THE 0llA|il.0 nrrowu auannln V0 p|`gg.¢_1yoa¢saq| lslnnll JI bns`l'l(, suntan-I-Isnt-cal as lumasaghli iirthe fs':.'I|.°».7"sa"="»»»-'mg'-nn'). :ar-=»¢(=x “"'"` -;¢n=‘|:»°;"sag“:i.‘a.advaaac) nallalln mi r history ' wznmsosr, may s. me , M '__' 'i ii i MOMENTOUS ISSUE 'Ins vote on the Marketins Bill lu Parliament, as stated in the news columns, has been postponed until today. Two more supporters of the bill have como forward, one of them a Liberal representative from British Columbia, the other Mr. Henri Bou- nms, former Nationalist leader and now an Independent. Great interest has centred on the discussion of this important legisla- tion. As Hon. Mr. Motherwell, ex- Minister in the Mackenzie King Government, stated, it has been in- troduced at the request of the farm- ers and producers throughout Can- ada, and naturally all our farmers will follow closely the record of the vote, for and against the measure. There is no doubt as to the stand which our Conservative member: -_;:__~,’wiu ure. Mr. A. n 1vru¢Lean,bow- -L’ ever, has not yet been ‘reard from. °~°- Will he ta.mely follow fic antagonis- lan- ..*".‘I tic course of his party leader, or iii will he have the courage of his con- __-; victious, and indorse the effort ..".!_"*wlri¢r the Bennett Government is --»' making to aid our farmers end fish- _--_ -in iiiill ..., ...» ...A- ermen in this most difficult period? 'lioda.y's vote will tell the talel A NE W HISTORY A contribution of much value to students of Canadian legislative his- tory has appeared in the shape of a volume entitled “The Maritimes and Canada Before Confederation," by William Menzies Whitela/w, A_M., P‘h.D., assistant professor of History at McGill University. The aim of the author, as indicated in an ap- preciative foreword by Rt. Hon. R. L. Borden, has been to present a dis- passionate and detailed study of Maritime contacts in their earlier phases. and of their contacts with the old province of Canada, This and more has been achieved in a work which obviously emailed years vt painstaking study and research, and with a clarity of style and mas- tery in a.rra.nge_ment of subject mat- ter unsurpwed in any work of its kind. All who have studied the kaleidoscope of pre-Confederation P0litios must be impressed with the difficulty of arranging its confused records into any sort of coherent narrative. Here we have the frag- ments gleaned from all sources -- from manLr§_<_;r-ipts, state documents, newspaper files, individuel bio- graphies, contemporary writings and later monographs .8-nd arttcles-fit- ted together with consummate skill, so as to shed light upon each other, and presenting as rounded and com- plete a picture, probably, as it is pomible at this date to obtain. In several passages the author em- phasizes the paucity of authentic focords with regard especially to the Charlottetown Conference of Sept. 1864. Oontradictory accounts have been Elven of its official actions, and much futile discussion has tok- en Place as to the "understanding" there arrived at. The presstwas ex- eluded from the meetings, and the delegates were referred to as "plot- ten working in the dark." More, certainly, is known of the subsequent Quebec Conference; but in that ease also important decisions as to what course the union movement lhould take subsequent to the con- ference were not recorded; and of the proceedings of the conference itself we have only the barest out- line. This is accounted for, accord- ing to Professor Whitelaw, by the fact that the confederation Fathers were practical men intent on the plan for a new political structure, and in the days following the con- ferences were too much engrossed in laying the new foundation to tum back in reminiscence on the incep- tion of the plan. Three of these participants with distinct literary ability might have been expected to aet down the story of these momen- tous days, when their active political life was over, and two of them are known to have had such Intentions; but of the three McGee and Brown were shot, and Whelan died tragic- ally almost before the union was ac- eomplished. It is amusing to note that another event took place in Charlottetown during the Conference of 1864 which apparently bulked larger in public inter-mt. This was the visitation of s clrcusl It seems that the Nova Sootian delegation, which reached Charlottetown on the "Heather Bell” on the afternoon of Aug. 31, "were not officially met on landing, but made their way as best they could to the Pavillion. The Prince Edward Island govemment later justified it.