2:011 roux. ’ ~ . War 3n The Common Cold GIIIIILlITTETOWlI GIIAIIIIIAI marlin; only (Founded In 1:81) Author-Izod a: Second cu:- iiuil. rm Offloo Department, Oltnwl. Ila: Guardian may be obtained at: llllb Tobacco Shop, Moncton, N. B. Tho New: Shop, Monnton, N. B. corn McLean Plctou, N. S. Walker’: White Spill. ll Slllor Si, Illllflt. N-S. Metropolitan New: Agency, 1248 Pool Sh. Mimi-Nil United Clgar Stores. Chateau Lanrlei- Ottawa, Ont. B. Allken, Lord Elgln’! Hotel, Ofhwl, Onl- J. Flue, 354 Bay SL, Toronto Ont. Wolfe's News Stand. slldhlry: Dill- Old South News, Cur. Milk and Washington Sh, llohllng’: News Agency Time: Bulldlnl, New York. “The Strongest Memory is Weaker Than the Weakest Ink.‘ MONDAY, JUNE 3. 1MB Britain's Export Effort The trcnicuduns placing behind l self in CXIIQTI “QUIT it-r export drivc is showing ii- s, the value of which in April was 170 per cent of the monthly averaflc If volumg and not value is taken as former is more accurate in , view of lllCTClhUl pricey-thou the ‘tOIfll i5 I10W c1059 m ()0 per cunt of thc I038 figure.’ h But though tln; drive slioivs every sign of the guagc—-arid the point out the vcrv rczil difficulties which lie Sonic of tllg; exports ilow flourishing are only temporary: other basic exports. such 3,5 coal have not e\'(‘n entered the stream. Cotton is still staggering along at half the pre-war fig- Mainstav of the present drive are chemicals, non-ferrous metal ware, tools, electrical equipment, and artificial silk-I products, hard- All these commodities arc being exported at a higher rate than the pic- war figure and the importance of this lies in the fact that thcse products will form the basis of Britain's normal export trade. There is little hope fOr which have been 0n m. decline for 2o years and" which today are faced with heavy competition in India, Egypt and South America. there any immediate hope for coal, upon which for decades Britain has depended as a basis cotton products But there are other drive. According to Michael Hoffman of the New York Tunes, the ivhole basis of Britain's car export trade is unstable. cars today, and great numbers of them, because of the acute world shortage. British cars not because they prcfcr them American cars, but because there arc no Am- Britain is selling People are buying There is cvcry indication that Whm flit first demand is satisfied and U. S. car produc- tion hits its stride. a large share of the present Britisltfmarket will swing baclf to the United T-Thdsc weaknesses are recognized but the important fact is that Britain's exports are 0p- erating at bilge volume and that as a credit risk, and this is important to Canada, she is in a far today than even the most optim- thought possible. Britain's credit and to the credit of the British people who have survived 1 vicious war and entered a peace without the ‘Remembrance Day’ he Canadian Legion takctvthc Elound that November II, which saw the end of the First World War in I918, should bg preserved as Remembrance Day to honor as well those Can- ldians who lost their livcs in the Second World Commanding this decision, the Ottawa Jam'- “Wc should not expect much con- trary sentiment. Remembrance Day his Observed 0n November 11 for nearly 30 years and i: thoroughly established in the conscious- ness not only of those who fought with those it honors but of the yOungcr generation KIWI?" up since 1918. Many of these latter, scores of thousands of them, took up the torch their fath- er: had dropped, and it is not surprising to read that at the Legion convention most of -thcm favOrcd maintaining the old familiar date of Tradition is a powerful force, but the logic of this decision is equally clear. Clearly we should not have two days of remembrance, each of them honoring the dead of one war and excluding the other. to change lo a date associated with the Second War‘ would it bc the anniversary 0f ti); Ill’- Germany, or of lapln P” Remembrance Day. Until a few years agoynotes the Financial Post, scores of thousands of Canadians could contemplate secure retirement on llfg savings of A farmer could sell his farm, or a small merchant his store, invest the proceeds at 6% andahisincome plus that from what he had already saved would allow him to livg in comfort the rcst of his days. He can't do that now and with interest rates still declining he will be in greater diffi- culties tomorrow. Twenty thousand dollars invested in good securities gave a man an income of about $100 per month ‘before the war. To get the same in- comit now requires an invcsttnent of $40,000.