-.-.;..¢+.-<...-_-,,n~:»-'-.. ,_ t" ‘='?lt‘<<-.."- ll.lil.C.S. Queen Charlotte R C. N.(R) Active Reserve now recruiting (until November . 2nd) tor Winter Program. _ Two nights a week (Fridays only for first period) 30 days full pay a year (including two work! sea-time). Free uniform and llil‘ immi- Up-to-date equipment and interesting instruction. Sports and companionship stressed. _ Choose the Navy for your National SQIVICO. Advertisement sponsored lIY A. PICKARD (‘s-CO- Meyers Studios narrowest ‘Doublshillletothewllylmss TO MOTHERS! Due to impossibility to hold usual Child Contest and to avoid last minute rush, we will portray your child-d mouths to 12 years of age-for only $1.00 In return you will receive, with absolutely no ftuther charge, 1 8” x 10” portrait-our finest quality. Your Christmas orders may be placed on these sittings im- mediately. .'.l'o mate additional interest, one child will be selected in EACH of four age groups and be given FRI! 1 11” x 14" DeLUXI OIL OOLORID PORTRAIT. This ofler is good November 1st to 15th. Advis- able to make appointments as soon as possible. T0 BUSINESS POI-Ii Oar new working hours in efleot imsnediatoly: Monday and Thursday-EM AM. to 5:30 PM. Tuesday and Iriday—9:00 AM. to 9:00 P.M. Wednesday-QM AM. to 1:00 PM. Saturday-WOO A. M. to 7:00 PM. RAKE YOUR APPOINTMENTS TODAY! Phone 369-1.. 128 Richmond Street ,__-L»,_,_. a By Ken Reynolds // “Mr. Jonas, l answered a Guardian Want Ad for another bis-and used your name as a reference!" nanncoan AND COKE We are Stocking 500 Tons American BASEBURNER and WELSH Furnace Anthracit ---Order Now Furnace COKE Arriving Regularly All Grades Soft Coal on Hand ll. ll. LARGE 8. Bil. Telephones 1000-1001 \ us. Military n, snwns saauu BER-LIN. Oct. M-(AM-‘me American military sot/mm!" gave conditional eproval today to e proposed oonltitutiosr for Wuerttenibeiag-Baden which seeks ,to bar the ascendancy of another Hitler. outlaw war and make PM‘ sibie wide socialization of public utilities and basic lndll-IITIBI- - The constitution is similar to marten written for Bavaria and Hesse. the other two states in the United States zone. Similar sp- proval is anticipated for them. Patterned to fit into l. future tmlted Germany. the constitution ‘vclopunent of local self-gourm- ment, setting up lefllsiative. Mo» utive and judicial bodies. The constitutions will be sub- ntitted to the people 1n a refer- gpdwn in Wuerttexmberg-Badetn Nov. 54. in Bavaria Dec; 1 and in Hesse Dec. 8. The three constitutions make possible a socialization program similar to that undertaken by the British Labor Governmerut. The Hesse charter declares that ll sue; as it 30x into elect mines. Government Gives Provisional Approval 51v. e strong impulse to the de- io me cnarerowarau g iron. eted and power indusflhl. railways. telsgmphs and telephon- es “shall be transferred to oom- msmlty property." Oompeasstion is provided for prlveto owners the community" and therlore ownership o! mineral resources. of power, rails-ouch and facilities serving the public. water. one and electric works “belong as s rule to public law corporations or ao- operatives.” Large banks and insistence oom- panies would be placed under state sdntinlstration or supervis- n Oarteis are ptohflrted h all three documents. The Bavarian constitution says that Bavaria. wtlll "Join a future German democratic federal state which should rest on s voluntary union of the individual Gennar: states." while the other two diar- ters declare that the state they govern are a part of the German republic. ' Each constitution includes pro- visions protoetine the desiasifloet- lon prognosis. A Fanner Looks i At Factories MONTREAL, Oct. 30 — Unit!!! l- reconcili-aticn is affected between farm and factory prices, tens of thousands of our farms may be liquidated, according to Mr. John Atkins of Bracebridge, Ontario, who spoke at the 28rd annual meeting of the Canadian Woollen and Knit ‘Goods Manufacturers