Jr" Jiiiflt . licishultrzrlutsrtorr. an ,__ Plfiiinnun-vv. to I. In]. l-P. Yloo-Prolllnlt, I ‘ “" fillllf‘~—lallI:r.-éll|. DJ. IMBIIQI. DJ ' Idlin- lld lunyll‘ Dlrootoh-Jl». Ilrnctt, I.J.l. Auoghte Illness-hunk W1QIHDAY. 5Q ‘.3. 1 A ,, r “Those mo maple-hrs Commenting on the palg-n in "romnto Ilast. IN the Conservative candidate was returned 1n Moudgyb by-elecllcn contests. the Toronto Mail and Ismpire sayfli “No more daring lie has eve!‘ bee“ circulated by a set of political ed- ‘Ielltuififs than that w the effect um w. Bcmlett is s. friend of the b: interests. The simple fact of the matter is that from the mom- em when he was returned to’ WW" in 1W0, the present Prime Minister has labored night and day in_ the interests of the farmer, the worker and the ordinary niun on the street. “No Premier in Canadian history has ever dealt more firmly with st. James Street and the flnarlctal powers than the man who heads the present Ottawa. Admin- irfution. He has required the banks and the investment houses to come to his terms in the flota- tion of necessary loans. He has established the Bunk of Canada as a super-bank with some of the pow- ers which the chartered banks used to cnioy. He has refused to allow the chartered banks to retain an exchange premium on their gold holdings, which are to be acquired by the national bank. "He has passed stringent laws to curb abuses, long practised by brok- erage houses and on the stock ex- changes. He it was who introduced the resolution which led to the price spread and mass buying in- vestigation. He caused Parliament to adopt the Natural Products Marketing Act, and the two mess-- urea designed to ease the position of debt-laden agriculturists. He has put through conversion loans, with the result that the treasury ls sav- ing tens oi’ millions of dollars in hteflifl charges annually. “Contrast the record of the Ben- nett Government with that of Mr. , Mackenzie King. As has been said by a. contemporary, the conditions which the government is trying to clean up today accumulated under the King regime. During those nine yo... scores ‘of mergers, trusts and combines were formed in this country. Every morning, as one pic- ‘lred up the paper there was an- fiouncsment of a new trust and fies‘): securities with watered stock issued to the public. It was a. mad orgy of combines. What dld Mk. King or ‘Mr. Hepburn do in those nine years to curb this trend? The answer is, absolutely nothing. , “While the United States was depriving Canadian farmers of a market for over $170,000,000 worth of farm products and manufactures thereof, Mr. King and Mr. Hep- burn, sitting behind him in the House of Commons, made no move to offset this disastrous develop- ment. It remained for the Eennett Government. to afford our fanners adequate protection against imports l-{rom the offending country and to f~gupen the markets of the United flKlngdom to their products on a '; ‘preferred basis. The electors of .- flbronio East and other constituen- _7 gies can scarcely forget how the ‘- Liberal party in the last federal - Jhmpaign took a. corruption flmd "of $720,000 from the Beauharnols crowd who were ‘lonly a section of the biz interests of Montreal." / 3 rlvll: TRADE UPTREND p" The Dominion Bureau oi statis- ‘tlcs reports the interesting fact ‘that with few exceptions Canada's ‘increased exports in August were representative o: all lines of pro- ductlgrl,___raw materials and finished products. There was a notable in- crease in automobiles, the totaiex- port being valued at $1,459,000. c. min of 0815.000 over last year. The value of those sent to the United ‘ Kingdom was #202,000, also a gain. The export of planks and boards amounted to $2,555,000, of which 01,571,000 went to the United Kingdom, the supply to Great Britain being an increase of $015,- 000. nllpwood to the United States at $1,888,000 was an increase of over hair s. million. Wheat at $l2,8_8€.000_wu almost double the sale dbroad a. year ago _-\nd $7,019,000 wont to the Uhitnd “Kingdom. About one third of tho >'_'_ ‘rubber expose of $1,072,000 want to Grout Britain. The cheese export spade a gain of 000,000 which was .., o. ‘gum... a . ‘ bu, ) uh an FIN" ‘l: m learn.) ‘ypsinly absorbed by Great Britcin. Omidim meats in the United market continued their _ in Ausust. ammmtint to t1»- ”" 4.0M out of l total of 0135.000, your ago the amount was 0004.- ‘ p ymgunmir ielltromtimnooto - but new. chiefirnevl- V print, not fremJl-lfllhm to OM00- .I. .0. Willa! llll 0.‘. Ourrlc. 1111a) delivered“ lid Ullkl Ii. ‘li-fllfll. Great Britain. m niche! caport W8! flANMll. nu increase of 0064.