aide desims to gain without conceding power. The rival “gm. q! they; religious faciions, un- ghgguq by British Bliihoriiy, might hamniunmriv." “"- - ~ I a . of violence ' It the individual, in remedial and a deterrent. Figure-r may not lie, but the exper- ience of Worcester, Massachusetts. reported in the christian science of occupation, while others had luf- iicicnt income: without working to provide for their needs. An unem- , ploynicnt census has its purpose, but clearly it cannot always be accepted’ as a gauge of actual diutnll. __du_ The Two Macs 140 Great George Street FX%R%Z~I your order in advance as quired. - we will only grind a! W‘ ROOPlSi-"hllt/‘IITED 125 .- Grafton l Street