l t. 1 . l i y, v1; . __:**‘ , ? l. i4 VALUED EXECUTIVE ‘Itisannolmcedthatlllt-‘LW. Boulter, Deputy Minister ofAgrlcul- turc, is severing his connection with the Department, the change to tabs place as from the 1st of October. It Is the expectation that Mk‘. Boiilter will now be in a position to devote all his time and enemies to the management and further develop- ment o! the Prince Edward Island Potato Growers‘ Association. with which he has been associated since Its inception. . It has been apparent for sonic tilnathat owing to changed econo- mic condition, productive and ex- port organizations of the dimensions of the Potato tilowsla’ idsswiltion require the full time and. attention. bf those in chofsfl- As mans!!!’ of this organisation. Mr. Boulter has eliown great initiative and resource- fulness in the development of new potato markets andin- providing re- quisite fertilizer for crops, and his abilib in this connection should be ofstlll more value to the Associa- tion in the future. sincahis first connection with the Department of Agriculture under the ministry of Hon. J. B. Myers, Mr. Boultsr has proved an administrator and executive of more than ordinary ealilre. It was his organising power ‘ Pairs which first attracted the attention of Mr. Myers, who promoted Mr. Boillter ‘from the ibspeetorarllp u! schools to the position in the Asfl- Succeeding Ministers and Premiers have borne testimony from time to time to the avaiuabls assistance which he ren- dered than. It was with sleet N- fore, that the Present of Mr. Boilltcfs connection with the De- partmentJl-ltheinfereetofthePo- us. GHJWOPI’ Association. has been r_ in connection with cultural Department. luctance, ‘” necessity for the so zecosniued- i- ONTARIO PIPE-DREAM. mhshmczthsshosluflhu ilefurlct issue of Maritime Union is now generally known to be Ontsrh- Periodically Mme wiseacrle in that province rises to suggest such union as s, panacea for Maritime economic ills. And now. under an 00M" date-line. a Ohicflfii? “WIND” N‘ huh“ the subject, throwing New- Xoundlalld into the asserted Merl- for good measure. Ac- cording f0 the writer 0f the article. Newfoundland. with its S400 l!!!‘ capita debt and its loss of stflllls l! might be-Defslladed u. mi in its lot with Oesisdfl, and. in that event, ‘since Newfolmdlandb main induslflel IR fishing and agriculture. the same as those of Canada's three Maritime Provinces, Prince Edward Island. Nova Bcotia, and New Brunswick. Q is silggested that these four areas could be administered by 0116 [coal government, situated either at gaiirax, us, or at Ilrederlctoll. MB!‘ This, it is claimed, would save in government . house-keeping. The writer has even decided that "Atlantica" would be an appropriate name for the corn- umq “ca; .140 assume. All time nlul‘. a self-governing dominion, Illiliiblll annually that is necessary W mill" success of the scheme, spill-f‘ aflrompllyl "(sin the meantime - we l. -"n ~ LI. hi ldaritimea. ._..-_..__Z...__i_- - WEW LIBERAL POLICY As noted in ‘Thursday's Ollsldim. .l g-lsigilificlslt chases has some we: mbcrai campaign tactics ill past few months. occasioned by succsl of u» toenail pulls?! m , is the consent of the un- f: ' motives of these "areas." If ~sslly narkus was willin‘. tbs mum! “some be arraused ill ilk-time- luv! "31s nuptials, celebrated almost flu Jilly "console ourselves for the loss of q-QI-Islifax, NB, or Fredericton, N.B., cg g QQIIUQ c1 "local government" '_ h the reflection that our W!‘ “l i... cxpenditunc politically is evimlsiderably less than any 0i’ ills rmbygq- pmviflo8, including Ontario. political hari-kssi il dcllrllllfl worn an economic standpoint. the". gqgecmstphemoreneedforitin ontwio and Quebec than in ill! Etetainnunieaoiruilmmc-hss received an invitljltln m reliance: mask-laurel. this coming winni- lei- he Grumman's Million," tovestinthsnankcfmslllldll" management and control of _0an- adslaiforelgn cxchlllio 1nd Canada's internal credit administration. The hkrketing Act the Liberal leader also desaibed as s conspir- acy to bring Canada into a vast marketing union in which the marketing interests of the Domin- ion would be subordinate to those of the Motherland. changed their tune since the last session of Parliament Prom one and of the country to the other. liberal mwspl-wre are touting m. Kins Is an ultra-imperialist and the trite‘ apostle 0t Brit-l ish trade ‘inteiests. specious at Toronto mast during the cam- paign in which the Conservative candidate was returned. Eon.