- Ialf in this seemingly discolnteous neglect by claiming that the Nova Sootisns had arrived unexpectedly early. Several opposition papers, however, charged the members of the government with having been at ins circus when the delegates :mv- ad, md the charge was not effective- Lv answered." ` Apin, we lead that the Canadians -arrived at noon on Sept. 1 on the government steamer ;by the Provinclll Scent!-!'y. Hon. W. them 'with all the dignity be oould.' As tha only staunch advocate of Maritime union it was perhaps fit- ting that hc should meet this unof- ficial Canadian deputatiou to an of- ,fioial conference on Maritime union. The Cans/diana, or such of them as could bs accommodated, were direc- ted to the liiranklin. The others re- mained aboard their ship. Hen too the Prince Edward Island govern- ment explsined their inability to find accommodations for all the Csnadiansasduetothefactt-hats larger number had come from Can- ada than had been expected The truth seemed who that the city was full of Islanden who had polned. in from thc country to see, not the Conference, but the circus." The author notes that at the sub- sequent conference in Quebec, “as before and as after, Prince Edward Island failed to receive that pater- nal aid which it might reasonably have expected from Nova Scotia, or any fraternal assinancc from New Brunswick. It had to fight its bat- egates at Quebec came to be strik inlaly like the temper of the Island as a. whole in the months and years that followed." It would be impossible within the space limit of this notice, to review even the many references to Prince Edward Island which appear in Dr Wh.itelaw's narrative. Some of them are scarcely complimentary, as for example the insistence on the insul ar-ity of the pre-Confederation Is- landers' viewpoint; but on the whole they fairly represent the special dif- ficulties oonfronting our Island statesmen, and the reasons for their reluctance in aoceding to the orig- inal terms of Union. of Confederation to a head. (and Maritime sentiment and conditions), the author shows his sympathy and Confederation discussions on this subject, Prince Edward' Island, he points out, was either ignored or touched upon lightly. In the Island, annexation to one or the other of the mainland provinces had never seemed far from the range of pos- sibility. It might have seemed that the coming of responsible govern- ment would have removed the ap- prehension; but the new system had not worked well. The land system added bitterness to party strife, and instability to party government. The attitude of the Island pres, on the whole, "was what one might have expected toward s movement that threatened to extinguish the Island’s veryexistenceasaprovineeoftlre Empim.. "It is difficult." says the author in another place, "to read the debates in the Island legislature in 1864 without realizing that so far as that Island was concerned, the project was doomed before the (Charlotte- town) conference was ever convok- ed. New conditions might, of course, arise to give urgency and strength to the Maritime union movement on the Island, but conditioned and sep- af-ated as it was, it was less likely than any other part of British North America to be driven into such a self~e£faolng movement either by convulsions from within or terrors from without. Two baits were pre- sented to the Island. but neither ex- ercised much drawing power. One was that the Island could, in the union, have the full value and use of the mainland railways which had been built at such staggering cost by the two mainland provinces, without being required to pay anything in taxes toward construction or upkeep. The second was the purchase by the united province of the rights of the landed Pfvprietors of the Island. In answertnthefirstitwasarguedin the Island legislature that even without the union Islanders could not be excluded from using the mainland railways; and with regard to the second few were brave enough openly to suggest that the Island colony should thus sell its birth- right for a mess of pottege." Commenting on the attempts sub- sequently made to revive this dc- funct issuo, Dr. Whitelaw says: "I’he attempt to seclno rights for the Maritime Provinces has seldom in- duced them to act together, rarely hasitlsdthemtoadvoatcapo- litical union among themselves either within or without the Domin- ion. Even the threat of aecmion which has