‘ In the meantime those planning retirement face f: double squeeze. ' Th (mm. in income m: nukes it more difficult m "acclilnulaft dying: and the aharp rise in the cmt of 7liv1ltlg<,jmal<cs a greater income from those m-i . ntcclliry . $10,000 to $20,000. the middle class. farmers. ralarled people. ' garé fllred to contribute dollan-a year Ottawa h The United States National Institute 0f Health has announced that early in luly it will open its campaign to discover prevention and cure for civilizations greatest and most irksomc time-waster, the common cold. Dr. Rolla Dyer. institute director, dis- closes a research team will assigned to the program. which will last at least fivc yczirs. Key researchers will be a medical officer. a rc- demiologist and possibly a bio-chemist. virus or, if there arc a number of Iype of virus. researchers will go to work to develop a vac- cine which \‘Vlll provide immunity against colds. For the first vear of iuvcstigzitiou the rc- searchers have been allotted 3440.000. This sum will be incalculablc. - EDITORIAL NOTES — try to our ally Russia. O I C . I yarns five cents a pound. able. w- n- :- s ally, in Iuly. be that the new Commonwealth will specially favoured position under the have attempts to force the British pcrial Preference. 1: n- o m Mr. Bevin is alleged from London to have independent states, without a gcncral lstration for the whole nation. This principalities and states into one vast Empire. w i: w- v George V born this date I865; overseas dominions; (hiring the took great personal interest iii industrial to Vt/indsor by royal proclamation. m w w a- vctcrans, are liable to be evicted at this the City- Council took over the not clearly stated. We cannot afford as into the breach and give some statesmanship? i i! i The City Electrical see it. cr coal nor electricity but simply conducts is hcating. advantage that working costs amount to heating. i: n a :- sliowcd an increase. products, $168,467 (M68 off trawl I legislation largely co nld off by. ll search expert specializing in viruses. an sill" Their first task will be to isolate the cold different viruses. causing a variety of colds. isolate rach When this has hccn done the is negligible when it is realized that in the United States alone colds every day R8911 250.- 000 workers away from their iohs. And if the proicct is a success the rclicf in human uiiscry Today, National Research Council engineer EdwardWVilfrcd Mazcrall will know his ‘fate on conviction of conspiracy'to betray his coun- There seems less prospccts than ever of woollcns coming again into gcueral use, seeing that fabrics are to be increased sci-cu cents a yard, ivorstcds 3O cents a yard, and knitting We will have t0 hold on to the old material till more wool is avail- Philippine Independence commences, form- One part of the plan is known to a U. S. tariff. The State Department at Washington is ivorried about this, since it conflicts with U. S. to give up Im- The future of Germany is still obscure, with the Russians determined. apparently, to con- tinue the present division of the country. and the U. S. in favour of its being reunited, but not permitted to rebuild its economic structure. a plan of reconstituting Germany as a group of admin- com- promise may yet be adopted, which would end ascended throne May 6, 1910, coronation taking place on June 22, 1911; proclaimed