__Diln- can Marshal. Minister of Agricul- ture in the hepburn Government. wentsofarastocomplainthatths Bennett administration was “the most anti-British governmei: that ever existed in any British colony crDolnclnion. Theanswcrfcihlsridisulousmis- statementiaofooilrsmthatupto thclextpulisnsentary seuiflll-tlw Bennett governmentwastoopro- Britdahtosuitlidfhlhckenliefilllll me as an astute politician. Mr- Kingnow res-llsesthatllp-serrioc, atlcast,mustbepaidtothe Union Jcchandthathisdlancesinthe ncxtbominionalectionwilldepend largclyuponthemeasilre of his successin stealing the Bennett illlmpiretredepoiicy. EDITORIAL NOTES 'I‘hee'ndnf_thewe&andflre lmnth. October }. mises to be a busy time politically. The Stevens Oom- mlsion resumm. the White shri- time Commission b68108. Premier Bennett returns from, and Mr. Mac- kenzie King sails for, Europe, and the registration of electors tabla pin“. Addrusing the meeting of Tor- onto Wat Presbytery of the United Church in Pcarcll Memorial Church. Mount Dennis, Rev. W. l... Arm- strong, 13.13.. oeclarod that he had witnessed more drunkenness on street care and in restaurants during the last ten days than he had seen in ten years previously. There will be no Fall session- ‘llhe Leader or the Senate. accom- panied by Senatm- Inrne O. Web- ster, leaves for the. Victoria f‘ ‘ nial on Tuesday. Premier Bennett does notreilurn till the 20th, and. moreover, none of the depart- ments has been instructed to PN- parc their estimates. The next ses- sion of Parliament will Probably be in the third week of January or first week in rebrusry. aceordine to ‘the ‘Pmflmss made with deport- mental business; and probably a iilell general election The fact that a lot of’ publicity has been given to the conviction and fining cf a number of chain store companies and individuals op- erating group stores in the mtawa territory, (says Osnadim Grocer). isnotgoingtohelptherninthe eyes cf the public or those who are backing the Price Spreads and Mam Buying Ellqlllfy- The" “l! 5° no excuse ici- any retailer-chain or individual-consistently passing out to the public parcels of goods that are under weight. bcr llth falls on a Slmdlly this year. and according to the rill- lns of the I-csion F ‘ Ril- memblance Day will be observed um. day. and there will b0 m holiday on Monday. By law iboum Ohrlstnill nay full on Sunday. the public holiday h held the day fol- lowing, but no such provision is made in the act mskills November ll. a public holiday. The oblsct of the promoters was to commemorate the particular day-that and no other. . a continental reputation "Grand old lsan of the exhibition dlllllly. fill ‘V1100 millsfcrlecgllfeand “Hhnilibxuommwdbicwosub iaws-Ieinvcrinteadsdanybody jsilioriodirtilltbehesrt But-the Liberal cohorts have , “t E After thirty-five years of married life. the penaionec Austrian General Joseph Kaleb his fending his royal feelings. She fur- therlnole convened secret Nani 139931188. he said, at their home. Hefrflthatbythishispensionwas endangered. leather is subjected to year-g of wear in a few months by a method rewutly developed by-experts in the U. B. Bureau of Chemistry and Bfllls. A cylindrical tank filled with fumesfl-omagaslightisusedin the test. Samples of strips of leath- elgicftinthetarllsforslxm “ show the aims qr age that would be noted after several years or or- dinary usage. The deterioration is caused by the sulphur fumes creat- ed by the comblntion of the illum- inating gas. Buffalds surgeons are now men in white no longer; their surgical dress is blue. "Blue is preferred," Dr. James Bcrrell explained, “be- cUuse it does not reflect the rays 0f llshl. as did the white." Asked Wocommentcnthelnoveanumber of prominent surgeons said it was all the same to them, black, white, blue or green. A love romance o! 00 yeue ago is revealed by the death, aged 0i, of Miss More. Jennings of Wimbledon, Ellsland. About 1870 her sweet- heart died the day before they were tobemarriedandshemsdeavow