Association i here todray. In an address entitled | "A Farmer Looks at Factories" Mr. iAtklns pointed to the increasing nilvergence between the return a , farmer receives and the wages paid lat the present time to factory V workers. The only way equity could .be restored, he said, was by un- iprecedented production in indus- _'try which would lower costs and l prices. Failing this he believed that |Canada would have to undergo “the surgery of depression". Many clty people lacked under- standing of the farmer's lite. pro- ‘blems and work the speaker felt. With greater understanding he be- lieved there would be greater will- ingness to bring about adjustments giving the farmer a return in line 'with his investment and labour, He outlined the long hours of hard work on a farm-starting with chores at 5.30 a.m._ and pictured g, tired farm fiamlly reading in their ‘evening newspapers of the high pay and shorter hours demanded by factory workers. Farm people, declared Mr. At- kins, were more concerned than resentful; more anxious to [ind a practicable way out than to in- dulge in bitter comparisons. They wanted a fair deal, not one weight- ed unduly in their favour, but one which wc-uld restore equity in the exchange of farm and factory labour. "We farm people" the spmker said, "want from you an assured and adequate supply of garments and comforts which are essential to our work and well-being. We want them at prices consistent with our own earnings from our products which must be sold c-n both tlomestl-n and world markets The reconciliation of our prices with yours, at levels which will maintain the maximum exchange of labour between us, involves all the considerations of national and international policy.” In the end the speaker pointed out. unbalanced prices would work to tho disadvantage of all. The farmer he said was compelled to conform closely to the principles underlying economic health and national well-being whereas indus- trial workers could depart rem» porarily from such principles. "But wo all suffer when you stray into error" he emphasized. According to Mr. Aitkens the beslc problem was that on one hand there was the farmer receiv- ing not more than 33 cents an hour for a 60 hour week, Whllg on the other, the industrial worker was receiving twice as much per hour and working only forty o-r forty-four hours o wee-k. He claimed that as a result of this situation Canadian agriculture was facing a period of downward adjustment. while Can- adian industry, with costs mounting and production dropping, had to get more for its products. The inevit- able outcome,‘ unless equity was re- uorod, would he inflation followed by a cataclysmic slump, Mr. At- kins declared. He felt that flsctorles should have pegged their wages and prices nl the end of the war and that increased costs should have been met by greater production on the basis of the 48-hour week without i-ncreasee in weekly pay. He con- demned the fiction that a. short work week would contribute to grceter prosperity by spreading employment. "Few Canadians realise” he said, "that a reduction in tho rvork week from 48 to 40 hours means a loss of more than two months in pro auction in industries and business- es which are on one-shift openat- I ion. The hard working. thrifty |people of Canada. who work long hours, have been compelled to sur- frender their rights and an in- creasing pert of their eerninss to relatively high-paid, short-hour people who have forced uneconomic costs and prices upon everyone in the pretence. and sometimes in the belief, that they were sharlns employment." When a farmer looked at the factories, he concluded, h; looked to them for the manufactured l goods he needed produced by people I who were willing to exchanle their labour with him on a basis which would lower his costs and incfllll their own real win-gee. l Ila-Operatives lire 4 Now Big Business Oo-opetraitive bmlness organisat- toms in Canada ame definitely in a substantial business .111 1945 total business 0d such Oflldl- lzatlons, the overwhelming per-- cantage 0t which an farmers’ oo- operatlves, amounted to wmflo, 066 an increase of 270 per cent mtmpaaed with the, gggregahe Mme of lmsinless done ten years earlier, crr in 1906. A mow-t entitled’ "Cooperation in Canada. 