- 000. Coal and stone products in- maaled. but ‘r’ ‘ morgy to the United States (lIVPDBd from $0,000 to 8157.000. There were ten countries to which Canada sent exports to the value ofoverholfnmlllioncklllars in August. Five of these were Bnpirc countries and five foreign: United K111011011: $3,121,000, United States $1151.01», Brltidi South Africa $2,116,000, Jl-Dfln “$5,000, Belgium $1,599,000, Auatmlia $1,219,000, France 0979.000, New Iceland c531,- 000, Newfoundland $500,000, my. way $549,000. EDITORIAL NOTES Central school lair ahould ze- odve more Oity patronage. Winter has set in with s ven_ Bea-Hoe in the West, sleet, snow, floods. fwhen the tumult and the shout- iflz have ceased people will realize that Ontario federally dong no better than Nova. Scotla, British Columbia and saskatchewan pro- Vlnlimlly. those having asked the LiberalParty for bread and been given s stone-and worse, s, w“- temptuous kick in the shape 0g m- creased taxation. Premier Bennett in Geneva. has been in conference with represen- tatives of the Mother Country and of other Dominions on Imperial matters arising out of the Ottawa; and Iflrldon Conferences and agreements. It was largely for this Purpose he went overseas, and, un- like Mr. Mackenzie King, refrained fwm having with him aCanaxilan Press correspondent to 01111111361; his doings, 1 J The word trek is practically obso- lete so far as travel by wagon in search of gold is concerned. The discovery of-gold in the Lake Nipi- gon region of Northern Ontario has resulted in the proverbial rush, but, alas, by airplane and not by team. Much of the glitter, rom- B-Iwe and trezedy will be eliminat- ed by the change in the mode of locomotion-and likewise much of the fraud and misrepresentation. It is hard to beat some Charlot- tetonlsns for sang froid. A case in point is that of the youth who found hinlself in Moncton without the wherewlthall to provide a night's lodging. He picked out a quiet, respectable looking dwelling, which happened to be 811060071, entered by the window, undressed 1n the sitting room, and went com‘- fortably to sleep on the davenport. He ls said to have been surprised Hid fl-Imoyed when the doctor telé- plwned w the police wfmve hlm removed. even harshly and illegally across the border. The other day no a person than the New York to Attorney . General broadcast n. 89ml! on the recent development of the Lindbergh {mapping scin- dal in which he envphatlcally said that the police had solved the mys- tery. hB-d got the per-petrsfor of the deed, and that the many months of police investigation had attained fruition in the capture of the criminal. All this, too, before even the accused had been brought into Court to answer the “ Trial by newspaper is bad enough in all conscience, but conviction by radio without any sort of trial isthelast strwwto break the back of much abused Magus Gmrto. According to an Ottawa. corres- pondent the Bennett Government is accepting the challenge of a. re- turn to "laisses-foire" economies which ex-Prenller King leader) has fllsed in his speeches during the lost session of Parlia- ment and since. Mr. King would rcducealltcriffubylopvr cent: be would abolish the Imperial trade Ineoment; he would lcrlp the Public in... do. things unvethloslly I ml-rlwtlnr leclllmon becluls of uu authority which it khan our ox- ports and the cmkol which. it wioldloverthowicamaadlwliloh‘ the pecker: and middle mm mo! Notes By The Way Mr. Hoover’: book reveals him u a victim of the delusion. 0c to all who havwbeen in place and power and mnoved from them, that the public wants him back. Emst is one of the extraordinary thins! I-bout power, or loss of it. Hen who bold high places odien comploln of its lmxdslll-Dfl. of the plwsioal and menial toll which it takes, yet once relieved of such pen.- altiea they pine to return to them. Whether it be because of the hu- man frailty which makes a man come to believe that he is indis- “ , or because of the lure of pomp and power, the spectacle ofamanwhoknowsthathe is finished, that his usefulness and welcome have departed. is among the rarest things in Mew-Ex. A change of Intel-call. like the clash of personalities, helps to strike sparks from the mind, ‘and one of the few important prac" 1 benefits conveyed by psychological investigation ls the 11:" ‘tlon of the fact that possession of a sound mind makes a vital contribution to the maintenance of a. sound body. Healthiness, in the largest sense, owes much to opportunities of con- trast. "Hero below," said Newman, though in a rather different con- nection, "to live is to change, and to be perfect is to Jmve changed often." Mere change, then, plays a large part in a. holiday. The best form of recreation may simply be a fresh occupation for mind and body carried out in fresh surround.