to remain true m her first and only love. Friends had been permitted to see her wedding dress and izousseau, which she kept in lav- ender _ Italian excavators in lava-buried l-Ierculuneum. near Vesuvius, have brought to light a many-colored 8105940. which. in its motive, com- position and manner of execution, is said W Provide a perfect link between the wall decorations o! an- cient Roman times and the first mosaics of the earliest Christian basilicas of the fourth century. The zenerel patina and the tints of the pieces are as fresh and brilliant as when first put gogether, the experts report. Nothing so nearly raeemb- ling the style and technique of the fourth-century artists ever has been found before in such perfectly preserved completeness, though other Roman and pre-Roman wall mosaics have been unearthed at I-Ieroulsneum and elsewhere. Recently the Australian Budget enabled Mir. Lyons to claim that "probably no other country could show such impressive evidence of improvement in public credit." South Africa now has some claim to challenge that pro-eminence, and New Zealarld is advancing mm- fully- When the Finance Minister of Canada presented his Budget in April last he could speak of the year as showing “a recovery that was unmistakable and of greater ‘ dc than many had thought possible." Silica those words were uttered the advance in the price of wheat and of meat has added to the prosperity of Canada. Wherever we look in the self-governing Em- pire today them is the same story 0i’ balanced ‘s, of reduced taxation and of a revival of pros- perity that has passed beyond the stage of faiths-London Daily Tele- graph. It is said that the siren of the new giant Cunsrder 534 will be the loudest voice on the seas. In time of need, as in Atlantic fog. it will carry ten miles over the waters. nu mighty voice will boom forth from three "throats," and instead missioner at Halifax (before sail- ing to resume his duties in Lon- don.) calling for still closer trade unity between Canada and the Motherland, the Globe says: "When Mr. Ferguson speaks of the entry in the British nlsrhet as ‘a marvellous privilege,‘ he does not exaggerate.‘ That's what the Ottawa agreement means, which Mr. Mmckerlsie King intimates his intention to scrap, should he be returned to power. In future you wlllown a revolver or pistol at your risk. unless you secure a lloerlsc. The Dominion Government has proclaimed the amendment in the Orimincl Oode passed at last session of parliament, by which every pistol and revolver owned in Oansda must be register- ed wltlithe police, the number and other details of identification put on record. This is one more im- porhntstep lntheprocessof giv- ing the authorities control of firearms, of leaking it mire didlcult for criminals to _ "HE ‘ CHARLUPTEPOWN _“Tilele are groups of people in parts of the world not yet affected by the great American dict of meat, cooked starches, and sweets who live long lives without the dentist, the toothbrush“ tooth paste or powder, andwithlittleorno decay ofths whuc teeth. Dr. Boots has demonstrated this the Koreans, Dr. Gysi ainld the aheph “ of South Ger- many and the Swiss mountaineers, be and Dr. Waugh among the Bkilnos of. Labrador and Alaska. Each o! these dentists has shown that wherever the American diet enters. decay of the teeth enters with it." I am quoting from an article in the Dominion Dental Journal en- titled ‘ZErr-ors and Facts about ‘Ilceth y. Dr. Illoncs, in Bridgeport, Conn, examined the mouths of 000 ycimg dentist or used a toothbrus... The mouths of the 200 young men whose parents came from Northern Italy and surrounding districts could hardly have been more unclean but the tceth were practically free from decay. The mouths of the 400 young men who had lived on the American diet were vexed with decay. Prof. and Mrs. Mellanby of Eng- land and Dr. and Mrs. Agnew, Oan- ada, have shown that with the right kinds of foods decay of the teeth may be prevented, and where decay has already started its llrosress can be stopped. - However as we were not born in Northern Italy and have Just the kind of teeth t our parents gave us, together with their food habits. it does make a difference to oilr teeth if we neglect to