Emperor of India in person at Delhi Durbar, during what consti- ‘tutcd the first visit of a British monarch to his First (lrcat War was incessant in the encouragement of the troops at the front, whom he visited frequently; af- fairs and accepted invitations to be present at many important functions intended to solidify and develop friendly relations between capital and labour; during his reign the family name of the ruling house was changed from Guelph Sonic I00 families, mostly of returned war Maple Hills within three months. We have no commun- ity housing scheme here, and it was to offset vacated houses at the R. C. A. F. grounds. They now find they are unable to finance the projcct, the Provincial Government refuses to undertake it, and now the Federal Government, through the Department of Transport, declares its inten- tion 0f taking possession, with what object is a Province to stand idly by and let these 100 fam- ilies be turncd out homeless iust as Fall and Winter comes upon us. Who is going to step indication of For about a year now the small English town of Norwich has offered a sight worth seeing, and the only one of its kind in the ‘world. Engiiiccr, Mr. Sumner, has developed a heating process based on en- tirely neiv principles and engineers from all over the world have travelled to Norwich’ to In this prnccss Mr. Sumner uscs neith- the cold water from the river inlo the building he Mr. Sumner works on the theory that compression produces licat and his heat- pump has proved so successful that he has been able to maintain a temperature of nearly 63 deg. F. (approx. i7 deg. C.) in a five- storey Corporation building. This new. British system of compression-heating has the great one- third of those incurred by electric or solid-fuel Cash income received by Canadian farm- ers from the sale of produce in 1945 declined 7.7_ per ccnt from 1944, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reports, but Prince Edward Island Total income by_ prov- inces, in millions of dollars, follows: (1944 tot-' als in brackctsy-Princc Edward Island $16.4 time ($13.7), Nova Scotia $26 ($27.9), New Bruns- wick $35.1 ($33.3), Quebec $228 ($221), Ont- ario 18449-3 ($404M. Manitoba’ $15.14 ($1757). Saskatchewan $414.8 ($543.8), Alberta $289.1 ‘($338) and British Columbia $737 ($68). By groups, farm cash income, in thousands of dol- lan, follows: (1944 total: in IbrackeuO-Grain, seeds and liay. '$5¢6.565 ($677,395); vegé- tables and other field crops, $117,004 (stop; 811).: livwock, $589.5!!!" 0570.785): Am $05); fruits. $33n93 (3 .)'. f~°01,lli.@ °d ' fzllllltfliligzlltlfmdlgtlfl ‘gill Notes By Thé Way Men are more Intelligent than Wmen. awn a writer. so that! wliv they wear double-brushed outta on hot. day: eh? —Guclph Mercury- l-lhrlry offlctal: report. that children read more non-fiction than dime novels. Current event-s Pro- let.- bably scam them more than Iom- Sault Ste. Marla Stu. Ellllllld l! ntliuklnznathe hole. 211311? towns lily piidmh fmfwiduoillg 0 . people. what 5.5 tlliiit abbut the ‘conservative British?" —Frcm St. Louis Posy-Dispatch. Mr. Stalin hu gained a re l.- atlon for playln; the cards ose to his chest. bu: the day seems near when he must face a shew. down and reveal what Russia's Dolley is. —Hamilwn Spectator lulwrt of the existence of a bll- lion-dollai" ooal deposit 4O miles north of Hudson Hope Ls just. one tncre evidence of the vast potential resources awaiting development tn BC/s Peace Rlve- area. —vanccuv- er News-Herald. The Empire may he weakened, but not the British poo 1e. There are many who belleve ha? the post- war generation will be more enter- prising and resourceful than thclr falhens. Certainly the Brltlsh am the best rIsILs In the world today-- and the only strong corn tltors In the business of 111a Iiig e democ- ratic system work. _New York Times. Mr. Malcolm. MacDonald, the new Govenwr General of the Malayan Union-who ls display- Ing his flne Intelligence by ohms- Imi a wife from