tended to coma with re- current hand times hasseldom been realistic enough to involve its es- sential corollary,-Maritime ruiion. That latter has been left for orstions and editorials. It has ceased to be a. movement and has become again, ss at the first, a dream.” The work concludes with the prediction that if Maritime union is ever achieved, it will be "hardly apart from the com- pelling force of a great catastrophe unpleasant to contemplate." _Viotd|'i&”lndwH\!l\dHml1, On the question of Maritime un- 558 ties alone, and the temper of its del- Our local contempol”&I'¥’S 11110011! - t . cours I-£8 lking ion, which brought the larger issue UM ennu rose which inner-ry has been advocated iw by people who know nothing about he# understanding. In most of the pre- .P1606 efiel ist abc thatse rsiovpioswliiba btained Pmvincialdamegisflbrary sndthatitwillbomadeeasilyao cessilaletoalistudsntaoftlazxsdian in the Province. GOOD BEGINNING 'I‘here was, as anticipated, gnat H. Pope, “who :owed out to meet , interest taken in the formal opening of the ening. east ted in Faloonwood Hospital last ev- Reconstructed from the old wing. I large saving was effec- tho cost of the work, but the building nevertheless has every ap- pearance of a new edifice, and the equipment throughout is a credit to the Province. Unfortunately, it will take can of only a comparatively number of patients; th*_e_ rest must be provided for in the other establishments which have been made available. It is still largely a matter, as Premier MacMillan sta- ted in the Legislature, of boarding, rather than of treating along mod- ern lines, our mentally afflicted pop- ulation. The Province cannot afford to build on the larger scale recom- dm Slillli mended by the Canadian Council of Hygiene, but at least a splendid has been made in the institu- opened formally last evening e start tion Chief Justice in his capacity inistrator. byth of A PURE GALL _ the MacMillan Government is clearly seen in its editorial yester- day on the forthcoming meeting of the Motor League. It goes out of its to mention gasoline taxes, but of e says nothing about the two-cent boost which the Nova Sco- tia Liberal government has just giv- en the gas tax in that Province! It mentions criticism of the roads, but neglects to state that the criticism from Opposition members in islature who were admittedly ta to the gallery, and whose statements were refuted by Govem- ment way came the usitins i-kills spokesmen. Our oontemporary‘s effort to use Motor League as a political horse, and to dictate the of discussion to be adopted at al meeting, will, we believe, nted by every member who the Lea.g1re’s interests at heart. the most favorable interpreta- it can only be construed as a of unparalleled impudence. RISE IN PRICES the its On tion, Granting that n rise in commod- ity prices is highly to be desired. the record of the past year has been distinctly favorable. As Hon. E. N. Rhodes poinwd out in his budget speech, from February, 1983, to Feb- ruary of this year the general ln- dex of wholesale prices in Canada rose by 13.4 per cent. This rise has been more rapid than in most other countries. In England wholesale prices have risen by 9.2 per cent.. according to the figures compiled by the Financial Times of london. As an indication of the extent to which the rnaladjustments between various price groups have been corrected in Canada, while the wholesale price index was rising 13.4 per cent.. the index for fvtm prices rose by no less than 94.9 per cent. The prices of raw and partly manufactured articles show- ed a rise of 23,8 per cent., as com- pared with one of 11.4 per cent. for fully and chiefly manufactured commodities. It should be noted also that the price of No. 1 North- ern wheat at Fort. William averag- ed 43.2 per cent. higher in Iiiebnx- ary this year than in February, 1933, while the eorresonding in- crease for cattle (steers, good, 1,000 to 1,200 lbs. was 45.7 per cent, and for bacon hogs at Toronto, 153.8 per cent. was was EDITORIAL NOTES "During 1933," says a Halifax contemporary, "there was a drop in the mm-rber of motor cars register- ed of 31,546 or 2.8 per cent. The decrease by provinces was Ontario 11344 Quebec 5,718, British Colum- bia 2,468 Alberta 769, Saskatchewan 6,901, Manitoba 2,830. Nova Scotia 710, New prunswlck 1,202, and Prince Edward Island 42. These are the figures as given by the Do- minion Bureau of Statistics. The greatest percentage of decrease , as was to be expected, in