clean them. Partsofthefoodleftonthe teeth- and the enamel of tlm teeth may have tiny cracks in it-means that as this food decays I; may enter into these cracks and attack tooth proper. ' Therefore in this country anyway, aside from eating the proper foods, brushing the teeth-up and down- regularly, and rinsing out the mouth after meals will mean that you are doing all that is possible to prevent the 1cm of your teeth. of being upright as other 1mm. sirens are, its mouths will stand out, like sigh; foot suns, ln differ- ent directions from the funnels. A light pressure on a switch will start the siren song. “Its note may av}. ‘need in miniature on the piano by striking the note A right down among the ilnsingable notes _¢,-w° octave; below Middle A." But whilst it will carry so far, its mel- low depth is such that it will not disturb passengers on board. Of all the notes on the piano this was found to be the ideal for nerve- comfort. Over the Royal Service Museum in London, which contains a col- lection of Nelson relics, thirty-one signaifiagswillberunuporloct. 21, the anniversary cf the Battle of Trafalgar. They will spell the admiral’; famous message to his fleet as the ships went into action: "Erlgland expects, that every man will do his duty." The collection cf relics ‘ ‘ ’ among other things two cocked hats and the dirk Nelson wore as a lnidshlpman, the saw which amputated his arm and combined knives and forks he used afterward, and the watch he wore during his last fight, which still keeps perfect time. There ‘is also a, large panoramic model of Trafalgar showing every ship of both fleets. which enables the stud- ent of naval tactics to study the manoevres employed by Nelson on that occasion. Cargo For wNome Vancouver Province) Down at Seattle they are load- ing two ships for Nome this week, and they are making haste. The cargo manifests allow principally items o! food, clothing and building materials-Nome is in sore need of the elementary necessitiw of life. Fire, driven on a wind from the Bering Sea, has destroyed the" old wooden business blocks that have stood in the main street of Nome this thirty yearrgone. A third of the famous Alaskan sold camp's population of 1500 is “ melese. There isn't very much time to spare. The temperature is nearly down to freesirlg point now; winter is coming on; the winds of the Bering Sea will soon be piling the sub-Arctic ice on the desolate beaches. In Nome, they are holding a cargo of 3000 reindeer carcasses, intended for shipment south, in case there is s real shortage of food. Up there, halfway between the sixties and seventies of north latitude, fire can be a very m. rible act of God. Seattle remembers Nome in Noble's extremity. and remembers kindly. with good Nleofl. Seattle socsbaclrslunswaybeyond the Lsbld rushes of the Yukon and Nome. but the pert of Puset Sound Iot its real start in thediscover- mo which took 00,000 adventurers to the beaches of the Seward Pen- insula. is still a memory to conjure with in Seattle. still sws recollections of the years I9 the rn of the century, and thz maid the time ivhcn eggs were a r apiece in Nome, and up men. none of whom had visited ai I PUBLIC FORUM Illseelsmnleelflllilil codpile shippers" of ‘p! pllyllll W” with prices, ctc., prompted evidently by those involved. The real cause for the price de- cline is that farmers here in some caeesale snxiousforreadycsahat allysellingpriceat stirnewhenun- usually hot weather in the eastern states has curtailed the turnip de- mand. and it would be a wonderful help if the Banks would assist these needy farmers for a week or two. But the real cause back of all this lg that large quantities of turnips have been shipped to New Yul-k and Boston markets on commission or consigned for sale on arrival. 