- ings.-The Church Times, London. Germany has thrown a monkey wrench in-to the "Eastern Incarno" negotiations. This was feared. The fear and resentment between France and Gemlsny are causing the greater part of the international tension in Emope today and are preventing the progress of all measures, by whomsoever proposed, leading towards collective security guarantees. 0f course we have liberty of ao- tion and may no longer be placed on the auction block, w be dispos- ed of as human chattels, whether rwe be white or black. Brut it ls reas- onably open to question if the great majority of us have not used our liberty of action to bring about for ourselves a. state "of slavery quite as objectionable as that which was made illegal one hundred years ago-Exchange. Without I. single patient in the whole l3 years of its existence is‘ the unique record of a fully-equip- ped hospital in the Londonderry area. The hospital was built by the Londonderly Fort sanitary Board at Moville, on the Donegal side of 1011811 Feyle. Then came the Free State treaty and the drawing of the border-line. Northern‘ Ireland, containing Iondonderry. became 0119 598th. and Southern Ireland, with Movllle within its boundaries, became an other. The Sanitary Board was left on one side-of the ‘border and its hospital on the olher. If you want to compile p, book that is both ludicrously funny and terribly tragic, all that you have to do today is to print extracts from the everyday utterances of Nazi leaders and leader writers. Two ‘books of this kind have Just been Published. The first ls called "Hell Hitler." R is most alnuslngly illus- trated. and it specialises in state- ments which are contradictory, funny and idiotic. To quote one out of a feast of good things: "This 10rd‘ (Beaverbrook) calls himself a. Canadian, but in the Foreign Press Handbook it is stated that he is a. Hungarian Jew called Ralph D. Blumenfeld."--“Crltlc" in The Slew fitatesmari and Nation (Ion- . am .. Molt of the snubs, which we “My belong to us, in reality were not meant at all. We must give credit to others in broad and lavish fashlomwe must not misjudge and mic-interpret. We must try m un- derstand. The limited few belong to ‘the snob class. You, who read this talk. decide in belong to that lifter class who refuse to be snub- bed by snobs! Give credit where it is due. and do not worry over fanc- ied wrongs. Ho who walks right on, looking neither to the right nor the deft. mylfls no attention whatso- ever to the turmoil and the strife, to the petty jsalousles and ambi- tions of those! about hlm, is gurg w emerge important and outstanding. —Exchange. It is not vvlthln the province of m"! t0 80y B5 1o who performs glmtest in life. A good influence is aometh‘ w that cannot ‘be measur- ed. Stevenson once wrote that "a happy man or woman‘ is a better thin! to find than a. five-pound note." For the simple reason, he stated. that the influence of such a one radiated so far. 111m is no plaine language in the world than Its meaning cannot be found in books of learning, nor in dictionaries. Influence alone does it assert its worth. In unmetentions works a lone does it give of its genuine The advantage Mr. Roosevelt has is in the fact that it should be of tariff privilege under a which permits of executive torlfl moking and which contemplates a ‘policy of mututl concession under . u. away-sow s;- enaier to carry the entrenchments low PUBLIC FORUM ‘Iilooclunllolaulnlln i l? SENATE)! HUGHES AND MR. DYAL Bin-I know m. Dyal of New Yorktobounrolfnbloinbothwu-d mdaction. Ialsoknowthothofs. orwamaveryastutomamhonool conclude that ho did not write much of the letter appearing in his name in the Guardian of the 17th. instant and the Patriot of the 19th imtant. Men of the Dye-l type d0 not, as a rule, write foolish letters containing wholesale palpable in- accuracies. They are too wary, to do that. when Mr. Macfadyen, Vice-President of the Potato Grow- em’ Association, wrote in the Guardian of the 12th instant that he would like very much to hear Dyal's account of his dealings with me, he evidently knew that the Dyal letter was being prepared. All the statements in the Dyal letter, namely: that I ate at. the same table with Dyal in the Queen Hotel, that he shipped potatoes for" me in the name of the Dysl Pro- duce Corporation, and paid $500.00 in profits, that I shipped potatoes in second hand bags which town, at his expense, etc. etc, are pure fabrications, made out of whole cloth, auddf written by Dyal show that his badness has made him luny. I shall give as briefly as possible the salient facts of the transactlonI had with Dyal. In one of my visits to Havana I met brokers from Neuvltas. a city on the north east end of Cubs. and the second in size on the Island. They told me they had been buying potatoes through commission Hous- es in Havana, but wished to buy direct from Prince Edward Island. They also told me their T6011!"