Sas- katchewan, where the crop failure most bitterly felt. ' The present year, notes an ex- change, will witness national cele- brations on the pert of all the Bri- tish Dominions. Here in Canada we shall commemorate the four hun- dredth anniversary of the discovery of this land; Three Rivers will ob- serve lts tercentenary, and Toronto its centenary. Canada. will also mark the hundred and fiftieth sn- niversary of the United Empire loy- alists. In Australia the city of Mal- bourne is to commemorate the him- dredth anniversary of its founda- tion, while Australia as a whole, and New Zealand, will welcome the first visit to the Antlpodes of Prince George. New Zealand has already celebrated her first treaty with the Maoris. South Africa has given till _lIk._W\ii\e|sw'sl|ookacataiman Prince a. wonderful welcome and held liisli walsii ia his l|o\\g,_ Notes By i §iiiii§i§i§ii*i= fri; §§§;ii;§§§;i§§,i _ .§;§§§;|f§,§§.r.,;§§@§' nnsnmn p1o\.\>m Roosevelt cure the e system in face that il ¥°iD8 the acid hat 0! daring experiments. And more and more clear th to secure enforcement ho “° °° “.3 “‘° '.“?.:“.i.°:l‘l: t w care ry hhirszchemes or to mllb “Wm md fective scrllil more than a legend-tells ugthlt sym hanging gwinging through the air 2703 in a very unpleasantifashion. Mont- -nie in a verse: "Tis DOW." ¥¢P1i¢d *U0 0;- villege bell-St. Marksmysterioua Sturm eve-The ghosts of all whom death of 811811 d°°m"Wm\m th* “mms ` died; of 4399 given one laxative 1 in year-In pale 101006851011 Wlik-'E116 18 died ` slocm-Amid the diww iimf- rsxsuve 1 in a died; or sad eases ~l- where Mussolini has i\l¢ made another of any of those mst noisy speeches in 21 thanks to which he maintains among his black shirts the letelide cal of Il Duce's eternal youth, and ,_ de among the chauvinists of all count- gppen a. ries the conviction that the Italian Phil statesman stands head and shoul- had ders above all other statesmen of neun his day. nut to bs s gmt states- z.ooo man one needs to have a high ¥|vm_ sense of responsibility toward ones nm, own people, and toward the col- 38,4 lectivity of nations. International gb,-1 sity Qi’ to sweep the oobwebs from our gn forget their own troubles. mon, interesting passages in the address of DL D- H- I- MDW president of the Australasian Med It has been establishd thot sill! baths are apt to induce cancer in people of fair complexion, and the numerous beach loungers of t0dlY Not might be warned by the fact thlt cancer apparently thus caused has Not occurred in people far below what Tha construction of Moscow: yet another treasure for histor- la.ns. Remains of wooden fortifi- -nw cations built round Moscow in 1701 by Peter the Great 'have been nn- unearthed. They were built when Sweden were threatening to at- . tack Moscow. 'rho and is or rreli historical interest, as they are the only known specimens of Tsar Peter's wooden fortifications. miles from Toronto, on an emin ence about 800 feet above sea level. N telescope with an apertur of 'I4 C311 inches has just been finished in I nhgrsud. when this instrument, wi which exceeds fifty tons in weight. is placed in position, Canada will W” possess the secondlargesf-telescope U19 in the world. The only one that ex- th* seeds it in sins is the loo-inch re- iiufi flector presented by the American millionaire, Mr. Hooker. to the. UN Mount Wilson Observatory. in Cal- lim PN It is possible for s mind to dry Ui up for want of something to keep it fresh. Serious minded people 1101' ‘icine and stimulates what might ed c The City Fathers of Cologne are be having a trying time 'with a quan- . co e .. tity of poison gas left over from may congratulate themselves' that \War stocks, and buried in Wabner last Moor the city's largest open space vc Y Bi' B8 81' DW-¢°8»il tions after various other methods it in the ses--had been considered with clay, lidded with concretl. and a. "coma" containing the mx- p ious fumes, buried some twenty feet below ground level. Now the City Fathers have decided to closa theivfoorforaperiod ofthirty years. _-_ii . ' Tha Englishman who aid 'that it was less remarkable that Col- umbus should have found America than it would have been had he not found it, was right. But it-rs- quiredamanofhigbcourage and s good mind to make that fintsxe perlment. However most of hh contemporaries probably clung to their own belief in the flataesa _of the earth for Nany years. - - A question mark caused lei lr- Nst of a typogrspher in Germany last week. The ivvbsrepher of the newspaper liasener volhleitung inserted a question mark in set- uf Hs' ¢...r.r,""°"'§‘..Z _ `£...