0on- signing unsold has been the ruinw tion of the potato and turnip mar- kets and no improvement can be ss- sured lmtilthbpracticeisputs stop to. I received a letter this momlns from one of the lamest turnip blly- ers in New York which reads in part: "It seems that souls of the Associations at your end are ship- ping hare on commission and the re- here, in so far as they have nothing invested in the merchandise do not care what they get for the turnips Just as long as they sell them and get their few cents com- mission. In other vmrds they invest nothing and have nothing to lose mdaiimgaininthewayofafew cents commission no matter at what- price they sell them." It is bard to conceive a more idiotic practice than conaimling tlimllll or Olll unsold, and this tremendous con- signing has only been made possible by price fixing arrangements at this end permitting unfairly wide spreads between prices paid the farmers here and prevailing market prices at ro- ceiving centres. ll'or instance, - tween November 0th and December 30th, less, the price paid to farmers hire was 16c. per bushel for turnips flhg until December 'Ith, and 30c. to end of December last, and during that same period the average selling price according to U. S. Government re- ports was rse. on Nov. 9th: srudu- ally advancing to 86c. by November 20th and to $1.00 the last week in December. Sothat during the time the price advanced 25c. per bushel in Boston it only advanced two cents per bushel to our farmers. Why? The only Justification the- shippers responsible can offer is the risk in shipping and the fact that lnosi; shipments were consigned and the strippers did not know for weeks afterwards what prices they would be get, and they required an unusually wide spread to cover these unneces- sary hazards. Naturally with a wide spread shippers were careless of quality-they could afford to take unnatural chances for they were gambling with the farmers’ money. I1; is hard to conceive. in view of the very heavy losses on consignments of potatoes made last year, why this practice should be continued, or why any shipper could be so a sly egotistical as to consider himself a better judge of ‘ ‘ requirements in New York and Boston than the dealers in these cities whose business ic is to know their market require- merits. It is practically impossible to sell any turnips outright in Boston be- cause all the dealers there can get all they want on consignment, and if these "niggers in the woodlllllil have their way New York will soon be in the same shape. Consisllllls is a lazy man's way of getting rid of something he bought without re- quiring and does not know what to do with after he has bollsllt it. It's a. wild gamblers game and should not be permitted. There is no in- centive for anyme irl New York or Boston to buy turnips outright when his neighbour is able to cut the price 0n consigned goods. I have never consigned a car un- sold for years and hope I will not be forced ‘into doing, so. My ae- sociates are shipping quite a num- ber of cars of turnips each week on an outright sale basis and they have not sold a single car which has not left a very reasonable profit on to- day's costs and lowered risks. A week ago 1 suggested to some of the larger shippers that we all get together and agree oma buying price of 15o. per bushel. and am sure that if all shippers would agree to this we could easily move all the turnips we have at a profit to the shippers above that price. I have advertised all my loaders to urge the farmers to stop hauling until they can get 150., for we never had less competition than this year and a good prospect of wider mankets be- cause of the scarcity and prevailing high prices of. cattle feed. What is needed this year is solid co-opsratiorl to stnp and start an energetic selling campaign so that the turnip deal can be made safe and profitable for all concern- ed, and if consigning cannot be stopped in any other way then the Government should be asked to tshe action. ' l I std, Sir etc, . a. sratmrsou. Charlottetown, P, I. I, 20th ‘Smt, 10M.‘ BINATOI H051’ WAN!) Sin-The follow up letter of Sen- ator .7. .7. flushes, cr his mouth- iuofWI-ndlllandtheboornofpq The old-timers of Seattle can m . --_'_ ’ - l‘ the old king went ash and touched an "Children I had, and they IN dQld- Wlld IhMl. andsheisiost. “id. “At the hour of frost?" ‘llleclgvlvlntbe-ashtreecawedand Butdidnot sing. ‘ ‘me old king shut his two fast, And leant his forehead u” the tree, And thought of all the dead leaves past- A marvellous company. They came, they came, like waves of the sea, These ghosts of leaves came rolmd that king. ‘Ill-W hushed, they whispered, cease- And he 1...’