- ments would be from 200,000 to 300,000 bags per year. I arranged to do buslnem with them, and the arrangements were as follows: They were to deposit in the Royal Bank 0g Canada, at Nuevitas half the, value of the potatoes they would order, the money to be transferred to the Charlottetown branch, and to be irrevocable for a period of time long enough to enable me to amemble and ship the cargo. When the documents would be all signed and the ship ready to Ball 011B money in the Bank here would b! paid to me, and I would make a sight draft or drafts for the bal- ance, against the whole shipment. In this way the consignees would be sure to get the potatoes, or their money lmck. and I would. be sure to be paid, and any Bank here would finance such o. transaction. The following autumn, after some correspondence, I receiver an order m: 0.000 bass at $1316 =- bas de- livered Nuevitas, the brokers sayln! this was as large an order as they could arrange for under the terms agreed upon. This was less than half the cargo of a small steamer, consequently I had to get 5P6“ with somebody shipping to Havana. I met Dyal at the Queen Hotel who told me he was in the Havana. trade, but could not sell a. whole cargo there. I told hlm of the order I had and showed him the corres- pondence. Ho jumped at the idea of linking up with me. and giving me space in his ship. He said I was in with the best people in Cuba, and had made a splendid In ngement, which would be sure to lead to a large and perfectly safe business. that his experience in Cuba. and his knowledge of the people would be a great help to me, but in as much as he would make no profit on the part of the cargo delivered in Ha.- vana he would have i0 ask me to give him half of the profit on my order. To this I agreed. Inter when the deposit was transferred from Nuevltas to Charlottetown, and when we had the ship chartered, he told me he would lose so much at Havana that he would have to back out unless I gave him seventy five per cent. of my profits, and to this I agreed. He said we were sure to make profits on future shipments and out of these profits he would be glad to recoup me for the help I was then glvinghim. When the documents were mpleted and the ship ready for sea, I got the money ‘that was to my credit.“ I made the drafts on the conslgnees in Nue- vitas and got smoney for them also, and instructed Mr. Hyndmsn, the Bank Manager. to my Dvul what I had agreed to give him. This closed the transaction regard- ing the 8.000 bass. When the potatoes werrdeliver- ed in Nuevitns I had a wire from the brokers saying it was the best cargopver landed there, and if I could supply potatoes of that qual- ity I would get all the business of the city. A few days later I had another wire asking me to quote on ten or twelve thousand bags and saying that they hoped in a little while to be able to order o full cargo. I showed this telegram t Dyfll gnd asked him what I ‘ “ quote, seeing that the market was declining. Ho suggested 81.00 per bag. I replied thlt, the: was too much, mt these men seemed to be establish an enduring and mutually satkfactory buainul. we should not had to be mbagged in Charlotte- be very honorable, that they knew the ' lanai-Tania.‘ INJURY 1'0 INNEI. BID! OI‘ KNEE ' Onoolflaeoommonestinjurinloc- cunifll lnsportllsostre ,__, tearing of the ligaments on the in- ner Lido of the knee. This is often "trick knee.“ and slso by other‘ names Itisumallycousedbyforceornb- structlonsgainst the foot which al- lows the knee joint to be carried too far forward. Thus if the foot strikes an object, orfs placed in a hole or depression, while the rest ‘of the body is carried forward, than the ligaments holding together the up- per leg bone and the lower lag bone at the knee are put under great strain and are stretched or torn. The capsule or covering of the Joint. is torn and also the special ligament on inner side of knee. If the injury is severe even more damage than that done to the out- er covering and the ligament .00- curs; even a part of the bone may torn off. ‘ _ ' Fortunately, if the majority of these cases a little