°°°"‘n.......”““.§‘§’.,f“ F0 PRIVENTING DEATHS FBO” Eve - one in pendioitis and this ra tion to about true for many oth About 89°!! ' 'lbxnple delphia. 'lent with appendicitis browht in to omina homitsl He appendi dicitil throughout the country. After three die,d in of paper. fm r ‘ to An old legend-and it is nothing 3; de] pt0 ghosts of those who are to die bfi H for-s the year is out wander pitiful; public lb' th1`°U8h °h“"°hY“‘”' md mg, physicians warned about careless ,W8 Hill' U" “Wm ‘mm Umm’ prescribing of laxatives, and drug- we so ihere Wh” *M _°““ i' “W” gi.-.ls advised sgsiust careless or in- and the stars ale up. The ancient dmc" ceremony of Church Watch hu! deaths pr 1°ns been l>i’=<=ii°°d W N’°'° WWI? The nzures are startling. In s re- Wh0 WWW *m°“3 tm wmbs ‘ view of of udicitis nicht tc waidi ii" PM-“W°? PW' or me operated on within 24 mug so by_.f,h0e9 wh() Wero $0 did only by drvwuins iwviul *°""i¢¢‘i"¢ on within sa hours 1 in rr died; of ghosts. and ibm ¢i°°m°f1 ii’ ‘Why zoos within '12 hours 1 in is died; or gomery gathers up 310 5\lD¢l'B¢iU°l\ mum o These fini list solidarity today is a vital neces- 1-1,5 individual survival. The city of Philadelphia has as- Sl-Sled Inst a little nonsense new and 3,000 then is what we all need. It hell! The eases brains and to 1181115011 our 110°-\‘i-L death Mark Twain used to cover up I them. _ multitude of worries and Dei'8°i1ll The above information is from an sorrows and troubles by a new article bylvliriam Zeller Gross in book that made millions smile and Hygeis. 'ribs Anstrshaha: one of the \ F / ‘ .‘ ical Congress. now sitting in H0- bart, relates to cancer research. _ - _ has been regarded as the cancer Db” _ cor underground nuwsy has yielded .rust T-' d the armies of King Charles X11 of M4” an mime, to tm Umwrslty of (Sydney Post-Record, Independent) »»~»»»»» »~ we »»=~»° -ez h _ The construction of the reflecting gndmi* In “YWK thi! 11° milw- A new Canadian observli0r!» ll mmissioner, but it is a curious progress com 1 _ im-YY lists. conceming which the Hom" statute is n0t very specific in it; instructions. Whether there were any or few persons left off the iiminary lists is a matter of mi- should learn to be just s. little fool- merely formed the nucleus of the iish new and then! ws good med- mils °f voters who were finally list- fpmv, un otherwise dun persona- surely ngnmsuht that msingrs lse of the deliberate disfrsnchise- ment of s Nova Scotia elector has en brought to light. It is also som m ii e n o with est - the province. In such a state of facts iirwould have been wiser for for its destruction-such as sinking, the Provincial Government to let bygones be bygones, and to have or tried. A grave was dug, floored avoided the manifest blunder of or- ‘TI . As long as is remembered, will be remembered as evidence e'es§ s;=== :§‘§S§ ig - printed in the newspaper. Border Cities Star: Prof. Harlan Shapley, 01.1-tarvsrd Observatory. makes the announcement that ow- ing to changes in the moon, the earth is grldually revolving mon slowly and the length of our day is being increased one-thousamith think-in a little more than 720.- 000. years hour of daylight without rBortin¢ lieu! #ours APPINDICITIB E.@;;i 8 E E ..r§.§§i ry twenty 'six the United Btu the Pbpulnti e ten years H80 a was working in the wards University Hospital, Phila. He saw patient after pat- GBP ite anything Www! 01' sta!! could do. vestlgated the statisttu of cltis and found that appen- deaths were increasing his investigation showed that igh death rate was due large- the misuses of laxatives and sys between the onset of the ms and the operation. stated his belief that if the were told of these dangers, mins to selling of them, many could be evented. 14904 cases appe hours in 96 died, of 535l»nperated after '12 hours, 1 in 11 died. figures regarding the use or of laxatives-castor oil, salts ther laxatives-are equally ng. 1898 not given laxatives 1 in 'll , of 565 given more than one 1 no definite history of the use laxative could be obtained, 1 died. figures so affected the medl- profession in Philadelphia that te fight against deaths from dicitis was undertaken. 