a.’ dlstlilglllshed 0t awa lBm‘llV—hBlS been inducted into his high office as a com- moner, and this may set an inset. estlng precedent. When the late John Buchan came to Canada as Govenlor General it was with B. peerage, as Loixl Tweedsmulr. Ottawa Journal. Ono or two pool-I kept homes and lots can spoil _t e up anne of an entire block, no ma ter how enterprising the other household- ers ln the alock can be Trlni lawns, well designed flower plots, tldv hedge and well pruned tree-s can add ally to the attract/Iva nes of a ome. 1.1 all owners and 0000981114; of ltomes will do their best at this season of the year our cIt-yvcan be made more attractive than ever before. -—1"ort. Wllllam Tunes-Journal. Lord Cur-Lon, a brllllanf but gggnipous Englishman who ed career HIS foreign secretary and narrowly missed beln Prlme Min- ister, was sent r0 1 Capt. Mlnchlii, Brltls consul ln Kansas Cltzy, tells of the great. man's reception when he reached India. As f-he imposing figure In his Dlumed bat ~ irmi the train the band by inlstake struck upin “Holy, Holy, Holy, Lcrd God lyhby" inswad of "God Save the King" Curzon whispered to an aide through the side of his mouth “The only time I ever was properly received". -Kansus City r. Sta One hundred and thirty-six years ago a Welsh soldier, his wife and f-lve children, while on a journey from Ireland. I00k shelter In a grav- el pll; near Cust-le Dou has Durln" the nlgiht the overhang n5‘ back o? the plt caved l.n and e entlm family was burial alive. A stone Ir. the churchyard of Twynlioim. whlch describes the soldier andfius wife as mlnstrels, was erected to their memory by four local minist- ei-s In 1811. Two mrmbers of Glasgow Galloway Association have now dis- covered that the soldler was none other than the protot. of ‘Wan- dering Willie" ln Slr alter Scott's novel " auntlet." and recently a ceremony was held at. the grains and a tablet recording the (ants and dedicated. ~—I.ondo1i Times. Former General Doollttlo’: pro- dlctlon that 400,00 private limes wlll be flying 1n the United fates wlthmnmevenrmlsmdoilita slgn o1 peat. aviation progress Yet the average clrmen Is sound to wonder how mucu peace and quiet can be expected when such a goal Is reached. The lit and d-ay mone of plums I-s alre‘ y causing annoy- ance to bousebo. ers Ilvlwhln the “fifrfiimfi nyiiiirt ‘all g oommonpiuce? Let us hope plane manufacturers are won-king on sllemlng devices to bone down the rocket. -—Boswn Post. The first house In Fnanoh Canada ofmwto _ who are now dead, four dled Dr. Sidney Bfnltb, Proficient of M bhc Unlvers PUBLIC FORUM Th1: column l: opon ll If: dlunulun by our» nponlluih of question Ill lnhlolt Tho bn-rloflofoini t Ginnllon doe: not ocular ' lly onlloroo the will!" I’ o-rapondonh- GAS SERVICE Sin-It wa: advertised on Satur- g tatlom, one fiyrfiiia ‘&Z§§"'a”§a‘ one ht BI- Avards. would servé 88s to the public on Sunday. June 2. An un- expected occasion arose thlil. made It necessary for the writer to sec- ure a supply of gas, and l "Ill f" accommodation was made at bu-th these stations between 6.30 and ‘I p. m. but. there was no one there to serve. Again, one of them we: _ nothing ' visited at 7.30 but stlll doing. so ll was necessary l0 20 home, put the car away and nurse a grievance. If thIx klnd of practice I: con- tinued we might as well forget the tourist trade we talk so much about, as tourists wlll not put up with It—they don't have to. Chur- lottetoiwn gas dealers must feel pretty independent when thcy subscribe to the present unsatis- factory arrangements to cater to the public. ~ S ' etc. I am. li. ‘ DISGUSTED MOTURIST. LongeTty On Parliament Hill (Montreal Gazette) The fact that King In June wlll pass even the long record l-ri offlce of Slr John A. Macdc-nald serves to remind Canadians that their prlme mlnlst- er ‘is no longer young. Bui. ~lt should also remind them ‘if the fact that belng prlme mlnlstc-r of Canada seems to prulbn! the l"? rather than to abridge