rest is all that is neoeuary. If the individual must. be about on his feet a. good crepe or elastic bandage should be worn for at least three weeks. A simple but effective method of allowing the knee to heal properly is to apply strips of one-inch adhesive tape, placed half way across one another, from halfway behind the knee joint around the injury to half way across the knee in front. The knee should bakept perfectly straight while the adhesive is being applied. A new one should be ap- plied every five or six days for three w . In more severe cases, placing the knee in a plaster cast for five weeks is usually all that is necessary to obtain a complete recovery. This ul- lows the patient to go about his usual work, except of course that the knee cannot be bent, and he must walk with a "stiff" leg. However there are some cases where none of the above measures are effective and operation must be performed. Some years ago surgeons hesitated to "g0 into the knee Joint" as the results were successful in only about half the cases. To-day such is the care and effectiveness of antl- septlc IIlGB-Sllfcn that the results in opmling the joint to operate are as successful as in any other oper- ations, and brilliant results are ob- tained. NICHOLAS NYE Nicholas Nye was lean and gray, Lame of a leg and old, More than a score of d.onkey's years He had seen since he was fouled; He munched the thistles, purple and spiked, Would sometimes stoop and sigh, And turn to his head, as if he said, “Poor Nicholas Nyel" Alone with his shadow he'd drowso in the meadow lazily swinging his tall, - At break of day he used to bray- Not much too hearty and hale; But wonderful gumption was under skin, And s. calm clear light in his eye, And once in a while, he'd smile- Would Nicholas Nye. Seem to be smiling at ma, he would, From his bush in the comer, of “WYP Bony and ownerleas, widowed and , worn , Knobble-kneed, lonely‘ and gray; And over tho grass would seem to pass Neath the deep dark blue of the lky Something much better than words between me ' And Nicholas Nye. But dusk would come in the apple u: , . And ‘green of the glow-worm shins, And birds in nest would crouch to rest, And home I'd trudgevto mine; And there in tho moonlight, dark with dew. Asking not wherefore nor why. Would brood like a shout. and as ill as a. Old Nicholas Nye. -Walwr do lo Mare. _..._____i-.- The ‘number of live cattle ship- pod m 1m to the United Kinsdonr up to September l8 was 81.715 bead. as oompucd with $0,229 head dur- ing the correapondiul W504 0‘ 1933. o! . spoken of as a "loose cartilage," a, |thankful for getting that informa- holdlng the ligaments in place and... The Great "actlhg Mystery. -_-—._ (J. B. ll. in thoflvmnrpeg has Preu) Yachting u decidedly a sport m: boos with spend flvo and u lulf houn go- ing thirty miles when even a street car will do it quicker. The come- quence-ia that the toners-l 900110 rarely if ‘ever goes yachting. Though yachting is thus, u the aaylngisamortofklngdthogen- oral public is at present taking a great deal of interest because of the races going on between Mr. Sopwitlfs sloop and w. Vander- bilt's. It is Agreed that they are extremely beautiful boa-ts, and p00- plo in all parts wait eagerly day by flay to know. the result of the oom- petltlon. m humble homes through- out the world, and not only in the mansions of the rich and powerful, the outcome is a. matter of mo- ment. ' mvlewofthlsfnctltaeenms thousand pities that no one who has not devoted a lifetime to read- ing Joseph Conrad can make out what is happening to the boats while they are sailing. It is all very well to announce at the end. of each event that the Endeavour has won and perhaps we should be tlon in English and not inlPortu- guese, but a. little more plain speaking about the race itself would be B. Erect help in many. fll-loundirlg the buoy with his balloon jlbs waving in the breeze," we read, "Mr. Vanderbilt gybed his Jibboom spanker and reefed his mlzzen topsoil while ,Mr. Bopwlth elected the more dashing, if soma- whst precarious, expedient of dous- ing his scuppers and cabling his fore-top-gallant skysails. If only his focsle had not got mixed up with his Greta Garbo he might have made headway here but he luffed that off speedily and leaped ahead when Mr. Vanderbilt's quadrilateral splnnakers jlbbed his galllon a few moments later." This sort of reporting, it seems to us, is really going a bit too far. We expect to have to look up a word or two to ‘ ’ any sporting event but we cannot spend the whole morning with a nautical dictionary and do our other work. We offer the suggestion