'I’he delphia County Medical Society 800,000 stickers printed; the Druggists Association put out placards, and radio talks were '1‘hese stickers, placards and tslka warned the public taking laxatives in casea of l pain. this been worth while? in saving the lives of nearly citizens by this effort; medical profession no longer the reasons for the high rate in spperrdicitis; it knows HUNGEB. for the dear thingsmid do I weep now; for your deeds of quiet love and duty my heart freeze and sts/ne since you endow death with beauty. for the look of utter ,compre- dhsnsion; nu GBX' BW laugh t only true hearts know; these I would from life's severe detention and go. -Mary Webb. That Franchise Inquiry er for its omissions than its whatever is intended on the that when the inquiry was in , very little if any attention paid to the crucial question of completeness or otherwise of final lists. All the irregularities, ty and carelessness, which have e to iight, have had relation en- Y to the preparation of the pre importance, because those lists as electors on polling day. It is thing of which Nova Sootians ysar's registration was the most prehensive in the history of this essentially political lack of sportsmanship of the d Government. But it r forgotten, and is cor- to be forgotten. cellor Hitler on the occa- ths Iatt.er's 45th birthday. cation mark appeared after oe in the message wishing long life (1) and thus was s second per century. Just 000 we’ll have an extra A Western Agrutilu 1uduu1ss_og_posiu°h l * plied elsewhere. FERTILIZER TAKE EARLY DELIVERY Right now, Mr Farmer, before your rk starts. Haul your fertilizer req ments from our plant. ,Or ask your fertilize dealer toorder out your requirements. r . -.ACT AT 0NCE_ Our goods are superior and we can suppl you to better advantage than you can be hug Island goods for Island growers 'THE ISLANDFERTILIZER C . Charlottetown.. 0 LTD' > new um, 0 / L-I speaker, als. “Y0l.i with about these My were to us FC!-YS 1921 1030 wheat was the above figures against our wheat have been ly rising since 1922. Who power then, and who lost this .. . It was lost by these negotiators . . . The Elect ers of liberty in this country WON the ones who lost this trade for us. Yet they keep on crying. ‘Why d°11'i you negotiate?-completely forget- ting what a sad lot of negotiators they tumed out to be when they were in power. If negotiation is the criterion by which the Liberals are toube measured. how would they explain the enactment of the Fordney-Mccumber tariff in 1922. which killed our cattle trade? The! did not do much by negotiation there. What excuse have they for the_Srnoot-1-Lawley tariff of 1909? That certainly did not do us lily good. In view of these facts I should think they would be the last to mention negotiation." Further Mr. Luchkovlch said: “I should like also to refer to the was considered so great a virtue _in the time of the Dunning budget. but so terrible a sin under the Right Hon. Mr. Meighen; _but I do not wish to rub it in too much. I think I do Mr. Dunning an inius- tice by not enumerating some of the great benefits that seemed to Canada when the Liberals in 1980 put hay, straw, oats, wheat and cutflowers on the free list of im- p0rts._ Of course. Canada has not enough of these things, but must bring them in from foreign c:unt- ries! It is only right to give the credit for so profound a discovery to the Liberal statisticians of the day. It was when the farmers of this country began to see the ridiculous futility of such a. free list that the party had to look into their bag of tricks for some other scheme to fool the public. Their latest device has been to make goo-goo eyes at _Miss Liberty and try to win hcl' over to their way of thinking. But by their crude ways 'and lack of good behaviour and proper etiquette they have estranged her affec- tions. I heard the hon. member for Lisgar (Mr. Brown) heave a couple of sighs and saw him east a few flirtatious winks in her direc- tion. I saw the hon. member for North Battleford (Mr. McIntosh) also throwing kisses by the hand- ful, the hon. member for Vancouv- er Centre (Mr. Mackenzie) give a. long series of yoo-hoo's,’ t.he hon. member for Weyburn plead on position whisper a ‘lot of sweet nothings -in her ear. but generally speaking the amorous technique of the Liberal would-be R/.vmeos made rl: ,_ impression whatsoever upon r. Seldom has an Opposition in Parliament been treated by s priv- ate member with such a. show of contempt as the member for Veg- reville thus displayed toward the Liberal Opposition of today. Quite naturally Mr. Luchkovich concluded his oration by poking fun at Mr. Mackenzie King's raising of the constitutional question as an objec- tion