... them sing! aiildren and bright-eyed wives. we 9-". But Time forgot us, arid no one grieves. Who re bers us? Who will stir The gh of leaves? . , , , ‘Ihe world is a world of forgotten rt i. bettcr 'eo, m better so. Wlvu and children, even a king's An as brief as snow. And who can be happies- than the dead, By all f0. a an? Oome with us, Kins! - the dead leavu said- ‘ihe year's at the fell. -('.'onrad Aitken. ton, and the price of spraying ma,- terials out in half, the first year the P. E. I. Potato Growers’ Asso- ciation petition was felt. The economic situation following the war, he suggests, was responsible for this fortunate out in mices. Does Mr. Hughes seriously considtr our farmers gullible enoluh to be- lieve that this rather amazing re- duiction in prices would just hap- pen to occln- the first year the As- sociation imported these commod. ities? If the economic or business adjustment was responsible, the lowering would have been a little more ‘ual. His attelnipted explanation of the $14.00 difference a tori irl the eel- ling price of mixed fertilizers, be- tween St. Gatherines, Ontario, and Hampton, Prince Edward Island, is just as feeble. He should know that mixed fertilizers are manu- factured in Canada. and the differ- ence in freight cannot be over $0.00, or certainly not over 84.00 per ton. How does Mr. hes account for the extra $10.00, a least still paid by the farmers in Ontario, where no 00-0}. rutive organization exists? Perhaps this evidence, which could be amply suppo ted before a Royal Oommission. might help him to understand this problem. 1n accepting his nomination to the first Board of Directors, a grow- er and former fertiliser salesman said. that although for the good of the indlltry he would agree for the Association to handle fertilizer. he was sacrificing from $10.00 to OM00 a ton profit that he had for- merly made handling fertilizer. Mr. Hlghes treats with sarcasm. the claim of the manager. that a million dollars had. been saved the farmers in the purchase of fertil- lulu and Imaying materials in the past twelve years. As 28,000 tons of fertiliser were supplied by the P. E. I. Potato Growers‘ Associa- tion alone in one year, this at a llsl" ' of 010.00 a ton would b9 838010.00. We have ample proof that this extra charge was lgvlgd by deailers in this province, before the competition cf the Amociation forced them all to cut their prices, and we have abundant proof that fertilisers during the past gcggon sold in the neighboring pmvinccs at from 00-00 to 010.00 a ton, and even $18.00 a ton higher than our Provincial prices, in districts in on- tario where co-operative Oompgfl. tion does not exist. A rvwlt supporter of nr. Hughes, dealt at great length with the quec. tion of whether or not the P. E. I. Potato Growers‘ Association could Purchase fertilisers cheaper than the dealers. What diirércrwc do; it makawhethertheyoancr cm. not. although when their purchases 7°" 18180. they could do this. It is the amount of extra, prong u.“ was formerly charged, and which m!‘ W91" yes-X's we have been sav- g “that our farmers are interest- EWW intelligent man kxlbwe, and every reasonable man will admit, ' "Ill our farmers’ Oltanization, the P. Ii. I. Potato Growers’ Aagoclgtlgrp Malone the seed potiito market‘ for our hill quality potatoes in the United States. Other independ- i snt dealers have since endeavoured It "was tbs lllsb prices for sev- petiwecc m» mum many ml]. its, lions of dollars in our Province, and was lalully responsible in a few yeanfortrebling the traflic onour Railways. It was due to the eflcrts 0| i118 mllllselnent. and loyal ‘fir: of this pfusressive organ- Wllstdo you do. good trees,"'he 'I'hscc‘.lk8treessoushcd.theashtree- But never a word they gave flint y to profit from the pioneer work ‘mmn m on for years by this crguii- "WWW" sralyearsobtalnedforourseed‘ possibilities for offers. of Canadian‘ Homes.‘ ' ' BRAHMIN , I I a l‘ ‘~ Avciil Taking“; '1 In thelllllll ill’ Illlil". illllg I‘ Lsilunolllle mos fiifii”'ri..‘.?.‘i’.‘..“€°'fi‘.“‘iiifiili?..f ."§£Z’“""’IQ should have youl-"flrst consideration and we will be pleased-to discuss-with you the many investment that Insurance . ‘Great-West I.ife policies make secure that future welfare and comfort of many _ For, .1.....