1946" Just issued by the Economics Division, Marketing 591-. vice, Dominion Department of Agrl- culture, prepared by 131m 1L p; Rich-adds and Luclenne Lalonde, gives some interesting figures and indonnatlon on the subject. more “we at the end at the year:- under review 739,604 shareholders or menu bars. more than double the number in IKJB. Oftinetoila-l busiriesod 0585.50.08; done in i945, $500,451,- 627 was in sale of taunt products. axons of all the cooperative bus- iness Organizations in Canada on Juli! 31. or end qf crop year 1944-45 amounted to $172,565,590 or more than twice the varue in 1936. Work- lng capital advanced from $15,797,. 223 in 1936 to $40,l83,E1 in 1945. '13: m mics! tlha/t it is eati- mfl ml!‘ til oa-qpetratives in the Dflminlon hgfhdled approxl. mlettely 28 per cent of the main fcnn products entering dlmnnglg of trade in 1944-46. Of the total dairy products marketed. coo-opera. lives handled 1'1 per oelnt; livestock 17 per cent; ease and Dimitry 12 Per cent; wool 47 per cent; fruits "111 Vflfletables 2'7 per cert-t; honey 91 peo- oent, tnugle products. 36 per 0611i: tobacco 69 per cent and grains and seeds 46 petr- cent Th; vglug of farm products marketed 1n 194s was 40 nrllllon dollars more than in 194:4 Brut the business of (‘o-operative business organizations in Osngdg is not limited to the sale of farm nmduots Tlhcy sell e, variety q; flllirphes and merchandise to their n-tembers and giatrrme. In 194445 these sales amounted to $81,360,855 an increase of l5 million dollars over the prevltmg ymgg 11h; org-m, lzattons also do a considerable mut- ual fine instimance business, Thor-o are 409 such companies with a net insurance risk of 81.436.298.369 with net assets of about 510900.000 Net losses paid in i914 totalled about '$3.000.000. Saskatchewan lead; among flhg Provinces in the rtwnlber of shame. holders or members in m-qpamtiveg and in the value of business with 237.842 and 6191164306 Rspecflvg ly in 1944-46. Alberta ls in second Dim Wlilh 149.196 manners and a total btslness for the year of $99,- (WJWO. Chili-I'll) ld irhim Ln vol-mm of lmslness with 877507.107 and is l" "m! Place in number qt them. {firs (57,715) being exceeded by anltoba with 116,043 lllgfltbqfg and Quebec with 01,713, , Nliort also discloses tihat there are 2.375 CO-ODELLIIW tele. P110114! Iystems in operation in Canada with an investment in ex. ccss 0f $32 million, and 110,388 091]- mfilvd lfllflllilones at the end or the Pear i944. In addition. co-operat. "as Pmvlde services, such as nous. infl- lodzlng and ltoarding facilities, transportation, nmiical and tsospltal 691'. and funeral scvlces. ln ll“ oi Wm“ K000 ma" fifi€fifi@fi%iiii fiwfizww%fwmwwwewwmwwa@w@fi@fifi%fi%%% l i h l i h l. l l h h h h A d h h 0 h h J ’. s». OCPU -" . ;r-_ . i’ t. a f’ =% f/"Qii - tn n tint Let it Blew! in n Blow! _. - You can laugh at the elements if you're bundled up right. We all the clothing necessary to thwart Old Man Winter Sturdy " f ‘I O Q Oelt hats. soft woolen sweaters. scarves and gloves. Warm wmd-resitent "cram" f0!‘ men. young men and boys, come int and let us winter-equip Y0", B0 you can enjoy life despite snow and cold. ' have til Come in early, Merchandise is still on: the short supply list. Our reputation over a period of Sixty Years is your guarantee o! receiving the most for the least. We invite comparison of our Low Priced Nth-quality Men’s Wear. H. M. C. S. Queen Charlotte is recruiting young men for Naval Service with the Charlottetown Division- Carry on the tradition established by our Navy in the iastGreat War. l Provvse Bros. Limited ‘l FOR REAL VALUE MERCHANDISE