to the Marketing Bill. Every one who knows anything about re- cent history is aware that in neg- Ofiltililk the Emlilre trade treaties and new trade treaties with France, Germany and austria the Bennett Government has done a great deal to extend Canadian busineasin a super-nationalist world. The proof is to be found in the official stat- istics showing remarkable gains in both ¢Xp°rts and imports. -_im 'lbs popularity of the Dutch on- ion, exported from Holland to the various cotmtries ,of Europe, is due in no small measure to the efficient grading established by the Nether- lands govemment. -L 56 Years Old Feels Like Boy ` Aloliar Trlllh It Dolfl "I was down aaa ,ji Eu‘:iLwri¢aa gc x j`_§_, __ ' a Hmm, u ,__ .mend Ns. *Mr kidnsyswnoinlsad .f -= 'alaap ra an i»e ..¢ in his Fig; E-'zs_{ i gui ! I gg ei a iwaiva Gnd sid s Kid- ' usb.” dewd when Duikht Saving! creditors. _ N Il. K. S. HEIIMIIG, B-A-.C.P.A..c.c.A J Clll'|.'ll'llD PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT llllllll Ol* CANADIAN soomr! or cosr accoUN'raN'-rg oosnnssromm ron rsxmo anrmavrlrs rn surmnn comm' or r. a. r. r. a. r. asranssrrrarrvn mn carvanlan oannn' naive ‘most assoclarrorr. uanrnn. aalvx or Nova scorn nunnmo caaaborrarown. P. n r. ____ _ Accounting systems opened np and Nviasd. Labor saving oifloc methods installed; out Amman; instituted es sun umm nqnhmmh ' Monthly, quarterly and annual audits. 'Balance sheets 'And Profit and Loss Accormta prepmg Income Tax retllma written up and Med. Financial arrangements made between debtor me TBI Limited Liability Companies Incorporated. P. 0. B0! 88. TELEPHONE im. brick for brick’ tariff policy that bonded knee, the leader of the Op- f .£21 .1it. rE?li?i[)`li/' fAdSk Fire, Lie, cci ent, ic ness and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetown -TURNED CEDAR POSTS- ' Large quantity on hand. ROUND TOP AND BALL TOP I -Also- 4 CARLOADS CEDAR FENCE POSTS 7-8-9-10 and 12 feet long. L. M.POOLE & C0. Paoli's Wharvl of stated that the monument cost Burns 830, and was erected by J. and R.. Bum, marble cutters, Leith ‘”ii‘u money, it is now shown was Plid through Peter Hill, an Edin- burgh bookseller, to whom Bums wrote: . "I 5034 YOU by the bearer, Mr. Clarke, A particular friend of mine. six pounds and a shilling which you will dispose of as follows: Five pounds 10 shillings per account I owe Mr. R. Burn, architect. for erecting the stone over t.he gravn of poor Ferguson. "l-te was two years in erecting it after I had commissioned him' for it, and I have been two years in paying him after he sent mo his account: so he and I are quits. "He had the hariesse to ask me interest on the sum but consider- 1118 that the money was due by one poet for putting s tombstone over another he may with grateful sur- prise tbank Heaven that he ever Britain’s_ War Debts (Mail and Enrpire) In his address to the Canadian Club on Monday, Mr. Angus Flet- cher, custodian of the British Lib- rary. maintained in New York City for the information of Americans, made this statement: “As to the war debts, American authorities, official and unofficial, have them- selves documented the facts in a number of books and pamphlets with admirable detachment-but I doubt if it is generally realiud that England has abandoned claims to war debts (owed by her Europe- an neighbors) greater than the a- mount abe borrowed from the Unit- ed &atss: or that sho has already paid a sum equal to about half the amount originally borrowed.” to of these indubitable facts, ted declarations during embers of Congress of the loans would of statements by States army officers be disgraceful to coi- § §ra=. aint? Riggs § . s ldnoy Pills lied debts from nat- Sf 5 3 2 saw a farthlng of it." § 'brood American poutiduu How Robeyt Burns tinue to beat the war-debt Ptlld for the edmcsuon electors back home. (Edinburgh srotsmsm can never be Paid Whether- Robert B 4 , un-told harm to United or un wmbsenus hl:'n:r§;r§rp°iln wd busiuw and iudileifi' Owcuzau churchyard in msumyfthe ernment that uiiiiiuiclg. Ferg-|non,th¢ hu bggngothometothcconscousu settled. pmt' the American masses. In Cur-rie'| "Life of Burns" it 1; The wiping out of the war or of 5 5 z Pllillheaviliin scaled-down bdis is out steps now required to the recovery of the and the rest of the depression. Will Uncle Bam the light? PROVOBT, Altu.. Mill’ enthusiasts, sided by freak er of the past few weeks. Stl something of a record iii2i’_¢ participating in curling, tennis golf events on the same