~......§....i.. consult any West Life Rapsasantatlvspct- get» in touch with . eiivllniilitiiessfcol., LIMITED ..... mliifiliw“ 74F...- Full 's'ii-ébg'illuaiid' ‘Fine Flam- ~ so ORANGE PEKOE TEX » Ceylon Small Leaf thine . , , ;, La . 2 us‘ I‘ » thousands l are due to the unsessonable frost of’ last fall, for which thsmanage- ment are no more to blame than many oflour more prozlleasive far- mers, who lost large accesses of turnips from the same came: and noone, but m. EugheacouldhI-ve foretold its colmng. Mr. Hughes smarts that a gov- ving any conception of anteed iille payment of a note, by backing it, who have never been called upon for any further alist- ance? And hove governments, in- cludiyg our own, guaranteeing other organisations, such as egg and poultry, suflered financial loss? m. Hughes, however, evidently feels he delivers his “grand slain" when he solemnly declares, he has a charge to make and the charge is that the Association lost a million with Mr. Dyal. charge Bvidcntly inspired by iihe fear that the farmers know that thh asnount at least was saved them thrown the pilrchese of fertiliser over a period of yarn, some endeavours to lose it for them, well knowing that no government would make itself ridiculous by granting such a silly request, with such s, price-fluctu- ating commodity as potato“, m- agine the field the/t would be c“... ed for such a vnriied form of evid- once? of iihie arighttohavehiedelnandfcra Royal Commission granbd, to my- ther inspect the past business or this body, which has been fully ex- plained and passed on at every an- lllllll 1119991118. how much more or better rlsht has many s. member °f W!‘ Private lmsinees companies, some of whom, including. members of the clergy, claim they we“ in. duced by influential manager: to place their hard-earned saving in t ‘ness ventures, -and who assert they have since never been oven tendered an annual-statement, let alone an auditor's report, which Mr. mglfes claims as masonry. to demand the Government to appoint a Royal Oommiaslon, to investigate what became of their money? We gull! cdomngertlg tomalii “(bmmhion man era. e ne injunctim-l, “Let him that is without sin cast the first stone." Now brother farmers, do not i“; sight of this fact. Itis s, few g9]- fish dealers, gndqthqg‘ jug-ping by illBllL-cnen who resent the loss of their former large fertiliser profits, and who are new frantically work- ills for its destruction, that they may be able to raise the price again, if the Association should fail to survive. Wehavetwcsouroeccpentcu, The one to continue our support of the anizgtlg , u“ 8|" i; time to redeem its obligation, much lilvlllliubyaamallmarginofpm. fit on lnainess done. The other is, in the event of failure, we must pay W1‘ Ollllsetlons. and suffer loss for i119 year's to come. Remember, $2.00 a ton profit on 10.000 tons of fer-m- iaer a year for three years, will m- deem our losses: whereas, 1mm $5.00 to $10.00 a ton each year, in the absence of our petition. will as assuredly be taken from us, a; itnowisfrom the farmersinSt. Gather-Ines. Ontario and other parts ofIganada. one of his recent letters, w. ‘Hughes attempts to leave the im. Drcflslfm. Mr. Dyers letter was in- Blllred or written by others, and that we shall never see Mr. Dyal again. ’ I venture to predict, m, Hughes. to the conrtary, that My, Dyal will be in Prince Edward Is» land lflin this season. as he has’ been for several Help . n at any time an ifilldllhdent] earl. we must remember that the Alociatlon had to find a market M‘ Wm! yiamfor U percent of mu crop. cane-ally chi-m. onto m: ldafietirl afew weeks. and their, omipetiiien was responsible for. maintaining whstfsnnds in other, Plovlneescenaidsreeraa enviablt ll dealer paid moremcriey for stew‘ AllIllsliI10(bv0,P. Beptembsrnl 1,!- W.‘ Golfer (far is tile rumor "say. caddy, wily do youkosp locking at your watch?" ~ - Daddy‘: "u isn't a null. m, in census-j 5s giggiégg s a irrllgrllfig first]; i carer ggggggiugilé: Pig. two later ‘llhe Times s “Who's Who in can-i and in 33 record of w. u‘ _ activities, imdcr me heading Reflection" thsfels 6 simple word "Work." . Next-An Atlantis Owning. .,., i??? sill i; isspcsitive: been ill 4.? "l; ‘ i?