lt. Canad- lan prime ministers have u cus- tom of dying full of years. The record shows that Canada has had eleven rlme mlnlsters since Confederut on. It l: true that some held office only for brlef gerlods. Yet all were men who had een subjected through many years to the strains of ubllc_llfe. It appears that, with on y a - ugle exception, all Canadian pr- re mlnlaters have died over the age of seventy. The single exception l: Sir John Thompson, who. at the age of 50, dropped dead Im Windsor Castle a few mlnutes af- ter having been made a Prl Councillor. phaslze the longevlty of lils ore- decessors and successors. the other seven prlme mlzfistei-s ll their seventies, one In hls’ --I'zhrles, and two In their nI-nefles. Two former prime ministers are llvlng —both In their seventies. Even eminent medical nut-hunt- les. who have shaken dubious heads over the llfe expectancy u! prime ministers, have themselves lived to be surprised, If, not ahash- ed. Slr William Osler once pro- nounced Slr William Tupper to be a very sick man. some rwenty years later, while attending a cere- mc-Tly at the Cathedral at Ant- werp. someone tapped hlm on the _ turnlng around. he saw Srr Charles, who smiled sweet- ly and sald“Not dead yet!" Thu! was In 1901. when Slr Charles was 80. He lived to dle In 1915. when shoulder. On In his 95th year, ' _In the record of Canadian prlme ministers l-s placed beslde that of the presidents of the United States the comparlslon l: definitely fav- orable to Canada. Since the Civil War (a period approximately rqual ‘an- ada) the average age of the presi- to that of the Dominion of dents has been only 82.4 years. There Is contrast in another par- .ave lorf their live: through assassinat- prWv-z get had the opportun- ll-cular. For three presidents Ion. whereas no Canadl minister ha: Ity to fall a B11 lesiied martyr. There must be Iome explanation _ who head Canada's governmental svs- pure air 1n Parliament Hill. Or perhaps ltfl-‘l: e for the longevity of those fem Perhaps It l»; the the essential tranquillity Canadlan political scene. The Price of— 40-Hr. Farm Week (By John Atkins) of leaders must believe that Labor the Interests of urban tum people arc common; they It s0 often. ‘they 1m. fill y intend rm Home Ovnvenlent day to give practi- cal pnoof of tihts belief Inthewesenloampamif tho weeks heyhovenéluolden 40-hour t flzpmurrlty to alve m: affect and to win 0f farm ma: on do , hours. Mackenzie min . VY The comparatively early end of Slr John Thompson seems to ("PP For of "l? hh 1r f ‘uwmiifi India Background (Unlted xingFuTniror-mmon) Area and Population - The Ind- Inn m re covers an area of some 1.516, square mile: with a fir‘? ulatlon In 194:1 of nearly 339109 i v Le. three fourths of thepopulation of the whole British Empire and one fifth of the total world _)0PI-!' 151101 The population Increase is estimated n! over flve inllllons un- nuully. Brl-tlsh India coin risen eleven provinces wlth apopu atlmi In 1941 of ZQUJDOMIO andmareii of 888.000 square mlles. The NW!!!“ range from Bengal wltli £00,000 pulatfoii to the northwest front- er with 3,000,000. In Indlan State: (19411 census) 93.000900 owe al- legiance only to their own ruler: and are not Brltlsh mbjectu. There are M2 State: ranglng from I-Uderabad. a: large u France wlth a population of over 109001100. to minute units comprising only four villages. The natlve state: cover 690.000 square miles, two fifths of the total area of India. Muchlnery of Government Hitherto the muchlnery of Govern- ment ha: been as follows: A re- agonslble agent for the exerclae of t e authority of Klng George VI. Emperor of India, has been Secre- tary of State for Indla. A Govern- or General Nlceroy) and Provinc- lnl Governors have been uppolnted by the Klng Emperor and have been responsible to the Secretary of State for the exerclie of special powers. The Viceroy, n! Jrowii representative. ha: conducted ‘uslnes: with the Indian State: through his polltlcnl Department. The