for what it is worth, which might be one round-the-world cruise in a yacht with a gasoline engine in it, that for the remainder of the contest the stories should have more hu- mun interest and less technology. After all there are other things on yachts besides mizzen topsails, luff scuppers and tsffrails. Tilers are also sailors. And where, we ask, ~wou1d England be today without its sailors? Where would America be? Where would Iceland be? Micro would New Zealand be? (This could be continued indefinitely but wt. have to get on with the story.) "As the two Jolly boats came into the homo stretch" (this ls our no- tion of a yacht race dispatch), "the American crew was heard to break into the good old song ‘Ye Marin- ers of England.’ The Englishmen politely responded with ‘Tile Star- Spongled Harmer,‘ not knowing any American sea. sang except ‘Colum- bus sailed the ocean blus‘ and thinking it unsuitable. At this _point, unfortunately, one of the Erlgllsh crew slipped on the deck and tore his trousers on a nail. A cable demanding an explanation was immediately dispatched to Gosport. As the Endeavour raced into the lead, the first mate was observed dancing a. hornplpe on what was believed to be the spank- er but turned out, on closer scrut- n 1-.’ — Hllll‘; ‘v .7. |'L\-/.' |l— llrlml FOR SOUND INDUSTRY Industry and trade are the moan: by which a country make: ofloctivo use of natural wealth. Tho Royal Bunkhus always boon ready‘ to encourage sound Canadian entorprluo. It ha: maintained this attitude through many your! of varying condltlonl. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA‘ Joction to a little expensive termin-l a public ‘duty to understand ology for the benefit of the few and they are doing their level who understand it. But the human But up till now the experts the patriotic interest we should in that they will continue to tho remaining races. public. They want to understand‘ economics. tho boat races. They realize it u‘ l ,WANTED Agents in all Counties to represent our Companies transacting Fire, Life, Automobile and all other lines of Insurance, call or write immediately. Hughes & Edmonds Cameron Block _ Charlottetown E. R. ,BROW and Plate Glass Insurance my. to be the Jibboom." We do not suggest that the next story should follow this word for word. We are merely trying to in- dicate the general idea and, as the last sentence shows, have no ob- / PDQ/l PILLS M5 “RA \ \\\\\\\"\sl9" iufKlDNEY m lalqfigg c l... L m p at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St... Charlottetown element must predominate or we not co-operatod. It is a dismal but are not going to be able to take probably all too accurate Prcdictifl their message in words thntklo one In making this plea. wcthink we understands. This is one of tho fine meek for many members of the, old traditions of yachting, as of Fire, Life,» Accident, Sickness (-1 them boat have WU BLUE BUS LINE Schedule Leaves 7.45 AM. 8.00 AM. New Perth School u"... 8.10 AJtI. Summer-villa School . 8.20 A-M. Vernon ltlvcr . . Geo. Poole’: Store, Lower cherry valley . Montoguomm. .... .. 8.30.430. ,,, Clemente Office, Upper - Moutaguo............. 8.50 AltArflvu Charlottetown... 10.15 have: Rovers Hotel 4.00 P. M. ‘ Arrives Pater: Bond 0J0 P. ll. u. Panels carried at 25c znlnimum AM Bz-wlllatoponllgnalatuxypolnteurlluto. ' “Z31”; cm/ BUS, i SER VICE 011v TMENT T531" EXQZTQVNDAY W .‘.‘."'.'..:'.‘.'.;'!.",“.°.I.’" fm WW $38.»... no if“ Inch . .. . uo m. smart M! PP??? I. Ill I. lhnll ,. . l." I. lthtefi It ltdwart....'.........l.fl' Anlvaatllnrlottctcwnnli-ULI-Arriveullmln - ilgnllpt ' t Into. .r0=llottotcwu:€ld,:;ln—l'oal01. whiehmmqyggpgcgw magyqwlsthlthaknawthetlubmpeo- nun-mum . _ chorus mmmluwauu opply m,lm,,,;,,r,,h,,,, ,,_ plobetterthanIdid mdnomat- "VIII" - ' M... t. omditlom .. w... m. r :.'::'.‘..:.."',';"',,r,;:- "n: ‘ Farlly In; Sarvleo 8. Iaxl Sorvlca principlenoaoiaantunlm Llblml- colldboolnd vvlthlltn- ' um and mm mammnlolmmitnm of mama... ioindustry lflflbltonoptotien. no. . to am» m. pump» of Oanodlln and mlwltuq, coupled well an Lam-u a: ban mm u v ., economic life. 0n the who». Insurance a social 1mm. a. m and ':"""'"‘~uw m . . TIME TABLE upheld t; u... Liberal Lcadmtbc vmkm. m mun. film-crested giant m,“ . "fun my: _ a1: Isltltmuheotmwanifhooulldbttwemtlaotwoplnienurcnrd- ovlhllam “moan- use.» haoeetbcoom-potltfon ably. cdlnpoliflulcirclahiottawou N31. "can. mmmsovmauuu, thomoltinim-eating political du- “liflfilll-PIWIII- we: volopmcnt nOWImGQfIII-Ibpmm- n wo “:1”, gQmflfithOptflt-llfilllhtll b. “&' “ w‘... ncutgsncraieiectiomflrbuiovcrit use...» d M‘ - - mom‘