Central Government has con- sisted o! the Viceroy‘! Executive Council and the Central Legislat- ure and has dealt. wlIth defence, forelgn nffalra, ti-iuirport and other matters of common concern to all India. m: position In reluflon to the Province: ha: cvr-eaponded roughly to that of the American Federal Government In relation to separate States. Since 1M1. III! Executive Council ha: been pre- dominantly Indlnn. home and domlnuitly Indian. on ' four o! the fifteen member: be n; Brltlqh: that 1:. member: for flnmce. home and tranrport and commander in chlef. The Viceroy ha: been bound by the advice of the Executive to overrule In certuln clrcumltanc- 0:. Indian member: testify not been exercised. 4 i 4' The Central Igglllature ha: had two Chairmen-the Ooimcll 141 member: of whom 102 ~huve total o 1.5 mIllIon In Ian Leglrlaturo md dent with a full range of matter: o! Govern- ment Including law finance. public health, locll w: . ucatlon, land and taxation. An to varlou: racu. coinmlinftlelnnd other :pecl:l lnterutl. numbered about 8.000.000 Including nbou four and a half million Wfllhvfl. The ruler: of lndlui I treaty relnlonnll p rl wlthln thelr n ulna. Thu: Brltlfli Indlun late for Council. Though lie had the rI-ght ilint In thalr experience thl: right has f State with 5B memberl, of whoin 82 have been elected by lndlam, d and the beilllntlvo Allombly wltli been elected by the Indium. Of a Government Ber-yam: tn India, only about 3.000 are Brltllh. Brltlsh Indlm Provlnce: have eggyod loll-government dnce 1 . In each Province an Indlon Preanler ond Olblnet have been re :lhle to n freely-elected 1rder. 110v- ngrlculture, electorate Ilvln: wld: range rowouentutloii. Slate: which are not Brltlfh territory are wlth Brltalii. e h»: control of all lntornnl v: doe: not to th d ‘t?’ a em :11 e Central lufiilntun cannot I051:- Ounmunltloli and Turtle: -w :71 : i 000 “mlalfira mwreymbc alnuld Th. mgim 1 ‘ mm; gztlrnl-Ofllllfllfll will: u» enrn- n: aoeoerwdfit-m“: of lnventcd In ~ " cw m galwiiliibovcfifofctwufninonilm-clorylbollf- this e but he ha: never had Deep down whit: noum. will!!! h orlnmnuénwldedzne ,q;1mg.n_- "°"“r.?i“‘rar"°‘°"ifi'u'a'l‘mu“"" "nil liiu i or‘ d ” n) - ow wunow unerma, wl ' hold IQ b- ' Y: PW wt???’ ::hroinmie°:biindcr-blue,of.:en a: mould mulch‘ e u n . d: I mun-amass: s“ an film’ - i. ’ Jour. , ; . labor m Fniduttiggoe 112% The bouac: wlegce cube: Ind’ ch11- mmbe“ arm.‘ I tumor: In m "to the And blozg-dult :11 the hill: lem- pmnlt all Canadian 11:. . t foodswrlaabvioapgamlh d ‘ m‘ sir "1...- wa. ......... to ~ "s. W "*1". "i a l Infounod can b! Slld lower down the cup‘: bluo fathered. It mlahtpbc will bl: B aides. ' m, m“, m, m“ - m? In the 11ml wwufl wvlslcn- The m wu :11. n: m firm was. ‘me 1m and ls Spice mrlvellod up. 1 1m time mass..." wnwmsbz: "w: t establish a notldnnl Word: and love m. or bonuth r3111 1 n rmLn-vtzeek. h; And, I above m: need w breathe. ' V Q" . . ~ r "take- oiiio" pay at tho week-Iv Ill- I : bee with star-wide room. m l B1111 Lost In the ocean’: azure bloom. -R»obcrt P. Trlstnm Coffin In the Saturday Review of Literature. lng the lint twcnt year: ha: been shaped lnrzelyby ndhl, has been the foremost clinmplon of Eendence. Influence extend: far eyond aublcrlblnz membenhlp of and a half mllllon. » The All lndln Mulllm Ied by Jlnnah hu more doubled Itaimembershlp :Ince 1939. Now It number: well over one rall- llon. It, ha: lll0 been n. staunch advocate of Ind ndence but also [league want: Paklltan, .e. a le nte or- ganization of area: wlt Muslim majorltlel. I. e. provinces o! the out and northwest. The thlrd best known Party la the Hlndu Muhasabh: wltli n membershlp of a quarter of u mll- Ilon and Increulnl. The Manuela,- ha represent: the Conservative Hindu tradition and It: main pol.- lcy ha: been for a BIndu-control- led Raj with Domlnlon stotul. The Slkh: (leader Tor: 811mb) allo advocated an independent 'n- dla but were opposed to the Hindu conception of caste and to Mash-m plan: for dlvlslona. Bchediued caste: who are laid to make up nInety percent. of Indln’: factory worker: have t-hreel/orkonlzatloric, the lender of one o whlch, Jr. Ainbedkar. has been a member of the Vlceroy‘: Executive _Counull. The remnlnlng pollltlcal actlvlty i: conducted by Communist: (nmost ftvethmunnd) and several "_ Partle l. An-Iculturo -Nlnety percent. of Indla’: population I: purely rural. To ntlinulate agricultural product- Ion and to keep pace wltb tho growing population, the Govern- ment ha: made great effort: dc:- plte the perllstence of traditional method: to lnculcafe t): aclentiflc use of land. The grate: - progrésb In the agrleultural fI-eld has. now- ever, been In lrrlgatlon. Brltlali rule, Indl: has developed the world’: largest Irlgatlon sys- tem, cosxlng over £100.0W,J00 and fertlllzmz 56,000,000 acres. To off- set, the economic eitslovenielit n! the peasantry to money-lenden, British administration Introduced a co-operatlve movement which, In forty yeurl, has grown to number M Socletle: of whlch some 85% are 1n Britten India. The Indlsn Government has otlmullte‘ and extended cultlvntlon of food mop: of wlildh- 1n 1944 rloe aoommt-ad for nearly 80.001000 :cre:. millet. over 56,000,000 lnd when! nearly .14,- OIILOM. Indl: produce: 50% mf the world‘: ground uunbnd i: ucond to Ohlua In uumum 11d rapeseed. Indl: produce: vlrtfinllj.‘ the world’: jute and 1: the ucond lnrgelt producer of cotton after the USA. Demlte the predomlnmc: if ag- riculture, India, even bofora lh In: inanlnnele largest roducer of coal and produce :11 htl more fton thug Au:tr:l n. ndl: I: amon wor d’: chief producer: of and lend: the world Inithe ductlon of Ilmonlto. In . yen-a- lnduntrlnl dovalopmon ore. t e quit-uncut: foi- cumnt. and refined lililr. ‘hi! qulreinenu. During the war (Continued on Page (6) Gmy’ Stanislas I Ilolalvod _ injywlllir hllLfltlib {mi 1111' over me ‘up: ‘mum: ‘bu: uric.- v inde- thunl ‘Jndér o war, was one o! the eight loading lndultrfal count-tie: of the world. Slie we: the ncond lar ell produc- flghfill r o ore the c: sen very rapid. ‘twenty you‘: ago Indln Imported the _bulk of 11:1- {C- o: uy. llie nip- plle: prlctlully :1! her home rev; u‘! Hwy», Farina iii-oi, , 9.23%.‘... I) .- . . Qilhflpedlc l. fllllhllllfllllsl 159"" "Hm! ltrea r34 Professional Bards ~ r \OOOOOO~O OO§QQQQQOQOOOQQQ Charles R. McQuald I 5-4- lhi-rlnor, Sollultor, Natl?! Sh. Intern Tron Building. CIIAPIUQMMIII [honor I'll! :o»+¢$0-oc_oc»o+o-o~+.“ ' NEIL "L HIGGINS Chaijtored Accountant 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown Tel. 5B9 . P1). Box 5a OKOXO-Q-§O4O§O-0-0-O-O§+OOO0 v . Morrell and cflmpany Account-mt: lllillflll Trllt Bllldlng i Cir-u‘ “clown o-ooo~0-oo+ooo4+0+oo+»““ n. R. DOANE a c0. Chartered Accountants 68 Grafton Street . Clllrlotlctown INN $080 » no: m lonlolnh W. Manning. 0.: r i' i McLeod & Bentley W. l. BENTLEY. LC. l» A BENTLEY. LC Barrister: ma ‘Arum-mun 1 4 [II 1M Prlnou Strut z Q-oooo-o-ooo-o-oooow-o-o-o-oooo- PUBI IC STENDGRAPHER vhm: uni: and circular oomnponrlenca, Ifllllll ma bookkeeping. H188 HELEN GIDDEN Tel» hon: ‘$020 i". Emil‘)? . l i 10s on» no»: on. w. n. cluisoi Chlrdprntor Pnlml! Gfldlllh Ch» latter-own "l Prince 8t. Phone um FREDERIC A. LARGE ...... Fbononlfll. u.’ ‘medial 48f: OIIARLOTTETUWN. v.21 DR. A R SMITH UINTISI l1! Gromn Street Oftkxlluunrlltoll-itnl Telephone 1.284. ALEX W. MATHIESON alingisnzii. SOLICITOR. mu 0mm: l. GIQIC G00!" Street "l!!! h" lnu Collection PALMER 81 HASLAM A. .1. IIASLAM. 11.14.. um IABBIBTIB, ITO. Bonk of Non Scull: Chamban clurlofmown, r u. l. Mobil! ‘to Phone l5 _ .0. 1m 1i J. A. McGUlGAN, B.A NDTAII. no. Ill!!! magi.‘ suuggoii M. ALBA"; FARMER ll- LLB. will?" 531%? m . onnilai-r-rdi-oriu all“!!! Qlll cl Oolunurcc Bldl :1. r. Mciiiiim. 11.11.. 11.0 mun. no. animus. qouoiwo: lllq lullllg ' (‘harlottctowl usual-tr ‘a l-lASZARll zoom. m rwnfiisrr “u?” 17" he hour: Into lino wt clty _ further percent- Inoreue w ....u“ w’. ‘y.